Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 August 1937 — Page 4

PAGE 4

NBS 777 BAIA BSL. 00 A AOI II 5 HAI,

Paris original hy Agnes shows a new side swing to the brim and a vouthful peaked crown. Mahoegany felt with a ribbon bow of placid blue.

Adventure In Romance Held Lesson

n 1) Affairs Quickly, Jane Declares.

nuestions in a letter to Jane them in this

Put Jordan who will answer

von

column

EAR Jordan—Whiie on my vacation at a lake I met » verv nice voung man who took a me. We seemed common. having

Jane

great interest in have much in read the same books and liked the He was a gentleman

and we had a grand

same things.

every way

time together.

the end of our {riendship.

mean

We exchanged addresses and parted |

the best of friends. I did not hear from him and after shout 10 days I wrote a short and To my amazement

friendly note

it ‘was returned unopened, marked |

‘no such person.” I can’t figure it At no time did I seek him out he was always coming over. 1 was convinced of his sincerity and very likeable. I've heard of vacation romances and I'm not taking this seriously, but I was mysWhy do people have to be It makes me feel as

oil out,

but

|

was

tified

so complex?

though I am not a very good judge |

of human nature. DOROTHY JEAN, ” & ANSWER—Of course there may be some simple explanation which would clear the whole thing up. You may have heard from him by now. if he gave vou the wrong name and

”n

address on purpose we assume he

had something to conceal such as a | poor

marriage, an engagement or circumstances. The lightness with which bovs take romance in summer or winter has long been & puzzie to the girls. With a girl any congenial association calls up pictures of permanence. Boys can act a part with great finesse and forget all about it. It is as if girls were bent on finding lasting relationships as sooh as possible and boys were bent on avoiding them as long as possible. Let your adventures make you wary but not cynical. Not all young men can vanish so easily.

most

DEAR JANE JORDAN--I am a girl 19 years old and have been going ‘with a man for about a year. 1 thought I loved him and promised to marry him. 1 am wearing his ring. But lately I hardly can stand him. Should I go ahead letting him think I am crazy about him or tell there is someone else—and is—and give him back his NOT IN LOVE.

him there ring?

» ”

ANSWER -—The sooner you break vour engagement the better. woman can go against a strong inner negative. It is ruinous to try. It is & kindness to release him and crime to fool him.

®,

a

oys Able to Forget Love!

He often said that | the end of our vacation would not |

No |

The Paris Bxposition has put the French milliners in a gay mood, judging by the first imports of fall hats to reach New York. Tn a collection which a New York milliner, culled from the Paris houses there enough lightheartedness to catapult curiosity weeks before you plan to shop for a new chapeau. We expected high hats—they are as syhonomous

with fall and winter as wide brims are with summer—but we are delighted with the diversity of silWearable and becoming height is accomplished in the trimming of chou bows or high drapes. The youngest of them all, that clicks with America every time, is the beret, not anything resembling the old vintages, but a new off-the-face beret, upturned

is

houette.

By GERTRUDE BAILEY

ment.

towering silhouette.

handles on your handbag.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Hats From Paris Exposition Are ‘High ,Wide and Handsome’

and spreading with height given to the front moveSome lvok as innocent as aureoles, others sophisticated in a profile version. it “High, Wide and Handsome.” Height is suggested in a cone-shaped crown for a hat with a rolling brim that does not deflect from the Height is amusingly “handled” in two loops that grow out of the tops of hats like

There is many a new twist in berets and turbans that will have to be triad on before you dare to pass judgment on its becomingness. ing in some of the high turbans are equaled only by the Alix dresses which inspired them. Theirs is a softness, a more subtle elegance, that we predict is going to be a big weakness from the start of the fall

Schiaparelli calls

fashion picture. You can't afford to be tod in a cut-and-dried hat in the face of oft, cal, daring hats. If you anticipate a collision be pared to meet it hat-on, a bewitching hat ‘with accent, and meaningful manipulation that demands closer study to be fully appreciated. A new felt ribbon or a chou of bright velvet on an ostrich fancy may be the devastating color on your new hat that deserves to be the attehtionsgetter of

MONDAY, AUG. 28, 1937

your fall costume. Especially if the dress is all black,

The intricate drapfall. right off

venture to the milliner's.

and wear them with a light heart, something for you and not to you.

as it 1s likely to be. Don’t wait for hat fashions to “get set” before you They never will be this You will want several hats, an upturned beret

the bat. Choose them to suit your

Handles on vour hat, or an original means of getting height te the crown, designed by Blanche & Simone.

Mind Your Manners

Test your Knowledge of correct social usage hy answering the following questions, then checking against he authoritative answers below: 1. When does a bride throw her bouquet? 2. Does a bride ever change from her wedding dress into her going away clothes before the reception? 3. May a brides words of thanks for a wedding gift be written on a visiting card? 4. Should the groom's gift to his best man be finer than his gift to his ushers? 5. Who pays for the decorations for a church wedding?

What would vou do it You are a bridegroom wishing to be a real help in wedding preparations (a) Volunteer to address the invitations and announcements going to your own list? (b) Take over plans for the wedding decorations? tc) Keep out of the way?

» Answers

she leaves to ehange for her

» »

1. As her wedding gown traveling dress. 2. No. 3. No. 4. Yes. 5. Bride's father.

Best “What Would You Do” solution—(a) 11 vou write legibly. Otherwise (ec).

(Copyright, 1937. NEA Service. Ine.)

Keep Silver Clean

New and convenient as ‘well as inexpensive receptacles for keeping silver clean and untarnished are envelopes made of oiled silk with a slide fastener closing, inside of which is a bag of treated flannel. Each envelope will hold eight pieces of flat ware and each is labeled clearly on the outside.

Phil Spitalny Weighs Career and

Suzy calls this “Pep-over.” Tt is a brown felt toque with a double brim and a thrush-colored veil

that falls to the shoulders.

Wavs to Remove Facial Wrinkles Are Made Easier

By ALICIA HART NEA Service Staff Writer Satisfactory beauty preparations to keep your skin young-looking and attractive are easy to find these days. If you want to greet fall with smoother, clearer skin and fewer

wrinkles, by all means shop around |

for some of the items experts are recommending. There is, for instance, a hew [night cream that the beauty-mind-led like. Fairly light in texture, this lis to be patted into face and throat after a thorough cleansing, then [left on all night. One jar contains | enough cream for thirty treatments. Naturally, if you follow directions, | using the specified amount of cream, | taking care and time to apply it correctly and leaving it on for at | Teast six hours, you will see results | more quickly than one who uses [it only now and then. Don’t go

Tombo

i ———

y Instincts of Girls

Are Held Aids to Character

By OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON

No longer do the gossips shake | their heads when Nellie rides astride

| her horse, nor do they lower their |

eves when she comes out to play | tennis in shorts. Summer girls poe- | sess two legs, all are aware now, ‘and are proud of it.

are similar these days. They swim {and hike and play ball. They row | and paddle and gallop horses. No one would think of calling these | vigorous young Valkyries tomboys. { They aren’t, because there are ho tomboys any more.

Todav’s Pattern

{around expecting miracles. Simply |

‘get vour cream and use it! How tn Use Cream

After a good old fashioned soap |

and water serubbing, apply the cream, patting vigorously around mouth, across forehead, wherever there are wrinkles and lines. With clockwise strokes, smooth it around | eves, After one month, wrinkles and {lines will be less obvious. But don't stop then. Keep treatments. Also new is a tiny makeup kit to carry in your purse. It—no larger [than one of the fatter lipsticks | contains minute portions of lip | rouge, cleansing and foundation

| | { |

up the nightly!

|

|

| creams and eveshadow. With this, | [it's a simple mattér to do a pret- |

[ty pointments during the day or when traveling.

.

fair makeup job between ap- |

Marriage for Girls—Bets on Man

By PHIL SPITALNY (Written for NEA Service and The Indianapolis Times) h NEW YORK, Aug. 23.—Recently one of the young ladies inh my orchestra occasioned quite a bit of excitement by breaking the three

| year no-marriage clause required in my musicians’ contracts.

will always compete with Career, 1

most cases, it's old man Career who stages a losing battle.

the girls in the oragree with me, but According to our

Thus far, chestra don’t we shall see.

previous agreement, any girl who |

broke the contract by breaking into matrimony automatically lost her position. Thus she forfeited any further profits in the co-operative band. But the three years the orches[tra has been organized have | brought the girls to the conclusion | that a no-marriage clause is too | severe. Since, in .almost every | other question of policy, we work

DEAR JANE JORDAN—I am % |

co-operatively,

my people are very much against, I| marriage clause.

am sure he likes me a lot and I] feel the same way about him; so | we see each other as often as we | can. I believe that IT am old enough | to know ‘what I am doing and I | do not think what I am doing is Please help me. ETHEL MAY. =

wrong.

» LJ

ANSWER—How can I help you when I do not know ‘what your peo- | ple have against the boy? Your parents may be prejudiced, but they may be right—as many another girl | has found to her sorrow. Be careful that in your efforts to break loose |

the majority. guite strongly about it. refused, a certain mutinous look in those usually gentle eyes implied [that they would be firm in their | His emotional power, a factor which | determination to give up even the | orchestra—if it ‘meant giving up [ly to be more highly concentrated | freedom to marry please. But such strong feeling on this point only convinces me more firm- | ly thinking the woman that her mand, after her marriage. In questionnaires thev once filled |

Majority Wins

a group decision cir] almost 17 and for the past year | pode it plain that the girls very have been going with ® boy ‘whom | strongly favored revoking the anti-

suppose, but it's my belief that, in

a

| husband, indicated they would only | do so for a male paragon, possessing almost superhiman qualities. One youthful player, who is how & sure-ehough bride, will make an interesting test case. These are the questions that are uppermost in my mind, now that she has beén reinstated: 1. Am I right in thinking that the attention required by husband, home and in-laws becomes increasingly absorbing? 2. What about the fast that all girls in the orchestra must be prepared to gb on tour at any time for a period of many weeks, il need be, with very little notice?

Not Like Men As married man usually works

So I have bowed to the will of harder at his musical career after

whenever

ever that I'm right that

intensity

than

of interest for

they

nothing can hold

home will com-

Believe me, they felt | marriage, because of his additional If I had | marital responsibilities.

He usually | has less actual outside distraction {in his life than before marriage.

| cannot be too greatly valued, is like-

in his music, since marriage is a | stabilizing influence in the otherwise often nomadic existence of the | male musician. | The emotional power of a female instrumentalist, on the contrary, is | definitely lessened by being divided [ between her interest in art ahd her | determination to make her mar- | riage a success. I hope, for all concerned, that

from parental eontrol, vou are not gut, only six of the girls signified | our young bride will Prove my themore interested in defying your willingness to give ub altogether ory to have many exceptions—but I

parents than in winning the boy.

others,

ein m they

| careers Pr home making. Even the | have niy finpérsueérossed. This is might possibly

one time when I'd feel better if ‘does maie me change my mind.

Cupid |

|

ERE is the

perfect dress to wear between summer fall. Tt will look lovely in town all through the late summer and will see you smartly into fall. Make it of the fabric that Paris has made famous in this dress——silk and rayon jersey that looks fresh and cool and drapes so very easily.

Black and brown are two im-

of the femine figure. Note the becoming low neckline and t

bodice into which the blouse shirred. The waistline is placed a little high and finished ‘with casual belt to emphasize the full flare of the skirt. ‘The tapered front panel in the skirt gives = pleasing slimness to the silhouette. Pattern 8020 is designed for sizes 14, 16, 18, 20, 40 and 42. Size 16 requires 4 yards of 39-inch material with short sleeves. With long sleeves it requires 5 yards. To obtain the patterh and Step-by-Step Sewing Instructions inclose 15 eents in coin together with the above pattern number and your size, your name and address and mail to Pattérn Editor, The Indianapolis

apolis. The fall selection of late dress desighs how is ready. It's 15 cents when purchased separately. Or, if you ‘want to order it ‘with the

30 cents.

Activities of girls’ and boys’ camps |

afMnity | are outstanding

| but herself, and thinks it | Tark to be one of the fellows,

| ing)

| one should

| is she rough. She is usually

However, old Madame Grundy, fearful of losing her job, still has something to say. Just let 2 girl find [ better comrades among boys, go on

a ball team with them, or even cap-

tain it, as in one case, and this is something else again. The ladies,

some of them, think this is odd and |

that this whistling Thomasina will surely come to some bad end. It is all right for a girl to play masculine games with her own pals, but to enter into the male world as one of thém. she must be unbalahead, they think

Admire Straight Not all, Many

Thinking

girls find an in the straight thinking ahd sportiveness of the opposite sex. They often find other girls too easy to beat, if they themselves in strength and There may be a Rosalind who fools nobody a grand but at heart she is still on the other side of the fence and is acting out of cast, Your true

at

speed. now and then

who spends her days with Tom and Ben and Charlie, taking her turn beaching the heavy canoe, or getting up at 4 to help corral the eavy, | is going through a most normal and healthful (emotionally speakterm of existence. There is no reason in the world why anylook over her glasses, and mention what was not done in “hér day.” The tomboy

tomboy

sexless, nor frank honest.

fs not

and above all this in so

and direct, I have noticed

| cases that I think I shall make it

She may offend her sisters by saving that she likes boys better than girls, but in speaking thus, she is talking about the male viewpoint and way of

[ unanimous,

{doing things, rather than personal

attraction. Develops Understanding

hard for the less indewoman to understand, or girl either. She prefers to keep the bars up and be the eternal feminine. This attitude ‘won't

Tt Is pendent

| help her much when she has to

pet out and hustle in the business or professional world. Then she will either have to learn the

[give and take of the sexes, or ory

her eves out every other night

| because someone has forgotten to

he | button-trimmed closing at front of | Is |

nl

whole |

Times, 214 'W. Maryland St,, Indian- |

above, send an waits) 3

and | pe kind. Too bad, but true.

1 do not think that the tomboy will sacrifice any true femininity or gentleness by consorting with her buddies, I fact, I am certain that the true woman never ean change to this extent. By a little rough going in her girlhood, the | wite and mother comes to under-

portant colors for this dress (pat-|cmnd boy and mah nature better; tern 8029), which accents the charm | {5 sympathize where otherwise she

| might be puzzled ahd impatient, (Copyright. 1037 NEA Service, Ine.)

Council Officer - Mav Come Here

Dr. Seeta Parmanand. an assocfate member of the Internatiohal Council of Women, may be brought here for a speaking engagement by the May Wright Sewall Indiana Council of Women, The organization has been advised by its international

soon to be traveling through the United States and would be available for an engagement here. At a recent meeting plans also were made for a breakfast to be held Oct. 21. The council is eon-

nent meta

many |

head- | quarters that Dr. Parmanand is |

Beats Bad

whims

Let them do

Beret toque, created by Martha, in wmidnight blue, felt trimmed with absinthe green velvet. The graceful twist of the forward brim is typical of the manipulation in fall millinery,

Distribution

Contract Problem (Solution in next issue) South's contract is three no trump, After winning the first trick with the club queen, he is permitted to cash two spade tricks in his owh hand. Is there a chance for South to make four no trump and thus excel the score of others who played for the laydown heart game?

(Blind) (Blind)

Dealer AAD YKJE3 ® Al1094 H_hQI02 Duplicate-<None vulnerable

Opener 4

18

Solution to Previous Problem. By W. E. M'’KINNEY American Bridge Deague Seerelary HE wise bridoe plaver is he who Kkhows that enough fis [ enough, If he ean count the trieks | for his game against any distribu- | tion of the adverse ecards, he does not become greedy and begin looking for overtricks, if they imperil the safety of the contract. This is: always true inh rubber | bridge, and even most duplicate players have learned that it fis [ better to be safe than sorry. { Th today's hand the declarer, [with the opening lead can count

[diamonds. He needs four trieks in elubs to MIAN his contract. His | probleth fs thus centered solely [in the play in this one suit | The bidding as given above is [as pood as any. If South opéns | with ohe ho trump, North should

| | {

hAT2 vis ® 1053 ARQJI642

N wv

E

Dealer AaKID3 AQ ® AJA AADSHD Duplicate==All vulnerable South West North East IN. T. Pass 2N.T. Pass 2N.T. Pass Pass Pass Opening lead—W J 16

be PE 0 Ne

| | raise rather than bid two clubs, as his fivescard with the ace for an [entry makes a no trump game [more probable than game in [ minor suit. When South saw the dummy, it was not hard to do his little probJem in mental arithmetic. If the clubs broke two and two and Fast held the ¢lub king, then five club fricks were available, Against this plan of play, which would require the use of dummy’s ace for an entry, there were, how3ver, very sound considerations, There was no assurance that the club suit was evenly divided, nor that Bast held the club king. The player who made his cone tract rightly led a low club to the second trick, and when West failed to follow suit went up with the queen in dummy. Bast won with the king, but South's contract was safe, as he now had no trouble in winning four club tricks,

have assured him of four elub | tricks, had West, not Bast, held all the outstanding olubs, Ree taining the ace was anh essential

feature of the early play to guerd |

against the distribution which we-

tually occurred, (Copyright, 193% NEA Rearvies, The

he

Time Critical Factor in Boiling Corn Properly, Expert States)

corn on the cob hasn't ben up to [snufr, try these methods of preparling it. Experts insist that there are [ just two wavs to boll corn, First Method

Plunge corn into boiling water. [The water will stop boiling. Bring it back to boll, then reduce heat so that water merely simmers, Leave corn in simmering water for from 10 to 15 minutes, Local corn will require only 10 minutes; eorn shipped needs 15 minutes,

Second Method

Boil eorn in husks. Remove all silk from husks and outer leaves. Still wrapped in its owh green leaves, plunge corn into boiling water, Cook as above, only give local corn 15 minutes and distant corn 20 minutes. Add a little sugar to water if extra sweetness is wanted. Sweet, corn combines amiably with green peppers. Try this for proof. Serve it with broiled steak.

Green Peppers and Fresh Corn

(4 to 6 servings) One tablespoon butter, 1 green pepper sliced thin, 2 cups fresh | corn, cooked whd sliced from cob, | 15 sup heavy cream, salt and pepe | por and dash of paprika. | Melt Butter ih frying pan, Add [green pepper. Saute in butter 3 (minutes, Add corh, saute 1 Mmin-

| ute, then turn in cream, Season. | Simmer gently for 5 minutes and

serve piping hot. Corn fritters are necessary | houses of hungry men.

Corn Fritters 4 to 8 servings)

Two eggs, 1 cup cooked oorn, out | from cob and mashed, 5% table-

| spoons flour, '% teaspoon baking

sidering the purchase of a perma-

in|

By MRS, GAYNOR MADDOX NEA Service Staft Welter

If vou are wondering why your |

powder, 1-18 teaspoon nubineg, 2 tablespoons butter for frying, Beat eggs well, Add mashed fresh corn, Sift flour, baking powder and nutmeg together. Add egg and eorn mixture, Combine well, Th frying pah melt 2 tablespoons butter, When very hot, drop ih fritter battér by tablespoons. When brown on one side, turn and brown on other, Serve in small stacks with either a sweet syrup or a light meat sauce,

Sigma Chi's ‘Date’

By United Press BOSTON, Aug. 23.-Sweethearts of Sigma Ohi were numbered in the Hundreds today. A “oupid’s committee” did a land office business as delegates to the fraternity’s 43d bignnial national convention at Boston took advan tage of the committee's offer to arrange “dates” for visiting delegates,

Through a ecard Index, dateless delegates Were given access to names, addresses und telephone numbers of “college widows” Wwish« ing dates. Index cards carried sueh phrases ns: “She's a sweet girl” or "would make a good wife.”

We

With

| The plan of play adopted would | | five tricks in spades, hearts and | p P P

LAA Bins

Rose Valois’ off-the-face beret, in black felt accented by Killare ney green and black felt ribbon,

ee

@

Overcoming Allergies Is Strict Task

Patience and Care Are

Needed to Spot All Trritants,

a i

By DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN Editor, American Medical Journal Fortunately it is possible to de« | sensitize some babies. By eliminating | from the diet all of the foods which [ cause symptoms of allergy and then, | beginning with small amounts of the | food concerned and gradually ine | oreasing the dosage day by day, the ehild may be desensitized. If the child is sensitive to feathers from chickens or geese, pillows [stuffed with these materials should | be removed from its environment, Tn sifeh eases kapok pillows are often substituted, | There are other conditions of the [skin which manifest themselves by | redness or by the development of | inflammations under the skin, sup- [ posedly due to sensitivity, Some | times minute hemorrhages or bleeds | ing into the skin may be associated | with allergy.

| |

“Serum Sickness”

Certain people become sensitive fo serums of animals which are used in the treatment of disease. They | develop a condition ealled “serum siekness” when injected with the serum of a horse. Th this condition there is an eruption on the skin, fever, swelling of the joints and other disturbances. The physician is able to relate (hese symptoms quite definitely to the injection of the gerum

Some people have sick headaches which are quite definitely related to the eating of certain foods, Asso elated with this siek headache there may be colic and diarrhea, People who have these sick headaches are frequently members of families in which there fs a pood deal of allergy, In these forms of sick headaches everything possible must be done by gkin tests and by eliminaMen diets to determine the substance to which the person is sensitive. If he wil then avoid thix substance. he tg not HKelv to have ansther attack

Mouth May Mlister

As has connection

heen mentioned other allargie

already

in with

| the bowels are frequently disturbed

because of the sensitivity, Th some oases the mouth will blister when a food to which the person ix sensitive is eaten,

It fs not certain that a similar effect takes place in the lining of the intestines, but inasmuch as a diarrhea frequently oceurs with the taking of the food concerned, it belfeved that the lining of the ins testines is also sensitive and responds with irritation For all of the formes of allergy it fs necessary to find out first of all the substance to which the person fs sensitive and, second, It Is necesgary to remove that substance, Tha physician may, of course, relieve most of the serious symptoms by thas use of drugs which have speciiia

Bureau Is Rushed

Get Ready for "Fall Activities” A SPECIAL

Croguignole Permanent Complete

end Finger Wave

properties inh controlling itehing, [swelling and other signs of inflam {mation and irritation |

Theta Delta Sigma To Mark Birthday

Beta Chapter, Theta Delta Sigma [| Sorority, is to celabrate {ts first an niversary Sept, 156, with a formal dinner at the Columbia Club Plans for the event were discussed [nt a recent sorority meeting held [in the home of Miss Pat Cleraghty, 270 W. 18th St, Newly elected officers are to be installed following the dinner,

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