Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 March 1940 — Page 11

~

- to enj

Swimming, Volley Ball And Badmi ton Listed For Tomarrow.

‘Thé annual Highland Day celebration will be observed at the Indianapolis Athletic Club tomorrow When 1. A. C. members will be hosts for - Highland ‘and: Country Chib members a a families. A full day of activity has been Arranged for members, of both clubs. The club pool will be open for Women and girls during thé morning hours, and there will be badminton and volley ball play until noon ih the gymnasium. | Hours for mixed swiintning have béen announced for from 2 6 7 Pp. m., and men and boys will have access to the gymnasium for badminton and volley ball froth nooti te 6 p. m. Bridge Scheduled ; Informal bridge play for individual table prizes will bé held in the afternoon for women of both clubs. i The club's Whirl- -E-Gig Playhouse will be open from 2 to 10 Pp. m. and bowling on the club alleys will ve from noon to 7 p. m. Members and guests have been. invited to witness final play in the, I. A. C's class A and B squash racquets tournament, scheduled for 6p. m. J An outstanding feature of the day’s program will be the Buffet dinner for members and - theif families of both clubs in the main ining room from 6 to 9 p. m uie| Lowe's orchestra will play for dancing from 7 to 8:30 p. m. d from 9:30 o'clock until midnight. ! | ‘ Plan Is Reciprocal | This ‘year’s Highland Day is the fourth nnual event in the I. A. C. By recriprocal arrarigément, mem-: bers of ithe country club are invited the facilities of the down- | town [plub for a day during the | winter® months. In return, I. A. C. members and their families are extended priv- | {leges at [the ‘Sunshine and Water

| construction

| [noon for Mrs. }

NEW YORK, March 28 (NEA).— The week-end guest who wants to take a gift to small fry can get in right with both the “young’'un” and

about this toy hiisiness.

for dolls or whether Juhior—given

Rtiticston set piece by piece.

edge. Say the toy experts and your week-end: visits to friends. To the baby ip to a two-year-old,

light in weight, washable, t60 big for him to swallow and frée from sharp corners. Boy or girl, the little tot will ‘love: a stuffed animal that takes kinaly.to cuddling. Or if baby is learning to walk, a ball or push-and-pull toy will be an incentive—and so please mamma aad papa as well as baby. And don’t overlook bath toys. Helping mother make his bath seductive won't hurt your popularity at all. The child from two to four is partial to push=and-pull toys. | He's 4180 big enough py then to play with Building blocks pounding sets and all sorts of “housekeeping” equipmetit.

” ” ” ! FOUR-TO-SIXERS go for simple toys and puzzles. Both) are. good for them, aiding

control. They would be tickled, too, with & drawing set, a modeling set, easy | weaving equipment ,or sewing cards. At |6 it matters for the first time whether you are choosing a toy for a boy or girl.

wp

Town Tr ies Club | Will Hold Luncheon

The Town Trotters Club will entertain at luncheon Saturday afteryé Haydon and the Misses Jane |[Hamilton, Christine Gardner and Jean Johnson. The luncheon will be in the Williams= burg Room of the Canary ‘Cottage. In charge of arrangements are Miss Mae O'Dell, Miss Frances Morgan and Mrs. Jackson Keith, Mrs. Stanley Call 18 a new member of the

organization.

Carnival at Highland each June:

na

All that is now scientific knowlluckily their advice comes before

take a toy that is bright colored,

manipulative skill and muscular

His mamma by being a bit scientific J

Theté's no longer any need to : wonder whether Saiiie is too old |

a chanée-would try -to eat a coh-

Nothing pleases a liftle girl more than a dot, But it miist be

in the fatest fashion, like

| Science Takes the Guesswork Out. of ToyGiving |

- or horseshoes,

Ck dressed the glamour dolls above, ©

| UP until then they, litle girls go ieminine,

‘have about the same interests. Bit at 6 the boys go he-man and the

am I

JA NE JORDA

DEAR JANE JORDAN—In m ground has resulted in a slowl of good books, good music, g company of educated péople.|

music, éte. to symphony, murder mysteries average. i am not so humorless that I be typical of her age, but she h

enjoyment of them. which would be an asset to

she will settle down to take them for herself? |

qualities I believe in, and at times,

A little girl from 6 to 8 would love to have you add to hér doll

N-

y case the lack of cultural backbut Steadily accumulated library theater and a préferenceé for the

I have rested easily on the assumption ‘that I was giving my daughter a taken-for-grantéd background in people, art, literature, Now that she has reached 15, I find she chooses .jazz

to good books, fads to classic

clothes, and has a sublime indifference to any thing above the

fail to recognize much of this to’ as ga real resentment against the an active antagonism of my own

Is my desire to improve plshing her away from the very things. er, or do you think that after a while

for granted and évén want them WORKING MOTHER.

” » 2 . Answer: Your daughté ay not scorn your tastes and. preferences in life as much as you, or she, think at present. Since you have attained your present “position at great cost to yourself, you place a high valué on what you have and may have over-empha=

- smart. Easter outfit). something for house, of course. A boy would be insulted by Sither but not by a construction set,

Or give Hep “the houge”—doll

‘model airplane, a science toy or : 43

game that takes skill at numbers, He would also like a book with lots of pictures and some reading, 2 s .

EIGHT TO TEN is known to]

child experts and toymakers as the “hobby age.” Boys like carpentry tools; materials for printing. They

are “collectors”=-and probably have:

a collection of boats or airplanes. Girls are ready for sore difficult handeraft and drawing sets to stimulate artistic skill. Games that teach spelling, arithmetic. and geography fit right in with school work. At this age a globe is a fine present for a wide-awake child. For children of 10 or over, mental games havé to be pretty. difficult, not to be though “kid stuff.” The kinds of active games adults might play in the game room on a rainy Sunday afternoon, like darts are ‘a good bet. They're an especially good bet if .one afternoon of your week-end visit furns out to be rainy. Of

course, Juhior may iésent having his new game taken over by the grownups. Bitt your harassed host and hostéss will bless you from the bottom

[family (be sure the doll has on a of their hearts.

Shower to Be Given For Miss Sheridan Miss Margaret Sheridan, whose marriage to Urban J. Albright will be April 11, will be honor guest at a miscellaneous shower given tonight by Mrs. Henry Heldman Jr. at her homie, 205 W. Troy Ave. Miss Sheridan is the daughter of Mrs. Margaret Sheridan, 631 Prospect St., and Mr. Albright is the son of Mrs. Emma Albright, 628 Holt Ave.

jo

Program Planned

Miss Jean Adele Schaefer, vocalist and pianist, will present a program at a meeting of the Ladies’ Auxiliary of the Altenheim Home at 2 p. m. tomorrow at the home. Miss Mary Elizabéth Miller will play the accordion and Miss Mariann Schafer will give a reading.

| Talk on a Clubs

‘Outside U. Ss. Is Scheduled

Gotlptare Pasting, Music Topics for . Monday Grotip.

Talks are a feature of clubwomen’s programs fof the re-

mainder of this week and early next. |

Mrs. C. T. Austin w Loon on “Glimpses of Clubs Outside the United States” at a meeting of the MAGAZINE -CL.UB Saturday. Mrs. G. W. Workman will report on curs rent events, Hostess will be Mrs. W. H. Link, assisted by s. D. O. Wilmeth and Mrs. J. A. | Johnson.

‘The METAL CRAFT. CLUB will meet at 1 p m. tomorrow at the home of Mts. Guy Lefforge, 1029 N.| Drexel Ave. Mrs. Elmer Mullen will assist the hostess. |

Mrs. Lee Welker will speak on “Achievémeénts in Sculpture and Painting” at a meeting of the MONDAY AFTERNOON READING CLUB Monday. Mrs. Arthur C. Hoffman's topic will be “Musical Attainments” and Mrs. Mildiéed Skintier will cliscuss current events. Mrs. John I. Boesinger will be hostess for the meéting, which will. be at. the Y. W. C. A.

_The T. C. A. CLUB of Shortridge High School will give a Leap Year party tomorrow evening. Members and guests who will attend are Misses Martha Nordyke, Dorothy Perine, Mary Jean Sayles, | Betty Bright, Betty Murphy, Urte Smolenski, Doris Henderson, Ferne Sanders; Messrs. Roy Reeser, Paul “Ashley, Marion Burt, Robert Silvey, John Noble, Irwin Ulrich, Hobart

TODAY'S PA TTERN

+7 * PATTERN 118

THE SECRET of fashion success, as every smart woman knows, is in well-planned, nicely proportioned, 8 lines! In Pattern 115, Claire Tiden has designed a frock

figure demands.

tering lihe down the bodice panelling, matched by the center panel of the skirt. ! Pattern 115 is cut in wombs sizes 34, 36, 38, 40, 42, 44, 46 48. Size 36 requires 3% yards 7h inch fabrie. Send orders to Pattern. Depdrt- . ment, Indianapolis Times, 214 Ww. Maryland St. Send fifteen cents (i5¢) fn coins

for this pattern. Write clearly size, hare, address and style number.

FOLKS LIKE you

You'll like the. other guests at the Bismarck, They, too, enjoy and appreciate good food, unobtrusive service ~~ and restful rooms, “-

Emil Eitel Karl Eitel Steff

TY

HOTEL-CHICAGO

TATE BET

Free and Thomas Pucky.

“Colombia, the Land of Miracles,” will be the subject of Mrs. John W. Thornburgh. luncheon meeting of the JORDAN CHAPTER, I

at the Colonial Tearoom a 11:30 a. m. Monday. Officers elected. i

Toner Overley will speak vertising” at a luncheon meeting of the TUESDAY AFTERNOON STUDY CLUB at 1 p. m. at the Columbia Club. ] Hostesses will include Mesdames Everett Van Matre, Mrs, Hiatt, Edward Elliot, Meyer.

with youthful casualness, yet with. all the expert touiches that a mature

The smooth, tailored effect of the front yokes is continued in a-flat-

-sized the struggle to your daughter until she does not feel able to equal you. Even though | you haven't harped on .the subject, she may have picked up the facts from others and felt it in your anxious attitude. A hard-working, adequate mother represents. discouraging competition to a| daughter. Haven't you often noticed how seldom the sons of famous fathers ever make the same marks in life for themselves? ‘Now the easiest way to allay self-depreciation is to pretend to want less from life, A girl of 15 is engaged in a normal struggle for independence. She resents the domination of her mother, wants the freedom to establish her -own tastes And preferences by the trial and error system. You yourself recognize that jazz and mysteries and fads aré normal to Her age and represent the interest of the majority of her contemporaries. But your ambition for her creates unbearable anxieties that she will pause in this stage of development and never rise higher than your own forebears, Your anxieties arouse her anxiéties and produce revolt. The trick, I believe, wollid consist of identifying yourself more: closely with her interests without scorning them as young and frivolous. As it is, perhaps you are impatiently waiting for her to catch up with you and that makes her feel foolish, but determined to remain foolish because it is pleasant. Adult interests seem. dull and boring before one has grown up to them. To push at this period is to set the child against what it i§ being pushed toward. | It is indeed hard to see a. child with plenty of help.do less | . well than a child who had no help. Parents are so eager to help i J their children that they forget to wait until the child asks for ) I help. When she cut her baby teeth you didfi't worry for fear she would never have another set. Doubtless her adolescent standards will be succeeded by others if you can reftain from making others seem difficult, unobtainable and undesirable, - JANE JORDAN.

Mrs. Louis Ketchan on “The First Worl meeting of the LOOGOOTEE WOMEN'S eos, Loogoot morrow. Mrs. B. ckerman will discuss “The San i ncisco Fair,” and Miss Frances Folks, “The New York Fair.” Mrs. Carl Patterson will be hostess.

Sponsor Card Party

The Parents Council of Troop 83 and Cub Pack 21 of the Boy Scouts will give a public card party at 7:30 p. m. Saturday at the home of Mr, and Mrs. James Roberts, 541 Dotthen St.

ere’s Climalene to help you save nearly alf on your soap bill . . . to help you clean, easier and quicker. ave snow-white washes, sparkling dishes. Wash and clean with CLIMALENE. 10c and 25¢ packages at your grocer's s.

OS Bs y

MN vj J F R\ Wa 4 A

: . i WV NN 3 NEW YORK 1440 * /, 4 Po = 11:46 a.m, 3:33 p.m., 5:06 p.m. yy 12:26 a.m..arrive New York at 5:37 p.m, 8:42 p.m., 10:52 p. 6:02 a.m. Fly ia lpxurious fwi Skyelubs and Skysiorpens.

FAST FLIGHT FARES New York or 3H 55 i ree 19 ).55

Three rooms of smart hewly styled furnilure . . . in-

cludes Sysryihing ou need

COMPLETE sie moses aes

completely and comfortably. You get the 16-pe. Living Room Outfit, 10-pc. Bedroom Outfit AND Te 570) Breakfast Set, exactly as pictured.

Put your problems in a letter to Bane Jordi Jie will answer our quiéstions in this column daily.

Sale of Home Show Tickets Is Outlined

Presidents of Indianapolis garden|

Program Gorrmities ~ For Club Selected |

KANSAS CITY

FAST FLICHT FARES Kansas City ....$25.90 - St. Louis.......... 12.95

12:31 *9:04 Kansas City 3:56 p. m.,, 7:09 p.m, 11:48 p. m,, 12:29 a. m.,, 7:50 a. m.; sane departure to St. Louis.

. m, *3:44'p. m., *8:23 p. m,, . Mm, *4:25 a, m...,...arrive

L

08 ANGELES

clubs. Indianapolis: Home 8how garden chairmen and ticket chairmen for this year's Home Show were to meet at Banner-Whitehill auditorium today to receive assignments for downtown ticket sales for the Home how. Mrs. Dean F. Stubbs, in charge of downtown sales, was to assign the clubs to various stores where tickets will be svld the week before the Show opens April 12 at the State Fair Grounds. Preceding the general meeting, there was to be a meeting of the Advisory Council headed by Mrs. W. R. Sanders.

Dance Today

A “Hurdlers’ Hop” was to be held in honor of the Howe High School track squad from 3 to 4:30 p. m. today in the school gymnasium. Members of the track squad will be

the Inter Alia Club for the coming year by Mrs. Roy Slaughter, president. On Mrs. Gent’s committee will be Mesdameés Frank Langsenkamp Sr. C. Fred Fitchey, Joseph -P. Merriam and Don Jenkins, Noblesville, Ind.

Council of Women; Mrs. Ernest

Spickelmier, alternate;

Mrs. Frank B. Haney, alternate. Parhamentarian for the year will be Mrs. Charles H. Fenner. Mrs. Ross Coffin will head the membership committee, assistd by Mesdames T. E. Grinslade, Douglas White, James W. Taylor and L. A.

introduced at the dance.

Turnock.

Mrs. J. Browning Gent recently = was named program chairman for |i

Delegates chosen for the club are. Mrs. A. L. Rice, for the Indianapolis |

Mrs. Fred |

Wagoner, delegate to the Sevénth | "| District Federation, of Clubs, and

~

| | |

i6-PC. LIVING ROOM OUTEIT

Imagine getting all fine ‘pieces: 2-Pc. Mod=~ ern Living Room

of these

15 DOWN BALANCE EASY TERMS Buy Now and / Save . .. Use Our Sve te ide De livery.

8 De Luxe Threeid Room Outfits

Reg. $280 Values include 9 3 9

‘Suite, Occasional

C h air, Kneehole Desk, Desk Chair, Cocktail Table, | Reflector Lamp, Table Lamp,

| End Table,

18-pe. Sivins ving Foor Bedidom "ak 5-Pe. Dinette Set Included in

$189 Three-

Deck Lamp, 5-Pc. Desk Set

ANY ROOM | and Leatherette Hassock!

Leave Indianapolis 12:31 p..,on GROUP SOLD SEPARATELY

the “Sun Racer”; or *9:04 p.m, connect with the “Sky Chief”; or #4:25 am. on the “Grand Tae over the most scenic air rosste west.

PLAN A HEARTY; THRIFTY MEAL AROUND HEINZ COOKED SPAGHETTI!

| BAST FLIGHT FARSS Los Angeles..$109.40 San Francisco 115.50

#s all you need fo hold your 3-réom outfit for future delivery!

Included in Rel yze Outfit only.

9-PIECE DINING ROOM

Modern waterfall design walnut veneered Buffet, Table and Six Chairs, including Host Chair. Also attractive 82-piece dinner set,

fo | | | Leave Indianapolis 11:46 a. m,, 3:38° p. m., 5:08 p: m., 12:26 a. Mm....... arrive Washington at 4:58 p. m, 7:57 p. m., 10:12 p. m., 5:16 4. m. Douglas Luxury liners all the way.

3

/FAST PLIGHT FARES

ashington.....$30.75 TR

AKE Heinz Cooked Spaghetti a ‘featured dinner in your home—at - least once a week! This hearty, nourishing food with its tangy sauce of redripe tomatoes and snappy cheese is all ready to heat and serve, It’s delicious alone or mixed with leftover meats. Better keep a few tins 8 Hitndy for time-and-money-saving meals,

HEINZ SPAGHETTI |

ste or 1 \ 10-PIECE BEDROOM ENSEMBLE Includes BED, CHEST and drop front VANITY in beautiful matched walnut veneers, stunning hardware—big plate-glass mirror on vanity . pair of Vanity Lamps, Steel Coil Spring, Fine Mattress, Boudoir Chair AND pair: of Feather Pillows.

128- -130 N. PENNSYLVANIA

Open Friday Night Until 9 o'Ole | Phone LL 5513 iv 8

Attention Newlyweds, Engaged Couples

‘We don’t know when we will ever again have such an attractive ie offer. e your se- Are lection HOW + 4+ us Gur Jeyawsy. |

Se eT

SPAGHETTI

LRGTYYS TR \I]¢ WITH CHEESE

For Information, Ressrvations: Your Travel Agent or | Lincoln 2596—108 West Washington St.

TINENTALZ,

Cane’ Hasbro fin, Sec.