Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 August 1937 — Page 8
sy
PAGE 8
THE INDIAN
Self-Study Advised for | Bored Wife
; | Job Won't Restore Zest| Na For Life, Jane | Jane Jordan will help vou with your
4 Jordan Says. problems by her answers to your letters
in this column.
——— | 3 DEAR JANE JORDAN—| I am a married woman 25 years old and terribly restless. I am fairly good looking and popular. The trouble is 1 don’t know what to do with my time. I have a 5-year-old child but I haven't enough work to do to keep me busy. I am a good mother, wife and housekeeper but I want to be something more and don't know what that something is. I don't about drinking or smoking some of our friends do and I
care as
can't have a good time on their parties. Oh, I don't suppose I can ever
make you know how I feel but sometimes I think I am tired of life. I can’t get any satsifaction from anything I do or any place I go. My husband is a prince to me and I'm afraid he will soon tire of me. Do you think I would be different if I found a job? Please give me some advice as to what to do to make me more cheerful before it 1s too late, RESTLESS ONE. ” n n | ANSWER—When a woman finds | life below her expectations, the first | question to settle is whether she is | wholeheartedly in love with her husband. She may have every reason | to be satisfied on the surface and | vet fail to be contented by the relationship. As a rule a woman in |
Safari brown Alaskan sealskin is popular among college girls. There's a gay outline to this boxy swagger (left) with iis interesting pocket lines and couturier contrast in the striking Bolivar sleeves. The
OVERBIDS ON SACRIFICE Grape or Gooseberry Catsup
RRR Ra AR
fur coat suit (right) is a smart coat is lined and ensembled with
love is a happy one whose interest | is easily engaged by any one of the | many things there are to do in the | world. However, there are other | causes for discontent and this shoe |] may not fit your foot at all. | For example, an over-weening ambition, beyond what the personality can fulfill, takes the joy
Contract Problem (Solution in next issue) South's powerhouse makes impossible any but a bust response, if he opens his hand i] with a forcing bid of two. A bid of three or four no trump might easily be passed. Even a bid of one is not sure to receive a response. What bid shoulda South make as an opea-
out of life. It is very easy to get
the wrong idea about yourself in || jng? childhood, particularly if you are SOUTH an only child. Sometimes the cradle AAQ is just too, too cozy and it appears YVAKQ3 that the whole world was created $AKQS for the benefit of the child. When % AK?2 a child is wisely brought up this | Duplicate—N. & S. vul. idea vanishes in his early contacts Opener—¥ 10. 10
with others, but when he is not wisely brought up the illusion continues and is much harder to give up gracefully in later life. Every day we see doting parents | spending a fortune on Mary's | voice in the firm belief that it |
| Solution to Previous Probiem By WILLIAM E. M'KENNEY
American Bridge League Secretary
will shake the musical world | depth. This is the situation in towhereas everybody else knows | day's hand, taken from the collecthat Mary's voice is mediocre.
K. Perkins, of Boston. North and South had no need to overbid, because against the four- | heart contract they could have won three clubs, one diamond and one spade for a penalty of “500 points. Instead, South, as soon as the aum- | my was spread, realized that he had
Adoring parents make their chil- | dren believe that they are des- ! tined for something great and when it doesn’t materlalize we have discontented adults, When you said you wanted to be
something more than a good | embarked on an almost unmakable p n ckeener | contract. mother, Wife and housekeser id The Opening lead of the heart you didn't know just what, I won- pine held the trick. and .a heart
dred if your parents hadn't expected | more of you and regretted the face | that you married and settled down | Hast returned a heart and South so soon instead of having a whirl | pad to trump, and with only two at a career. Let me tell you that | trumps in each hand, South could
continued, which South ruffed. He led a trump and the finesse of the 10 forced East's ace.
good , mothers, * wives and house- [not now afford to draw trumps . : . \ yithout establishing some side - : ce as hens teeth | Wit : RECjjers &r% 23 S0ATTE US tens suits, The finesse of the club jack
and if you have done well with all |heiq and a low diamond was led three, you're a success. Your effi- [from dummy. East piayed the 10, ciency leaves you with time on your [and South won with the queen. hands ahich can be taken up with | South now made the play which an absorbing hobby, a part-time | gave him his contract. He returned job, more thought for others, study = E—
in a subject which. interests you | . . i and so on ad infinitum. Sum mer Bric c Just to tear offi and get a job |
because you don’t get a kick out of | anvthing won't restore your zest for | life. You have to find out what is| gnawing vou in secret first. I don't | Er but I think vou might find | Mrs. Charles B. Lohman, 1416 W. out, patticularly if you had a little [32d St, is to entertain this evening aid from an understanding person. | With a miscellaneous shower in JANE JORDAN. [honor of Mrs. Chandler Root Jr. iii mt | Mrs. Root was Miss Peggy Zaring “ A | before her Hatyiage July 38. Kyat v qr aen flowers are to be use nroughCarol I. Stuat t out the entertaining rooms and pink > ~ rosebud corsages are to be given the W ed On Sunday |zuests. Appointments are to be in © |pink and blue. Guests are to be the Mesdames R. C. Root, Althea E. Johnson, Stella Allen, E. R. Zimmer and Misses Alice
— |
Mr. and Mrs. Norman O. Stuart
announce the marriage of their ar ,id \wooling, Helen Root and daughter, Carol Jane, to Waldo | Meta Boren, g. Preston Brown, son of the Rev.! ~~
Frank Brown, Coatesville. The wedding was read Sunday in N | S L E Y the home of the bride's uncle, the | Clear Chiffon
Rev. Morton C. Lonz. Aragon, 10. || Pure Silk HOSIERY
After a trip through the East, Mr. ! PERFECT and Mrs. Brown are to be at home | 59 C ouauty
in Coatesville. Mrs. Brown formeriy t-ught school at Amo. 44 N. Penn.
SHE ALWAYS PAINTS WHAT HE'S THINKING OF ~
perfect energy-build-For esl packed with vital food essentials, try Shredded Wheat with fresh §ruits or berries!
A Product of NATI UIT COMPANY
To Get Shower
OMETIMES bridge players, not | obligatory finesse, a term describ- | Oven (300 degrees F.) for 1! knowing their own strength, [Ing a play to drop a rush in to take sacrifices when the | Without sacrificing an honor. opponents were out beyond their
| tion of that fine card player, Frank one heart and one trump.
| the diamond five, and although | and cook until all grapes are broken. | West played the nine, he played | Put through colander, add sugar, the four from dummy | spices and vinegar.
and Bast's | lace fell. This is
known as the | Pan or shaliow pan and cook in slow
» hours. high ecard | i : : : Now | lized jars, seal with paraffin and | East returned a trump, but South | Store in cool place. | | Plums, peaches, grapes, apples.
{made his overambitious contract . 3 Cherri k cellent { doubled. losing only one diamond, | Pears and cherries make excellen | fruit butter.
stones, then put through
(Copyright. 1937. NEA Service, Inc.) food
| | |
Alaskan Sealskin Popular in Safari, Brown
8 3
touch in the sealsKin giiet, if you'll notice. Adds Zest to Cold Meat Cuts 5.
catsups made of grapes, of gooseberries and many other summer bless-| pull up his socks.
AKI103 ¥365 $Ks42 MATE ; By MRS. GAYNOR MADDOX ATO N ih ATH NEA Service Staff Writer VK 1042 Ww E YAQJI With meats, particularly with Sunday night ®.J963 S AID %Q107 Deal 986 ings have a way of making even fae pleasure. i A 9 pat ! Grape Catsup ®Q75 Four pounds Concord grapes, 3 2dd '2 3 $Ki32 | pounds sugar, 1 teaspoon allspice, Pulp by weight. Duplicate—E. & W. vul. 1 teaspoon salt, 1 cup tarragon South West North East vinegar, 2 teaspoons cloves, 2 (ea-° : Pass Pass Pags 4 | spoons Cinnamon. | jars or crocks. 14 2 a Doubl Remove stems from grapes and “4 Pass Pass ouble | | wash thoroughly. Place in large Opening lead—¥ K.» 10 | | utensil and bring to boiling on surface. Do not use any water. Stir
Pour in broiler |
Allow to cool in oven, then fill ster- |
Peel fruit, remove any |
a, hn.
ARIEL ISA TI
APOLIS TIMES
Odd Actions Ot Children
Nn
Distressed Parents Told Not to Worry Over Strange Notions.
By OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON
Children go through phases of “oddities” that puzzle parents and distress their mothers, but if I say that most of these notions are transient and pass with the breeze, will you please try to believe me? These are some of the things that are poured into my ears. Johnny has taken a notion, when company comes, to hide under a rug, one particular rug, that covers him all over, Another boy has achieved the shirt-tail stage, and won't wear his blouse tucked in. A little girl talks to herself, but shuts up like a clam if people outside the family address her.
Present in Body Only
Behavior is serious, of course, in its deeper reaches, and it is true that acts form habits and habits character. But just because such children go through cycles of original ideas, it does not mean they are queer or bound for the asylum, any more than ourselves if we take notions to read in a certain chair only, or wear black in summer or talk to the canary. Johnny, aged 6, has always been shy. He used to slip out of the room, and stay out, when guests arrived. His remaining now, even under a rug, is not a step back, but a step forward. He wants to be pres- | ent, but he can’t stand being talked | to or answering. One small fellow sprawls flat on | the floor, kicks his heels and makes funny noises with his mouth, when- | ever three of his mama's friends | come for bridge. He never does it | at any other time. We can figure { this out in a dozen ways. Personal- | 1¥ I think he's so fed up on being
The There's a clever
version for all-purpose wear. a flecked tweed.
fussed over and asked silly questions that he has found an escape. He prefers to disgust these fussers, so they'll let him alone. shirt-tailer, who has his | mother almost frantic, tells his reasons. “I'm not going to be called | ‘button baby,’” he declares. His | counterpart is Bill, 6 years older, meats, | who won't buckle his knickers or Bill says he's no the teapot get all steamed up with |sis, but Bill was willing to be a ns c— ——— | “sis,” and as neat as wax, until two | chopper. Weigh pulp carefully and | moss SE. Hell 2 oi ig J as much sugar as there is evidently got. Boys never tell what's Add spices if liked, | rankling. We have to guess.
| then cook in oven, stirring occasion{ally. Cool in oven and fill sterilized |
supper cold
Next Year Something Else
A lot of girls talk to imaginary chums they make up out of whole | Five pounds gooseberries, 4 pounds | cloth, When they talk to them-
sugar, 2 cups apple vinegar, 1 tea- Selves, it is usually one of these
spoon cinnamon, 1 tablespoon cloves, dulcet words and a mincing voice. leaspoon| Time uses a large eraser. from now you'll be worrying about something else, good mother. course, if John gets violent, begins
1 tablespoon all-spice, 4 puverized candied ginger. Pick over gooseberriees carefully. | Wash and drain. Place in kettle. Add sugar, vinegar and spices. Bring to boiling point, and after whistle through his fingers to see that simmer for exactly two hours. people jump, and won't get into the | Cool and fiill sterilized bottles. Pickling syrups and spiced vine-| doghouse. But at that, he'd probgars are matters of first importance | ably come out mewing, just to be | during this open season for can-| contrary. ning. | He'll be all right. Just try and
Temporary
A year | warm oil and
Of | ton bandages on for
Ona Butler Wed
—Voorhis Photo
John F. Butler their
Mr.
and Mrs. announce the marriage of daughter. Ona Nell, to R. H. Kin-
caid. July 4.
The wedding took place
Dresden China * Makeup Meets Fall Approval
By ALICIA HART NEA Service Staff Writer
With profile hats, feather boas and other Gay Nineties fashions becoming important for fall, the “Dresden China look” will be the thing to strive to attain. The com-
plexions of fashionables will have a crisp pink and white, freshly scrubbed appearance. Daring coiffures and obvious makeup are out. Apply cosmetics as carefully as
| Rouge must harmonize with your natural blood tones. And it won't | be difficult to find a flattering shade | because the majority of cosmetics I manufacturers are talking about various rich red tones rather than orange and rust ones. Scarlet and royal red lipsticks are to be im-
portant. Daintiness will reign supreme. Get rid of the suntanned, hardy perennial look you have culti-
vated since June, Go in for bath oils, masks, rich cream and hand lotions again. Substitute heady perfumes for the light, single flower odors you have liked all summer.
Pay special attention to your hands, elbows and shoulders. Do you use hand lotion frequently,
cuticle cream about three nights a week? Don't wear chipped, cracked nail polish. If you haven't time to | put on a fresh coat, remove all the polish and simply buff your nails. Lacquer is smart, of course, but only when it is in perfect order. Hot oil manicures are an ex- | cellent idea. When you have re- | moved old polish and whisked nails | into shape with an emery board,
| soak fingertips in warm olive oil in- | phantom friends addressing her in |
stead of soapy water. Or, if you | like, dip pieces of cotton in the around each finger. Leave the cot-
then finish the manicure in the
to “ixnay” everyone in the house, | regular manner.
put up with him. Don't let go reputation with the neighbors, but don't get gray. You have lots of company. (Copyright, 1937, NEA Service, Inc.)
an artist puts color on his picture. |
wrap one of these |
10 minutes,
TUESDAY, AUG. i7, 1587
Asthma Is Similar to Hay Fever
Tightening of Muscles Causes Shortness of Breath.
By DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN Editor, American Medical Journal Among the allergic diseases, asthe ma is probably most serious. The term, which means “panting,” defines the condition in which thers is shortness of breath caused by a spasmodic tightening of the muscles in the large tubes which lead into the lungs. Usually the condition results from an abnormal hypersensitivity to some protein substances, although occasionally there are other factors, For some time it has been recognized that the tendency to develop hypersensitivity is greater in some families than in others, and that the condition is much more preve alent among white people, The condition is transferred mors than twice as often through ithe mother than through the father. Incidentally, boys seem to have the condition about three times as often as do girls. ; Cause Is Sought
In every case of asthma, it is necessary to find out, if possible, ths | specific substance to which the per- | son is sensitive. Sometimes it is a substance that may be inhaled, like the dandruff of animals, house dust, the pollens of plants, molds and germs. Sometimes the condition follows the eating of certain foods or the | taking of drugs to which the person is sensitive; sometimes it is associated with the injection of various serums, or with the bite or sting of | an insect; sometimes asthma results merely from contact with some chemical substance or from overheating, too much cold, or some similar factor. It is obvious, therefore, that asthe ma follows the same type of sensi= tivity that is associated with hay fever, but in this instance the ree action is in the breathing apparatus of the lungs and not in the eyes and nose. Disease Seldom Fatal
Fortunately, asthma is not in general a fatal disease. When it does cause death, the result is due to some secondary factor affecting the heart or to an infection. It is exe tremely rare for death to occur in an uncomplicated case of asthma. The person who has asthma may develop changes in the lungs due to | interference with the mechanics of breathing. For example, the lungs become overdistended because the tightening of the tubes makes it | difficult to get the air out after the shortness of breath has caused | excess air to be breathed in. | Furthermore, repeated coughing and straining may rupture some of | the fine cells in the lungs and thus produce changes in the lung tissue,
| ‘Beret Cap’ Featured A prominent hatter is featuring Le new gabardine ‘“beret-cap” for sportsmen. As the name suggests, it combines features of both types of head-gear. It can be worn
| bathtub, he'll have to be kept in ihe | gyite, and do what you can to save | aslant, like a beret, or the crown
| can be pulled forward and snapped | to the headband with a glove faste | ener, The new hybrid head cover= | ing comes in a full range of colors.
CANARY COTTAGE Combines the OLDEST in American Charm
with the NEWEST in Madewn ELECTRICAL Conveniences . . .
With the opening of the Canary Cottage Restaurant on Monument Circle, southern cooking has been brought to Indianapolis and offered in a colonial setting from old Virginia. Yet for the convenience and comfort of patrons everything possible is done the mod-
eled ones
of reason
The Baking Kitchen with all-Electric equipment, where pastries, breads and other delicacies are baked throughout the day.
Above: The main dining room on the second floor is also distinguished by its interesting and care-fully-planned lighting effects.
Below: One of the giant Electri¢ food mixers. Potatoes and other vege:
MORE THAN A BILLION SHREDDED WHEAT RISCUITS SOLD EVERY YEAR
tables are prepared Electrically. . Electric dish-washers are also used.
ern Electric way. So when, one after another, new restaurants and remod-
and baking—there MUST be a world
same Electric methods both time-sav-ing and economical in your own home.
The Apollo Room where ing effects, in colonial design, harmonize perfectly with antique furnishings.
. J em
go Electric—even to cooking
s. You, too, will find these
Electricity, and at the same
5 RF &
modern light-
A
A Portion of the Main All-Electric Kitchen where a battery of
The attractive Electric sign on the exterior of the building dramatizes the value of advertising by
lighting enriches the quaint outside colonial motif.
Ranges speedily prepare the appetizing recipes developed from the old-fashioned methods of southern homes. Electric refrigeration guarantees the safe preservation of food the same as in your own home.
time the use of indirect
Electric
INDIANAPOLIS Power & Light C
Electric Building, 17 MN. Meridian
¥
The Cocktail Lounge on the first floor, completely appointed and paneled in leather, is Electrically air-conditioned the year around—the same as are the other dining rooms on both floors. Thus patrons of Canary Cottage are assured healthful, comfortable atmosphere regardless of weather.
Canary Cottage mesraumant
SIRVES BEST COSTS LESS
OMPANY
Phone, Riley 7622
