Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 January 1941 — Page 13

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Ration’ of $2.60 a Year

w'to Get By on Cosmetic

REPORTS FROM ENGLAND state that cosmetics are being rationed that every woman will be allowed to spend only

five cents) a day for cosmetics.

£ It is an interesting problem to figure just how yo "could spend that sum if you were in a similar situation—maybe your budget allows only

that amount now. + This is the way one beauty columnist - budgeted. the $2.60. She allowed forty cents for four of the fattest lipsticks available at 10 cents f piece. With that weuld go a resoultion not to waste the lipstick by applying it when the lips were moist.

. Thirty cents of the sum would go for powder, a 20 cent box and a ten cent box. Sixty cents would buy a large bottle of hand lotion and a deodorant. A dollar would go for _ & jar of night cream to be applied * sparingly. and massaged in well. . With the remaining 30 cents, the beauty authority would buy a piece of chamois for a nail buffer and a cake of polishing powder for the ils. If anything remains of the final thirty ‘cents which goes for nail care purchases, one could buy | a cake of rouge, otherwise use a | speck of the lipstick for the cheeks.

Handy for Ice Cubes

ilon the island [of Curacao in ‘the : [Dutch West Indies,

A silver vacuum jug holds forty: ice cubes and will keep them, from ' melting for a long. time, Mean- + while you can be freezing more in the refrigerator ice-trays.

Opens Its New 1941 Series

TOMORROW, Thursday at 9:30 A. M.

1 Mrs. Dorothy Ellis ‘Instructor

I On Mondays and Thurs« | days, at 9:30, Mrs. Ellis will hold her classes in Bidding and Play of the Hand.. Dpulicate games will be played on Tuesdays and Fridays at 9:30 AM. ~ ROR

— Auditorium, Sixth Floor.

i |lightly 0 prevent heavy blobs from

| Today's Recipe

Algreen.

e pence (about

The Question Box

Q—Please give me. & recipe for

A—Mix % teaspoon of salt, 1 teaspoon of sugar paprika together. Adc % cup of vinegar and % [cup of oil. Shake the mixture in a closed glass jar or beat it with|an egg ‘beater. If made sometime in advance, shake it ‘thoroughly just before using. Many. persons omit the ‘sugar and reduce ‘the amou:it' of vinegar omehalf, LR :

Q—Please give me a recipe for pralines. .-. * A—The ingredients are 1-7% cups’ of powdered sugar, 1 cup maple, sirup, 2 cups pecan meats, cut in pieces; and % cup cream. Boil the first three ingredients -until when’ tried in water, soft ball. Re beat until: creamy; add nuts and drop from tip |of spoon in small piles on buttered paper. : Q—What is curacao? "A—It is an orange peel liqueur flavored and sweetened, usually with Jamaica rum. It| was originally made

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Q-—How soon after painting wire cages is it safe to put birds in them? A—Let the paint dry from four days to a week pefore putting in the birds.. The wire should be painted

forming. Q—Which Vitamins cod-liver oil? *| =

A—A and D. | Vitamin A promotes growth and D prevents ricRets. . :

are found in

Cranberry salad

‘Take 1 cup unsweetened cranberry sauce (strained), %' cup sugar, 1 cup ginger ale, 1 psickage gelatine, cup crush pineapple, 1 cup celery, diced, 2 tablespoons lemon juice, and % eup chopped walnuts! Dissolve gelatine and sugar’in hot cranberry sauce. When cool add lemon juice, ginger ale and pineapple. ‘When slightly congealed stir in chopped celery and nut meats. Turn |into molds till firm, Unmgld on lettuce and serve with mayonnaise, to which a teaspoon of horseradish may be added for piquancy. ii

Soap Rule | FOR BEST LAUNDRY results, a good general rule is to add enough soap to the water to form two or three inches of suds. Gay Mitts | MITTENS be in order for young

folks .and ey like ‘them both warm and gay, New and amusing are mittens of fluffy white angora tipped with bright red or

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| Prevent Cold Contagion TO HELP prevent cold contagion, ‘all dishes and silver and other utensils used by the person: having the cold should be washed separately from .those used by other members of the family. Wash in. plenty of ‘hot . water and soapsuds. Rinse in scalding water. .

Junior Dance Frocks _ FOR GAY evenings, young daughter will want a frock with a festive romantic air, For these gala occasions, try gypsy-ish concoctions of bright red or blue rayon jersey bo-

dices and’ billowing white taffeta skirts splashed generously with brilliant flower clusters. A flowing sash might nip in the waistline.

Sponsor Dance The Indianapelis.: Saengerbund will have a| dance sponsored by its|

hall, 4935 Delaware St. William

they will form a nove from fire and|

FOOD

By Mrs. Gaynor Maddox

Blow hot, blow crld, a meat loaf is always. your friend. For the draip-ping-in of iriends:. on their way home from shopping, a meat loaf in the fefr gerator is a Wweltome gesture. boos . "| Ham and Veal Loaf (Serves 6 fo 8) “Twa cups jFobed raw veal, 1 cup chopped rav; smoked ham, 2 cups bread crumhs, 2-3 cup grated cheese, 1 cup cookec ‘macaroni, 1 tablespoon chopped persley, 1 clove garlic chopped, 2 ¢ggs, pepper, paprika, 1 tablespoon Worcestershire sauce. Beat eggs slightly. Moisten bread crumbs | with, waters, Mix all ingredients in the order given. Place in well-buttered bread’ tin and bake in moderate | oven (350 degrees F.) about 45 minutes. Serve as cold meat, or hot with tomato and mushroom sauce. An eggles; loaf can taste wonderfully /good, 100. * Sajory Meat Loaf {(Serves 10) g Two thin 2-inch slices salt pork (diced), 2 tiiblespoons minced onion, 2 pounds ‘ound beef ground, 1-2 cup quick-cyoking tapioca, 2 1-2 teaspoons salt, 1-4 teaspoon pepper, 2 cups, strained canned tomatoes (juice and pulp). Try out salt pork, add onion, and cook until golden brown. Add pork onion and drippings to other ingredients and mix thoroughly. Bake in loaf pan ia hot oven (450 degrees F.) 15 minutes. Then decrease heat to moderae (350 degrees F. and bake 30 riinutes longer, or until done. Serve hot or cold. Garnish with parsley.

Sundown Saddle Club Dedicetes Clubhouse

Meniber:; of the Sundown Saddle Club dedicated their new clubhouse at the Sur down Ranch near Bridgepor last night during their New Year’s Eve party. The clubhouse is the gift ¢f Mr. and Mrs. Joe Hoff, managers of the ranch. The celebration began with a turkey dinner and included games and a midnight ride.

Open House Today The annual open hous: of the Old Settlers’ Civic and Social Club will be held ‘rom 5:30 to 9 p. m. today at the home of Mrs. O. H. Morgan, 912 N. West St. Mrs. Rhoda A.

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orchestra at 9 p. m. Saturday in the Blumhart is chairman.

Hanley is presidept of the club.

Here's a preview of smart little suits for brother and sister to wear in' the Soutl. this winter and anywhere next spr'ng and summer. Both are of cottcn gabardine, treated with a durable, water-repellent finish. They come in maize, aqua, light and dark blue:, peach, white and red.

Lollar-Williams Service Today

The Rev, Ernest F. Prevo, New Richmond, nssisted by the Rev. Paul

Methodist Church, will officiate at

the weddini; of Miss Dorothy Marie Williams tc Robert Miller Lollar at

{3 o'clock this afternoon in the

church. ; The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Wilbur E. Williams, 5759

W. Minnesota St. and Mr. Lollar’s parents ar¢ Mr. and Mrs. Harry D. Lollar, Lebanon, O. Among the bridal airs which Mrs. Ralph E. (iaskins will play for the ceremony are “Sabbath Chimes,” “Hold Thoit My Hand,” “At Dawning,” “Faitrful Forever” and “Evening Prayer.” Roy Aughe will sing “rT Love [You Truly” and “The “Sweetest tory Ever Told.” “Hearts and Flowe!s” will be played for the processionel and Mendelssohn’s wedding march for the recessional. Miss Cliristiner Cloyd and Mrs. Elden Rowland, Cincinnati, the bridegroon:’s sister, will be bridesmaids. . Tliey will be gowned alike in Empire style satin frocks embroidered with flower motifs on waist and skirt and made with matching jackets. Miss Cloyd will be in pint and Mts. Rowland in blue. They will carry bouquets of rubrum lilies and roses. - Entering on the arm of her father, the: bride will wear an Empire style white slipper satin embroidered ‘vith seed pearls. The dress has long s.eeves and is closed at the back with loops of the fabric. Her fingertip l:ngth veil of illusion will

with seed pearls and she will carry Johanna, Hill roses. Mr. Rowland will be best man and ushers will be Robert E. Williams, brother of the bride, Edwin IL. Miller, Columbus, O., and Russell L. Johnston. Mrs. Williams, the bride’s mother, has chosén a’ seafoam green dress with self-colored braid, a matching hat and black accessories. Her corsage will be of rubrum lilies. “The bridegrooin’s mother will wear a wine-toned frock with matching hat, black: accessories and a corsage of Johanna Hill roses. Assisting at the reception to be held at the home of the bride's uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs, L. E. Hobson, 1321 Edgemont Ave. will be Misses Billy and Maxine Willtlams, Rockford. IN.; Miss, Geraldine Schmidt, Ft. Wayne, and Miss Josephine Kingston, Mrs. E. M. Williams, the bride's grandmother,

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| IL VITAMINS KEEP YOU GOING!

AND MILK OF VITAMI

FOR GLOWI

GIVES YOo0 aN NS-

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ABUNDANCE

and Mr¢. Effie Hobson will preside at the tia table. : * Upon Gheir return from a wedding trip Jar. 5, ‘the couple will be at home st 1757 E. Morris St. Mr. Iollar received his Ph.D. In chemistry from the : University of Cincinnati and is a’ member of Sigma Ki, Tau Beta Pi, Alpha Chi Sigma and Lambda . Upsilon Fraternities. The bride attended Indiana University. Out-cf-town . guests with the bridegroom’s parents will include Mr. and Mrs. O. E. Banta, Mr. and Mrs. Rpy E. Miller and:Mrs. P. P. Miller, Lebanon, O., and Mr. and Mrs. (Clarence Dieterich, Middiletown; O. :

A. Riesen, pastor of the Riverside|.

be held by a Juliet cap embroidered |.

mix and match to suit themselves.

wearable one.

models. Skirts remain full for both day and evening. Neat litile street tailleurs, with stunning handmade blouses, are highlighted. Evening clothes vie between romantic and sirenish types. Sports materials fashion some of the handsomest of the gowns for formal wear. Mrs. Gimbel, one of the topranking American designers and dressmakers to the great and near great, shows quilted jackets with a great many of her most formal evening gowns. She puts quilted, rolled collars on both day and evening jackets. Quilted patch pockets look new. So does a quilted yoke on a tailored blouse. And a blue and lighter blue plaid evening dress .with quilted jacket of matching material has a wonderful quilted band, 10 inches wide, around the full, swirling hemline. A pink and white checked taffeta corselette is worn with a billowy, black lace bouffant gown. Rhinestones sparkle and glitter in the centers of the small flowers in some of the smartest prints. Rhinestones are used again in the centers of the small white polka dots on a dinner suit of coral shantung. And similarly in the centers of the white dots on a blue shantung dinner suit. J ” ”

on her designing staff busy cutting butterflies and flower petals out of chiffon monotones and prints. A cluster of filmy butterflies trims the neckline of a soft clay print to wear at a southern resort or anywhere under a fur coat. Petals cut out of the print wave on the patch pockets of another “good little print.” A three-quarters coat of white caracul, for north or south, is shown over a simple black silk dress, cut on tailored shirtwaster lines, ‘has an ultra-full, skirt and a figurehugging bodice, embroidered with tiny glittering sequins. Black skis and ski poles on a white

1background make an interesting

print pattern. A printed dinner dress with white background has splashes of green flowers on ‘the bodice and down one side of the

brown used near the hemline. Plaids and checks are widely used — for north and south, day and evening. » » ” A group of navy blue wool suits are shown with tiny white pompadour hats and white lingerie touchLes. Beige, in soft wools for day dresses and in silks for dinner, still is an important shade with this designer. Black, vivid pink and soft blues are repeated again and -again. All except one or two models wore pompadours. For evening, starstudded and elaborately embroidered chiffon squares, tied unusual ways, covered them. In hats, pompadour sailors and turbans, often flower-trimmed and invariably lav-

ishly veiled, take first honors.

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an APPRECIATION

WE TAKE THIS ocCASION TO THANK OUR CUSTOMERS and FRIENDS FOR THEIR PAST BUSINESS ... AND TO PLEDGE OURSELVES TO CONTINUOUS SERVICE and FRIENDSHIP IN THE FUTURE.

MAY YOU HAVE A PROSPEROUS 1941

* THE UNION * TRUST COMPANY

CAPITAL AND SURPLUS $3,000,000.00 120 E. Market St. * * MA-434(

(Branch)

1225 Kentucky Ave. * * LI-2926

Sophie Gimbel has kept somebody [Fin

skirt, with the same flowers in|

.Bubble-blowing brother and sister wear harmonizing sailor suits of fine cotton gabardine which has been puf t make them water-repellent and spot-resistant. fits may be bought separately so that the children, like grown-ups, can

gh a new process to ach item in the out-

Sophie Gimbel’s Midseason Collection Features Quilting * And Billowing Skirts

By MARIAN YOUNG Timies Special Writer fines NEW YORK, Jan. 1.—New uses of quilting, rhinestone-studded prints, billowing skirts slit to the kree in front and such mouthwatering colors as tortoise shell, fog pink and sea-foam green make Sophie Gimbel’s midseason collection an exciting as well as an infinitely

There’s not a sloping shoulder in the entire group of more than 300

Angeline Shaneff Is Engaged

Mrs. Theodora P. Shaneff, 1905 Kessler Blvd, announces the engagement of her daughter, Miss Angeline P. Shaneff, Mansfield, O., to Lambo L. Kisselintcheff of New York, son of Lazar T. Kisselintcheff, Sofia, Bulgaria. Miss Shaneff attended Butler University and is a graduate of Columbia University. Her fiance studied at the Bulgarian State University and at Columbia.

Give Dinner Party AtL A.C. -

Miss Camilla Jeanne Wright and Lloyd S. Wright Jr., daughter and son of Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd S. Wright, 4010 Carrollton Ave., entertained at a dinner followed by ‘dancing last night at the Indianapolis Athletic Club. Their guests were the Misses Jean Jarrard, Marilyn Beimford and Betty Jane Sanders, Earl Miller, Robert Monger and James C. Wottg.

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| ' Card Party Friday + Mrs. Fred Wehlage is in charge of a card party to be given by the Altar Seciety of the St. Philip Neri Catholic Church Friday at 2 p. m.

Marriage Announced ‘Mrs. Rose Ayres Mullins, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. M. *L. Ayres, Lebanon, Ky., and Fred Fisher, stepson of E. R. Layton, 1447 Gimber Ave, were married Dec. 1 in Covington, Ky. They are at home at 1056 W. 31st St. :

¢

| | there is too much freedom of speech and action. This is not the cry

You pay.for a home each 15 years that you pay rent, so why not arrange to get the deed for it? To start you, a down payment is all that is needed, and we can assist you to accumulate it. Remember, too, that we can lend you the largest part of the purchase price, with. rent-size monthly re-

ES Railrn bf

Ih == FEDERAL SAVING

! the standards of her own home. | able from childhood is apt to stay with her all of her life. One may

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DEAR JANE JORDAN—I am worried by certain influences in

sentative of-the best in school*but the standards of the other girls certainly are not desirable. .I do not mean that each girl is lax but

of a mother clinging to eld-fashioned standards for her daughter,

' butiI feel that tolerance born of loyalty to these girls will in time have . & corroding effect on my own.daughter's ideals. Jest and drinking to. excess is prevalent.

Virginity is a

While my daughter talks to me very frankly ‘about it now and .

expresses ‘her-disapproval to me, my fear is that she will come to accept it as being the “modern way” and gradually ellow it to in< ! fluence her. “If such a thing comes to pass it would bo only natural { 3ha.1 would: lose her confidence and thus any ability” to help her. ards of these girls, ‘she’ will eventually accept them as right? i

fo fear that if she outwardly conforms to the stande

‘ V/ORRIED. tA A 8 8 Ch a.m . . 0... “Vice is. a monster of so frightful mien : As, to be hated, needs but to be seen; Yet seen too oft, familiar with her face, We first endure, then pity, then embrace.”

‘I have quoted Pope by way of showing you that your problem fs

| not. peculiar tu the modern girl or to modern conditions, but a prob~ ; lem of human nature in all time. The quotation contains its truth, | Loose conduct has. its influence on the young and i may be dis-

| astrous unless there is a stronger pull in. the opposite direction.

I do not

think that any young girl ever gets very far away from _ What she ‘has accepted as desir!

point to wild youngsters who come from conservative homes but I. stiil

| maintain that these young people did not regard their parent's cone’

duct as desirable or they would not have revolted. The parents may’ have achieved a submissive attitude up to a certain point, but the children never were convinced that the way of the righteous was rewarded. rl Ty ; : . \ Sometimes parents are living examples what barren lives may. be led by the ultra conservative, the over-respectable or the self-' sacrificing. One must prove to a child that he can organize his life: according to prevalent rules of society and still get scmething out of living. By something I mean satisfactions and pleasiires other than the merely negative feeling of being virtuous and superior to wrong

to heaven for rewards.

It is impossible for a girl to be in the swim today without en=' countering the easy attitudes of which you speak. They exist in = almost. every group and our children cannot be shielded from this or any other form of reality. It doesn’t take any very keen powers of

observation to see that the revolters aren't happy satisfied peoble but

the: reverse. Almost always they are: revolting against uneasy - tops in their own homes. ‘ili . aga i ond: «If you are on the child's side, neither forbidding nor. condemning but.able to give her insight and understanding she stands in no personal danger. The greatest safeguard of all i a mather:who: has ound uumens in her own life; without: abandoning ‘accepted 8 es. . » . “ye . . 2 y ah % wh ta

DEAR JANE JORDAN—TI ain a girl ‘of 16 years and & sophomore. in Manual: I have been going with a.boy for two, years, I have seen him almost every night since we met, but all of a sudden he quit coming ‘over. I asked him why he did. this and he, sdld. we. wen through. I am very much in love with him. .I don’t think I wi be able to give him up. He never looks at andther. girl but still he says we're through. Would you fight to keep him?—B. 8. =

rai — Answer—The trouble is that the more you try to keep him. the harder -he will try. to pull away. Try :to lose him for a while and you may have more luck. Show a little independence and go about with other boys, Perhaps he won't enjoy being forgatten so readily. I don’t say that this will bring him running back, but-it will do more good than'hanging on. Above all don’t take him 80 seriously, He isn't the only boy on earth. Look around. JANE JORDAN.

Pgt your problems in a letter to Jane Jordan pho wil answer vour questions in this column daily.

Its time for resolutions!

POLAR § * @ Resolve that the whole fam-

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ily shall get greater ‘benefit .out.of the foods they eat.

"® Resolve.that the foods yo serve, will “be properly pro) tected. al Ly © Resolve that the meat won't = a the: abbage, the cheese “. like fish, the vegetables like leather. pe eo Resolve. NOW fo use pure Polar ICE in a modern ICE Refrigerator for absolute protection of foods! ..:. .

ty Smarz & Hae | ICE]

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If you are now purchasing your. home on a “Lease Contract,” it may be possible to obtain a loan here and get your deed. PROMPT" ACTION may permit filing TAX "EXEMPTION this year for deductions, c Givin We will be glad to discuss these arrangements. without; any obliga=: . + tion to you. Call this week!

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Be ‘ -

_ the life of my 18-year-old daughter. She belongs to a club repre Ad

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rs. Children are practical and don’t want te wai; until they get.

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