Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 February 1941 — Page 12

cp SOSEINIED RR

.

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i FOURS AI, | SER EIEN NRE SREY

‘little as 10 cents a dozen. Lettuce,

PAGE 12

omemaking—

Local Food Prices Have Increased

4.6 Per

Cent in the Last Year|

THE HOMEMAKER IS KEEPING A WATCHFUL EYE on her food

budget these days, suspecting food

prices are increasing. She’s right,

£ood prices in Indianapolis were 4.6 per cent higher last month than

they were a year ago. This is 1.6

increase of 3 per cent for the year. .S. Department of Labor’s Bureau

of Statistics indicate there will be a further moderate increase in meat, sugar and fresh vegetable prices. This trend is indicated in a check made on January, 1941, prices over the December, 1940, costs. According to the survey; the cost of food was up 2 of 1 per cent over the preceding month. The local housewife was paying about 2 per cent more for meats in January than in December and over 12 per cent more for fruits and vegetables. An increase of 1 per cent in sugar was shown. The Bureau of Labor Statistics point out that housewives over the nation paid 10. per cent more’ for meat in January than ig a corresponding period last year and increases in dairy products, fruits and vegetables were noted. This year's prices in cereals, bakery products, fats and oils were 2 to 6 per cent lower, the nation over.

Bargains in Oranges

. Grocery bergains in the stores this week include the citrus fruits. This is the season for or-

per cent above the nation’s average And preliminary reports of the U.

Lelong Shows Hats of Wood

PARIS, Feb. 21 (U, P.).—(Via Berlin: Delayed) —The female silhouette achieves new lines in the spring fashion collection presented today by Lucien Lelong, noted Paris stylist. Employing a new technique, Lelong obtains fulness through straight cuts. Skirts ‘and blouses are fuller and shoulders larger. * Fulness in skirts starts below the waist and is achieved either through godets or shirring flat and round unpressed ~ pleats. Skirts never swing out, being the same fulness at the hem as below the waist. Dress bodices are blousy and frequently gathered or pleated. Spring suits sport novel: high

sometimes are triangular shaped. Skirts are narrow and short and jackets bias-cut to make them more form-fitting, reach below the hips.

anges and grapefruit and the same low prices are quoted as in the past few weeks. The large and choice oranges are selling at about 25 cents per dozen but cheaper grades, good for juice, may be bought for as

both the head and leaf varieties, is a good buy as the shipments are coming in from California and Arizona. : The economy-minded homemaker should tdke advantage of the low prices of dried fruits which are high jn vitamin content. Many foreign markets have been cut off and the surplus has brought a drop in price. ‘ Beans are a little higher in price these days, so look to cabbage, turnips, carrots and spinach for the lower prices. Potatoes are selling for about 10 pounds for 15 cents and Idahos at 10 pounds for around 23 cents. The new potatoes, just in from Florida, sell at about 6 pounds for 25 cents.

Eggs Are Good Buys

Eggs are decidedly cheaper these days and as meats are up in general it is a good idea to use eggs in various ways as substitute meat dishes. Rib roasts of beef and smoked hams are economy specials in many of the local stores.

Here is a tasty egg dish. It is called Eggs a la Goldenrod by some and Goldenrod Toast by others. Separate the yolks and whites of four hard cooked eggs. Make a white sauce and add the chopped whites. Heat thoroughly and pour the mixture on slices of toast, The sauce will be enough for from six to eight slices. Cover the slices with the yolk which has been pressed through a fine strainer. Garnish with parsley. It’s especially popular with youngsters.

Party Arranged

A card party will be sponsored at 8 p. m. Friday by the Mars Hill Par-ent-Teacher Association. Mrs. Ellsworth Caldwell is general chairman for the event. which will be held in

Lelong uses pockets in profusion, particularly patch pockets, which range in shape from geometrical figures to paper bags. Accessories such as belts and buckles are used sparingly, being replaced by handwork trimmings. Many of the coats come with metal buttons. Stressing a slogan of “work,” Lelong uses utensils of various trades, such as saws and hammers, as dress ornaments. Wood, which is being used increasingly in the manufacture of working clothes, is achieving popularity also with French haute couture. Hats of wood already have been presented and Lelong is putting out handbags of wood. The new Lelong bags, in fact, are round, flat boxes cut from logs.

Catholic Study Club Executives Named

Mrs. Roy Babcock, new president of the Irvington Catholic Woman’s Study Club, has announced her 1941

assistants. Other officers chosen at a recent meeting are Mrs. George Duffy, first vice president; Mrs. Charles Barrett, second vice president; Mrs. William Betz, secretary, and Mrs. George Lawler, treasurer. Parliamentarian is Mrs. Betz. Delegates and alternates, respectively, are Mrs. Leo Hemelgarn and Mrs. A. J. Ullrich, Seventh District Federation of Clubs; Mrs. George H. Stahl and Mrs. Peter Specht, Irvington Union of Clubs; Mrs. George W. Faulstich and Mrs. Robert J. Smith, National Council of Catholic Women. Committees are: Mesdames Duffy, William Strack and Harry Burkart, program; Mesdames Lawler, Thomas J. Murphy and Karl Kernel, social; Mesdames Albert Ehrensperger, H. H. Robertson and Barrett, press.

Miss Easterling to Speak

The Study Group of School 54 will meet at 1:30 p. m. Wednesday to hear Miss Mildred Easterling, superintendent of the Indianapolis Orphans’ Home, talk on “Caring for

the school building.

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|| K.erz will preside. Miss May Shields, | |program chairman, will introduce

[FN STINT YR 6 VNC N a esl Loo

By CAPT. VICTOR H. KING Instructor in Physical Culture, West Point

EST POINT, N. Y.—Here are two really tough ones today. They are not particularly difficult to do, but are very strenuous if repeated enough times. They "are great for the entire body, especially the middle section, both back and front. Lie on the floor on your back, legs together and arms outward along the floor, palms down. Raise your legs slowly up and overhead snd touch the floor with

Riviera Group

Will Install

New officers of the Riviera Club Boosters will be installed at a dinner dance at the club Thursday. The dance also will honor past presidents. New club officers are Ray C. Cashon, president; Fletcher Brown, vice president; Elmer Julian, secretary; R. C. Dorr, treasurer, and C. Eerrold, sergeant-at-arms. Past presidents who will attend are Emmett W. Green, William F. Swope, W. L. Bridges, C. V. Montgomery, IZarold Unger, Russell Edwards, Roy L. Huse, Paul S. Whipple, Dr. Gieorge M. King, William Mager Dickson and William A. Kassenberg, retiring president. Dinner, at 7 p. m, will be followed by presentation of gifts to retiring officers and the installation. Dancing will follow entertainment presentecd by the past presidents. Reservations may be made at the club | before Wednesday evening. Johnson and Snyder’s orchestra will

play.

Shower Will Honor Betty McKamey

Miss Betty Jean McKamey will be honor guest at a bridal shower Friday by Misses Louise Crabb, Vivian Gatwood and Jane Riggs at the latter’s home. Guests will be Mrs. Chester A. McE.amey, the bride-to-be’s mother; Mesdames James Millican, L. A. Dailey and Paul Oliver and Misses Dorothy | Roberts, Carolyn Kendall, Jean Ann Pluess, Judith McTurnan, Marian Lewis and Eva Thompson. Miss McKamey’s marriage to Claude A. Johnston Jr., Evanston, Ill, will be at 4:30 p. m. March i5 in the Sutherland Presbyterian Church.

Annual Card Party, Set Tomorrow

The annual Shrove Tuesday bridge party sponsored by the Choir Guild of the Episcopal Church of the Advent will be held at 1 p. m. tomorrow in the parish house. Additional table reservations have betn made by Mesdames Emmet Judson, Paul Whipple, C. L. Callender, Howard Whitney, R. B. Bushouse, E. FP. Hansen, C. E. Vogelgesang, Arthur Johnson, Pred Geile, James T. Mead, Hugh Thorn= burg, Norman Beattey, Karl Kistner, Fred Lorenz Sr. and. Jack Shideler Sr.

Zonta Club to Hear Vayne Armstrong

Vayne M. Armstrong, attorney, will talk on “Our National Defense” tomorrew following a 6:30 o'clock dinner meeting of the Zonta Club in the Columbia Club. Miss Lily

the speaker. The local club is contributing to

gist women and girls in Great Britain and to a fund for Canadian ¢lubs to aid them in war work.

Bridge Arranged ' Members of Psi Chapter, Alpha Omicron Alpha Sorority, will be guests at a luncheon-bridge given at 1 p. m. Wednesday by Mrs. Thomas J. :{ennedy Jr. 923 N. Rural St.

--Keep in West Point Trim—No. 9

Double Up—To Straighten You Out

the Zonta International Fund to as-|

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“Styling Included

With or Witheut Appointment Telephone LI. 8531

JILIN EL RE Alabama at Vermont St.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

.

This exercise being demonstrated by Miss Betti Stine of N. C. A. G. U. is strenuous, but good for you. sure you touch the floor with your toes.

your toes, as Betti Stine of Indianapolis is doing in the photograph, Lower your legs slowly back to the starting position. Your legs must be kept together and fully straight throughout. Repeat as many times as you can, A more strenuous variation of this exercise can be had by lowering the legs until about three inches off the floor and then bringing them up and overhead and continuing in this manner. Start the second exercise exactly as the first, but instead of

JANE JORDAN

Caan

|nounce committee

SOREN EEE

Be

lowering your legs back down, swing them slowly around to the right, feet close to the floor, then on around to the left and overhead and- so on for several full swings. Then stop overhead and swing them for several full swings in the other direction. In doing this exercise your feet should describe one large circle after another, the circumference of which is at all points about three inches off the floor.

TOMORROW — Swinging exer= cise is next best to a swim.

DEAR JANE JORDAN—I am 19 years old and go with a boy 21. I love this boy with all my heart and do not see how I can give him up. I have a little boy one year old and he said he could never marry a girl with a baby. I don’t want to give my baby up but I don’t want to give this boy up either. She said she would keep him if I wanted to marry

my mother. this boy.

What would people say if I give up my baby for this man? I work and support my baby but I think I should have a little hapShould I give up the man I love and find someone else who would take my baby, too? I want to

piness.

a home.

- » » 4 Answer—If you consider your problem from the baby’s angle the best possible thing you can do is to wait for a man who is willing to be a father to your child as well as a husband to you, While this is easier said than done it is not an impossible goal. have married women with children and made admirable step-fathers. You ask what people will say if you give up your baby. Doubtless they will criticize you severely, There is nothing which the populace holds more sacred than mother love and nothing which arouses more popular ire than a mother who gives up her child. People would like to believe that mother love is the purest most powerful emotion on earth, crowding out all other human desires. At least not always. concentration on the child is not always desirable. emotional slavery for the young in later life. I cannot tell you what to do for I do not know whether you are capable of giving up your own desires to benefit your child or not. If you do not marry the man you want at present, you might blame the baby for your disappointment. . sciously hold the baby responsible for your sacrifice, but simply that it would unconsciously affect your attitude toward the little boy. You might regard him as a burden, a millstone around your neck which prevented you from making a satisfactory adjustment to life. that case it would be far better for the baby to be brought up by a grandmother who wants him than by a mother made nervous and irritable by her own deprivations. It would not be at all wise to wait and hope that your husband eventually would become reconciled to the baby. He has been honest enough to say flatly that he wants you only on the condition that you give up the baby. I doubt if he would be able to overcome his If you marry him I imagine his distaste for the child will cause you considerable pain even though he does not live in the same house with the baby. It is an unhappy situation which you will: have to work out for yourself.

Of course it is not true.

original attitude.

tell you exactly what to do.

Put ‘your problems in a letter to Jane Jordan who will answer your questions in this column daily.

Coat-Fastened Slenderizer

A

1 8828

One-Dish Dinner

A one-dish dinner that will have mounds of golden bantam corn and both taste and eye appeal might puttered green peas, hot biscuits, consist of a ham ring baked to a|to9, and a mixed green salad, and light perfect brown, filled with|sor gq

¥ 3

. classics. But it is particularly good

I could leave the baby with

get married again and have

Many men

And when it is, such It may mean

It is not that you would con-

In

No one is wise enough to JANE JORDAN.

PATTERN 8828 Isn't this a marvelous season for those who take women’s sizés? Of course a dress like 8828 is always smart, one of the very best daytime

in a mode which exalts tailored fashions, and emphasizes columnslim lines. You have to be somewhat filled out in order to wear this style, and if you have any curves at all, you look -wonderful in it! The skirt is almost straight, which is very new, and the bodice is just enough gathered to create a becoming, high bustline. The shoulders are correctly squared. The beauty of a design like this, and one reason why youll repeat it many times over, is that it's a home dress or a run-about, according to the material in which you make it up. For home, choose seersucker or chambray for the street, spun rayon or jersey, with bright buttons and narrow leather belt to match. : Pattern No. 8828 is designed for sizes 34, 36, 38, 40, 42, 44, 46 and 48. Size 36, short sleeves, requires 41 yards of 39-inch material without nap; long sleeves, 4% yards. For. a PATTERN of this attractive model send 15¢ IN COIN, YOUR NAME, ADDRESS, STYLE, NUMBER and SIZE to The Indianapolis Times, 214 W. Maryland St., Indianapolis. If you want to find out, quickly and authoritatively, just what’s doing about waistlines, necklines and skirt flares, send for the new spring Fashion Book! It pictures all the established styles for day-time and afternoon, in patterns that you can quickly and easily make for yourself at home. Pattern, 15c, Pattern Book, 15c. One Pattern and Pattern Book ordered together, 25c.

rounded by small. new boiled potatoes with parsley and butter,

|Past Leaders Mrs. Westfall to An-|

|garet Schuler, George Yeazel, Albert

- |Blanche Ratz,

‘|garet O'Connor, Gertrude Memmer,

Democratic Club to Honor

nounce Committees

Past presidents of the Marion County Democratic Women’s Club will be special guests at a meeting in the Florentine Room of the Claypool Hotel at 8 p. m. tomorrow. Among the guests will be Miss Julia

of the club in 1921. A short program will be followed by a social hour. ; 5 Mrs. Robert D. Westfall, new club president, will preside and anappointments. These include: Social—Miss Mary Sullivan, chairman; Mrs. Henry FPF. Schricker, honorary chairman; Mesdames John H. Bingham, E. Kirk McKinney and Martin Walpole and Miss Hannah Noone, co-chairmen; Mesdames Earl R. Cox, John W. Kern Sr., Mary Feeney, George Werbe, Dewey Meyers, H. Nathan Swaim, Herbert Spencer, John Hollett, Henry Goett, Edna Christian, Paul Kernel, Otto Deluse, Frank T. Dowd, George R. Popp, W. C. Smith, Mar-

Losche, Curtis Roll, Curtis Shake, Marcia Murphy, Herschell M. Tebay, Charles Meyers, Olive Belden Lewis, James E. Deery, Isaac Born, Marie Karrer, Sol Hoffman, Frank Martino, Edward Barry and John Linder, Miss Landers and Miss Gertrude McHugh. Program Committee Program—Mrs. E. C. Wakelam, chairman; Mesdames Carl E. Wood, Hettie Dunkin and Mary Case, cochairmen; Mesdames Norman Koster, Albert Walsman, Ray Smith and Margaret Bright, Welfare—Miss Fay Terrill, chairman; Mesdames Timothy P. Sexton, Joseph Markey and Cynthia Craigle, co-chairmen; Mesdames Charles Ettinger, Thomas McGee, Josephine Wade, Elsie Meusing, Catherine Sandberg, Julia Zeller, Bernice Baker, Elva Powers and Miss Helen Wagoner. * Ways and Means—Mrs. Kathryn Coleman, chairman; Mesdames Frank McKinney, Edith McKay and Thomas Bridges, co-chairmen; Mesdames Ben Finegold, Ann Brown, Harry Mack, Rose Ritter, Edward Beggs, George Rooker, Roy Hendershott, ClaPfa Hilkene, Catherine Koster, Frank Reilly, Evalena McCullom, Leo Murphy and Alice Jones and Miss Nancy Lichtenberg. : Others Announced Telephone and Radio—Mrs. Max Farb, chairman; Mesdames Katherine Hodzes, Val B. McLeay and Hazel Callaway, co-chairmen; Mesdames Orville Denbo, Fred V. Louiso, Mary Knippenberg, Willard Stout, Ann Irving, Edna Bullman, Catherine Marshall, Paul Watson, Elizabeth Cook, Opal Taylor and Louise Rich and Miss Mary Chasteen. Publicity—Mrs. Mark Gray, chairman; Mesdames Mary Barrett, Mary Frenzel and Peter J. Minck, cochairmen; Mrs. Walter Shead, Miss Nina Fuller and Miss Emma Vidmar. Membership—Mrs. E. Wayne Seay, chairman* Mesdames Evalena McCollum Smiley Chambers, Olive Fitz and Mary Garrett, co-chair-men; Mesdames Florine Smith, Albest Fromhold, Marie Hadley, Elizabeth Wheatley, Eleanor Boyce, Sylvia Yohler, Katherine Price Dunn, Cledie Eddington, Lenora Robertson, Lucille Petithory, Grant Karns, Ada Espy, Rossie Pittman,

son, Ruby Hendelman, Pearl Jones, Linnie Kennedy, Lillian Donahue, Emma A-gerter, Pearl Kennett and Susan Green and Miss Helen Mannix. Directors Named Condolence—Mrs., Josephine MecNamara, chairman; Mesdames John Corwin, Victor M. Salb and Margaret Fritsche and Miss Marie Linehart, co-chairmen; Mesdames Stephen Noland, Mary Solomon, Helen Miller and Carrie Bowers, Miss Norma Dalton and Miss Mary L. Moran. Board of Directors—Mrs. Susann Munn, chairman; Mesdames Grover Parr, P. C. Kelly and Anna McNellis, co-chairmen; Mesdames E. L. Jackson, Ada Crider, John Meyers, Louis Wahl, Myrtle Hinsley, Thelma Koesters, Alice Snyder, Nell McCarty, Margaret Harrington, Mar-

Irene Snider, Martha Claus, Elsie Schilling, Gertrude Smith, Walter McCord and Mary Shackleford. Mrs. Tilden F. Greer will be club archivist; Mrs. Ray Hoerner, pianist; Misses Rosemary Lawlor, Frances Sherrer and Mary Jane Edington, soloists, and Mrs. Bess Robbins Kaufman, legislative reporter.

Your Health

By JANE STAFFORD MOST PEOPLE now realize that good health requires the regular, daily eating of foods containing certain essential substances called vitamins and certain minerals, for

us, however, cannot be walking encyclopedias of the latest information on vitamin content of various foods and the exact vitamin requirements of the human body. We must rely on rule-of-thumb methods for working out a good diet. To help with this problem, Dr. Florence L. Meredith, professor of hygiene at Tufts College, presents in her new textbook on hygiene a nine-point diet. The idea of this is that, in order not to skip any nutritional essentials, you eat appropriate amounts daily of an item from each of the following nine: 1. Meat or fish, fowl or game. 2. Whole grain cereals, either as breakfast cereal or as dark bread. 3. Milk or foods made with milk —cream soups and custards, for example. 4, Milk products, which include butter, cheese and cream. 5. Eggs. ; 6. Green leaf vegetables, such as lettuce, spinach or other “greens.” 7. Root vegetables, which include potatoes, carrots and the like. - 8. Legumes, or beans, peas, and lentils. 9. Fruits or berries. Tomatoes and cucumbers are fruits, though generally eaten as vegetables, it is pointed out. In following this scheme, you are advised to make" some variations within the groups of cereals, meats, vegetables and fruits, since each of the members of these groups fur-

Landers, past president and founder |

Lena Lee Cohen, Thomas Rawlin- |

example, calcium and iron. Most of |

ball game. »

S24, Bulgaria, Feb. 24 (U. P.

requested.

Shortly after Mr, Earle entered the restaurant he asked -the orchestra to play “Tipperary.” The band complied and Germans in the place hooted and hissed the number. Mr. Earle and one of the Germans became involved in an altercation, during which the missles were wielded. Afterward, Mr. Earie issued this statement: “Accompanied by representatives of the Associated Press and the United Press, I was in a restaurant tonight. Resenting the playing of ‘Tipperary,’ a German threw a bottle at me. I warded it off and retaliated by injuring his features. The incident is regrettable but I saw no other course.” No representations were expected as a result of the affair,

2 a = R. EARLE is one of Pennsylvania’s most colorful sons. His wife says he “always craved excitement.”

It is significant that widespread credence was given to a story that | recently went the rounds in Washington that George Earle had won an emerald ring from King Boris in a pinball game. The Bulgarian legation denied it vehemently—but to many others it seemed quite in character—with Mr. Earle, not the King. Mrs. Earle admitted in Haverford, Pa., that her husband had taken ga pinball . machine = abroad—though she doubted he had played it with the King. But then Mrs. Earle is noted for her sense of humor, She has the emerald ring. Mrs. Earle is a slim, attractive woman in her early forties, with a

MONDAY, FEB. 24, 1941 Earle Battles Nazi in Sofia

YN

Mrs. Earle wears a handsome emerald ring . . . and smiles inscrutably over the tale that George Earle won it from King Boris in a pin-

#H a

Balkan Envoy ‘Injures Features’ Of One Who Hisses as He Asks Orchestra to Play ‘Tipperary’

) —~United States Minister George

H. Earle and an unidentified German struck. each other yesterday with missles in a restaurant after German patrons hissed the playing of “Tipperary,” British World War marching song, which Mr. Earle had

The former Pennsylvania Governor’s left arm was bruised by a blow from a wine bottle and the German's face was cut with another object.

life with George Earle keeps her on her toes. During her term as Governor he became almost as well-known in Pennsylvania for plane crack-ups as the Prince of Wales was for falls from horses a decade or so ago. X Last winter, when Mr. Earle was appointed to the Bulgarian post, after an unsuccessful try at Jim Davis's seat in the Senate, his wife and three of his sons accompanied him abroad. “In spite of blackouts,” says Mrs. Earle, “there was a great deal of festivity and party-going in Sofia, which, incidentally, happens to be a very beautiful, gay and sophisticated city.” It has also, by the way, been called “the hotspot of the Bal kans,” since Hitler started consid= ff ering it as a corridor for an offensive in the southeast. ” » »

S MRS. EARLE tells it, how the U. S drew its handsome headquarters in Sofia is a story in

litself. It seems that the building

was first offered to the French. But because it faced the rear of an equestrian statue of Czar Alexander of Russia, they refused it, feeling it was. an insult to their national pride. With no such esthetic sensitivity, the U. S. legation and recently the Earles have been occupy= ing it ever since. Last May the State Department ordered families of U. S. diplomats —including the Earles—to come home. And so Mrs. Earle, who likes excitement as well as her husband, and wants to be near him anyway, had to go back to her comfortable old Victorian house in Haverford.

carefully-groomed appearance. It's hard to believe that she's the mother of four sons—two of them over 21. ” un ”

HEN she married the present minister more than 25 years ago, he was in line to inherit a large fortune and was known as one of Pennsylvania's few first-rate play-boys. This reputation he only began to outgrow toward .middle age, when he took a sudden interest in politics and was named Ambassador to Austria. Later he became the state's first Democratic Governor in half a century. Even now, Mrs. Earle indicates,

* * *

P

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“I don’t hear from George regularly,” she complains. “Communication is so difficult and not really satisfactory. I do wish they'd let me go back to Sofia. Only then would I feel really comfortable about how George is getting along.

Remove Scratches .

If scratches on furniture are ‘quite deep, first stain the scratch with matching wood color, then wax or polish with a good furniture polish. ‘If the scratch is not deep and the wood rather light, often only wax or polish is sufficient to make the blemish less evident.

In the Military Manner

x * x

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