Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 April 1941 — Page 12
PAGE 12
Homemaking—
Smart Beachwear May Be| Made From Turkish Towels
NOW YOU CAN wrap vourself up in a towel and parade the beach Without fear of the censor. For a leading towel] company (Cannon| Mills) has been in a huddle with all the important pattern houses from which has emerged a selection of smart beachwear to be made from] gpecific Turkish towel designs One pattern (Butterick) is an ensemble of snug-fitting trunks and] 2 bra gathered at the with narrow tape run through a casing, | plus a brief coat—for all of which only three towels are required. Another pattern (McCall) consists of & bathrobe, bag and sunsuit, and calls for four towels. Other companies have bathrobe, hooded coat, beach cape and coat patterns deigned for Turkish towels
front | THE FIRST BLUSH of spring ushered in a rose fashion that per-| mits a flower-loving woman to have her roses and wear them, too. Appreciating the universal love| for flowers, the world’s largest] growers of fine roses went into a huddle with the Ameritex Co. while {the rest of the world was fighting] ‘snowstorms, and soon an idea) sprang into bloom. Now, just as! the flower planting season opens, ! Miss or Mrs. America can buy al new frock of rose-printed lawn in-| spired by one of the nine prize roses| of 1941, send in the attached hang! tag with her name and address. and receite a bush of the same rose to plant in her garden. » = »
The Question Box Q-—-Can homogenized cream be whipped ? A—No, it is practically useless for whipping.
THE COAST of a man who, strings ang self-
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wearied of
apron
consciousness directly feminine aprons. designed for him-
gelf an apron to suit a man=s taste TH» 1 owing
Bart
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Angeles
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took a straight piece of cotton drill, slipped a steel spring through top hem, clamped it around his chest, and christened it *His Own.” i friends discovered it and wouldn't give him any peace til] he And then the So he had
advertisi of
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Q—Please name some of the best Sources of vitamin E. A—The richest source is wheat germ oil. Other vegetable oils contain it and also leafy green vegetables. such as lettuce, spinach and 1 water 1 a and
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Q—Please suggest a durable and] economical material for upholstery. A—Many fabrics of medium qual- | ity and price, wear well, if the varn! is tightly twisted and the cloth is closely woven. Choose a color that | will not soil easily. Among recom-| mended fabrics are cotton and linen! friezes, which are attractive and] come in a wide range of colors.
right atmofor bar. K hobhy, this apron washable after removing ng
ONE OF THE IMPORTANT new {tems that stores participating in National Notions Week this week wil] show is a dainty slide fastener for neck pockets, sleeves end plackets designed for sheer fabrics such as lawns and organdies. These slide fasteners are so fine they are alm invisible on the gress
itch-
Q—Please give a recipe for mock! angel cake A—The ingredients are: 2 egg whites, 1 cup sugar, 113 cups flour. 3 teaspoons baking powder, 23 cup scalded milk, 1 teaspoon vanilla. 4 {teaspoon salt Mix and sift together four times the sugar, flour.! baking powder and salt. Pour in| the scalded milk gradually. Fold in| {egg whites, stiffly beaten, and add| {varilla. Turn into ungreased angel {food pan and bake in moderate oven {for 45 minutes. It is best when] served a day or two after baking.
At Ayres’ Tomorrow
Q—What will restore the luster to {cut glass that has become dull? | | A—Rub a cut lemon over the | glass and rinse the glass with clear water.
Q—What are the chief sources] from which bees obtain commercial {honey in this country? | | A--Sweet clover, white and alsike jclovers, and alfalfa. Distinctly fla-| { vored honeys come also from the] |tupelo trees of the South; orange blossoms, cotton blossoms, and wild | sage in the California foothills; star thistle of the Pacific Coast, and] from buckwheat, mesquite and fire- | weed.
| dprcking, Sev ‘Church Choir will speak tomorrow in | iy i Concert Set
auditorium on “Your Personality and Your Table” She replaces Mrs. Marjorie Thorsh, Mrs. J. H. Copeland will present | the Young Peoples’ Choir of the Second Presbyterian Church in a
whe was te appear on the “It's Home Week at Ayres” program, mT —— | concert Thursday at 7:30 p. m. in| {the church. Choir director is Rob-|
ert Burford and accompanist is) { Mrs. Laurance R. Hayes. | Instrumental soloists will be Miss| Mary Elizabeth Bradway. who will | play two vioiin solos, and Miss Marv | Higgins, pianist. Four groups of | anthems and songs will make up | the choir’ program. Members of the choir are the Misses Agnes Alig, Betty Jean Bur- | ris, Barbara Foster, Marguerite Hardy, Charmion Harp, Elsie Hubert, Jane and Eleanor Iovine, Elea- { nor Sylvester, Marian Thompson, | Mary Joe Beazell, Emily Blasing- | ham, Ruth Copeland, Dorothy El- | der, Betty Graves, Margaret Hard- {| ing, Jo Anne Hayes, Marian Scott, | Marcia Smith and Higgins, William Brannen, Charles Knowles, Eldon Alig, Robert Blu. Harold Craig, Jav Davis, William Higgins and Robert Knowles | Mesdames Jack Oldham, E G ! Plum, J. R. Duvall and Vance Smith | are sponsors of the choir. Ushers | at Thursday's concert will be Samuel | Copeland, Robert Elder, Richard Jowitt and Robert Lagemann.
Mrs, York,
Avres'
Helen
| 1
Jewish Unit to Hear Welfare Worker | Miss Ethel H. Wise, New York,| | social and welfare worker, will] speak tomorrow at the noon lunch-
| eon of the Women's Division of the! | Jewish Welfare Fund in the Traver- |
| tine Room of the Hotel Lincoln. | She is co-chairman of the Wom-! { en's Division of the United Jewish Appeal of New York, a member of | the executive committee of the Na-| tional Refugee Service and chair- | man of that group's division for] social and cultural adjustment. She is a graduate of Barnard, did research work at Mt. Sinai Hospital, | directed a girls’ club and was sec- | retary of the United Vacation | Home in Long Branch, N. J. She also has been vice president of the! Lavanburg Corner House, & psv-| chiatric case work institute for boys.
Mrs. Fritz Hostess
Beta Chapter of Phi Beta Delta | Sorority will hold 2 business meeting tonight at the home of Mrs Kennard Fritz, 56 S. Linwood Ave
= Ap 27
ve Sunadi
\mproved
assenger Train P schedules
| Ticket Agent Consult oes details.
Simplicity is the keynote of our home loan plan. Your can arrange your own loan at Railroadmen’s.
A member of our staff, with a thorough knowledge of LOCAL conditions, will assist you in presenting your application for a loan.
No charge is made for this service and there is no deposit required with your application. Why not call soon?
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES in the Home
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TUESDAY, APRIL 22, 1941
Travel News—
Indiana Parks Are Ready for
Visitors
French Lick Hotel Prepares for Derby
Cr
In case you haven't noticed, it's already the time of year to pack up| a lunch, load the family in the car| and have a look at outdoor In.
diana. And just in case you've been too! busy with the every-day job to no-| tice the leafing out of trees, bloom- | ing of the forsythia and blossoming | {|of tulip trees, you can get a refreshing glimpse of the vernal season along the Hoosier highways and in the State parks next weekend. | It's only a couple hours’ drive to! |a half dozen State parks near In-| dianapolis where the kids can ex-| | plore interesting woodland paths, ‘| press their noses against the screen {of animal exhibit cages, and use up | a little excess energy climbing up into observation towers. Wild flowers should be popping
aaa ia
Perfect for the home office, living room or den is this sleek, modern desk. There's a disappearing |up soon, and the fishing is reported
table surface for a.portable typewriter, plenty of filing cabinet and drawer space on two sides—so that Designed by Gilbert Rhode, it's of
mother and father can go over the houscheld accounts together. bleached striped walnut. x
about the best in the year. |
2 on
JANE JORDAN
DEAR JANE JORDAN-—I don't know what to do. My mother and father are married again and I live with my father and stepmother. My time is not my own. I can't even think for myself. My mother sends me a letter and my step-mother reads it and shows it to her friends hefore I get it. Now don't get the impression that I am mistreated. for I am not, except for my mother. They talk about her continually and if I defend her I am scolded severely. My mother wants me to live with her but I can't get along with my step-father. Please help me. MARIE. = = ” Answer—Your situation is hard. I doubt it not. Yet here it is and you have to cope with it. You may as well face the fact that you are more jealous of your step-father than your stepmother. That is why you have difficulty in getting along with him, I imagine you project the blame for the whole situation on him. He took your father's place and you resent it. I don’t blame you, but if only you could learn to forgive him you would be able to get along with him better You do not like to hear your mother criticized. Again I do not blame vou and I feel that you have a right to insist that your father and step-mother refrain from expressing their opinions in your presence. Your mail is your own and they should not feel free to open it. You are justified in objecting as strenuously as you please. However, when remarks are made over your earnest protest. arrange to be a little deaf, and ignore what is said if you ean. In other words, don't enter into the squabbles of grown-ups but lead your own life with other young people. Fill it so full that you just don't have time to think about your parents and their problems. I believe that children could put up with the divorce of their parents more graciously if the dissenting adults would not contend with each other for the love and loyalty of the child. It is cruel to expect the child to take sides. At best divorce is an evil thing for children but the harm it causes is lessened when the parents share the child's love and allow it to visit back and forth without being forced to join in the hostilities. = = ” DEAR JANE JORDAN—I am a girl of 16 and go to Washington High School. My father won't let me go with boys. I'm not even allowed to walk down the street with a boy unless my dad knows him. I've been secretly going with a boy for a vear and a half. We've been plannning to ask my father if he can go with me. I want to wait until IT am 17 but the bov wants to ask him now. My mother doesn’t care if 1 go with him. She likes him and his mother likes me. Should I wait until I am 17 or what should I do? WORRIED.
» s Answer—What is your reason for waiting until you are 17? Has your father promised to relent when you are older? If so, it might be wise to wait and then confront him with his promise. Otherwise, would his attitude be any different when you are 17 than it is now? It is normal and natural for you to be interested in boys. All vour father accomplishes by his prohibitidns is that he forces you to deceive him. The sooner he faces this fact the better. JANE JORDAN,
Put vour problems in a letter tea Jane Jordan whe will answer your questions in this column daily.
“WHE
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Maybe you didn't get in all the]
” | . ~ But just in case you really have the wanderlust, how about a flight M over the Arctic? Maybe that 1 1 sounds a little far-fetched, but F i Guild Plans Esquire Magazine, in an article this | " month, asserts it can be arranged. ami y Party If you're just a little more orthoThe Marian College Guild will | dox, there are 30,000 miles of U. S.| entertain with a social hour for its| territory without the conveniences | members and their families Thurs- of hot-dog stands and filling staday at 8 p. m. Hostesses will be | tions where you can rough it pio-| Mesdames August Annee, Ralph neer style, according to another Cox, Charles Mellen, Mary Rapia, | Esquire article. There are 60 wilRussell Ritchie, Gerry Spragg and |derness areas saved from modern C. C. Swengel and the Misses Mar- | Streamlining. | guerite Gallagher, Jule Lanahan,| A pack trip through the wilder. Betty Riedy and Minnie Sarter. ness areas, sponsored by the Amer- | Guild members were to meet this|ican Forest Association, will cost morning at 10:30 o'clock at the col- YOu about $140 for two weeks. lege to sew for the Red Cross. If you feel audacious, go ahead | ions | and plan your own trip. You can] v \tmie hi Qf hire saddle and pack horses for Entertains Chi Sigma $1.25 a day and guides cost $5 a Chi Sigma will meet tonight at!day. the home of Miss Margaret O'Neal, 24 N. Holmes Ave ———n——————————— skiing you wanted last winter. | Mrs. Cook Hostess There's still 38 inches of snow on| Irs. H the runs of Baldy Mountain at Sun| The 12 Per Cent Club will be en- | Valley, Idaho, according to Friedl | tertained tomorrow afternoon at | Pfeifer, skiing instructor—or maythe home of Mrs. Chester Cook. be it's too early in the warm seaa s LA B J . ith t \ 11 Sr a Wake-up AVAILABLE IN DRIP OR REGULAR GRIND
Listen te Edgar Bergen-Charlie McCarthy on the Chase &
son for that to conjure up hopeful dreams.
|W. C. T. U. to Hear ’ | Rev. Emery Parks
Already, at French Lick, people | are thinking of the Kentucky | The Rev. Emery Parks, pastor of Derby, May 3. Reservations for|the Bellaire Methodist Church, will that week-end already are reported! speak on “Temperance and Sabbath rolling in. Observance” at a meeting of the The management is optimistically Mary E. Balch W.C.T. U. unit Fripredicting the, biggest season since| day afternoon. Hostess will be Mrs. 1929 at the southern Indiana spa.) Paul Durant, 1907 E. 2nd St. There's horseback riding, golf and| Topic for general discussion is tennis in the daytime and the| “What Would Frances Willard Do Frank Gagen orchestra for danc-| About My Town and the Liquor ing in the lobby every evening. | Traffic?”
Visit the POLAR EXHIBIT
AT THE
HOME SHOW
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® VISIT THAT
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Round-Trip Fares CAMP SHELBY Hattiesburg, Miss, $17.05 CAMP KNOX Ft. Knox, RKy..... CAMP CUSTER Battle Creek, Mich. .
One Round Way Trip Boston, Mass. 13.7% 21.70
New York N. ¥Y . 11.50 20,70 htn., D.C. 9.50 17.10
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will still be good?”
the GAN Refrigerator Lasts Longest
BECAUSE THERE ARE NO MOVING PARTS TO WEAR OUT OR CAUSE TROUBLE!
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ESR EEN
RLINES
