Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 February 1938 — Page 7
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Quins—A Winter's Tale That's No Fairy Story in Dionneville
TUESDAY, FEB. § 1088
Snow ‘White and the
Pive laughing little snow-maidens these wintry days are the
Dionne quintuplets.
Fur collars turned up around their necks, ‘woolen
helmets tight on their heads, they are ready for frolic every time
snow fills the air. and Marie in the center.
That's Emilie, smiling at left, then grave Yvonne, Annette is the next one and that's Cecile
who rolls such a roguish pair of eyes at right,
———————————————
Raising a Family
Present Day
- - Clubs
Four Latreian groups
The |
ISS TE TN pp EE ieD 2
have |
NEA Service, In
MAIN
OAD TQ R LANDER: 0
OBSLRVA CAULERY
Children Are
rig programs for today. ha Beta group will meet with | | Mra Russell E. Clift, 923 E. 57th |
Like Parents
Environment Is Reason For Apparent Difference, Writer Says.
(Eighth of a Series)
By OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON “Don’t you think that children are different?” remark many motiners today.
When I ask just what they mean |
vary as much as crossword puzzles. One mother is shocked because “they” know so much about biology and discuss reproduction as calmly as the latest movie, “Oh, I don't know exactly, but I think they expect the earth. They seem to know it all, but they won't hustle the way we used to,” says another, A third informs me that her 9-year-old hoy told her one day to go ahead and get a divorce, if she and his father were going to fuss s0 much. “Really, we were only arguing about painting the house, and we were not quarreling at all. But | Allen said it in a way that startled us both. He acted as though it would be all right with him, that's what worries me. He didn’t know what it would mean to him but I hate these cool comments.”
Parents Are Baffled I could go on, hearing the refrain | as often as I do, stating case after | case of mothers who are trying to understand their amaging modern offspring. They cannot quite put into words their secret fears and disapointments.
by this, replies
Well, children are not different, I!
but times are. You can train a boy | or girl any way you wish, almost, but naturally they are products of environment, and today’s environment is quite a study. I believe that the so-called “old fashioned” home, with the family working happily and sympathetically together, is still the best influence we have. Perhaps parents make mistakes, and many to a disastrous degree, but give me the heartsome home with everybody plugging for a common cause, to combat any and all influences that fills the air, Mother Main Hope Today's mother has a pretty tough time of it, trying to keep up with her children, to begin with. Ada to this her distress | about the scientific training that | she. cannot quite grasp. She is led around by this idealist and that, telling her what to do, only to read in her newer book, that Professor | Thus-and-So has refuted the discovery of his colleague, other way is better, end, really. She tries to go on baking her | cakes, mending the clothes and | sending her family out into the] world, nicely fed and looking decent, as well as keeping herself as later that the children are not interested particularly in home or its people. Forces are carrying them along on a tide she cahnot control. terfere with freedom and independence, but she feels that all this outside life of her children's leaves her pretty well out of it all. I tell her here, to go right along trying. She is almost the last hope we have against a tide that seems to have no real direction or identified future, She need not understand all there is to know about “idealistic” goals. If she understands her children in a measure, and can keep them going, this is her part. It is the best part of all.
NEXT—How is your neighbor. hood?
and |
and some | There is no|
modern as possible, to discover |
She does not want to in-|
St. Mrs. Paul D. Whittemore is to be assistant hostess. Miss Grace L. Brown, | tendent of the Indianapolis Free | Kindergarten Society, is to speak lon “Health and the Preschool | Child” at a meeting of the Alpha | Kappa Latreian Club with Mrs. F. J. Miller, 4634 College Ave, “Your Horoscope” is to be Miss Christine Houseman’s topic at the Alpha unit's meeting with Mrs. William Horn. The Alpha Eta La- | trefan Club is to meet with Mrs, P. F. Holton. Mrs. Austin V. Clifford will speak on “The Juvenile Court.” » » Three chapters of the P, E O. Sisterhood will meet today. Mrs. (J. A. Crewes is to be hostess to
Chapter U., Mrs, S. N. Nail will be assistant hostess and Miss Catherine Smith and Mrs. P. T. Schaeffer are arranging the program. Chapter S will meet with Mr. R. K. Lewis, 5009 Park Ave. Mrs. Don Long and Mrs. B. L. Tamneéy are program cochairmen. Mrs, E. C. Hall is to speak on “The Study of the Constitution” at a meeting of Chapter W with Mrs. Corlie BE. Jackson, 245 W, Ma- | ple Road,
n » nN | Members of three mothers’ clubs from the Indianapolis Free Kinof dergurten units are planning programs for today. The Garfield | Park Mothers Club will meet at the Kindergarten. Brown will speak. “Art for Today's Child” is to be the topic of Dale Bessire at a meeting of the Broad | Ripple Mothers’ Club this afternoon. The Mothers’ Club of the | Pall Creek Kindergarten is to hear Dr. Herman G. Morgan speak on “Building for Health.” A treasurer | and corresponding secretary are | to be elected. | ” n »
| Mrs, Charles A. Pfaffiin is to
| speak on “The Lobo Trail” at a meeting of the Fortnightly Club today in the Propylaesum. Mrs. Alexander A. Taggart is to talk on “Western Horizon.” » » ~ Mrs. D. E. Kramer will be hostess to the Irvington Chautauqua Club today at her home, 5527 University Ave. Mrs, William H. Frosch is to speak on “The End of an Age” and Mrs. Max Oritch- [ field will discuss “Love and Mar- | riage.”
|
{ » » » | Mrs. G. T. Doyal will be hostess ® the Amicitia Club at her home, 1518 Edgemont Ave. » »
»
Mrs. R. E. Coleman will entertain members of the Ephamar Literary | Club at a luncheon tomorrow. Mrs. Cora M. Raber and Mrs. Floyd | Hughett are to assist. The program is being arranged by Mesdames | Laura Craig Poland, Anthony PF. ( Shaffer and Effie Hill,
» » » Mrs. BE. D. Cummings is to speak on “Americanism” at a meeting of the Minerva Club tomorrow | with Mrs, George W. Dyer, 957 W, 33d St.
Mrs. Dowd to Dine With Mrs. Roosevelt
Mrs. Frank T. Dowd, 12th District Democratic vice chairman, is to be the guest of Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt at luncheon tomorrow at the White House. Mr. and Mrs. Dowd and their daughters, Rose and Margaret, motored to Washington. They will visit friends in Philadelphia and in Caldwell and Newark, N, J. before returning home.
Scalloped Ham,
Kidney Saute
Tasty Menus With Easy Work
By MRS. GAYNOR MADDOX NEA Staff Writer
Here's a good eating without kitchen slavery.
these recipes are the answer.
For the | * "» meal
SCALLOPED HAM ON TOAST
(4 servi
ngs)
One and one-quarter tablespoons butter, 1'4 tablespoons flour, 1% cups milk, 2 cups chopped cooked ham, 5 cup chopped green pepper,
cup fine bread crumbs, salt pepper, 6 pieces toast. Melt butter in saucepan, stir in flour. Slowly add milk and stir until it thickens. Add chopped ham and minced peppers. Season to taste, adding a suspicion of dry mustard if you- like its flavor. Mix all ingredients well and simmer until creamy and smooth. Toast 6 slices bread. Cover each slice with ham mixture. Dust with bread crumbs and dot with butter, Run under broiler long enough to brown crumbs. Garnish each slice with sprig of erisp watercress. Serve very hot. Kidney Saute on Toast
(4 servings)
Two beef kidneys, 2 tablespoons . but
and®
2% tablespoons flour, 2 cups | thin, 1 teaspoon minted onion,
\ 1 teaspoon chopped parsley, 1 thalespoon lemon juice, salt and pepper, 1, teaspoon worcestershire sauce, whole wheat toast.
Slice kidneys very thin and cut off all white part. Boil gently in salted water % hour. Drain, rinse in cold water. Dry carefully. Melt 2 tablespoons butter in saucepan, Add kidneys. Fry gently for 4 minutes, stirring gently. Re- | move kidneys from butter, add 1 tablespoon more and stir in flour, [mix well, then slowly stir in cold water. Blend thoroughly. Add onion, parsley, lemon juice and seasoning. turn kidneys to saucepan and simmer until hot. Add Worcsdtezshire at last. Serve on
superin- |
Dr. Frances T.
of ‘whole |
Except when slight colds have interrupted the regular routine, every morning and afternoon finds the five rosy-cheeked little girls tobogganing, skiing, snowshoeing in the open air. Usually they wait until shortly before noon, when the weather “warms up’--almost to zero. These outdoor sports, in which the quins join with noisy enthusfasm, have been a photographer's | paradise as well, and have brought |
What's what and where in Dionneville, The artist's sketch above, drawn from the airplane photo, shows the use of the buildings and features of the quins’ winter surroundings. The toboggan chute--the little girls’ favorite—is built in the play yard surrounded by the observation gallery. Despite wintry weather, visitors still come daily to see the quins at play.
CALLANDER, Ontario, Feb. 8.-| quintuplets’ neighborhood (NEA)—Real winter, with tempera- | wim pg wil Spruce bree rk gre r a spr ) tures miiing so 30 depreas below | oy the expanse of glaring white zero and with a continuous blanket | snow, almost unbroken save for
of snow, has turhed the Dionne | main roads or trails.
I ————— ar a —— —
into a
Here's a true winter wonderland, Dionneville seen from a plane, in | the first air-photo to be made of the enlarged grounds and buildings | where the quintuplets live their happy lives. The white mantle of snow has covered the ground all winter, giving full opportunity for
| pietures of
(C 9
outdoor sports,
created by the main road.
out some of the most appealing the quintuplets ever taken. Some of the best of Hien |
will appear tomorrow and the day following in The Indianapolis | Times. On days when it Is too cold for |
making a picture,
electric before they would | operate, tice the cold at all, From their
| earliest days they have been ace
pads
from Callander, the quints will be | out of doors, out rolling in the show and squeal= | ing with delight at one prank after | another
One day recently movie men were
nursery plant is located offers plenty of opportunity for
sports and play. Between the nur
Their cameras froze and had to be kept warm with |
The five-acre tract on which the |
|
but the quins did not no-|
| visitors to travel the crackling road A Customed to sleeping and playing |
| {
wintei tures
” hy ALL Ni iA
orvica
Devoted entirely to the guiny are the buildings and a fivesncre tract lying nearest the camera from the dividing-line Nun and shadows on the daseling white show bring out the winter glory of the quins’ home and playground,
ery and the play yard Is a nies slope for sledding and skiing, good practice for the toboggan run bull inside the play yard. Behind the nursery a tiny stream gurgles along under the ice, and a fir grove beckons. Tomorrow's pictures will show the quins playing on their spes= cially built toboggan slide, and on the following day there will be pies of one of the little girls
frolicking around on snowshoes Li
REG CARRINGTON ASKS COMMANDER ELLSBERG:
‘Gan you tell a
Real
Difference
hetween Camels and other cigarettes?”
“Absolutely!” says Commander Edward
REG CARRINGTON: “I see you're
Camel smoker, Commander, There really isn’t any difference in cigarettes, is there?”
COMMANDER ELLSBERG: "You're dead wrong, Reg. The life of a deep. sea diver is tougher on a man than most work. Most of the divers | know are steady Camel smokers and, believe me, they know there's a difference. Take my own case, for example, I stick to Camels—have smoked "em for ten years. They never get on my nerves, Smoking Camels, I feel that I enjoy life more, Camel is the cigarette that agrees with me.”
a steady
Elisberg. And millions of other steady smokers agree that Camels have what they
want. They know there is a distinct differonce in Camels. That's why Camels are the largest-selling cigarette in the world.
¥ A MAN OF ACTION! (right) Commander Ells 7 berg was the first man 73 to dive to a depth of J 20 fathoms, He shares undersea danger with his men. He says: "The last thing a diver does before going down und the first thing after comingup=is tosmoke a Camel, In work like this, men really appreciate the way Camels hit the spot.”
CLUB-ROOM CONVERSATION (above) so often swings around to cigarettes un interesting topic to smokers generally. “I can tell the difference in Camels,” Commander Ellsberg says. “That famous saying, ‘I'd walk a mile for a Camel!’ expresses how enthusiastic I am about Camels myself. Camels have such an appealing flavor.”
CAMEL PAYS MILLIONS MORE FOR COSTLIER TOBACCOS! Camels are a matchless blend of finer, MORE EXPENSIVE TOBACCOS = Turkish and Domestic.
PEOPLE DO APPRECIATE THE
COSTLIER TOBACCOS
IN CAMELS
THEY ARE
LARGEST-SELLING
CIGAR
gil
CREE AY UA Ne
NEW DOUBLE-FEATURE CAMEL CARAVAN
Two great shows—"Jack Oakie College” and Benny Goodman's "Swing School” «in one fast, fun-filled hour. On the air every Tuesday night st 9:30 pm E.S.T, 8:30 pm C.8.T, 7:30 pm i 6:30 i. P.S.T., over WABC-Columbia Network.
ONE SMOKER TELLS ANOTHER
OF COURSE an Annapolis man likes to sail! (right) Here's Commander Ells berg enjoying his favorite sport=-small-boat sailing. And Camels are right be side him! “Camels fit in with my leisurchours, too,” he says. “It's only common sense that a cigarette made from such choice tobaccos would be a mild, tasty smoke, I've never known Camels to jangle my nerves. That means a lot=-because I smoke a lot!”
THE ELLSBERG TORCH (left), an invention of Commander Edward Ells» berg. Imagine the long hours of research he put in on this successful in. vention! Ellsherg is used to fatigue. He says of Camels: "I've found that smoking a Camel after an hour under water=or any tour of duty gives me a quick “life,”
Camels agree with me
