Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 August 1938 — Page 7
WEDNESDAY, AUG. 10, 1938 __
3 New F ashions i
Friends of Boy Chosen
For Variety | §
Parents Should Not Worry Over Possible Bad Influence.
‘By OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON
‘Parents often worry about the influence of young friends upon their children. There is Sandy, for instance, who. hoots “and. belittles everything our Fred does. Fred is _ forever trying to show Sandy that he isn’t afraid. And thus Fred gels inte trouble. © Then there is Carver, who is always so cross and demanding. Fred runs his legs off trying to please the bigger and older boy. Nothing pleases this sore-head of a child, but. because he is a grade ahead, Fred would rather have a kind word from him than eat his dinner. Another thorn in our thumbs is _ Art. Art is a giggler who never ~ takes anything seriously. He likes to call our Frederick a sissy, when Fred is trying to study or runs in to change his muddy shoes.
Others Are Still Worse “What's the use?” giggles, Art. “You are the fussiest person I ever saw. You're always trying to please somebody. Take it easy, the way I do. Let the rest of them worry.” The worst of Art is that he is kind
under it all and has gotten a good grip on our son’s affections by lug- : ging home his books when he has an errand to do, or giving him a - place in the new club. He does things himself for people, but he jeers when his cronies try to please.
There are others, of course. Gerald,
is jealous. Mort is calculating, and uses other people's belongings to further his own ends, Eddie is a boss and cracks a mean whip. Eddie is a born manager, but we fear that
he is robbing our Fred of initiative
‘and leadership. Here, on the face of it, appears to be a hopeless array of impossible applicants for the boy’s friendship, but for some reason or other he takes glory and pride in them all. They are his crowd and he refuses to see what we see. He is unhappy part of the time, but right carefree and normal for most of it.
He Likes Them All
We try to open his eyes, but he goes to bat every time for each of his friends. What a boy, we think
impatiently. So blind he can’t see..
Stubborn as a‘ mule when we attempt to show him that he should take sides on his own account and stand up for himself. Little by little our Fred is learn- - ning the daily struggle more than we- may think. Unless he ‘is completely spineless, he will learn to resist the extremes of relationship, because his sénse of justice will stand only so much. He sees other boys resenting certain mannerisms and he will learn more from them than from us. And. perhaps our Fred has a besetting sin also. We might be surprised at another mother’s opinion.
Today’s Pattern
The correctness of sweater-and-skirt for campus wear is shown in a costume which includes a gored skirt of smooth, spice brown flannel and a closely knit matching pullover.
enemy © a a Leg
This smart, three-piece suit with a skirt that can be worn with separate sweaters and a topcoat which will go over any number of
things would be ideal for any college girl. -
Of knit wool—so firmly
knit that it looks like woven fabric—its skirt and tuck-in scarf are in solid green, while the jacket and topooat. are Aviractive in green and
rust stripes.
s [Defeat Hot | Season With
Cool Treats
= Rectpes’ . Provide. Perfect 1 End for Warm Dinners
In Summer,
By MES. GAYNOR MADDOX
Don’t get overheated thinking up cool desserts. Try these. They are a cool end {0 a warm dinner.
Coffee Parfait - One cup ‘strong, freshly made cot-
| fee, % cup sugar, ® teaspoon salt, 2 egg yolks beaten, 2 ‘| cream whipped.
‘cups * heavy
“Heat the coffee, shank and salt
over hot water until sugar is * dis- | | solved. ‘Pour the mixture over beat- ‘| en egg yolks, return to the double : { boiler. Cook as for custard (stirring . {over hot water until mixture forms
5 7 # coating on a metal spoon.) Cool.
This classic shirtwaist dress in a rabbit-and-<wool mixture is ideal for college classrooms. It’s trimmed with buttons in a deep gréen ‘color and a leather belt in a matching shade of green.
Psi Chi Phi. 8:30 p. m. today.
hostess.
house,
.pital, Chicago.
EVENTS
SORORITIES Miss Alis SMarqueste, 1530 Broad-
way. Beta Chi Theta. 8 p. m. today. Miss Frances Hayes, 1226 English,
: REUNION Costin family, descendants Isaac and Mary. Sun. Riverside shelter
LODGES
Daughters of the) Nile, Koran Temple. All day wiley. Mrs. Alberta Nay, 703 Sanders, hostess. Sewing bee for children of Shrine Hos-
Women of the Moose. 2 p. m. Thurs. Temple. Mrs. Ruth Jackson, child care and training chairman, in charge. Dolls for contest are to be left at the Temple for Mrs. Charles Austermiller. ~~ 7/
lives 800 miles inland in Indianapolis is most impressed by the waterfront. “I think being so near the
.| ocean and surrounded by rivers is
the most interesting thing about New York,” she said when I talked to her in Whittier Hall where she is staying. During the winter Charlotte teaches at School 5 in Indianapolis. Although she is enrolled in several classes in elementary science and teaching of reading at Columbia University’s summer school, she takes plenty of time off to browse around, Some Scarcely See Water
Some people come to the city without ever catching more than a glimpse of the water, which is a great shame because it was New York’s fine harbor that was responsible for its development. The city’s waterfront in mileage is as great as the distance between New York and Cleveland. So no wonder it appealed to Charlotte. Just where West St. runs into Battery Park there is a weatherbeaten, low pier-like structure. This is the office of the Commissioner of Docks, John McKenzie. Alongside ‘is the New York Harbor
W.C.T.U. Plans Peace Campaign
SAN FRANCISCO, Aug. 10 (U. P.).—Peace was championed today
R all its extreme simplicity, this dress has a really seductive figure-line.
The waist, fitted in by darts, is |
sim but the puff sleeves make it look even slimmer. The skirt has graceful animation. Because it’s absolutely untrimmed, except for the scalloped closing and pocket, you can wear . this dress with many different ac- . cessories such as an Ascot scarf, a flower, beads or clips. On very hot days wear it neat, as pictured. Make it up in pique, linen or sharkskin — or in all three — and wear it for business, shopping and traveling. It will always look crisp and fresh. Pattern 8274 is designed for Sizes 12, 14, 16, 18, 20 and 40. Size 14 requires 4% yards of 36-inch material. With long sleeves, 4% yards of 35-inch material is required. 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, In- _ dianapelis, Ind.
@ LAST CALL!
Upto $4 @ Velues $1 00
by the Women’s Christian ‘Temperance Union. It was announced-at the 64th annual convention of the organization that education in peace work was aligned with education in the dangers of alcohol. The W. C. T. U. pledged itself to campaign against war. In yesterday's election national officers were returned to office. Mrs. Ida B. Wise Smith of Evanston, Ill. was re-elected president; Mrs. D. Leigh Colvin of New York was reelected vice president; Mrs. Anna Marden De Yo, Evanston, coiresponding secretary; Mrs. Margaret C. Munns, Evanston, treasurer; and Mrs. Nelle G. Burger, Springfield, Mo., recording secretary. Dr. E. Guy Talbott, a director of the National Council for the Prevention of War, told delegates that the majority of peoples and nations of the world want to live in peace. “The peace, the freedom, and the security of 90 per cent of the world’s population are being jeopardized by the remaining 10 per cent; who are threatening a breakdown of all international law and order,” Dr. Talbott said
IEE)
ra
Indianapolis School Teacher j ‘Explores’ N. Y. ‘Waterfront
By HELEN WORDEN Times Special Writer NEW YORK, Aug. 10—No two people see things in exactly the same way. That's a truism which is wonderfully illustrated in the case of New York City. An economic and cultural mecca, the metropolis attracts | thousands. Yet each one looks for and finds something different.
Charlotte Herr, for instance, who &— , police station. Here every offerider
on the river is brought before being
taken to headgquarters—rume-run- | ners, water pirates and petty river | thieving sailors. Near the Cominis-. sioner of Docks’ Building is a police boat, one of five that cruise around local waters, keeping a weather-eye out for law-breakers. All sorts of doings take place at this particular point. When the Orthodox Greeks. celebrate their New Year rites, they are held in the water just off West St. and the beginning of Battery Park. ‘Every year near the latter part of November, from 80 to 100 canal boats slip quietly into haven at the New York State piers, Nos. 4, 5 and 6 East River,
Live in Comort Canal-boat life is a world in itself. Skippers and their families live in a very comfortable manner. Trim little curtains, cheery pots of scarlet geraniums, and plenty of children and dogs make for a normal background. The boats which they call home constitute only onefifth of the entire fleet that operates between New York and Canada by the way of the Hudson River. When the waters freeze each winter, these placid, easy-going boats retire until spring. The majority of families aboard
are of French-Canadian stock with |
a sprinkling of Irish. Many of the French originally lived in Lake Champlain. The Irish are from more local ports. Canal-boat people
are a closed corporation. They keep || to themselves and trouble: little
about making friends on shore. They are law-abiding, religious: and
simple. A lifetime of exploration’ &ould be spent in New York, but: Chatiotte will leave for Indianapolis: 88 soon as she receives her Master's. “degree. She plans to fly home.
New ee Cream Deodorant: safely Na Stops Perspiration
1. Does not rof dresses — dots not irritate ski. 2. No waiting to dry. Can be used right after'shaving. ; 3. Instantly stops perspiration for 1 to 3 days. Removes odor from perspiration, : 4. A pure white, greaseless, stainless vanishing cream. : 8. Arrid has Doe SE uidut the Approval Seal of the American Institute Laundering, for being ess to Fabrics. TEN MILLION fur of Arrid have been sold. ajar todayl
ARRID | well toilet
ons Adios
W.C.T. U. Unit Friday
Henry M. Dowling will speak at a meeting of the Central W.C. T. U. at 2 p. m. Friday at the World War Memorial Building. Department heads who will re= port include Mrs. Stella Cotton, alcohol education; Mrs. Elmer Norris, Christian citizenship; Mrs. Roy Carter; temperance and missions; Mrs. E. W. Munson, fairs, and Mrs. Ross Winder, child welfare. Mrs. George Barnes will report on a tea held recently at Ayres auditorium and Mrs. R. H. White will make the secretary’s report. Mrs. C. M. Cannaday will lead the devotions
and Mrs. W. W. Reedy will preside.
Garden Club to Meet
Mrs. J. R. Spalding, 6371 Wash.
ington Blvd., is to be hostess at 2
. Frid N - rls 2m, ay to the North Epd Gar. 'dignapelis Day Nursery will meet at |
10 a. m. tomorrow at the nursery.
den Club. Mrs. Clarence Hughel
is to talk on “Narcissus and Lilies.”
Personals
Dr. and Mrs. James Kemper have returned to the city after spending a few days at northern Indiana lakes. They visited their
daughter, Miss Agatha Kemper, who is attending Camp Yarnell on Lake
Winona.
Mrs. Boyd W. Templeton and her |
mother, Mrs. Elizabeth Howard, 2058 Washington Blvd, have returned to the city after spending two weeks at the Templeton cottage at Lake Wawasee,
Mrs. Ruth A, Didway and her daughter, Barbara, Chicago, formerly of this city, are vacationing with Mrs. Didway’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Oakes, 1629 College Ave. ;
Nursery Board to M cet
..The board of managers of the In-
| tard. Then pour into 04 mold
;Whip the cream. Fold in the cus-
(or ise your Coffee can), seal ‘tightly, -end
: let tPeeze without a -i11 ice and
salt. Or pack in the: trays ‘of. your automatic refrigerator. and. let freeze, without stirring. = ~. =
Southern Sherbet
One tablespoon gelatin, % cup cold water, % cup sugar, 1 cup boiling water, one No. 2 can grapefruit juice, “a cup lemon juice, 1° egg white. : Soak gelatin in cold water. ‘Dis‘solve gelatin ‘and sugar in boiling water. Cool. Add = fruit: juices. Freeze to a mush in ice eream freezer or trays of mechanical refrigerator. Fold in beaten ¢€gg Whites and continue freezing until
Rev. Hanawalt, Bride Touring Downstate Times Special LOGANSPORT, Aug. 10—The
Rev. and Mrs. Joseph Hanawalt are touring southern Indiana and Ken-
tueky. following ‘their marriage here day. The bride was Miss Mildred Branham. The Rev. Mr. Hanawalt is a student at Manchester College, The Rev. D. K. Finch performed the ceremony at the Wheatland Avenue Methodist Church,
L. S. AYRES & CO.
Buy Now for Fall and School Sewing! All-Electrie Sewing Machine
34.50
| All Makes Machines. Repaired— Estimate Without Charge
N
® Atfractive cabinet ® Adjustable knee control * ® Fullsized mechanism
i ° + Air-cooled mofor
Payment
—ijust pay a few cents a day.
Sewing Machines —Air-Cooled Second Floor.
"6000 AND HOWT" SAY MILLIONS ABOUT IRIUM IN PEPSODENT PONDER
Pepsodent ALONE of all tooth powders contains A hable Jeiam! I*
“Seeing is believing”! So TRY PEPSODENT POWDER i SEE. how Pepsodent’s remarkable new cleansing agent . . . Irium . . . helps to clean YOUR teeth more thoroughly! SEE how wonderful Irium... found in Pepsodent alone of all tooth powders . . . helps brush away those dull, masking surface-stains that so often hide the true natural sparkle of teeth... . SEE how Pepsodent containing Irium can reveal the full sparkling radiance of
SRT REIL RUE
makes teeth glisten and gleam as they naturally should
your teeth!
~ Pepsodent CAN do this pve in rapid order .. and with complete SAFETY to teeth ! For Ponsodenty you can be sure, contains NO BLEACH, NO GRIT, NO PUMICE! Tryit.., today. . . for RESULTS! :
® pepsodent’s trade mark . for Purified Alkyl Sulfate
dll
uu
v
Br RE BS VRS:
a]
IRS
It
HS
aa
III
/ 2c. can ger 4 with
THE LONE. MILEAGE GASOLINE.
IIE
