Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 March 1938 — Page 7
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-' By OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON
‘to let little children put in time
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.- It is something we all need as long
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2-Year-0Old Is Half Child, Half Inf ant
Play of Youngsters Under Six Is Sometimes eglected.
We have a way of thinking that children of _iwo are babies, and so they are. Yhere: is no visible dividing line between babyhood and «young childhood. The weeks pass evenly, and,. mother, you won't see ‘much difference after the birthday cake has proudly been topped -by twin randles. | > Yet in your mind there is a certain relief. Jackie is able to play by himself more; he can do things for himself, and his diet is becoming sb general that you think of him as a great big fellow who may be treated as a child and not as an ‘infant. You are right, in many ways, and it is fine to let him do as many things for himself as he can. But there is danger in our confidence, because he will appear older than he is. I once heard a child specialist call the period between 2 and 6 “the neglected age.” It sounds a bit critical, but he did not intend to convey that idea. The basis of his remarks is the fact that busy mothers are inclined
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the best way they can up to school age. I doh’t see how it can be helped much, at that, but possibly a little light on the subject may reveal some things. Tiny children are very ‘suggestible.” They do better when mother says, “Let ‘us’ do so and so,” than when we say, “You do this or that.” At two or three they are not yet able completely to separate their personalities from those of their mothers. ‘We have to wait a little longer for this. They love to cooperate, and take pride in pleasing. They understand “no” better than a positive order. Please don’t smile at this, because it doesn’t quite click with our Jackie deliberately pulling the pansy after -you have said, “No, you mustn't touch the pretty flower, darling.” He won't always waht to, obey the negative commands, but he will understand them better than the othe? kind. “It’s bedtime, so be quiet and go to sleep,” may fail two times out of four, but the other type of order will fail less often because that is the way he is made. Work “with” him rather than against him... When he has the feeling that it is a co-operative society instead of a divided affair with you on one side and himself on the other, hell try harder to please. He loves praise and this is a splendid way to bribe him. Praise is a wonderful ,ally of the mother.
as we live, but it is particularly effective during young childhood. From 2 to 6, character is formed, never to be quite changed. It is the age of trying, experimenting and making mistakes. Too often it is mistaken for the naughty age;. because reason is not yet sufficiently
NESDAY, MARCH2 1088. Star Wears Wool Crepe Suit
developed to act as a guide.
Merle Oberon, Hollywood film star, wears a plain maize colored wool "crepe suit for spring. The ensemble is accented by the square of striking ocelot at the front of the jacket with harmonious notes in the ocelot
cap and gloves.
5
State P.-T.. A. Convention to Hear National Rural Service Head
Dr. William McKinley Robinson, Western State Teachers College faculty member, Kalamazoo, Mich., will address the Indiana Congress of Parents and Teachers state convention April 26-28 at the Claypool Hotel.
Dr. Robinson is rural service chairman of the National Congress. Governor Clifford M. Townsend will greet the delegates. The conference will open with an informal dinner directed by Mrs. James Kirvin, Ft. Wayne, chairman of the national P.-T. A. magazine. Silver cups are to be awarded to the association having the most subscriptions. Mrs. Ulen ' Hall, Scottsburg, music chairman, is to present a skit. Miss Marion Telford, safety chairman, will Tuesday’s meeting and Dr. ; . Knight of the Purdue University psychology department will appear on Wednesday’s program. “Adjusting the individual to
national
TODAY'S
Ny J 1g you simply must have * is a jaeket costume that
PATTERN
goes smartly to bridge club, meetings and luncheons and yet is not too dressy for general street wear, too. Pattern 8042 is exactly the type you want, and you can make it so easily. It has everything to make it styleright and becoming— casual, feminine lines, - smooth
. | shoulders in the jacket, soft drap-
ing at the bodice in the dress. No-
tice that it is made with the new lifted waistline and fullness over the bust, that combine for perfect flattery. This design makes up successfully in lightweight wool or in silk crepe, which ever you prefer, and the bodice top may be in contrasting fabric or color. Pattern 8042 is designed for sizes 34, 36, 38, 40, 42, 44 and 46. In size 36, the dress requires 23 yards of 39-inch material, plus 13 yards contrasting. The jacket requires 2% yards of 38-inch material. 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.
11 Girls Are Initiated By Butler Sororities
Eleven Butler University sorority pledges were recently initiated. Miss Faye Mendenhall and Miss Marjorie Scarborough became members of Zeta Tau Alpha Sorority and the Misses Miriam Dunkin, Eileen Sweeney, Eloise Foreman, Winona Watson, Mary Bell, Betty Jane Mock, Dorothy Jones, Rese Myers and Dorotha: James were initiated into Delta Delta Delta So-
rority.
(
joy them in your home, anytime!
SNOW WHITE
‘and THE SEVEN DWARFS .. . on
RCA VICTOR RECORDS
t of three 10-inch records - cludes Whistle While You Work Bho,” mile sid 4 Son "nie Prince Will Come . 1) Dig-a.Dig Digi... Song.
2d
$ SHEET MUSIC
Five of the best loved “Snow White” « songs for the children to ay and .
"35¢
Each, or 3 for $1 Lincoln 5518.
|-.mond, publications
Mrs. Fred M. Raychairman for will
tion theme.
the speak.
national organization,
few cents a day
A constant, never-failing supply of hot hot water is an inexpensive luxury with an automatic gas water heater. It costs the average family in Indianapolis less than six cents a day.
piping hot without wasting effort or gas. Monthly payments on a modern automatic gas water heater are as low $1.66
ye
PRES C23 CR OIN)
IX RF)
Group Living” is to be the conven-
Then Try This
- By MRS. GAYNOR Any self-respecting fish is quite firm on the flesh does not yield to the pressure of the finger, but is rigid and firm, |§ then all’s well on the waterfront. When you buy a whole fish, look it |] straight in the eyes—tihey should be bright and not weary for customers. The scales of a fresh fish are free from any discoloration, |i cling to the skin and do not come off to easily.
HY AS
rictly
MADDOX
gives a lemon sole suggestion to panish the Lenten blues. But if you can’t catch a lemon sole, then have four fillets of halibut in your kitchen and use them in the St. Regis manner. ; Iridium Room Sole Mornay (Serves. 4) One lemon ‘sole (2 pounds) or 4 large fillets of halibut, salt, pepper, white paper, 1 cup heavy cream, grated Parmesan cheese, cayenne. Trim fillets and use trimming to
Season fillets with salt and pepper. Place in baking dish. Cover with fish broth. Cover with buttered sheet of paper.. Bake in.moderate oven (350 degrees F.) until tender. Remove fillets’ to hot oven-proof platter and keep hot in oven. To
liquid from baking dish add cream
——PEARSO! | Announce | Sensation.
1938 GIBSO
The St. Regis Hotel in New Yorke gis o (and
make broth. Butter a baking dish.
cook down. Add 1 table-
St. Regis Menu
with waiting |{
the matter of being fresh. If | 3
spoon butter and 1 tablespoon Par- [i
mesan cheese. Continue to cook
until it begins to thicken, stirring |}
with wire whip all the time. Season |=
with salt, pepper, and a shake of |} Pour over the hot fillets. |;
cayenne. Sprinkle with grated cheese and run under broiler just long enough to brown the cheese. By varying your Lenten fish menus you can save money, experts of the Blireau of Fisheries say. The less common varieties of fish are lower in cost than the higher-priced staple sea products. Along the coast, and often inland, you can buy hake, mackerel, red snapper, grouper, and channel bass. Pilchard (California) sardine, South Atlantic crab and Great Lakes burbot are a few sectional specalities. :
S
Moorefield Photo. Mr. and Mrs. W. G, Gingery announce the engagement of their daughter, Ruth, to Donald Leukhardt, son of Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Leukhardt. Miss Gingery atterid-
ed Butler and DePauw Univer sities. .
try to find time to:
Sh do it in the morning right after the children leave for school, coax waves into place, then wrap a piece of clean cotton gauze lightly around head, letting hair dry while she goes about the morning’s tasks.
Use Hand Lotion
Use hand lotion after each dishwashing session. (Incidentally, if you rub lotion into hands and wrists before you start cleaning and dusting, the accumulated dirt on palms and fingertips will wash away more easily when the work is done. Also, before beginning any unusually dirty task, it’s a good idea to. dig fingernails into a cake of soap. Afterward, remove soap and dust with a little nail brush.) Take a warm bath every day. (The busiest women attend to this little detail late in the afternoon—
| Busy Housewives Are Warned Not to Ignore Personal Tidiness io) i By ALICIA HART doa her i Li Hole and 0 ay ought vs
Brush her hair for two minutes every night before going to bed. ampoo once a week. She can®—
generally just before supper has to be prepared.) .
Pickup Facials
Treat face and throat to a pickAp facial one night a week. (Simply spend one full hour cleansing skin carefully, applying & mask, either a homemade or a commerrially prepared one, letting it dry, smoothing on nourishing cream, then patting it in) Use regularly one preparation to cure whatever special skin defect she happens to have.
Mrs. Levin to Entertain Mrs. Eph Levin, 240 Blue Ridge Road, is to be dinner hostess at €
p. m. tomorrow to 1936 Worthy Matrons, O. E. S., District 11. Mrs. Henry Huggler is to be assistant hostess.
a Refrigeration
.. The New
-
~
CONTROLLED AIR CIRCULATION maintains delicious
fresh food flavors:
MORE FOOD CAPACITY ... No awkward flat drip tray to waste
food space! Instead, Gibson's lit-
tle Defrostajar. When not defrosting, use it for eggs.
TRIPLE-SEALED . . . Balsam
Wool insulation between
a l=
walls defeats heat-carrying, condensed moisture!
Not 3, 4 Nor 5 | Cubic Feet, But Our
EXTRA BIG 6 Ft. Model
Feature for feature, dollar for dollar, the new 1938 Gibson challenges comparison with ANY and EVERY electric refrigerator in the land. It’s soundly engineered, ruggedly built and priced closer than you would ever believe possible. It’s BIG and ROOMY, ample food storage space and ice making capacity for a family of 5 or 6 persons, EXCLUSIVELY AT PEARSON’S
/
es
Compare Before LT hate al Vo ack. COMPARE! COMPARE
for your pocketbook Gibson's low ‘and small operating expense. COMPARE its
. graceful, streamlined Beauty, its p
ord of dependability. Learn all
“many advantages of ‘the Gibson Freez'r Shelf, a feature found in no other electric refrig-. srator at any price. |
You'll Want the Refrigerator With This New and Exclusive Feature
The FREEZ'R SHELF . .. Only GIBSON Hous It
Don't be fooled by "cubic footage." * Thanks to the FREEZ'R SHELF GIBSON gives you l/3 to 3 MORE SQUARE FEET of usable food space. The Freez'r S helf eliminates the ordinary space-wasting droppeddown freezing unit and its big square drip fray. More ice, Desse
- FREEZ'R SHELF.
rt and Cold Storage Capacity with
ILLUMINATED CONTROL DIAL . «+ You see all 13 available food temperatures; You have the right current saving degree of cold ‘at your finger touch!
ELBOW HIGH HALF SHELF . .. Things you use frequently
come to hand easily here.
SEALED MONOUNIT . . . Only 3 moving parts and .it's over-pow-ered—runs !/, as long as most of the others, has ample capacity
for the hottest days!
7 7 7
| . Come first cost Y ;
roven recabout the
~
QL
You Buy! in Now! See Tomorrow's Refrigerator Today!
All PEARSON ‘Branch Stores Feature the New Gibson
There are Pearson Stores in ELKHART . . . GOSHEN . . . KOKOMO . . . ANDERSON “'e'« » MUNCIE . . . RUSHVILLE . . . RICH- .
- MOND . .. NEWCASTLE and FT. WAYNE.
y PENNSYLVANIA + + + Open Every E nie Wash... Open Monday and Friday Eves. », LI-4687 |
RY
ve... .. LIS5I3
