Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 January 1938 — Page 9

TUESDAY, JAN. 11, 1988

Attitude of Child Linked

To Training

Emphasis on What They | Deem Important Due to Parents.

By OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON

The pends trained

y on what they to consider important, but | so. One child with | airty hat won't be conscious of | t) II; another will worry be- | doesn't like stickiness: but | will run and wash off he spoil things he|

largely

not altogether em at cause he still another the muck touches T was calling on a friend once who had asked me in to see the children’s Christmas tree. One small girl, fussing about under the branches, | knocked off a glass ball. A lovely big blue one, now it was a HumptyDumpty wreck on the floor. Her mother started to say something about prettiest ornament | of all being lost, but Joan, not yet | 9, said quickly, “I'll clean it up.| mother.” She got a small broom and | a big dustpan. She went about sweeping up the fragments as carefully and thoroughly as an experienced housewife, I was charmed at the way she circled the mess, gently urging the tiny scraps into a neat pile and then edging them over onto the pan. Such a tidy child, she should be put into a poem like Goody Two Shoes or something.

lest

the

Big Sister's Reaction

Her sister came in then and began to wail because the heavenly | blue ball had met its end. | ‘The prettiest one on all the! tree,” she cried. “You would have to spoil my favorite ornament.” i Would Dorothy have swept it up | 18 quickly and quietly as Joan?” I had to ask later, when the chil- | dren had left. And their mother said, “I wondered if you noticed. No, she wouldn't. She would have fussed and carried on, but someone else would have had to pick up the pieces. The girls are so unlike, although there is only a year and a half difference in their ages. “When Dorothy was very we lived with my mother. Deorothy did not me worry about keeping things nice, and besides, she was not with me so much. Joan has been my constant companion | since we started housekeeping by ourselves, and she has been ‘conditioned,’ I guess you call it, to order and helping to keep things neat. Imitative Effort She copied me and now it is secnature. She went and got her broom, right away, instead of stopping to think of any loss, as you noticed. Dorothy is learning, but she never will be as responsible about the house as her little sister. “It is fine, but natural for such a little child to housekeep,” I said. “She is like Dave's mother, a good bit, so I think she inherits it partly, but isn't it interesting how | children differ in their attitudes to | things?” | It stayed in my mind. I am passing it along to other parents. | 'o understand a child, isn't it wise to observe these attitudes? We cannot weigh one with the same scales we use for another. They are different in the way they look at things. Even conditioning won't have the identical results. We could not standardize all children even if every minute of every day were duplicated in their handling.

New Members of Auxiliary Feted|

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New members of the Indianapolis | Day Nursery Auxiliary were feted at a luncheon today in the Woodstock Club.

Mrs. James T. Cunnitkham was hostess. Mrs. Cunningham, a member of the nursery home board, was instrumental in soliciting the aid cf a group of younger women in the nursery work. Attending were Mesdames Joseph L. Hanna, Howard W. Fieber, John Bruhn, Marvin Lugar. Robert Rhodehamel, Walter C. Hiser, Dana L. Jones, Edwin Ransburg, Leroy Gordner, Wendell M. Hicks. Addison Howe, and the Misses Marjorie Crull. Jean Engelke, Margaret Anne Clippinger, Lucy Ann Balch. Jane Snyder, Betty Messick, Barbara Fowler, Margaret Millikan, Mary Elam and Marv Luten.

Mrs. Austin Brown Is Hostess at Tea

4401 N. vesterday meeting and tea he Progressive Club. Mrs. Thor G. Wesenberg spoke on “St. Theresa of Avila and Indianapolis.” Officers of the club ine clude Mrs. James F. Carroll, president; Mrs. Charles Latham, secretary; Mrs. Noble Dean, treasurer, and Mrs. Robert A. Hendrickson,

Austin H. Brown. St, was hostess m. for a

" N e

“attitude” of children de- | are |

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

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? AR

Never serve candy, nuts or pickles at the tea table—only breads and cakes! That's a cardinal rule of etiquette often discussed on her air talks by Emily Post. who personally arranged the setting of the formal tea table pictured above, in her own |

Serve Only Bread and Cakes at Tea |

home. At one end of the table is the entire tea | service on a large tray, and at the other end a bowl of fruit punch. Plates are stacked with napkins between each one in sandwich fashion. Flowers and candelabra add a festive note.

Roast Meat And Candied Yams Good

Corn Pones Add—It’s Just an Old Southern Custom Writer Says.

By MRS. GAYNOR MADDOX Roast meat with barbecue sauce {and candied yams or corn pones— | well, - that’s just an old Southern custom. Barbecue Sauce (For 6 to 10 persons) One pound butter, 3 lemons, 1 teaspoon catsup, 2 tablespoons Worcestershire sauce, !: teaspoon tabasco sauce, 1 clove garlic, 34 teaspoon salt. Rub the large kettle with the garlic, then throw garlic away. Combine all the other ingredients, heat thoroughly and baste meat with the sauce. Hot? Very, but that's what a genuine barbecue sauce is suposed to be. Candied Yams (4 to 6 servings) (Use very ripe and yellow sweet | potatoes if you cannot get yams.) Six medium sized potatoes, 4 | nutmeg, grated, 1 cup hot water, + cup sugar, 4 tablespoons butter, Peel and slice potatoes. Arrange in layers in baking dish, sprinkling each layer with sugar and nutmeg and dotting with butter. Add hot water, cover and bake slowly until

tender and “candied.” Uncover last

: Todav’s Pattern |

| Parent-Teacher Notes

quarter of baking.

Corn Pones (4 to 6 servings)

One cup cornmeal, 1 teaspoon

3 3 8 | - 8 | Ne@0 od aR

$ -

| >

The Parent Education group of Schoo! 80 is to meet at 1:30 p. m. tomorrow. F. O. Belzer, Boy Scout executive, is to talk on “Recreation and Character Building.” 2

R { 4 / X

s William A. Evans, director of Pub- |

at A

“Safety and Civics” at 2 p. m. tomorrow.

{ school pupils. and music is to be | provided by the Intermediate

Chorus.

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to address patrons of School 84 at 2 p. m. tomorrow.

at Ethel Crawford is to talk on “De. | Wide. linquency.” tat ae cc + lications and Safety, is to talk on | be presented by Mrs. Selma Harry (J. L. Coleman to W ed School 82 | and Mrs. Georgia Dodson is to read. program | The junior high school chorus is is to be presented by junior high | to sing.

8031 LJ Le

OING housework is no excuse for not looking neat and attractive, so make up design 8037 to chore around in. The dainty shoulder yoke is softly draped at the bodice, to look well and be comfortable in your work-time hours. Ricrac braid trimming, an old fashion revived this season for casual dresses, lends distinction. If you would like to keep your dress more formal for cold weather, eliminate the pockets and make long sleeves. Choose one of the pretty rayon prints, bright cottons or rayon spun jerseys for this practical dress. Pattern 8037 is designed for sizes 14, 16, 18, 20, 40, 42 and 44. Size 16 requires 43% yards of 39 inch material with short sleeves and 3% yards of ricrac braid. 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.

School 87 Association is to meet | sheets in hot oven. Makes 3 cakes

Sergt. A. C. Magenheimer is to | ment of their daughter Paulyne, to talk on “Safety” at School 9 at|John L. Coleman, son of Mr. and 3:15 p. m. Mrs. Marion F. Gallup, Indiana | dren are to present several musical | riage is to take place in the early Women's Prison superintendent, is 'selections.

The loudest 7.

‘bride ever spoke!

Even after such throattaxing scenes, ANN SOTHERN

salt, 5 cup milk, 2 tablespoons fat, i teaspoon soda. Mix meal and salt. Add soda to milk, then add milk to meal mixture. Mix well,

: then add melted fat. Bake on

= »

3:15 p. m. tomorrow. Mrs. about 3 inches long and 2 inches

Vocal selections are to

Miss Paulyne Hedges

Mr. and Mrs. David W. Hedges,

» 345 E. 33d St., announce the engage-

tomorrow, The chil-| Mrs, Lewis A. Coleman. The mar-

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1. “WHEN | FIRST READ the script of the new RKORadio picture—‘She’s Got Everything’,” says Ann Sothern, ‘‘one scene particularly appealed to me— where the girl gets married on a jolting truck...Well, that scene turned out to be a knockout. But, for me, as the actress...

4.”NOW AS REGARDS TOBACCO...The flavor of Luckies has always appealed to me so much, I simply concluded they must be made of better tobacco. So I was very much interested to read recently that Luckies are the favorite cigarette with the tobacco experts themselves.”

2.”IT WAS A KNOCKOUT in a different sense! Imagine shouting your ‘I do’s’ above the noise of a truck. . . and imagine going through such a scene not once, but 30 different times before all the mechanical details were right! Yet, even after this unusual throat strain...

S5.TOBACCO AUCTIONS MOVE at lightning speed. Auctioneers, buyers, warehousemen and other experts must be able to judge the quality of tobacco at a glance. So here's a fact that speaks volumes...Sworn

3.”1 STILL ENJOYED MY LUCKIES! In fact, Luckies arealways gentle tomy throat. Others at the RKO= Radio studios agree with me on this—Barbara Stanwyck and Herbert Marshall, for example.” (Reason: the exclusive ‘‘Toasting’’ process takes out certain throat irritants found in all tobacco.)

records show that, among inde« ndent tobacco experts, Luckies ave over twice as many exclusive

smokers as have all other cigarettes combined. With men who know tobacco

t...it's Luckies 2 to 1s

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