Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 April 1941 — Page 17
THURSDAY, APRIL 1 Delta Gammas To Have Suppet
Meetings of Delta Gamma ity alumnae will include that evening group tomorrow night following a 6:30 o'clock supper at the Butler chapter house, 737 W. Hampton Drive Mrs. Howard G Campbell hostess
ante
Soror-
of the
will be assistGilkison, rege C. House, John
Ww
with the following Mesdames George Horst Jr. Geo Frank Keppen., Arthur Koett, O'Donnell, Clay Trusty Jr. J Sullivan and Miss Dorothy Durham The luncheon group will Saturday in the home of Mrs. Theodote Rhodes at Indian Lake. Mesdames Karl Hardev. Guy Morrison and Robert Zaiser will :
hostess
Robert
meet
assist the
Shower to Honor Virginia Perry
Miss Dorothy “Evans, 3864 Ave. will entertain tomorrow with a Kitchen shower for Miss Vir ginia Rose Perry wil marriage to W. Richard Rhode nel will be April 26 in the Broadway Methodist Church. The hostess will be assisted her mother, Mrs. Walter M Evans Guests in addition to the Bide-to-be will include her mother, Mrs. O D. Perry: Mrs. George K. Shively Mrs. Ernest I. Davis, Misses Bett) Kerbox, Bets 3 anice Renick, Mary Stuar! Joan Kel-
Ruthann Pen and Harriet
Park night
by
ley Rray
Yh Y > } Sew For Ri J Federal! Uni Legion Auxilia) in the home of
an, 4635 N. Arsens
today Tord «
*W IO!
—
7, 1841
i
Hibben Photo
Mrs. Richard W. Fox (left) is assistant chairman of decorations for the Wild Oats Ball to be held April 26 in the Riley Room of the Claypool Hotel by the Indiana Saddle Horse Association. Miss Retha
Hogue (right) is the co-chairman of the ticket committee,
Legion Unit's Party |§ Aids Welfare Work | ’ or
The annual pillow slip card party of Hugh Copsey Unit 361, American Legion Auxiliary, will be held at 1:30 p. m. tomorrow in the Citizens Gas & Coke Utility auditorium Proceeds will go for welfare work The committee in charge of prizes includes Mrs. Elmer Koch, president Mesdames Oliver Harper, Fred Riffey and Carl Hardin
| - -—
Mise Housel Hostess
Beta Phi Chapter of the Club will meet at 8 clock tonight in the home of Miss
Speech Contest
meet at
Church Sunday at 7:30 p.
contest sponsored by Unit of the Women's Temperance Union Officers and direciors WoT Ela Sub-Deb in the home of Mrs 0 han, 303 8. Ritter Ave.
Assist With Wild Oats Ball
Mary Katherine Housel, 1219 Polk | fabric 'W. C. T. U. Sponsors
Ben Davis High School pupils will the Irvington Presbyterian
m.
of
to | participate in a silver medal speech the Irvington Christian
the U. group will be entertained Monday at a covered dish luncheon Walter Carna-
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES °
PAGE 17
Homemaking—
Make Simplicity the Keynote
For Your Sewing at Home and active Camp Fire Girl guara- |
SEWING IS fun, economical, and easy. to learn before you can call yourself an expert. out with an easy-to-handle fabric and pattern. Today, your home sew- | is made much easter.
ing problem elaborate, dressy styles, America’s rashion.
or much
The first step in making a dress is to know your fabrics. Some look smooth but they wriggle through |
are easy to work with. your fingers. Better start with an easy fabric) |like cotton or chambray or fine {rayon crepe or semi-sheer woolen, if | (you're really a beginner. Any fig-| jured fabric with woven or printed | | design demands a simple dress | patiern. Patterns with decorative! seamings and details are wasted on such fabrics. Let's suppose you've picked your pattern, and your fabric, and are] ready to go! Cut your precious carefully, following the] | directions your pattern gives vou| about laying out the pieces, and following the grain of the fabric. Make a crease or draw a pencil | line down the pattern piece to em-| | phasize the direction it should take. | A paper weight or two will keep vour! (slippery fabric from pulling off the | table From the time the pieces are cut | out until they are stitched safely! together, they must be handled carefully. So pin and then baste the seams together promptly on the table. Always baste tand stitch) seams down—from top to bottom Put the pieces together easily, without stretching or pulling. When joining a bias edge to a straight one, put the bias on top and pat the! two gently together. { When the dress is basted and ready to fit, try it on with great] care—once, or as little as possible. | Too much handling at this stage! may pull the fabric out of line.
Use Boilfast Thread | Now you come to stitching and|
trimming.
But there's a good deal So it's smart to start
don't have to fret about For simplicity is now
You
Some
Some are right for crisp pleats, wrong for soft gathers.
Camp Fire Girl Lsulers Take
Training
Training courses for prospective |
| jans are beginning this week, under | | the direction of Mrs. Russell B. | | Steinhour. local Camp Fire execu- | | tive. First session in the ele- | { mentary course will be held |7 o'clock tonight in the Camp Fire | | office, 42 Union Trust Bldg. with | | Miss Marcella West in charge. | An advanced course met for the | first time yesterday morning for a | “Let's Sing a Song” program led | bY Miss Malvin Morton, Girl Re-| serve secretary. Women enrolled in the begin-
School 34; Mrs. O. R. Hardy, Wallace Street Presbyterian Church; Mrs. Anthony Faccone, School 7; Miss Cleota Tapp, School 39; Mesdames Stewart Maxwell, Alfred Brown and W. Earle Miller, Ebe-| neger Lutheran Church; Miss Marie Dawson ana Miss Elizabeth Richard, School 39; Miss Betty Lou Speakman and Mrs. M. P. Stoelting, Irvington Methodist Church; Miss Frances Shaw, School 95; Miss Pauline Rathert, School 20; (Mrs. A. A. Phillips and Mis. | | Edith McWethy, Fairfax Christian | Church; Mrs. Grace Allen, Town- | ship School 14; Mésdames J. A | McCullough, R. D. McClaran, R. L. Biller, R. B. Bishop, N. P. Hollister and K. M. Koons. School 84. Camp Fire guardians enlisted In the advanced course are Mrs. Stewart Gordon. School 70: Mrs Pauline Krapes, Exeter Avenue Baptist Church: Mrs Doris Smitih, School 41; Mrs. J. W, Graves and Mrs. P. W. Clark, Wallace Street Presbyterian Church; Mrs. Kenneth Hart- | man and Mrs. Edith | Ebenezer Lutheran Church; Jesse Barker, School 8: | Louise Curtis. School 75; Mis. Hazel | Schuck, Fairfax Christian Church, Sha Mrs. Louise Warnock, School
| | | |
P-T A
News—
TOMORROW
School 357:45 p. m. Father's Night. Talk by Juvenile Court Judge Wilfred E. Bradshaw; WPA orchestra, Pasquale Montani; songs by Girls’ Glee Club of Manual Training High School, directed |
directed by
bv Miss Frieda M. Hart.
| al 87:45 p. m. “Mental Hygiene ot | Louis Segar, | |
Children,” by Dr. school choir to sing. Glenns Valley—1:30 p. m. of Tomorrow.” presiding. NEW OFFICERS
ners’ course are Mrs. Mildred Sehr, Fleming Garden—Mrs. William Wil- ; lis, president; Mrs. Kenneth Alpresident;
vice second
len, first
Morris, vice
bers; Mrs.
delegates.
McCormick, | Mrs. | Mrs. |
Program theme: “Safeguarding the Adult | Mrs. Frank Carey |
R. W.! president; | Miss Grace Stephens, secretary; Mrs, Chester Faulkner, treasurer; Raymond Barker, Russell Curtis, Mrs. Norris Wardell, board memWillis and Mrs, mond VonWiller, state convention
Ray-
William H. Evans — Mrs.
Granneman, president;
| Mrs. Frank Beaman, Mrs. Scott Beck, treasurer; |
| i Stofer and Irvin members. paper sale April 25
Adolph Mrs. Thomas McAnany, vice president; secretary, Mes= dames Henry Lohkamp, Thomas Seedorf, board The school will hold a
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Comfort May Be Y 1 pressing. Be sure to use a boilfast | ours 3 thread. It would be such a shame | to have a five cent spool of thread | FITTING CLIN spoil an entire garment, Remember |
to set your machine for a fairly Conducted by
long stitch, when sewing stretchy | Kenneth p Ransom '
| fabrics. If you're sewing on a sheer ucational Director
fabri er| tow { fabric, such as chiffon, place a strip] Ww ‘ alter T. Dickerson Co
{of tissue paper on the machine un- costs der the fabric as you stitch, to keep the seam smooth. As soon as a|~ seam is stitched, press it. For wool- always ens, press over a damp cloth. wrung | hanger at dry. For silks, press over a light turning the dry cloth. For rayvons, have the iron stretch out almost cool | There 1s a dainty new zipper on Most fabrics need only pinking the market which is excellent for | to keep the raw seam edges from use with sheer fabrics. It comes { raveling—but if yours is & sheer | in colors that match your boilfast loosely woven fabric that ravels thread, and is teather-weight, yet easily, overcasting is the answer. very strong certain not to On heavier fabrics that ravel eas- chip off. Paving attention to these ily. turn the edges of the seams little things makes a great differ under an eighth of an inch and ence in the looks of a dress after stitch along the fold. it is finished. Have you ever had trouble with These are a few of the hows and | a bias skirt streiching? They should | whys. The rest is up to you,
JANE JORDAN
DEAR JANE JORDAN-—I am 17 years old and I am going with a boy who is just 21. We love each other very much but we had some serious trouble and my father thinks we should split up for good We don't want to do this. 1s it fair for him to expect two people who love each other as much as we do to separate for good? I think Father feels that this young man is too old for me, Ever since I was a little girl I have palled around with friends over my age. Now he feels I should return to the friends who are now just sweet 16 and 17. I can't do this because they seem so young to me, Father has forbidden me to see this lad. We have decided that
we shall sneak out and see each other but I'm not the Kind to try to put something over. I will if T can't see the boy as I usually do. We were speaking or geiting married but now how can we do this? I just don’t want to live if I can't have this boy and I don't sea how we can see each other over my father's objection. Please don't ask us to give each other up for we can't do that, G. B
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Answer—It really is amazing how a love affair flourishes when some fond father decides to forbid it. At 17 a girl is struggling to hreak the emotional bonds which tie her to the parents. and establish Mr. Kenneth B. Ransom, a relationship with someone outside the family group. Her first Educational Director, choice seldom is her final choice. She falls in love two, three Walker T. Dickerson Co or even a half-dozen times. trving one after another until her judg- ' . ment matures and eventually she stays put If only parents have the wisdom not to take her attachments too seriously during this period of trial and error, she has a better chance to make an intelligent choice in the end. But let some parent rise up and forbid the boy friend the premises and the girl is pretty sure to freeze onto him regardless of his merits. In other words the misguided parent simply has stimulated her psychological neces-
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sity for establishing her independence at all costs instead of encouraging her to do so gradually. Your father would wield a more powerful influence over you if he pointed out the disadvantages of your situation obectively and then left you free to make your own decision. The opinion of a wise, tolerant parent always carries weight with a child. It is the attempt of the parent to rule without regard for the child's rights that begets rebellion. I don't know what you can do about it except to try to show your father that you are too old to be forbidden like a two-year-old child. One thing you can do for yourself is to try hard to distinguish how much of your emotion is real love for the boy and how much is the determination to prove something to your father. Don't let your critical faculties become blurred because you don't want to admit
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D. A. R. Congress Elects Today WASHINGTON, April 17 (U. P). —The Daughters of the American | Revolution today elect 19 new offi[cers with Mrs William 1. Pouch of New York assured of the post of president general. Mrs. Pouch and her national slate are unopposed. The only real test will come on the vote for four vice presidents general. Six women were | nominated last night—Miss Lillian | Chenoweth, Washington; Mrs. Elly | Barnes, Montgomery, Ala.; Mrs. William Brothers, Pocatello, Ida.; Mrs. James F. Donahue, Cleveland; | Mrs. C. A. Sinclair, Alexandria, Va., and Mrs. Thomas Maguire, Plant City, Fla. Mrs. Henry M. Robert | Jr, retiring as president general, | Jess high was Bouin et for a post ~ : as honorary president general. | ME miiatede and . | Later today, the delegates will juicy pork; with a ruddy tomato X {hear Breckinridge Long, Assistant sauce and pork; Vegetarian-style, {NS | Secretary of State, speak’ on “Pan Sol eat} Se rod kidney INUNR | America and Hemisphere Defense”; | ans with pork. Ask your near. —. Paul V. McNutt, Federal Security gst Sroces soon for ready-to-serve | | Administrator, on “The Civilian in| eing ven-Baked Beans! ational Defense’; H VW Kalten{born, radio commentator, on “Radio {in National Defense”. and Mrs.
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