Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 April 1940 — Page 15
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[ Mrs. T.F. Greer
. Hetherington,
' TUESDAY, APRIL 30,
-Re-Elected by Pilgrim Group Others Also Named by Mayflower Society.
Mrs. Tilden F. Greer was re-elect ed governor of the Imdiana Society of Mayflower Descendants at a luncheon meeting at the Y. W, C. A. yesterday. Paul Buchanan and Mrs. Edmund Burke Ball, Muncie, Ind., were elected deputy governors, Other officers elected are Mrs. W, Mitchell Taylor, corresponding secretary; Mrs. Side ney Scarborough, recording secretary; Earl Townsend, treasurer; Mrs. James G. Haston, historian; the Rev. George S. Southworth, elder; Dr. Fletcher Hodges, surgeon, and Norman Essex Titus, captain, Mesdames Edna Barcus, A. M. Samuel E, Perkins, Jess Pritchett Jr, H. A. O. Speers, Charles R. Weiss and Ellis B. Hall were elected assistants. Ex-officio board members are Joseph Allen Minturn, governor emeritus; Mus. Charles Albert Gall, deputy governor general, and Edgar H. Evans, deputy governor general; Mesdames B. W. Gillespie, Sidney Hatfield, Fred Hoke: Messrs. Halford Howland, William E. Osborn and William C. Smith, past governors.
Advises Design For Living
Young women should recognize the wide field open to them as designers, Louise Barnes Gallagher, well-known New York designer, said yesterday as she visited L. S. Ayres & Co. en route to French Lick Springs Hotel and the Derby at Churchill Downs on Saturday. “Young women with imagination are needed and the field of designing is not one overcrowded with bright young girls,” she said. Miss Gallagher is so interested in giving inspiration to girls considering designing as a career that she is injecting encouragement into “Frills and Thrills,” the book which she will complete early in’ January. The narrative of the life of a young designer will be released in the fall by Dodd, Mead & Co. as one of its series of books on various ca-
, Teers.
Guest at Luncheon Miss Gallagher was honor guest yesterday at a luncheon in Ayres’ tearoom attended by several exec-
v utives and department heads. With
her was Mrs. Nona James, an associate, They will meet a party from New York at the spa. Miss Gallagher believes that the American woman of 10 years ago had no taste in dress, but that since then she has made great strides toward being well dressed. Miss Gallagher designs for what she calls her idea of the American woman, who is dressed subtly in fine fabrics with fine lines. She has little patience with “the flash in the pan” type of woman who flaunts her wealth® in fiashy clothes, As an example she cited the ob\Viously overdressed well-to-do New s Yorker who attended a fashion problem clinic in a leading New York store. Told that she wasn't dressed correctly, she couldn't understand why. She had purchased the best apparel in the store. But she had failed to buy the proper items to achieve subtlety in the entire en-
Skirts Less Flaring
Miss Gallagher said that the summer clothes have and the fall clothes will have less flare in the skirts than in recent past seasons. The skirts will be narrower, but the peg top skirt and other extreme revivals will be short lived, she believes. She visions the silhouette as a “mermaid figure.” Skirts should be tight around the hips with the flare beginning low on the hips. The flare from the hip is out, according to the designer. It may be too cold to even think of summer clothes, but Miss Gallagher is thinking of fabrics and planning fall wardrobes. Her summer collections already are on the market, The war, she believes, has not helped the American designer much financially by bringing the American business of Parisian couturiers to the American shops. However, she sees the closing of several “houses” abroad as an opportunity for the broadening of the American field.
Wears Navy Mesh Wool
For the luncheon yesterday she wore a dressmaker suit of navy +» mesh wool. The skirt was fitted across the back and gained fullness by two unpressed pleats on each side of the skirt front. The fitted jacket was closed in front by many smal buttons and accented by high novel pockets. With it she wore a dusty pink crepe blouse and visor type hat of dusty pink felt with navy vell. Navy shoes and bag completed the ensemble.
X Clu b Has Tea
The X Club was to hold a bridge tea this afternoon from 2 to 5 o'clock at Banner-Whitehill auditorium. The arrangements committee includes the Misses Dorothy Colgan, Betty Jo McIlvaine, Rose Ann Heidenreich, Jean Heidenreich, Jeanne Rybolt, Joy Wischer, Pat Burnett, Roselyn Crabb, Marylou Dreiss, Joan Bearman, Betty Thompson and Julie Richardson.
1940
If a living room and dininrg room must be com bined in one room try this grouping of modern furniture. The walls are blue green and the boucle
finish with the
rug is of green,
= y
The furniture is in modern oak curved couch covered in gray and
the two one-arm chairs in lemon yellow,
JANE JORDA
N
DEAR JANE JORDAN--I am
together,
steady.
have been but a few times. I don’t think that changes things.
is a fine woman.
enough, A girl can't go through friends.
deal to me, ®
home life,
learning to meet tlw competition
from the start. Where is your father?
worthy of mention.
mother. from the others.
This is your trouble, friends. think. estimate of ourselves. as such,
If you feel
terest in their work and hobbies. tion which few children find easy.
to boys. This is as it should be. Push yourself a little harder.
well of themselves. They'll love
well of yourself just now?
Now you probably are thinking about my parents. I can talk to her as if she were a girl of my own age which these other girls cannot.
Answer—I do not think your problem is small. three major problems of life, to wit: well-adjusted person must learn how to handle all three, Are you an only child? You mention no brothers and sisters, and your father is conspicuous by his absence. An only child has a very special problem in that he is the center of attention at home and is not obliged to adjust to the personalities of other children in his
taking a sincere interest in them, and joining in with their pursuits when you can, Boys, too, respond to the same technique. admire them and who are not afraid to show a warm, cordial in-
Put your problems In a letter to Jane Jordan your questions in this column daily.
14 years old and have never had
any dates because I haven't been asked. I have very few real friends. I know two girls whom I like very well but they are not real friends. We go to the same high school, lunch and go to and from school
They treat me fine but I know that if they could get someone else to do these things with them, they would, One is 15 and goes The other is 14 and could go steady if she wanted to. feel sort of out of place with them because they go places where I I make higher grades than they do but
I
My mother
But her companionship is not life and be happy without close
My problem may seem small to you but it means a great
IN NEED OF HELP, »
It is one of the
Love, work and friends, A
Sometimes the difference in the way the world receives him and the way his parents regard him, tends to make him spend too much time at home where he feels most important, when he should be
of the outside world. The result
is a shy, self-conscious child. Of course, this is not inevitable, Some parents recognize the problems early and provide ample contacts
Fither your mother is a widow or you haven't established a relationship with your father which you think This, too, has a bearing on your problem. A sympathetic father is just as necessary to a girl as a sympathetic The lack of one may make the child feel insecure, different To feel unimportant to one's father or mother breeds the suspicion that one is ynimportant to others also, You feel unimportant to your two girl They would choose someone else if they could, or so you Please remember that other people tend to take us at our
unimportant, you will be regarded
It is easy to make yourself important to others simply by
by listening to their experiences They like girls who
At 14 you are in a state of transiYou've been close to your mother
and now your interest is turning outside to other girls and especially
Take stock of your good points
in order to decrease your self-depreciation. Make a real effort to be friendly and thoughtful of others.
Learn how to make them think you for it. Wouldn't you find it
easy to love someone who would take the trouble to make you think
JANE JORDAN,
Rho will answer
ALL ABOUT BABIES
By RICHARD ARTHUR BOLT, M. D, DR, P. H.
Secrefary, Maternal and Child Health Section of American Public Health Association.
| ORMAL growth and development as mentioned in the pre[vious article depend to a consider|able extent upon a well-balanced, [nutritious diet. Other factors con(dition the growth of children, but (the proper selection of food is of [paramount importance. We now know much more about ‘the right kinds of foods in the [proper portions than is at present (being put into practice. The problem is both economic and health educational. Children need a balanced diet— food in adequate quantity and of proper quality because it is neces- | sary: | 1. To supply building material for the tissues of the body. 2. To make up for the loss of | wear and tear of the body. | 3. To furnish sufficient energy {for the body to perform its funec- | tions. 4. To supply certain protective and regulatory substances—the vitamins and mineral salts such as iron, iodine, calcium, phosphorus |and minute quantities of other min-
erals, 5. To assist in the elimination of waste products.
| ¥N addition to these requirements ‘1 the food for a child should be appetizing, attractive, diversified
calm, happy, home environment. Bad food habits are often formed in a jangling atmosphere. There is general agreement that wholesome, clean, safe milk is the one most important element in a child's diet.
SEE PAGES 7
6 PAGES
of Home Furnishing Values From L. S. AYRES & CO. in Today's Times
» 8 9,10,11, 12
and given at regular periods in a |
The chief sources of heat producing foods will be the starchy foods and the fats. Cereals form the most acceptable foods to supply energy and some of the essential minerals. Fats containing vitamin A may be given in the form of butter and cream. Fruits are a desirable food to have in the dietary.
» » » AoE variety of vegetables may be given according to the age of the child. A liberal amount of green leafy vegetables and the colored vegetables such as
carrots, beets, sweet potatoes should be included. The protein foods will be supplied by milk, eggs, lean meats, fish and cheese. Liver is a valuable Y00od especially if the child is anemic, A basic balanced dietary should include the following: Milk—One quart a day in some form. Vegetables—Green leafy, and colored vegetables, cooked or raw potatoes—Irish, sweet and yams, tomatoes. Fruits—Fresh, cooked or canned. Oranges, grapefruit. Cereals and Bread—At least onehalf of bread and cereals used daily should be whole grain and dark breads. Eggs—Three or four fresh eggs a week. Meat, Fish, Cheese—Two to four servings a week. Fats and Sugars—In addition to foods above but not to take their place, in the form of simple desserts.
NEXT—Health can’t be handed child on silver platter.
Indiana Central Y. W. Plans for Breakfast
The annual May Morning breakfast of the Indiana Central College Y. W. C. A. will be held Saturday from 6:30 to 8:30 a. m. in the Dailey Hall dining room at the college. Miss Marjorie Hill, Twelve Mile, Ind, is in charge of the event. The breakfast is sponsored to send delegates from the campus Y. W. C. A. to the Lake Geneva Y. W. ©. A, camp to be held the last of June at Lake Geneva, Wis.
Plans July Session
The Pleasant Memory Club is planning to meet July 28 with Mrs. Alfred E. Curtis, Mt. Auburn, Ind. The members met recently at the home of Mrs. Sarah Cole. Assisting the hostess were Mesdames Frank Hulsopple, Edward Orme,
Samuel Todd and Eeona Gill,
Lillian Callaway Given Shower
Miss Lillian Joy Callaway, whose marriage to Cariyle Muff Baker, Piqua, O, will be May 11, will be honor guest at a kitchen shower tonight given by Miss Dorothy Gimbel, 3601 College Ave. Miss Gimbel will be assisted by her mother, Mrs, Ernest N, Gimbel and Mrs, H, B, McKee, Appointments for the party will be in the bridal colors, magnolia pink and lilac blue, Guests with the bride-to-be and her mother, Mrs. Allen J, Callaway, will include Misses Marjorie Callaway, Jane Keach, Jane Renad, Rosemary Bradley, Martha Louise Bovd, Grace Taylor, Ruth Duckwall, Jean Rau and Florence Bowers and Mrs, Guy S. Boyd and Mrs, RB, I. Larsen,
Brightwood O. E. S.
To Have Luncheon
Brightwood Auxiliary of the Order of the Eastern Star will hold a business meeting and covered dish luncheon Thursday neon in the Veritas Masonic Temple, 3350 Roosevelt Ave, Mrs. Florence Mitten, president of the Auxiliary, will preside at the business meeting. Mrs. Ida Watkins and Mrs. Lillian Whistler will be hostesses at the luncheon,
————————— ———
p = 952 PATTERN 952
DAINTY FROCK FOR KIDDIE AND DOLL
IT'S FUN to be a “copy cat” in this adorable kiddie style. For Claire Tilden has provided Pattern 952 in sizes for both a small, doting “mother” and her doll-child. Such an easy-to-make frock, with its few simple pattern parts and the step-by-step Sewing Guide to show needle and shears all the shortcuts, The skirt part is made in just two pieces and has a saucy flare, But it’s the yoke that gives this dress its unusual appeal. Made straight-across in back, in front it divides into three sections with rounded edges that form scallops. Trim the frock with lace for a “Sunday best” style, or have the entire yoke in vivid contrast. A practical idea for summer is to omit the sleeves ina sunny-day version. Still another style shows puffed sleeves and a trim little collar. Gay buttons or bows complete this colorful picture of childhood charm. Pattern 952 is cut In children’s sizes 2, 4, 6, 8 and 10. Doll size 18 inch only. Size 6, dress with sleeves, requires 1% yards 35-inch fabric and 4 yard contrast; sleeveless dress, 14 yards 35-inch fabric and 2% yards lace edging. Send orders to Pattern Department, Indianapolis Times, 214 W. Maryland St. Send fifteen cents (15¢) in coins for this pattern. Write clearly size,
name, address and style number,
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES Tasty Grouping for Combination Room
“Club at 8 p. m, tomorrow,
PAGE 156
l.U., 120 YEARS OLD, WILL NOTE FOUNDING HERE
Wells, Elliott to Speak Tomorrow; Campus Services Planned.
The 120th anniversary of the founding of Indiana University will be celebrated in Indianapolis with a dinner at the Indianapolis Athletic
President Herman B Wells of In. diana University and Dr, Edward ©. Elliott, president of Purdue Univer sity, will speak. Dr. William Lowe Bryan, Indiana University president emeritus, is on the schedule tentatively, Musical entertainment will be presented by Prof. Ernest Hoffzimer, head of the school of music, The chorus of the University's School of Nursing will sing.
Nine to Be Honored
Special tribute will be paid at the dinner to nine faculty and adminis trative officers who will retire this year, Those retiring from the cams pus in Bloomington are Dr, B, D. Myers, dean of the school of medi cine; H, T, Stephenson, professor of
English; Frank M. Andrews, professor of botany, and John P, Foley, instructor in physics, Retiring from the medical and dental schools in Indianapolis are Dr, Alois B. Graham, chairman of the division of gastro-enterology and professor of surgery; Dr. Charles E Cottingham, association in neurology and psychiatry: Dr. John Tipton Wheeler, professor of anatomy in the school of dentistry; Dr, Louis DeKeyser Belden, associate profess sor of pathology; bacteriology and histology in the school of dentistry, and Mark Helm, registrar of the school of medicine, Arrangements for the dinner are | being made by committees of the Indiana University Club of Indian apolis and the Indiana University Women's Club,
Committees In Charge
Representing the former are Harry L. Gause, Samuel Ashby, Allan Warne, Robert Loomis, Stuart Wilson and Mark Helm, The women's club committee is composed of Mesdames Earl Richardson, Victor Deitch, H. A, Bord-
ner, William A. Myers, J. D. Peter-|
son, Gordon F. Briggs, Floyd I. MeMurray, Paul R. Oldham, FP. D, Hatfield, LI. I. Clark and John Owen and Misses Cordelia Hoeflin and Gladys Ewbank, At Bloomington, faculty members in special services, The Foundation Day program, there, will feature an address in the moming by President Elliott in the Men's gymnasium. The invocation will be given by the Rev, Charles B Swartz of the Bloomington Presbyterian Church. Visit Wylle Grave
students and will participate
A charge to the junior class will |
be delivered by Earl Mauck, of Princeton, president of the senior class. Students who have dis tinguished themselves during, the present school year will be honored. In the afternoon, Mr. Wells, Dr, Bryan, and a committee of students and faculty members will visit the grave of Dr. Andrew Wylie, the school’s first president,
Parents’ Day Planned For Sunday, May 12
Times Special BLOOMINGTON, Ind, April 30. ~Hinkle Hays, Sullivan, president of the Indiana University Dads Association and Mrs. Merill Davis, Marion, representing the mothers of I. U. students, will speak at the Indiana University Parents’ Day program on the campus Sunday, May 12. The program also will include musical selections by the university orchestra and the Girls Glee Club. Campus tours for parents will be held throughout the day.
REFUSES TO DISMISS $25,000 POLICE SUIT
ROCHESTER, Ind, April 30 (U. P.) Judge Robert Miller today had refused to grant a request for dismissal of a $25,000 damage suit filed against Sheriff Russell Voorhees, Chief of Police Fred Carr and Night Patrolman Earle Graham and Paul Whitcomb by Charles Baran of Gary, former Lake County Commissioner, The defendants had asked dismissal on grounds that Mr. Barnan had not compiled with a eourt order to separate his complaint into three paragraphs within a specified time limit. Mr, Baran filed the suit after his acquittal on a charge of intoxication made against him last year by the four local officers.
PRICED BY THE INCH SPRINGFIELD, Mass., May 30 (U. P.).—Dogs that bite cows’ tails cost Hampden county $1358 last year. Despite many damage claims, county officials still are unable to set an exact price on the damaged tails, prices ranging from $1 to $5 an inch for the section of the tail torn off by the dogs.
Potter's Wheel Calls Girl
In a little studio just off 16th St, near the John Herron Art School where she had her training, Miss Marjorie Jones of Lebanon now is engaged In the fashioning of ceramics, A fifth year Herron student, she has been the one most interested in that medium of art, and she ear. ried it farther than any other grads uate of the school, This is because, she says, she has a natural feeling for the medium, and because she believes the art of ceramics currently is develop ing rapidly in America. The wars in the rest of the world stimulated the new interest in this country, Miss Jones believes, In the last four or five years, she added, Americans have been producing a really good product.
Miss Marjorie Jones , .
Times Photo,
+ fashions modern clay,
The Gallup Poll Shows=—
By Institute of Public Opinion
PRINCETON, N. J, April 30. Daylight saving time went into effect Sunday and heated discussions pro and con are being revived in (many communities where daylight saving is one of the most argued about innovations of recent decades. By some people, daylight saving is considered a | godsend. To othe | ers, particularly in rural areas, it is an abomination, In this tug-of-war between the friends of daylight time, what is the score today? How many people favor fit, and how many oppose it? The American Institute of Pub
[| NsTITUTR | PEALIC foes and
LEGION HELPS WITH EMPLOYMENT WEEK
Plans for the observance of National Employment Week, May 1 to (8, are being completed by the American Legion posts throughout the state in co-operation with the State Unemployment Compensa‘ion Division,
Fach of Indiana's 134 Legion posts is co-operating in a serfer of observances planned for the week, according to Melville W. Hankins, | Veterans’ Placement Represcitative of the Social Security Board, who is assigned to Indiana, Most. posts have named committees to confer with public officials, chambers of commerce, service clubs, labor unions and ministerial associations, The 25 State Employment Service offices in the state are compiling lists of skills available in older workers’ groups to be present. ed to employers.
NLRB PREPARED FOR VOTE AT REEVES CO.
The National Labor Relations Board's regional office here today announced final arrangements for the collective bargaining election Friday at the Reeves Pulley Co, Columbus, Ind, The election will be held in the new paint room of the main bullding of the plant, with polls open from 1 p. m. to 4 p. m, Tool makers, machinists and their apprentices and helpers in departments A, B,C,D EF, G, M and P will vote as to whether they desire to be represented by the A. F. of L. International Association of Machinists or by the independent Transmission Workers and Machinists Union of Columbus, Ind., or by neither. Other employees wil! vote as Yo whether they wish to be represented by the independent union or none,
ROCKEFELLER GIVES SCOUTS 1200 ACRES
NEW YORK, April 30 (U, P.).= John D. Rockefeller Jr. has given a 1200-acre tract near Alpine, N. J, to the Boy Scouts of America, it was learned today. The tract will be used for week-end camping. The Boy Scout Foundation of Greater New York was given 725 acres, while the remainder went to [the North Bergen County Couneil, |Boy Scouts of America. The land, heavily wooded, shelters deer, fox, rabbit and other wild life.
|
"TO OR FROM THE PACIFIC NORTHWEST
AND
CALIFORNIA ... VISIT
vivo Kpokces
on Canadian Pacific through transcontinental airconditioned trains,
po pe Double
cami ren way ough oo mics of nate
pan 00 ockil i incu \ Banff Lake hand mea RA tennis, ake VOW * ‘yhg dave ald ake, ‘vo 6 : er
anft
A
gay social life.
s JO 430 Merchants Ban
your fun = . » teau ise, Emerald Lake Chalet. ering olf boating, riding or hiking skyline trails, y See Your Travel Agent ov
NIEMAN, Agent, Indi . K Bids. Phone: Riley $300
CANADA WELCOMES U. 5. CINZENS —No Powperty
Daylight Saving Time Favored By 60% of Voters in U. S.
lic Opinion has just completed a the controversy which shows that a majority of persons
survey on
approve of daylight time,
sentiment for it has grown slightly
CS
in the last three years, that the greatest opposition to it comes from | the agricultural midwest and south, The results of the survey and of an identical study made in 1037 follow:
“Are you in favor of daylight saving time?” Today Yes FARRAR RRR 60% NO srsssssrsrsns $0 43
Approximately one person In every five (19 per cent) expressed no opinion, The highest vote of approval is in the northeast section--the New England and Middle Atlantic states ~-while the middle west and south | vole against it, Op-
pose
3 Years Ago 57%
Favor DST New England and Middle-Atlantie . 75% East Central ..... 64 West Central ..... 45 South 4M 56 Far West .........51 49
A national magazine recently proposed that we have daylight time in winter as well as summer, When thls proposal was put to persons in the survey who favor daylight time, the results were as follows: “Would you approve or disapprove of have ing daylight saving time here all year round, instead of only in sums mer?” Approve 40 per cent, Disap= prove 60 per cent. Daylight time is now observed in part or all of 15 states. Voters who favored it in the poll said it gives the “working man more opportunity to enjoy himself.” Those who oppose it think it is just A nuisance,
15 BUTLER SENIORS TO BE CITED MAY 9
Senior students of Butler Uni. versity who have been named to membership in Phi Kappa Phi, na- | tional scholastic honor society, will receive citations at the annual | Honor Day program, May 9, Seniors to be honored include Miss Berta Maxine Bartlow, Mrs. Martha Mason Bible, Miss Mary Gwendolyn Fallis, Herbert Curtis Gordon, Miss Marietta Finley Hahn, Miss Violet Lashbrook Huston, Miss Carrie Mack Kensler, Miss Elizabeth Howard Kuss, Miss Janet Elizabeth Morgan, Miss Margaret Emma Parrish, Miss Desolee Louise Schild, Charles P. Schulhafer, John | Edwin Steeg, Robert Mark Stultz | and Tommie G. Wright,
25% 36 55
CITY CONTINUES JOINT PURCHASE GASOLINE PLAN
Bids for Four Months to Be Received Tomorrow by Committee.
The City's joint purchasing sys= tem, by which gasoline for four City departments was bought in bulk at a uniform price, will be continued during the next four months, Ale bert H. Losche, purchasing agent announced today. The system was instituted last January to save money on such commodities as gasoline and oll, which are used by more than one department, At 10 a. m, tomorrow joint bids on a second four months’ supply of 41,500 gallons of regular and 11,000 gallons of premium gasoline will be received by a joint committee of City officials,
Prices Varied Before
Previously, City departments paid varying prices for gasoline of simie lar octane rating and purchased in
a fairly restricted competitive field, By purchasing in bulk the Oity received almost four times as many bids as were submitted when des partments purchased individually, The first joint contracts for premium and regular gasoline were awarded on a four months basis on the theory that the City could take any reduction in gasoline prices after the contracts had expired,
Contracts Expire Tomorrow
The contracts awarded in Janue ary to the Perine Oil Co, for prems= jum gasoline and the Associated Service Co, for regular expire toe morrow, The departments to be supplied with the fuel are the Works, Safety and Park Boards and the City Hose pital,
SCHWAB TO BE BURIED
BESIDE HIS PARENTS
LORETTO, Pa, April 30 (U, P,) ==
Charles M, Schwab's wish that he be buried beside the bodies of his
parents seven months after his death,
will be fulfilled today
The body of the late steel mage
nate will be buried in the family plot here where lie the bodies of his parents, John and Pauline Farae baugh Schwab,
After being removed from Gate of
Heaven Cemetery, Pleasantville, | Westchester County, New York, the body was to be taken first to Michael's where requiem mass was to be cele« hrated by Monsignor James P. Saas, the pastor,
St, Oatholie Church here
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