Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 April 1941 — Page 15
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Designers Name 13 Best Dressed Women
Times Special NEW YORK, April 1.—As long as women dress, there will always
be some one to pick a list of those who dress the best. Here are America's 13 Best Dressed Women for 1941, as selected in an annual poll of 100 leading designers for the Fashion Academy Awards. They were picked on their ability to keep within their individual budgets, to enhance their personalities and to dramatize their best points. Screen: Opera: Society: Debutante: Josette Daly,
TUESDAY, APRIL 1, 1941
in America| JANE JORDAN
DEAR JANE JORDAN-I have been married for seven years, About three years ago my husband was sent out of the city to work and I met a man whom I later found out was married. Our friendship ripened into love. We never have discussed divorce but I did try leaving town to join my husband but that didn’t work. I told my husband that I had fallen in love and left him, returning to this city to be near the other man. Would you say I was crazy if T told you him to get a divorce but to keep on living with his wife? That I am willing and contented just to see him once or twice a week for the rest of my life? Do you think me foolish to give up all my friends and live only for the time I am with him? I would rather die than cause him one minute's trouble. I am not taking anything from his home or his wife, but just him. I know it is not right to
Sports: Sonja Henie. on “a y a steal another woman's husband. I only want his love and friends Business: Vivien Kellems, president of Kellem: “oducts, Westport Ste : . . P port, ship. What do you really think is best for us to do?
Conn. : E 5 ® Radio: Alice Frost. Answer—You are frying to make a compromise with vour cone Ballett: Vera Zorina. science whereby you can break a social rule and escape the conse= quences by imposing your own punishment. You say to your con= Stage: Gertrude Lawrence. science, “Look. It's like this. Let me have this man and I will Supper Clubs: Adelaide Moffett, society singer.
give up my place in society. I will not expect to be his wife but will Public Life: Mrs. Henry A. Wallace, wife of the Vice President of give up my friends and hide myself away so as not to be a nuisance, the U. S.
I will let the outward shell of his home remain if only I may have its Author: Clare Boothe (Mrs. Henry R. Luce).
heart. I don’t want much. Just the only thing that counts.” All-American: Lucy Monroe, of the Chicago Civic Opera.
Homemaking—
Casseroles and Compotes of Vegetables Meat
AR
Are Adequate Substitutes for
that I do not want Rosalind Russell. Rise Stevens, of the Metropolitan Opera, Countess Barbara Hutton Haugwitz-Reventlow. of New York,
A VEGETABLE DISH is no adequate substitute for meat during § Lent unless it offers the same “stick-to-the-ribs” quality that meat has. Fortunately casseroles and compotes of vegetables with their accompanying sauces do “stick to the ribs.” Take curried vegetables in a rice ring, for example ' ie Ser e——c—————— me
CURRIED VEGETABLES 2 tablespoons melted
| Travel Ncows— ‘Mounds Cave In Wisconsin 3 Cup cooked carrot strips
2 cup cooked peas | [s Opened
12 cup cooked, tiny green beans | 4 cups hot, cooked rice 1 tablespoon chopped parsley 18 tomato wedges Make thick sauce with fat, salt and curry powder and milk. Add vegetables but do not stir. Pour mixture into individual rings of cooked rice, sprinkle with parsley and garnish with tomato wedges, three to a serving. Beans are a good source of proteins and therefore are especially valuable as meat substitutes. Here is a recipe that adds the proteins of cheese for good measure: | CHEESE LIMA BEANS cup chopped onion cup chopped celery tablespoons salad oil cups drained, canned 1, teaspoons salt
fat, tablespoons tour teaspoon salt teaspoon curry powder cup milk cup small,
new potatoes, cooked
The best thing for you to do is not to try to see anything noble in your attitude for it isn't there. Face the facts. What vou really want is what every other woman wants, to be publicly acknowl edged as the man’s choice and to live with him in a socially accept= able situaticn. The renunciation which you make is simply a device for alleviating your feeling of guilt and make you acceptable to your= self as an ethical person. It is not my vlace to preach or to warn you of trouble to come. I only can predict that you will not be satisfied with your compromise for long. In time you'll want more and if it is not forthcoming you'll feel very much cheated. A hole-in-the-corner existence can be temporarily endured but it's no way to grow old. The values upon which you now exist will fade with possession and become less and less satisfactory. With no home, children, or recognized posi= tion in the community you will have nothing of any consequence to take their place when they begin to slip. Even if vou succeed in concealing your affair today, in later years the piper will exact payment. JANE JORDAN.
rere comarca
The recently discovered Cave of the Mounds at Blue Mound, Wis., sealed for thousands of years, was § opened for the 1941 season today. Discovered in 1939 by accident during quarrying, the cave is filled with surrealistic forms of many caQi- § ors, which compare with the weird shapes in Carlsbad Caverns. Red veined stalactites hang from the 30-foot ceilings in the cave's eight subterranean rooms which vary in size from 120 to 250 feet in length. Eerie murals of wateretched limestone colored with ribhons of black and white striped stone, tiny underground lakes with nly pads of stone, and 400-million- | vear-old fossils create scenes of wonder. The cave is 160 miles northwest of Cnicago and is reached via teaspoon pepper. the Chicago & North Western few grains cayenne peppel Railroad. teaspoons Worcestershire sauce. | > % »
can'(3 cups) small mn beans |e piling Asked Retina Ronen Lucy Monroe Adelaide Moftes r ‘oste eans, { . . Ml — a -
1%: cups grated American cheese foul rways bias applied Wo the Brown onion and celery in salad | civ idm a AA Tod I» y arte Council of Women Is Fiecting \ CP Five Directors This Afternoon
oil; add seasonings, Worcestershire ji. to operate a new airline from sauce, tomatoes and beans. COOK|pajas Tex, to New Orleans, La. — lf // / ve } Mesdames J. Malcolm Dunn, Charles Smith, Donovan Turk, George Lois L : ret ests wi : 25, w isdom > : Ruth and J. Francis Huffman were expected to be elected to the Indian- |~01% Lanning, were guest: Bi 7 = er
slowly for 20 minutes, occasionally py way of Shreveport, Alexandria GH) i 1 < ye f stirring. Place alternate Ye and Baton Rouge. Braniff proposes | { bean mixture and cheese in oiled |, wo round trips daily. | casserole. Bake in moderate oven | " . 1n : =" =" ” 2 RG slay 3 v3 1 (300 degrees F.) for 30 minutes. | apolis Council of Women's board of directors today. The election was luncheon yesterday in the hospital] | to take place this afternoon in Ayres’ auditorium. Nominations could celebrating their acceptance for Red | be made from the floor. Officers of the Outen will be chosen al a Cross service. Miss O'Donnell is| meeting late in April of the entire board of 15 directors. All n omina- leaving soon for Ft. Livingstone, La.. tions except that for Mrs. Huffman | and Miss Lanning is awaiting call.
flour,
tomatoes
Two Nurses Leave Reward
For Red Cross Duty
| Two Methodist Hospital nurses, | Miss Mildred O'Donnell and Miss
Mrs. Henry A. Wallace |
for
Recipe serves six. > Corn, 100, has the virtue of seem- Folk Festival The Eighth
ing as “hearty” a food as meat and | when it is backed up by protein- Folk Festival will be rich milk, eggs and cheese, as In gtitution Hall,
Annual National | held in Con-|
Washington, May | of radio broadcasting at Indiana
whose
substitute,
this recipe, it is a delicious meat 1.3 the fourth the capital city.
successive year
i CORN SOUFFLE cup butter cup flour cup milk cup cream-style corn, put through sieve beaten egg volks : teaspoon salt 1. cup grated American cheese tablespoon chopped green pepper
picture of their | heritances of | instrumental music.
days. % u x
in|
Last year 600 performers from 27 (states and Hawaii presented a vivid | traditional folk in-| singing, orice and | The Festival's objective is to bring together groups exhibiting the characteristic folk expressions of various parts of the nation to Keep alive traditions of early
y {were for board members terms expire this year and were up for re-election today. Mrs. J. Lowell Fisher is leaving the board. Among committee reports at this morning's business meeting were two by Mrs. Clayton Hunt Ridge on municipal affairs and teachers’ salaries and a summary by Mrs. Fisher
University, was to speak on * Democracy Work” following luncheon.
Sunshine Club Meets The regular
{the Children's Sunshine
sponsored by the Chamber of Com- | torium.
| merce. Rev ary 7G TT rao peomvenpe | Mrs. Ridge asked the condemna- £1CU1€U Is Tomorrou
tion and evacuation of two groups| Mus.
Making a
{Others at
business meeting of Club of Sophyside Sanatorium will be held
of the Spring Clean-Up campaign! at 2 P. m. tomorrow in Ayres’ audi- |, rsing education director:
Howard P. McDavitt will re-
Luncheon plans were made by the hospital's Red Cross committee, Mrs. Beulah Armand Owens, Mrs. Ruth Kelley and Miss Carmen Sharp. | the luncheon were Dr.| John G. Benson, superintendent; C.| C. Hess, business manager; Miss | Bertha L. Pullen, superintendent of | nurses; Miss Ellen M. Anderson,| Miss | student Red Cross | the Misses)
Barbara Palmer, committee chairman;
Marcella Chaille, Carmen Ayres and |
Annabelle Hiatt, committee mem-|
“I've had my new 1CE Refrigerator for only a month, and here's what's happened: 1. My food bills have been reduced, because ICE Refrigeration prevents spoilage and waste; 2. Because there is no drying out of foods . . . no exchange of food flavors, everything we eat tastes better . ,. the whole family notices the difference; 3. We're enjoying a greater variety of tempting meals . . . because ICE keeps foods fresher!”
POLA R ICE AND
FUEL CO.
egg white, stiffly beaten Melt butter; add flour and blend Add milk and corn and cook until mixture thickens. Remove from fire, A new add egg volks, well beaten, salt, the S. S. cheese. green pepper. Fold in the be placed in Great Lakes service egg whites and bake in a greased early in May between Milwaukee
lof flats on the South Side, occupied view Jan Valtin’'s “Out of the 3 in part by families on relief and un- Night” at 1:30 p. m. tomorrow be-| 4100 tons —| 3 fit for habitation, in a resolution fore members of the Wednesday | which was passed by Council dele-| Afternoon Club in the home of Mrs. gates, {James LoRash, 112 N. DeQuincy St Mrs. Fisher listed as phases of the | The last of a series of reviews will Camp Knox, Kv. baking dish for 45 minutes at 325 and Muskegon by the Wisconsin and | I mil wd eta [clean-up campaign a proclamation | be given April 30. Kaufman, degrees F. Recipe serves six Michigan Steamship Co. of Milwau-| Wow ow] > 4 a by Mayor Reginald Sullivan, a| EE — kee. fii = « : clean-up demonstration in front of | The new Clipper, which will pro- City Hall by City officials and com- | vide year 'rcund tourist and com- mittee members, distribution of muter transportation for passengers 50,000 home survey reports in city and automobiles, will replace two and county schools, and inspection | ships now used on the route. of home, store and factory premises With air-conditioning and ultra- by uniformed inspectors. Contacts | 2 modern interior appointments and will be made by the Mayor's Covel ROUND TRIP—IN COACHES dynamic air-flow lines, the ship is Pride Cornitiee wish School groups, | Good on Specified trains only— 361 feet in overall length, 45 feet women’s clubs, busineess firms, ae for details consult ‘agents at the beam and is called “the groups and civic clubs. fully streamlined pas- Citing viewpoints on the subject | . | of city teachers’ salaries, Mrs. Ridge presented the teachers’ request, for! a salary schedule similar to the one] adopted in 1927 and retracted dur-| ing depression years, and the ad-| { |
bers; Mrs. Florence Stone and Miss | Margaret Allen. 2000 NORTHWESTERN AVE
. C Nurses who left the hospital's start : ny - VCE i
Milwaukee Clipper
luxury liner of 2302 W. MICHIGAN ST 1902 S EAST S51 Milwaukee Clipper—will ‘for Red Cross work last month were | Miss Anne Reynolds, who went to and Miss Dorothy who is at Ft. Bragg, S. C.
You CAN WRITE WITH A QUILL
world’s first senger ship.” { Streamlining to reduce wind pres-| sure and powerful oil-burning boilers will enable the all-steel Clipper make the run in one hour less the present schedules.
| : Mother 's Celebrate 2.50 LOUISVILLE ~ Te y —— ‘Fathers Night Returning leave destination Sun. Night “Fathers’ Night” will be observed by the Terrace Avenue Kindergarten Mothers’ Club at 8 p. m. tonight at the kindergarten. H. W.
Moesch Jr. of the State Conservation Department will give an illu-
SATURDAY NIGHT,
BUT A
APRIL 3
$5.00 ST. LOUIS $7.00 PITTSBURGH
SUNDAY MORNING, APRIL 8 lo
$3.75 COLUMBUS than $2.25 DAYTON $1.50 RICHMOND
ministrative arguments that librarians, custodians and clerks in| the school sytem are underpaid in | comparison to wages similar in in-| dustrial jobs. 8857 “The committee feels that teach-| ers are entitled to salaries com-| . : mensurate with the standar f 4 bahia bh As you see from the little dia- }iving they must maintain oy the | oll SOY gram, this practical pinafore con- |! further training they must take,”| : did sists of just three pieces that you she said.
“The School Board and! |can put together in no time! Goes
Phone Riley 9331
PENNSYLVANIA
RRILRORD
- |N COACHE GOING SATURDAY CLEVELAND . . . $5.50
Leave 10:00 p m. or 10:50 p. m
$4.25
FEES ER
SAVES THE COST OF REPAPERING
cur-aLL
ld BA
and Mrs. Corbett will be at in New York.
Superintendent Morgan would like | strated lecture on “Indiana Parks|{on over the head, buttons, no ties, gradual return to definite vearly drews, Harry Cowan, J. A. Good, W. skirt of your dress. in [ard Travis, who was a spokesman . For this attractive pattern, send |ert S. Richey, state NYA adminis-| Rite Announced | Indianapolis Times, Today's Pattern garet, to Clifford Corbett of New p pupils from 16 to 25. Plan your spring wardrobe right | terday in the First Presbyterian TOLEDO . . . {that you can make yourself. $5.25 home SHELBYVILLE ......$ .75 [5s Tonight oH a will have a chili supper tonight at! CINCINNATI. ....... 2.50 w. consult {meet at 7:45 p. m. Thursday at the
to get back on a salary schedule! | but realize the public tax-conscious-and Conservation.” {and it simply can't slip off your Hostesses will be Mesdames Har-| gq 1ders. Completeiv comfortable, re increases. | Guest speakers introduced by | E. Hutson, J. W. Kirk and Albert Svlvia. Pattern No. 8857 is designed | even sizes 34 to 48. Size 36, 2 1-3 | [or the Women's Field Army for , [Cancer Control's enlistment cam | ‘ { [15¢ in coin, vour name, address, | trator, who explained the work of | Mrs. Earl S. Gabriel announces pattern number and size to The ¢ National Youth Administration York. son of Mr. and Mrs. W. E. | Service, 214 W. Maryland St. In- | Robert’ EK. Allen, program ¢ director Corbett of Torrington, Conn. : now! You'll find all the approved | Church by the Rev. George Arthur mew styles in our Spring Fashion | Frantz DETROIT . 10°06 Ny Pattern, 15¢ Pattern Book, 15¢ b i s One Pattern and Pattern Book or- | = 25 5 E222 ans iti i BATESVILLE ee 1.50 The Indianapolis Alumnae Chap-| ) 35 Mri rr ‘ iy ter of Alpha Chi Omega Sorority] the home of Mrs. Frank Wood, 1064 | 35th St. A business meeting Leave 4:20 a. m. or 7:45 a. m. will follow. Ces For complete AS | 4h Mer | | f NY 4 Alumnae to Meet An Ample Supply of HOT WATER Ticket Agent home of Miss Pauline Rathert, 737 1S. Meridian St.
PAY AS LITTLE AS
00 ODUOWN Now you can buy an Electric water heater at less cost than
ever before. A small down payment puts one in your home.
Cag, ve MS
See the Westinghouse Electric WATER HEATERS
INDIANAPOLIS Power & Light COMPANY
Electric Building, 17 N. Meridian *
The Aristocrat of
LAUNDRIE
and Dry Cleaners
ness will hinder anything but g o’'d Sprong, John Acker, Patrick An- alld protects ‘the top as well &s ‘the | | committee chairmen were Dr. Rich- | | ~ ~ » . 3 . ( orbett-Gabriel vards 35-inch material. | paign which begins today, and Rob. | the marriage of her daughter, Mar-| | With part-time and full-time school | dianapolis. | The service was performed yes-| | Book, worked out in easy designs Mr YY CUT RT y | . dered together, 25c. GOING SUNDA} Alpha C his’ Supply Free Wer 7 228 PES SEER PERERA RRS AS REED ———— | GREENSBURG ....... $1.25 information The Alpha Delta Pi alumnae will Always Stored for Instant Use
rn that every time you wanted to write, you had to dip-dip-dip a sputtering quill pen. Yet it's just as unsatisfactory to depend for hot water upon old-fashioned heating coils that mean stair-climbing,
tank-patting and uncertain temperature. Enjoy “fountain pen” service
this tangy, B zestful
with an Electric water heater—an immediate flow of hot water at your
fingertips! The water stays hot because it’s stored in a heavily-insulated
tank, like a giant thermos bottle. It’s always at desired temperature, because a dependable control turns clean, flameless Electric heat on and off as needed. It’s all automatic, completely safe and care-free, and with
low-cost Electricity in Indianapolis, it’s economical, too. A
AVAILABLE IN DRIP OR REGULAR GRIND
A Phone BR. 5461
5301 Winthrop Avenue
Listen to Edgar Bergen-Charlie McCarthy on the Chase &
Sonbern Redie Progrem every Sunday, NBC Red Network Phone RILEY 7622
5610 E. Washington
