Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 January 1940 — Page 9
by
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; a WINTER VEGETABLES ‘have their lighter moods. Give them a &ind -word .and -they’ll make themselves very pleasant.
Creamed Parsnips i(Berves 4) ! © 1 pound parsnips ! Leup medium white sauce i ‘©. . Scrape parsnips, cut in cubes and cook in boiling salted water until tender. Drain and mix with white sauce. Garnish with nut< meg and: serve. : dn : Turnips Glazed in Bouillon “(Serves 4) : = i 1 bunch white turni 1 tablespoon butter ‘2 tablespoons cornstarch : i Peel turnips and cut in 22-inch cubes, Cook in boiling salted wa‘ter until sender. Melt butter, blend with cdrnstarch and sugar. Add {bouillon and cook until transparent. Drain turnips, mix with sauce, ‘place in buttered baking dish and bake in moderate oven (350 degrees ¥.) for 30 minutes,
JANE JORDAN
(Note: A girl quarreled with her mother in the presence of her boy friend who sided with her mother and did not return. This letter is from the girl’s mother.) DEAR JANE JORDAN—My daughter didn’t fuss at me over her boy friend. She cursed me because I tried to make her do something. I think that when a mother asks her daughter to wash a few dishes she should do it, especially when a mother is as good to her as I am. I work in a factory to make the children a living. I have spent my last dime for their pleasure. I don’t know how you feel but I feel that a girl should not fight her mother like a tiger. I do not pick boy friends for my girl but I make anyone welcome, for I am not the type of woman to make enemies.
Dash of nutmeg.
1 tablespoon sugar 1 can beef bouillon (1% cups) 3
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I knew this boy for several years before my daughter met him
and I feel that he is a very nice boy. I do not command loyalty from her boy friends. I do without clothes myself to furnish the girl with pleasure. I go to work with holes in the bottom of my
_ shoes and snow seeps in to my feet.
The way she cursed me has broken my heart. I don’t see how I will ever overcome it. She is sorry now and comes to mother just the same, Please give me some advice. = MOTHER OF DOWNHEARTED.
» " » ® = #
Answer—If the girl is sorry, all you can do is to accept her |
apology and forget the incident. Very few girls get through their adolescence without a feeling of severe revolt against authority. They resent direct commands and are more responsive to kindly requests than to orders. A girl in her teens wants to be treated as a grown-up woman, and if her mother treats her as a child, the fat is in the fire for sure. . . As I understand it, this quarrel took place before the girl’s boy friend who stopped coming to see her hecause of it. I take it that you tried to assert your authority while the boy was present which put your daughter in a childish position and injured her dignity. No girl likes this though not all of them are as violent and unrestrained in their objections as your daughter. = She showed a shocking lack of taste in using bad language before a guest in the House. Naturally the guest did not return to be involved in more Jamily quarrels. 2 But I imagine that the girl still holds you responsible for the loss of her friend. She feels that you made her appear at a disadvantage before him. Children expect their parents, particularly ‘their mothers, to save them from a disagreeable situation instead of exposing them to it. Doubtless you were right in objective but wrong in method. Naturally a mother feels abused when she has sacrificed much for her daughter and the girl fails to show gratitude. What she does not understand is that a mother’s sacrifices make the girl feel guilty. ‘Without stopping to reason it seems to her that parental sacrifice 4s made for the purpose of controlling her instead of helping her, -and she feels hostile about it all without knowing exactly why. It is setter for parents not to make too many sacrifices for their children, and when they are obliged to give up something it is better not to mention it since the child is not to blame. Your daughter’s outburst has relieved her hostile feelings for the time being. During the calm that follows you should be able to work out some amenable agreement for avoiding future trouble. So far as the boy friend is concerned, perhaps she will have to list him ‘on the loss side of the ledger.
Put your problems in a letter te Jane Jordan who will answer your questions in this column daily.
‘By MRS. GAYNOR MADDOX
R. K. Haerle, Who Is Janitor
* With $1 From Grandmother
a
[HOBBYIST BEGAN
Mrs. Betty Stark (left) and Miss Alice Claire Hollingsworth inspected R. K. Haerle’s collection of guns.
io
Hawaiian articles interested Mesdames Dorothy Woodlock, Thelma Binford and Reatha
Times Photos. Allen.
For Own Display Room, Started
You take a Civil War musket that you help carry home from school
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LTR NAT:
(Ja)
4|could conjure a hobby—either on a
to another fellow’s home—you take
employees - hobby show, belongs to R. K. Haerle. Mr. Haerle started just that way. At 11, when he was going to the old Lew Wallace public school here,” a classmate brought down a Civil War musket for the edification of the
history class. He Made a Deal
Mr. Haerile—who then was known to associates as Master Haerle— helped him carry the musket home and acquired musketitis. He tol his grandmother that he must have a Civil War musket or his life would be ruined and she gave him a .dollar. He walked up and down Indiana Avenue until he saw one in a pawn shop window and he eventually made a deal. For several years he collected guns. Then he became interested in a particular regiment in the Civil War because his wife’s grandmother gave them a bundle of letters about that regiment. That started him on a regiment hobby—collective information on specific regiments—and also on stamp collecting. He got interested in the World War, and began a collection of stuff from that. Now he's interested in propaganda—war propaganda, and he’s writing people for specimens. ; Lm Mr. Haerle says that $6 a month should be enough to start a hobby on, and suggests that one could do
right hobby. ; , This, for Instance
‘For instance, almost every family attic contains old documents and correspondence from which one
point of history, stamps, on historical organizations—or something. After one collects a certain volume of things on one hobby and decides to switch, he can trade and needs virtually no cash at all, if he’s 3 good trader. Mr. Haerle says that his trophies
you—you haggle with a pawn broker when you are 11 years old, and, when you grow up, you may have a-hobby. : One of the most extensive hobby displays—next to the one-man onepicture exhibit of W. Rowland Allen—in the current L. S. Ayres & Co.
room.
it in nothing flat, if he picked the}
one dollar your grandmother gives
ted except on personally conducted tours. Mr. Haerle is one of 139 exhibitors who are interesting. The reason this piece happens to be about Mr. Haerle is because he was around at the moment. " The man, for instance, who has a hobby of pickleing bats was not there, but the pickled bat was there. Mr. Haerle does admit there is one drawback to his hobby. He, personally, cleans up the hobby He dusts it, arranges it, and is head janitor. : 3 Sometimes, he admits, it’s not so well kept. Janitoring never has appealed to him as a hobby. ‘He might go clear on the loose and collect janitors.
CLUBS Victorian Chapter, International Travel Study. 12:30 p. m. Fri. Catherine Tearoom, 1435 N. Meridian. Luncheon. Mrs. Glenn Diddel to speak on “Argentina.” A. G. of Shortridge High School. 7:30 p. m. today. Miss Gloria Dewitt, 3265 Park Ave. hostess. E. T. C. Fri. eve. Downtown. Dinner and theater party.
SORORITY Rho Zeta Tau. 8 p. m. today. Mrs. Ernest Herring, 4403 Rockville Road, hostess. LODGE Monument Chapter 549, O. E. S. 8 p. m. Mon. Masonic Temple, Noxth and Illinois. Affiliation and advance night. Mrs. Esther Fogle, worthy matron. Morris Freeman, worthy patron.
G. 0. P. Women to Meet
The Lawrence Township Club of Republican Women will meet tomorrow at the home of Mrs. Edna Ludlow, Castleton, for an all-day meet-
are locked, with two padlocks, in his own den, to which no one is admit-
ing. A covered dish luncheon will be served at noon. He
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F rilly Fashions for “Blackout Hours Is Summer Paris Style
Compromise Between War Uniform Trend and Feminine Frocks Evidenced in New Creations.
PARIS, Jan. 18 (U. P.) —Frilly feminine costumes for the war-time “blackout” hours is the dictum of Paris dressmakers who will start their annual mid-winter shows of summer fashions within the next few days. Their decision represents a compromise between the love of French and English women for uniforms—which are worn in the daytime— and the dressmakers’ desire to retain the feminine touch.
Juniors in Charge Of Skating Party
~ Junior class officers at St. John’s Academy will be in charge of a skating party at 7:30 p. m. tomorrow at the Riverside rink. “Officers include Miss Patricia Byfield, president; Miss Geraldine Lord, vice president; Miss Mary Margaret Comerford, secretary, and Miss
T. P. Club Elects
Miss Lucy Peterson will serve as president of the T. P. Club of Shortridge High School during the coming year. Other new officers elected at a recent meeting include Miss Barbara Clifton, vice president; Miss Gene Fulton, treasurer; Miss Ruth Schlaegel, secretary; Miss Jeanne Johnson, publicity chair« man, and Miss Louanna McCreary,
“It is the |patriotic duty of woman to look as pretty as she can always, but especially at this time,” said Capt. Edward Molyneux. “Women should leave the uniforms to the men, who look much better in them.” Madame Schiaparelli’ compromised on: “If a woman drives an ambulance naturally she looks more military ‘in uniform, so I suppose uniforms are necessary for those doing war work but after the day's work is ended woman should return to normal feminine garments.” The big dressmakers have been influenced by the war and their showings are expected to include military - cut tailored costumes, with braiding and buttons and pockets borrowed from men’s uniforms and with frills missing on day-time costumes. : » ” » HIGHLIGHTS OF THE SHOWS are expected to be: 1. Rich styles are out until the end of the war. There will he few
afternoon dresses. 2. Dresses will use a minimum of materials, probably three or four yards. 3. Tailored suits are expected to make a comeback, along with
frocks. 4. Black will be widely worn but the favorite colors probably will be sapphire blue and burgundy red. ; 5. Dresses will he definitely shorter to please women with attractive legs as well as to conserve woolens and silks. The style shows started yesterday with the Louise Bourbon collection but the biggest shows are next week. :
Morgan has visited Finland.
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Bessie Morgan to Speak Miss Bessie C. Morgan will speak on “Finland” at the Woman’s Rotary Club luncheon at 12:30 p. m. Monday at the Columbia Club. Miss!
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Mary McNellis, treasurer. sergeant-at-arms.
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