Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 August 1937 — Page 10
PAGE 10
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ae
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Danger Seen In Breakup Of Romance
Let Man Serve Notice on His Own Wife, Is Jane's Advice.
Put your problems in a fetter to Jane Jordan, who will answer vour questions in this column.
EAR Jane Jordan—I am very much interested in an Indianapolis man, but he is married. He gives his wife all his money because he travels. She wastes the money and she is a poor housekeeper. Besides she is very jealous and nags him. He says he would not marry another, but I am sure if they were divorced I could get him. I am thinking of writing to her or doing something to break up this unhappy marriage. He loves his children dearly and so would I, I am sure. I believe if h» made her lonesome enough she would go out with someone else and he could take the children from her. He is | very handsome, and while he is | about 10 years older, I will not let | this keep us apart. I do not smoke | in his presence because he doesn't approve of girls’ smoking. I try to keep very tidy and attractive if I think I might see him. I am sure I could make a better home for him. It is worth trving for anyhow. Should I write her or choose other means to let her know her husband is interested in | me and stays with her just because | of the children. | PUZZLED.
ANSWER—Mercy, I would as soon jump down the throat of a | lion as tell a man's wife, the mother of his children, that he was in love with me instead of her. You can cause plenty of trouble but you can't break up a marriage that simply. Do you think a woman is going to give up her home, husband and | children without putting up the fight | of her life? She may be a poor housekeeper and waste her husband's money, but neither of these | things is grounds for divorce and | do not indicate that the woman is dumb enough to abdicate in your favor. Besides, what about the children? Even if you succeed and the poor woman fell into the trap by giving her husband legal grounds for divorce, the children would not give up their own mother and accept you as a substitute without hating you. It is very naive of you to assume that you would love them simpiy because they are his children. On the contrary, when you faced the problems which they would present, I doubt very much if you would love them at all. Surely you haven't had much ex- | perience with young children or you wouldn't be so optimistic about the | outcome of such marital arralige- | ments. Even under the best condi- | tions the job of stepmother 1s diffi- | cult, calling for the utmost skill and understanding. Where the stephas displaced the natural I should It was 1mposcible for her to win the love of the children. By the time the man has faced an embattled wife in a few rounds, he will wish he never heard of you. | Men often complain of their wives’ faults in order to win the sympathy | of another woman but you may be | sure they never dreamed that their | remarks would get back to the wives or they wouldn't have opened their | mouths. contented and has found your love | -xceedingly sweet, but I believe he | vould be profoundly astonished and .errified if he knew what you con- | emplate doing. You would do well | v0 let him break up his own mar- | riage—if he wants to.
mother
mother,
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=
DEAR JANE have fair play.
n n JORDAN — Let's | Why pick on “Stern | ald Bachelor” so much? Your col- | umn seems to delight in harping |
| the delights of summer, | and most people enjoy their pleasant sight and tasua.
Ne
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIM
~ iy
7
Luxurious Maribou Latest for Evening Wear
HE newest thing in the way of evening splendor for dining or dancing under a midnight
A lot cooler than it looks
sky is the luxurious and gentle maribou.
are the maribou jackets and capes for evening.
There is the sable-dyed maribou jacket. The shade alone is something to rave about.
Softly fuzzy, cool and floating in lightness
Tt
can take spatterings of color, which should be a delight to those who are accessory-minded. And any shade for an evening gown will be an added flash to Oriental hues, brings out a
glow in warm shades and attaches a frosty
thrill to the new icing-white,
The jacket is long enough to serve as a Wrap and short enough to show off the lines of There's a comfortable tailored cut to long sleeves.
a lovely evening gown.
Another new and starting addition is the snow white maribou cape.
in the picture is this
smartly square around
It is short and
the shoulders. Brunets, blonds
and red-heads can embrace it as a charm for a summer
night. Just to watch
a light summer breeze play
through maribou will take the mind away from sultry
temperatures.
To chiffons, satins,
crepe or whatever your silky
choice might be in evening gowns, maribou wraps do
something.
If you want to create a sensation on a hot summer night, appear in icing-white chiffon, with a wafty white
maribou cape enveloping the shoulders.
Just the pic-
ture for the roof and a knockout for the country club
dance.
sable marihon
jacket, left, with tailorvish sleeves that are airily wide at the wrists,
to let roof-garden breezes in.
The white maribou cape, right, makes a sumptuous finish to either
a white or a black evening gown or even a flowered one.
Although
they cover nude shoulders with no end of modesty, cape and coat fit with light-as-air comfort on a summer evening, They are all the rage
in Paris as well as here.
Delicate Summer Sherbets
Less Trouble Than They Seem
By MRS. GAYNOR MADDOX
NEA Service Sherbets, mousses and ices serve They really
Todav’s Pattern |
| |
| tapioca and cook until
Sym fe
An) . Y X's Sm—
clear. | rind. i thicken, | whites and beat
| thoroughly
Staff Writer d in tall sherbet glasses are among aren't as much trouble as they look, Here's a simple one that comes out as a surprise. Cherry Tapioca Sherbet (4 to 6 servings) One-half cup quick “cooking tapi-
oca, '4 teaspoon salt, 1 cup sugar, 2 cups boiling water, 1 cup strong
| cherry juice, grated rind 1 lemon, 2
egg whites, beaten stiff. Combine water, sugar, salt and tapioca is Add cherry juice and lemon Cool. When it begins to add stiffly beaten egg until mixture is Serve in sherbet glasses, chilled. a teaspoon
foamy.
with whipped
glass
Fluffs are made of whipped cream
| mixed with as much ripe and slight-
|
|
No doubt the man is dis-| .
| ly sweetened fruit as the cream will ! hold. | raspberries I some of the hetter choices. | fluff into the tall sherbet glasses and | chill completely.
Fresh, thinly sliced peaches, and blackberries. are Pile the
Garnish the top with some of the fruit just before serving. Another sherbet arrangement is a little ice cream in bottom of sherbet glass, then a layer of slightly cooked or fresh fruit and finally a deep covering of the ice
| cream.
Blackberry Sherbet
(4 to 6 servings) One and one-half cups cooked blackberries, juice 1 lemon, 1% cups cream, 15 cups sugar, 14 cups milk. Force Dblackberries through sieve. Heat to boiling point. Add sugar. Stir until sugar dissolves. Cool. Add milk and cream. Then add lemon juice. Mix thoroughly and pour into freezing tray of automatic refrigerator. Freeze four hours or more,
Garnish each |
)
|
SQUEEZE FOR FINAL TRICK |
Contract Problem (Solution in next issue) South's contract is six no trump. With the break in diamonds assuring five tricks in that suit, and only three club | tricks in sight, where does he find the other tricks needed to fulfill his contract? & None | YAK? | ®AKB8T754 *J654
[fA KJ108 743 |®JI76 [19 J10 LQ
Duplicate—A!l vu. Opener—¢ J.
By WILLIAM E. M'KENNEY
American Bridge League Secretary EST knew he faced a difficult problem in choosing an opening lead against the grand slam.
tack, but he had one faint hope that the contract might be beaten. That rested on cutting the lines
and closed hands. Thus his open- | Ing blind lead of a trump was the | best he had available, as it removed one probable entry to the closed hand, and enhanced the value of | his spade king, | When South studied the hands,
| he saw that his contract was an |
easy one, if the diamonds broke four
land three. Tf they failed to break.
Being a good player he realized | that he had no direct frontal at- |
of communications between exposed |
Dealer
AAJ WAKQJS54 ®3 »Bd876 Duplicate—N. & S. vul, th West North East Pass 36 Pass Pass 4% Pass Pass 5¢ Pass Pass 6N.T. Pass Pass Pass Pass Opening lead—% 8.
of diamonds and the King-ten of spades. When the second ech was cashed, West was in difficulty for | a discard. He dropped the ten of spades. | ing lead to guide him, but guessed | right. He led the spade, went up | with the ace and dropped the king, | thus making his contract. (Copyright, 1937 NEA Bervice, Inc.)
Attorney Is on | \ Rr -Camp I rogram
| Edward C. Snethen, local attorney, is to be featured on the sixth | program tonight at the C. M. T. Camp at Ft. Harrison. | grams are sponsored by the Women's Overseas Service League. Mr. Snethen does impersona- | tions. Others on the program are | to be Walter Hoffman, baritone,
South had only the open- |
The pro- |
| | | [
|
eT
Pride Bring Admiration Two Traits Always Identify Real ‘Thoroughbred’
Says Writer,
By OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON
A thoroughbred—this is what each mother dreams for her child. She | wants him to be that mysterious | something that the world looks up to and admires, but may not be able | to analyze just what being true blue | means, although one of the elect herself. The most essential quality of the thoroughbred is pride. Not the | pride that boasts or struts, or the | cool aloofness that freezes, but ra-| ther living up to a hard standard | one has set for one's self. If it re- | mains always a task, and there is the daily struggle te maintain a level, the struggler is not a thor- | oughbred—yet. When it becomes | second nature, and pride demands that honor and decency and duty | must reign, then the battle is won and the “true blue” has gone halfway to his goal. Next comes loyalty. The genuine | thoroughbred never lets anyone | down. He even goes so far as to| consider his life less important than | a friend's happiness, but he will al- | ways inconvenience himself for | friendship's sake. |
Worth Inspires Loyalities
The reached
vouth or man who has| this estate is never conscious of virtue. If he were he | would lack the very essence of breeding. The first intimation of a holier-than-thou feeling, or a righter-than-anyone, is dead give-away. He (or she) is innately kind, but never sentimentally so. His loyal- | ties are based largely upon the worth he sees in others. It must be | personal worth based upon char- | acter. He never admires people | purely for their possessions or place. | Naturally he feels that he has | a right to keep his thoughts and | his tongue to himself. But he also | feels privileged to speak when he | thinks best. He is never tongue-tied, | merely wise. Personalities
a
to are
are anathema him. Other people's affairs their own and he is He never detracts from a reputa- | tion, He does not consider his own | opinion necessary. | When trouble touches him, or he | i= worn thin with conflicts within | himself, he does not go about air | ing his problem. He may talk them | over confidentially with an under- | standing mind, but does not blast |
.
Troth
Kindred Photo,
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Hofmeister announce the engagement of their daughter, Charlotte, to Ralph W. Roche, son of Charles W. Roche. The wedding is to take place this month.
on every shoulder. The one thing he abhors is self pity, Parents Must Set Example Duty is first, whatever of life, high or low. “must” before play. But long-face, and he does play all his might, too The thoroughbred is fastidious about his habits and surroundings, even though it means only a eolean shirt and a scrubbed deal table, But he cultivates beauty rather than ascerticism He realizes that important and does what he can to be pleasant and a good fellow. He is no hermit, but a mixer A tall order, but something to work toward in raising children The great secret, if we can it, is to encourage the growing child to develop these traits with-
He puts he is no with
personality is
[in himself.
The child borrows from his parents. Their ideals become his, their habits his habits and their customs his own. To produce a thor-
oughbred child is little of a prob- |
lem to the thoroughbred home. (Copyright, 1937, NEA Bervice, Inc.)
New Romantic Trend Looms in Fall Shoes
Lady-like feet is the ideal of a new romantic collection of fall footwomen who have made the great love affairs through the ages one shoe designer has expressed a feeling for “romantic touches but with a very definite restraint.” Swirling bands of sleek grosgrain ribbon appear on suede sandals, oxfords and stepins.
WEDNESDAY, AUG. 11, 1937
Protein In
Pollen Hay
- 6 ’ Fever ‘Bug Condition Not Contagious, But Is Classed as Hereditary. By DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN
Editor, American Medical Journal
his walk |
find |
Many vears ago some English | physicians observed that certain | people invariably developed fits of | sneezing and wheezing, swelling of the eves with itching and smarting, a sense of fulness in the head and irritation in the nose on going into | hay fields | The condition came on particu | larly at the time of the blooming | of the roses and for a long time the | condition was called both rose fever |and hay fever. | People who toms felt rather of the time simply seldom were able to get | night's rest during the | the attack.
had these symp ill and tired most because they a good period of
Season Gives Clue
The seasonal character of the cons dition suggested quite definitely its association with something in nature occurring about the same time, Finally, it was disclosed that the disturbance was definitely associated with the pollination of plants In the years between 1856 and 1877, an English doctor named Blackley who had hay fever exe [perimented on himself with the pollens of more than 100 different | grasses and flowers, inhaling the | pollen and applying it to the mems | branes of his nose and eyes. It was proved later that it im the protein portion of the pollen which brings on the symptoms in the most intense form. Neither the whole pollen nor the protein exs tract will produce these symptoms in a person who does not have the disease,
Not Contagious
| These observations have estab (lished beyond the shadow of a [doubt that hay fever is the result |of a definite sensitivity of the pers son concerned to the protein pors [tions of the pollens of various flows [ers and grasses, | The condition
is not contagious,
. | as . ink Tn y Lon » not curious. | wear that was inspired by the [To some extent it is hereditary, for colorful |
chapters in history, After studying |
it has been shown that from 58 to 68 per cent of the people who have hay fever are descended from [mothers and fathers, grandmothers and grandfathers who in many in- | stances have also had this disease, | Hay fever apparently does not [produce any permanent changes in (the body of the person who has if.
-
on the faults of men, but when the | 2 : . . -zaleonduct of women comes up, the | stirring every half hour for two he still retained a squeeze or a
salumn simply does not print or else | [ . | hours, or until it begins to harden. | finesse in spades, for the thirteenth .droitly glosses over in the answer. | Serve in tall glasses, and garnish | trick. But why do I waste the stamp? with teaspoon of whipped erenm |, THEFS was a third Ps Lint) s won't be printed anyway. | with a whole blackberry in it. i g e losing club, an SONA PAIRPLAY. |PJHIS design—Pattern 8043 has | iil discarding his losing spades on the lips; Allan Scales, vocalist; Miss ote ana wii ‘Ke Sritn ‘Chm Ot n SIE | Blueberry Muffins high diamonds which he was Betty Reagan, vocalist and tap | ® vim a. | forced to give up as the discards | dancer, and a quartet composed of | waist frock plus the comfort of al One cup perfect fresh blueberries, | MUS be taken before trumps were | Alberta and Elfreda Niemever and | simple yoke and ca sleeves for |, ; | drawn, due to the opening trump| Mabel and Helen Hohn. | oat rH vou The bodice LS Ts Wal why Jets. P : P Mi Rudd, a Rg in the July | lis wcetully Chil a int tall i UN 1'; teaspoons sugar, 's teaspoon | South led three rounds of trumps, | C. M..T. Camp is to be master of | ; " IS Bhacely ly Sulrre es om TES | salt, 2 eggs, 1 cup milk, 4 tablespoons | discarding the spade queen, retain- | ceremonies. The programs are di- | Use Cosmetics front and has a becoming long-point |. ji.q shortening. (Ing the eight if a finesse was rected by Mis. Robert M. Moore, | 2 5 voke. Darts give a snug-fitted line Sift flour, baki dor. N ,| necessary. Then three rounds of service chairman. Mrs. Catharine | to the back of the frock Sift flour, baking powder, Sugar | diamonds, and learned that West | Meyer is league president. aid Ns] : land salt together. Beat eggs. Add | had the suit stopped. A low diamond | — ———— a You'll enjoy this frock for late |eggs, milk and melted shortening to New...@
I hrittily, Savs was ruffed and the last > B t E : {I and early fall, made up in | our Pie Nia mix all ar played. . 4 a 7 r FV I : inte | Well. Add cleaned blueberries. 3cauty Luxpert| or printe Cream Deodoran which safely
accompanied by Miss Alberta Nie- | | meyer; Homer Cornell, pianist, and | William Price, bones artist; Charles | Robbins and James Miller, vocalists, | accompanied by Miss Betty Phil-|
ANSWER Does this give you yout (1 dozen) stamp’s worth? JANE JORDAN,
AND YOUR OLD STOVE
New Magic Chef offers all
Your favorite Gas Range Features
percale. | with muffin mixture. Bake in mod- dummy was down to the ace and Pattern 8043 is designed for sizes | erate oven at 400 degrees F. for |14, 16, 18, 20, 40 and 42. Size 16 about 20 minutes. | requires 3 yards of 39-inch material . and ' yard for contrasting collar as pictured. | To obtain a pattern and Step-by- | | Step Sewing Instructions inclose 15 | cents in coin together with the above |
king of clubs, the diamond eight | | and the spade eight. West was] | down to the queen of clubs, the nine |
By ALICIA HART NEA staff Writer Don't waste beauty preparations! Whether your budget is limited or not, it is a splendid idea to learn to use cosmetics frugally. For instance, skin tonics and asiringents last twice as long if you
Indianapolis Homemakers know what they want! * Non-clog top burners * Baking
always dip cotton pads in ice water, eying them as dry as possible, then caturate with tonic. A thin layer of night cream, applied correctly and really patted in, does more good than a thick layer, smeared on hap-
pattern number and your size, your name and address and mail to Pattern Editor, The Indianapolis Times, 214 W. Maryland St. Indianapolis. The summer selection of late dress | designs now is ready. It's 15 cents |
1. Cannpt rot dresses ==
They told us exactly what features they desire in a modern gas range, and we found an ideal combination in this stylish new Magic Chef. It’s the complete answer to a woman's wish for a
timer alarm * (Red wheel) Oven heat regulator © Pullout broiler with smokeless grill * Electric. light,
clock, and condiment set * Fully insulated oven * Roomy utensil drawers * Automatic top burner lighter,
cannot irritate skin. No waiting to dry. Can be used after shaving. Instantly stops perspiration 1 to 3 days—removes odor from perspiration. 8. A pure, white, greaseles, stainless vanishing cream.
KRID
39% « igo arog una opr orm
time saving and money-saving modern gas range + + + easy to buy, too, for no money down, only $84.50 and your old stove. Trade in your old stove now on this “made-to-measure” favorite.
when purchased separately. Or, if | you want to order it with the pat-| |tern above, send an additional 10 | cents.
hazardly and removed almost immediately. Unless your bottle of bath oil has a special shaker top, measure it with an old teaspoon, kept in the bathfor that purpose. Half a wpoonful of the concentrated cties ix sufficient to softén and scent the water If you are trying to cut budget eorners, don’t be tempted to pour toilet water into the bathtub.
2. 3. 4
—NISLEY
Clear Chiffon
Pure Silk HOSIERY
59¢ PERFECT
QUALITY 44 N, Penn,
room
"Theres SOMETHING abort Thome you'll like”
~ TAREYTON
CIGARETTES
vari-
LT
| It's a nice idea, but in the long run, it is cheaper to buy bath oil.
v
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i ok gay Rs Ge RD a . a
