Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 May 1941 — Page 23

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| PAGE 22

Homemaking—

New Gadgets Are Incentive For More Outdoor Cookery|

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PART OF THE FUN of getting out into the “wide open spaces”

is the pleasant task of filling the “wide open space” that develops just | south of the diaphragm shortly after contact with fresh air. in quantities—is in order. Even if the al fresco banquet is held no farther afield than the Wide, open spaces of a city backyard, the fun of Suni cookery lends hew flavor to the meal. Some of | the new gadgets in the shops are| ° incentive enough in themselves to more—and bigger—outdoor meals. The “red hot toaster” at Ayres’, for instance. It's a long metal contrivance, with wooden handles, that started out to be. a fork—or ‘two forks—for roasting wieners. Somewhere along the route, it, or they, became ambitious and the result is a hinged arrangement of crinkled metal that grips not merely one, but THREE, wieners for exposure to the fire. Believe it or not, it costs but 10 cents.

BUILT ON THE SAME principle] with long metal shafts and. wooden grips to keep the palms cool, is the Hamburg-Grill. In its case the hinge Joins two square, shallow. pans for incasing a hamburger patty ‘as it cooks to juicy brownness. A minor miracle for 15 cents.

OR IT'S POSSIBLE to go really "upper bracket” with a cube steak

broiler fashioned to hold two regu-| To keep parties (indoor or out-lation-sized cube steaks at one and

door variety) from going the same time. This one (price: 39 along with the fizz-water, there

cents) is made of two flat oblongs of | | open-meshed metal, also hooked to-| 'S & Mew gadget on the market | called the “Soda-mizer.”

gether with a hinge | AND THERE

forks,

are marshmallow| A brightly colored little airtight

orthodox style at 10 cents and one, clamped on the opened bottle. Jut-| built on the extension plan so it ¢an ting from one side of the cap is a be stretched way out to there, at 15 tiny spigot effect and in the cap!

cents.

IT'S A LITTLE EARLY yet, -but

along in mid-picnic-season, guests : at outdoor parties will be able to|the bottle’s contents are usable

butter their chins with corn-on-|'ight down to the last bubble. It the-cob. New lucite cob-knobs will {FePays its $1 cost many times over be grand equipment for the corn|in soda-savings. Its habitat is eater. Ayres’ housewares department. They are little isosceles triangles| IT'S NO TRICK at all to keep of the transparent plastic, the rolls warm for the outdoor feast if sharpest points to be fitted into cob | jone has a container displayed at ends for easy handling. Theyre Ayres’. It, too, is of wood, in a boxy pretty enough to be used within |old-fashioned sugar-scoop design. the confines of a dining room as Curving down from scoop handle to well as at picnics. Twelve for $3, lip is a spring-hinged copper lid to although fewer than a dozen may hold in the rolls and their warmth. be purchased. A good investment at $3.

top is a push button for squirting

398

The sole is a platform... the wedge heel is scooped...the upper stock is softie calf...the colors are white with brown or saddle tan with brown. The effect is devastating! One of many...

NISLEY emis

.GLOVES. . SLIPPERS

44 N. PENNSYLVANIA

HANDBAGS. .HOSIERY.

flat |

the beverage from bottle to glass. | | Carbonation just can’t escape and |

-| Children, Strength of Nation: No. 8 Home Accidents Are Greatest

id DR. RICHARD ARTHUR BOLT

Director Cleveland Child Health Association

ACCIDENTS, not mumps, mea- | sles or pneumonia, take the heavy toll of our children today. Accie dents are the leading cause of death among children between 4 and 10 and rank second for children between 2 and 4.

Most frequent causes of accidents at home are suffocation, burns, poisoning, cuts, drownings | and falls. Many of these could be | prevented by simple precaution

: | and ever watchful care,

The young child is a great cx- | perimenter. If he sees mother | take something from the medi- | cine chest, he may drink it, or even try to use daddy’s razor. The best way to prevent such acci- | dents is, of course, to keep such | things out of baby’s reach. Mothers should keep handy antidotes for all poisons. If the child swallows poison or some harmful substance, administer the antidote at once and then call your doctor immediately. ® = A SURPRISING number of babies are drowned by being bathed in the family bathtub. Mothers sometimes faint while

|

bending over baby in the tub

which has been filled with too | much water. If the family tub | accidents. These can be obtained

must be used, bathe the child | | only when some other person is |

| present. The ideal precaution,

| a modern bathinette,

in such a way that they cannot be pulled over the baby's head. Too many deaths are caused from suffocation and can be avoided by careful attention and the use of

Theta Sigs Will Entertain

Sorority groups in the city will Meet tonight and next week.

THETA SIGMA PHI, honorary journalism sorority at Butler University, will entertain freshman and sophomore journal-

ism students with a 5 o'clock spread tonight in the student lounge of Arthur Jordan Memorial Hall Faculty guests and chaperons will include Dr. Elizabeth B. Ward, dean of women, and Mesdames Donald D. Burchard, Charles V. Kinter and John T. Barnett. Coeds to be entertained include | Miss Patricia Bridges, New Augus- | ta: Miss Jean Brannon, Marion; Miss Betty King, Huntington; Miss Ruth Neptune, Lebanon; Miss Wyoming Robinson, Bridgeport; Miss Jane Jordan, Colfax: Miss Orpha McCue, Hammond, and Miss Jane Lewis, El Paso, Tex. Indianapolis coeds to be guests at the spread are the Misses Barbara Dillon, Donnie Douglas, Wini- | fred Farrington, Bernice Hauser, | Jeanne Johnson, Jean Kercheval, | Helen McFarland, Harriet Meister, Elizabeth South, Virginia Crawford, Elizabeth Meyer, Lucille Williams, Mildred Reimer, Mary Alvey, Jeanne Gass, Marianne Collins, Kathryn Weaver and Martha Ann Kirby.

Miss Frieda Stumm, 2623 E. 18th St., will be hostess to BETA ALPHA CHAPTER members ‘of PI OMICRON SORORITY Tuesday evening.

B—

When work at home tires...pause and

TP or. wre OO,

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ice-cold Coca-Cola is refreshment at its best. It leaves you with t happy, refreshed feeling. It is pure, wholesome and delicious...

By

pause throughout that refreshes with

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the drink for home refreshment. So when you

the day, make it the pause ice-cold Coca-Cola.

BOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY BY

COCA-COLA BOTTLING CO, Ind

| however, is to bathe the baby in |

Threat to Young Children

sp

Bathing baby in a shallow, mod-

ern “bathinette” is an ideal precaution against the too-frequent bathtub accidents.

simple devices to prevent such

in your local stores. Leave no unprotected places such as the nead of staircase, an open window, porch or fireplace into which toddlers might tumble,

| Bed covers should be arranged | Safety doors or playpens may be

too, with wooden grips—the cap with plastic syphon tube, it is| | bought or built cheaply. They may

| save your child from breaking a

national:

bone or even from death. An even more dangerous time comes when the child is taken into the streets or permitted to play outdoors. First, teach him the difference between a red and green light and that speeding motorists have the right-of-way. If that lesson is well taught, the chances of his being crushed by a car decrease immensely.

2 WH wd

a THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

JANE JORDAN

DEAR JANE JORDAN-I have been a reader of your column for a long time and after reading so many problems of dissension contained in letters to you, I have arrived at the conclusion that the fault of most of the trouble lies at the feet of the wives. They are trying to be too dominating in this new age, and the contrariest thing on earth is a woman! I know, for I am a married man. Women are trying to go too far with their rights. They either are trying to be the boss of the house, or to reform a husband. They are contrary until they have their own way. Then they wonder why they can’t hold their husbands or win a proposal from a man. CLIFF, » n ” Answer—You speak too generally and take in too much territory in your accusations. You would have been closer to the truth if you had said that a large percentage of the women are dissatisfied with second place in marriage and are in constant competition with their husbands for the first or superior position. The happiest marriages are made when women are willing to concede the lead to their husbands and who feel no envy of their masculine rights. Did it ever occur to you that men might be at least in part to blame for the situation? Some women complain of a lack of masculinity in their husbands and would be glad to play second fiddle to a strong man. Their husbands have not been able to make them feel secure and satisfied under their management, In our culture men are so absorbed with the economic problem that they have little time for their women. They are inclined to feel that as long as they can write checks for what women want that nothing else is required. This is far from true. No woman is happily married to an animated check book. She Wants a friend, companion and lover. Men who know how to make love to their

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wives are seldom troubled with a woman who envies their sex. If your wife is contrary it is because she is discontented. If she wants to boss it is because she is not skillfully bossed. My guess is that it is your love she wants, but knows she does not have and that she tries to substitute other and less satisfactory things for: what is missing in her life. Many extravagant women spend their husband’s money because it is about the only thing they can get from the men. It is a well known fact that excessive buying is often a compensation for unsatisfied desires. Think things over and let me know if you see any truth in them. JANE JORDAN.

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

| cox. On the candy committee are |Mesdames Louis Haas, + Ernest [Schaeffer and Glen Bell. Mrs. Myron Sears is publicity chairman.

: . ) >2 3% a Firemen’s Auxiliary ‘To Give Party Mrs. Arthur Schaffner and Mrs. John Miller are co-chairmen for a| | pillowslip card party to be given by| the Ladies Auxiliary to the Indianapolis Firemen’'s Assoclation tomorrow at 2 p. m. Proceeds will be {turned over to the Women's Field | | Army for Cancer Control. General committee assistants are]

Mesdames Jack Stanley, James | Welsh, Hal Chamberlain, Herbert |

1] Mal A LICE

| Aker, Everett Jackson and John Wil-|

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