Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 June 1939 — Page 13

THURSDAY, JUNE 20, 198 Hoosier Puts Fancy Dress

On Groceries

Egmont Arens Designs

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Tempting Covers for Everyday Foods.

Times Special NEW YORK, June 29—If you| are among those who market at the A&P Food Stores, you will soon see a drastic change in their food pack- | aging. One of the most competent | designers in New York, Egmont] Arens, formerly of Indianapolis, is! attempting to arouse the comatose | housekeeper from her routine shop-| ping for butter, eggs and milk. He says the new packages will tempt] you to buy everything on the shelves if only to see what's inside. Mr. Arens also is responsible for | the Theme Exhibit in the Consumers! Building at the New York World's; Fair which is called One Third of a Nation. | _ He says he works so hard he does not think he or his wife, Camille, | can get away from New York this] summer. They expect to spend most | of the time in their home at 42 E.| -78th St. Mrs. Arens, under the] name of Camille Davied, edits the

‘special feature articles in McCall's Magazine. {

Mr. and Mrs. Norman W. Cook | are holding open house in their] “home at Englewood, N. J. Last week they entertained Louise Milligan of | Indianapolis and Mrs. Charles Her- | ‘ron. Mrs. Herron is the wife of | General Herron, of Culver, Ind., who |

now is stationed in Hawaii. Mrs. Cook's niece and her hus- | band, Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Lynn | Carroll, have been staying with! them. Mrs. Carroll, the former Ruth | Vonnegut, is the daughter of Mrs. |

Don Marquis, wife of the late au-| thor who created the inimitable] characters of Archie the cockroach! and Mehitabel the cat. * The Carrolls. who have been staying with Mr. and Mrs. Cook since Saturday, left yesterday. The couple will travel to St. Paul, stopping! at Culver on their way. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Lord. also live in Englewood and are frequent visitors at the Cook home, By ALICIA HART left last Wednesday for their sum- ik ; mer place at South Farish, Maine.| I agree with you that it takes Mrs. Lord was Louise Bennet. Her more time than money to be well mother, Mrs. Harry Bennet of M-/sroomed day in and day out,” dianapolis, will spend the summer writes a reader who lives in a town with the Lords m Maine. iin Minnesota. ee “It also takes a good bit of thought and careful planning to decide how a small amount of money for beauty preparations

¢ td ’ should be budgeted. I thought you Give Meals |

(might like to know how I solve the

. problem.” Right Star

The author of the interssting let-

Limit on Beauty Budget Doesn’t Balk This Wife

who

Fruit Juices

ter then goes on to say that she has dry skin, normal hair and good] nails. Her dimensions indicate that [she has a pretty nice figure, too. | 'She’s the mother of three, does her | own housework, yet manages to al-| low time for 10 minutes ot exercises every. single day. Every other week she has her hair) washed and set in a beauty shop. On a certain day of the weeks be-| tween, she shampoos it at home {and coaxes waves back into place. | | “Long ago I decided that a ten-| |dency to gain weight and dry skin | (were my individual beauty prob-| lems,” she continues. “I keep my hips slim by doing exercises and my |

By MRS. GAYNOR MADDOX Fruit soups are becoming popular. They taste far less odd than heir name. Fresh and cool, alive with essential vitamins and delightful in their fruit flavor, they start a meal in a reassuring way’ Here are three recipes which will prove their weight in fruit juice. Iced Puree (Loganberry and Cherry) (Serves 4 to 6)

Two cups canned or fresh loganberry juice, 2 cups canned or fresh tart cherry juice, 2 teaspoons arrowroot, grating of lemon rind.

iwaistline and throatline trim by ‘eating 2 litle less than I actually | want at meal time and never nib-| ‘bling between meals. Regular use of |

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a good night cream keeps my Second | {problem in hand. “You see, I never economize on night cream. I found a brand I liked and I've stuck to it. I always replenish my supply when a nearby store is having a cosmetic sale, but ‘even if there were no sales, I'd buy {that cream anyway. “On everything else I do economize. “I manage to look well enough to suit myself and my husband on what I have.”

Today’s Pattern

Sugar only if needed. Heat the fruit juice. Moisten arrowroot with water and stir into juice. The puree should be very tart and will need no sugar if canned juice is used. Cool. Add grating of lemon rind. Service ice cold with or without whole fruit floating in it.

Iced Fruit Bouillon (Serves 6 to 8)

One cup orange juice, 1 cup pineapple juice, 3% cup grapefruit juice, 2 teaspoons gelatin, 13 cup cold water, 1 tablespoon cornstarch, 4 cup sugar, 5 cloves, 2-inch piece stick cinnamon. Bring pineapple juice, cloves and cinnamon to boiling point. Strain. Add softened gelatin (in cold water), cormmstarch and sugar and juices. Child thoroughly or pack in ice salt. May be garnished with whipped cream.

Yeed Strawberry Bouillon (Serves 10)

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Two cups water, 2 cups strawberry juice, 1 cup berries, 6 tablespoons instant tapioca, sugar to taste. Boil water, juice and tapioca together till latter is transparent. Add ‘sugar to taste. Cool. Add berries in sherbet glasses surrounded by or containing cracked ice,

Feiker Is Called A ‘Pied Piper’

NORTHAMPTON, Mass, June 29 (U. P.).—Mayor William H. Feiker, | had been informed today that his| § “pied Piper” tactics in ordering

| married women off the city payrolls will increase immorality. | His critic was Mrs. Estelle C. | Laughlin of Gering, Neb., president | of the American Federation of Women, who wrote Mayor Feiker that the ouster of working wives would “lower our moral standards.” | She added that such activities | would postpone marriages and thus encourage immorality. | “The whole idea is eugenically, | sociologically and financially un- | sound,” she wrote. “If men and) ‘home’ women listen to such Pied Pipers as you . . . then God help us| The clean-cut, tailored all. You WW oe ey Joh) the classic shirtwaister are and raise babies . . . don't you know | peautifully embodied in this ex that thousands of women are rais- | cellent new design, Pattern 8458, ing families and working to supple-| which is planned especially to give ment the oe? ro the utmost in summer chic and Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt, wife of comfort. the President, also has criticized; Pattern 8458 is designed for sizes Mr. Feiker’s campaign. 34, 36, 38, 40, 42, 44, 46, 48. 50 and Meantime, another Massachu- 52. Size 36 requires 4! yards of setts chief executive, Mayor Lau-|36-inch material. rence Gillis of Revere, appointed his, To obtain a pattern and step-by-Se lui wire of & city oun sewing instructions ieee 15 of five children and wife of a city cents in coin together with the license commissioner, as City Audi- above pattern number and your id DE an unmarried wom- size, your name and address and an whom he had ousted

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1. She “faces” the summer gayly. This twopiece frock helps. Lya Lys likes the three-color combination so deftly used in this ensemble, The collarless blouse of chartreuse sharkskin is closed with self-colored bone button. and sports a kerchief of cyclamen chiffon which matches the wide cord and girdle. The elight-gored skirt is of sharkskin.

2. The keynote of this afternoon print is casual

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charm. Gloria Dickson wears it in French blue and white accented with navy blue accessories. The styling is notable for the new longer jacket and pleated skirt. White tabs at the collarline and white pocket bindings are clever details,

3. Why not try a white washable formal for

JANE JORDAN—-

DD JANE JORDAN—-I am 19, in love with a young man of 2% who recently left town in search of a new job. When he gets settled he wants me to marry him and I am sure that it will be within the next two months pecause he is a go-getter and always can find work. To my parents he is just another boy friend from whom I will break away some day soon. They always have guarded me. I never earned a cent of money before I graduated last year and it wasn't because I didn’t need it, but simply because I wasn’t taught to be inde= pendent. Now I have a small job but don’t make enough to be independent of my folks. They try to make me save, to make me pay my few little bills all at once. They nag at me if I buy too many clethes and have fits of anger if I stay out past 12 o'clock even one night a week. I have hinted to mother that I was in love, but she laughs and says that a 19-year-old girl isn't capable of love. She always told me never to marry, that men cannot be trusted. If I announced my intentions to dad, he would make me step seeing the young man. If I got married and came home with my husband to announce it,—well, dad has a bad heart. I don’t khow what might happen. What can I do? LD X

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Answer—1I believe that you should give the young man longer than two months to establish himself in a new job. Nobody can tell whether or not a job is going to be permanent or not within two months and it is impossible tc accumulate the cash reserve necessary for marriage in so short a time. Besides, a separation will put your love to the test and do more than anything else to prove its durability to your doubting mother. Your mother has some grounds for her fears about marriage for a 19-year-old girl, but she has put it to you in an unfortunate way by saying that a girl of your age isn’t capable of love. No doubt you can feel as keenly as an older woman. What one doubts is not a girl's capacity for emotion but her ability to stand for the stress and strain of marriage, to accept its responsibilities without dissatisfaction, to adjust herself to another personality under circumstances less favorable than courtship. Such a large percentage of failures occur among marriages made in youth that one has good reason to hope that a girl will wait until ner judgment matures before making so important a decision. The mistake your parents have made with you lies in treating you as a child overlong. They would have done better to withdraw strict supervision as you grew older. In adolescence young people crave to be treated as grownups. They need help and want help from sympathetic parents, but comments infuriate them. What they want is a chance to manage themselves and learn from their own mistakes. Where this opportunity is withheld, an early marriage offers the only escape from a nursery atmosphere. They are apt to blind themselves to the risks of the new situation in order to emancipate themselves from the restrictions of the old. I am glad that you do not believe that all men cannot be trusted for it is not true. However, you need not let this misrepreséntation make you swing to the opposite extreme and overvalue young men for none are saints and angels when one knows them intimately. JANE JORDAN.

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that next country club dance? This one has appliques of red strawberries on it and ruching in the matching red.

4. This dark print is both dressy and cool. Note the novel blouse with its fastenings at the left side,

"U.C.T. Unit to Meet

The Echo Club of United Com- ;

mercial Travelers will meet at 8:30 p. m, tomorrow night at the home of Tyra Davis, 3815 Graceland Ave,

Ar Conditioned

FRIDAY 6-Course Dinner

Served From 5 to 8:30 p. m.

69¢

Cocktail ® Soup Delectable SHRIMP SCALLOPS and MUSHROOMS

Louisiana 2 Vegetables Potatoes—Dessert

* Other Dinners 60c to $1.25

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There's Reason Behind Every Lie Child Tells

Be Sure He Isn’t Driven To It by Parents’ Intolerance.

By OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON Johnny comes in and says that he

Saw an Indian around the corner | chasing people. Or he may insist that a big bird talked to him.

| That is one kind of a fib we un(derstand because it belongs in the (category of imagination. Children {of certain years live, frequently, in {a world divided. Fact and fancy know no real cleavage in the minds of such youngsters. The 3 or 4-year-old is strong on fabrication. Then, there seems to be a relapse at 9 or 10 when boys, especially, are prone to fiction. This time it is not the Indian or the bird that is the protagonist, hut “I,” meaning self. “I am the general.” “I am the aviator.” I am the ruler of the universe.” Such inventions come of day-dreaming, and hero worship. The child says such things, however, with his tongue in his cheek. Of a Different Hue

But suppose Johnny comes in and says, “I found this ball” when all the time he knows, and you know, it is Tommy's ball. Or he denies having lost his dime, saying, perhaps, that someone took it. This is a fib of a different color. The first time Johnny lies, say for example, about Tommy's ball, {pet him by his own word of mouth

{do not rub in the fact that he has {lost caste in your eyes. Above all | things, keep him from thinking that |by fibbing he has become a criminal. |Just show him that it is better to [tell the truth than to lie.

Time to Talk Turkey

The second time he does it, tell (his that he will lose friends and [your respect, too, if he repeats iis |story-telling. 'This time, talk turkey to him. Show him that no lie ‘helps a boy to be a hero. Instead, ‘he will be despised in no time at all. | The third time I certainly should [punish him, simply to show him [that retribution overtakes the juntruthful. | In every case, however, we must |be sure that the child is not driven [to lying by your own intolerance jand short patience.

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FLAPPER FANNY

CAMP HEADQUARTERS

6-29

“! wanta camp with a name my folks can spell. sent a cake an’ two shirts to an Indian reservation by mistake.”

Last summer they

D. A. R. Boards Will Be Guests

Mrs. H. A. Van Osdol will entertain. members of the incoming and outgoing executive boards of the

{Caroline Scott Harrison Chapter, D. [to acknowledge that he took it. But

A. R, this afternoon at her home, Cool Creek Farm near Carmel, Members of the Old Glory Society, C. A. R,, will attend church services together at 11 a. m. Sunday at the Second Presbyterian Church. Each year the group attends services on the Sunday nearest the Fourth of July.

Altenheim Auxiliary Will Meet Tomorrow

The Ladies’ Auxiliary of the Alténheim will hold a business meeting at 2 p. i» tomorrow at the home. Appearing on the program to follow will be Miss Julia Niebereall, pianist; Miss Imogene McKenzie, accordion player; Mrs. Emo Hopkins,

vocalist, and John Max Hopkins, reader,

Winners at Duplicate Bridge Announced

Winners of the Tuesday afternson duplicate bridge game at Block’s were announced today by Mrs. Dore othy Ellis, bridge instructor, Winners are: Section 1, north and south, Mrs. Merritt Thompson and Mrs. Arthur Pratt, fivst; Mrs. Conlin Alexander and Mrs. Elmer Ittene bach, second; east and west, Mrs. ©, C. Mathews and Mrs. M. L. Ent, first; Mrs. C. B. Durham and Mrs, L. J Blackmore, second Section 2, north and south, Mrs. H. D. Kendrick and Mrs. Florence Boyer, first; Mrs. R. F. Pasho and

Mrs. J. F. Rhodes, second; east and west, Mrs. William Echert and Mrs. BE. C. Maudlin, first; Mrs. E. D. Fouts and Mrs. J. E. Callahan, second. Section 3, north and south, Mrs. K. P. Pettijohn and Mrs. Richard Neels, first; Mrs. Frank Morrow and Mrs. BE. P. Brenam, second; east and west, Mrs. E. W. Baldwin and Ms, R. E. Moore, first; Mrs. H. GG,

Thomas and Mrs. Harold Bettman,

Three Great Vacation Speci

y and Sa turday

BRONIE ROOM

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Misses

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