Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 September 1941 — Page 12

omemaking—

New Reflectorized House Numbers

Are Available in

Local Stores

ANYONE who ever searched wearily for a house number on a dark| :

2 street and on a moonless night will appreciate the value of the re-

_ flectorized house numbers being shown by local stores. Ji The Miro-Flex reflectorized house numbers come with a streamlined

steel frame and stake with brilliant reflecting elements sealed in With

three applications of weather-proofing.

The reflecting numerals appear on two sides of the frame and are

_ visible for 350 feet to persons ap-|®™Y

proaching from either direction. The numerals are in separate blocks and can be changed when the addr changes. The cost is $2 complete. Installed at a curb, they make it easy for guests or emergency - gallers, such as doctors, fo find a residence quickly.

AMONG GADGETS that make the housewife’s lot a great deal more convenient is a new towel rack shown in the housewares departments -of several local shops. The rack is of metal and employs the principle used in those extending keep-the-baby-in gates. Pulled out from the wall it provides hanging space for umpteen towels; shoved back when not in use it occupies a minimum of space. The cost—$1.

A THRIFT-PROMOTING device _ for these thrift-minded days is _ designed to cut the cost of heating an oven by transferring the baking operation to the stove top. It’s called an Ade-O-Matic Surface Oven and distributes heat evenly below the food-to-be-baked. Twentynine cents will buy it.

- TWO PIE TINS that have declared war on soggy undercrusts are available. There is Aunt Chick’s | Crispy Crust pie pan at 35 cents, with a wire mesh bottom sinstead of a solid sheet of‘ metal. At 25 cents there is the Magic Pie Pan with numbers of holes cut into the bottom to let hot air circulate freely to the crust.

SPEAKING OF BAKING, it won't be so very long before the cook’s thoughts turn to Christmas cookies. That's when a rolling pin with the intaglio designs necessary for springerles will come into play. For $1.19 it can ke tucked

We, the Women Women Don’t Dress

To Please Men

By RUTH MILLETT THE BEHAVIOR of women toward the silk stocking shortage is fresh evidence that women don’t dress to please men, but to please themselves. It has always been conceded that the reason women, Hoh and poor alike, just “had to have’ silk stockings was be cause men like to see feminine legs in sheer silk hosi-

But now the props have been knocked out of that old theory. W h en Uncle Sam said “No more silk stockings when the present supply is exhausted”— the men took the matter calmly. Ruth Millett They even looked down their noses at the women who went around wailing, “What'll I do?” And as for the ones who chased down to department stores to push and fight for the right to lay in a supply of the suddenly precious silk stockings—the men just snickered at them. “A bunch of scatterbrains,” they said. s » 8 IF WOMEN had been interested in the masculine viewpoint on clothes, right then.and there they would have stopped worrying over a future without the glamorizing effect of silk on their slender, fat or’ medium legs. If the men didn’t care, then what had they to worry about? But that wasn’t the way it was. The women just looked at the men as though they were impossibly stupid and. said, “Naturally, you don’t understand.” And wen{ right on worrying about the silk stocking situation. So wives haven't been wrecking the family budget and shop-girls haven’t been eating 15-cent lunches in order to buy si¥k stockings just to make themselves attractive to men. They've worn silk stockings all these years at no matter what the sacrifice because they liked silk stockings. So we can add that bit of negative evidence to the old,

away against the Christmas cookie day.

old question, “Do women dress Ww please men?”

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Dolls of the Warring - Countries

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Figures of American History Indian Dolls Hitler and Mussolini Mexican Dolls Cowboys and Cowgirls And many others ;

|given at 2:30 p. m. on Tuesdays,

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In Charles Lamb’s “Dissertation on Foass Pig,”

Baste Roast Port With White Table Wine

one of the world’s favorite main dishes received the fiterary glorification it deserves. Perennially popular, roast pork is delicious in any one of a number of ways in which it is prepared. But worthy of another essay on the subject is the tender pork roast which has been treated to a generous basting of white table wine during the cooking process!

ROAST PORK IN WHITE WINE (Serves 8 to 10)

1 Four-pound loin of pork Salt, pepper 2 Cups California Hock, Sauterne, Riesling or any dry white wine 1 Cup brown sugar Pineapple slices for garnish 3% Cup butter Bunches of white grapes for garnish

Marinate the pineapple slices in white wine for one-half hour. Drain and use wine for basting roast. Rub surface of roast with salt and pepper. Brown meat in an open roasting pan in a 500 degree oven. Reduce heat to 300 de‘grees and roast meat until next thermometer registers 185 degrees in center of roast or allow 30 to 35 minutes per pound. Baste frequently with wine in which pineapple slices were marinated. At end of roasting period, baste thoroughly with wine from roasting pan and rub surface with onehalf cup brown sugar. Return to oven and allow 15:minutes for glazing. laze the pineapple slices in skillet using butter and remaining one-half cup brown sugar. Use wine and roast drippings for making gravy.

Girl Reserve Advisers Will Dine Today

Girl Reserve advisers will be guests ‘at a dinner today opening the fall season for their department at the Central Young Women’s Christian Association. Following the dinner they will meet with their hostesses, the Girl Reserve committee, to make plans for the organization of clubs in 24 schools, churches and community centers this month. < Committee members are Mrs. George E. Gill, chairman; Mesdames Virgil Martin, Kenneth Trees, Charles Smuck, Harry Gor-

holter; Dr. Olga Bonke-Booher and the Misses Marian Davis, Myrtle Johnson and Dale Waterbury. Advisers who will be -at the dinner are Mesdames M. C. Rich, Robert Juday, O. F. Hands, Robert Price, James H. Sample, Marjorie Booher and Margaret Kelly; the Misses Dorothy Forsythe, Mary E. Dailey, Dorothy Bonne, Dale Waterbury, Ruth Smoots, Lucy Anna Peterson, Kathleen Shockley, Nina Switzer, Jean Wells; Catherine Mc-| Burney, Lucile McKinty, Mary Risk, Marjorie Glass and Dorothy Roeder. . . 8» A new Home Nursing Red Cross course is one of the Adult Education classes to be held this fall at the Y. W. C. A. following the pres-

ent registration period. It will bel

starting Sept. 30. Another new class will be in Creative Crafts. Mrs. Glenn Diddel will teach Spanish classes Monday and Tuesday eveniigs and Tuesday mornings and others in Creative Writing and the Art of Conversation. Also on the schedule are American Art and History of Costume, Monday mornings, Mrs. Katherine Pierce, instructor; Bible classes, Tuesday afternoons and evenings, Miss Florence E. Lanham, and bridge classes Tuesdays and Fridays, Mrs. R. Ralston Jones. 8 8 = Miss Emma Smith is in charge of an informal garden party to be given today by residents at the Y. W. C. A. Blue Triangle Hall, 725 N. Pennsylvania St. She is a member of Hall council, following her recent election with the Misses Kitty Lou Loper, Betty Miller, Betty Hunter, Anna Brandeberry, Louella Peterson, Martha Busby and Kay Robertson. Miss Mary Wolverton was named president of the

Entertains I. T. S. C.

Mrs. Lewis Coats, 517 E. 56th St.,

Monterey Chapter, International Travel-Study Club, when they hold at 12:30 p. m. tomorrow. Mrs. Ruth: Holman will leCture on the Panama Canal Mrs. Roger Lawton will preside, and Mrs. T. 8. Buck will be the assistant hostess.

Olnosi Meeting S Set

The ~ annual President's Day 1 o'clock e home of Mrs. W. Arthur ton, 1428 N. Lasalle St. Mrs.

man, Ralph Johns and H. H. Arn-|

will be hostess for members of :

JANE JORDAN

v

DEAR JANE JORDAN-I have a very dear girl friend who has been in love with a married man for the past two years. He finally got tired of her and she started drinking and is getting very hard. She never goes out with anyone but just goes-around by herself. She

* is working and supporting herself. I've known her for a number of

years and know she is just putting on a hard front to make the man think she doesn’t care. .He is a perfect heel but she always has overlooked his bad points and worships the few good ones. Is there anything I can do to get her back to her natural sweet self? . It worries

me to see her like this.

M. J.

® 8 =

Answer—Sometimes it helps a girl to point out some facts about

herself which may have escaped her notice.

For one thing the girl

who falls in love with a married man may be one wh underestimates her ability to win a single man. A serious love affair with a bachelor

suggests marriage as a goal.

Many girls are so doubtful about their

own worth that they do not expect a man to assume the responsibility for their support. Their anxiety shows itself in a stand-ofiish attitude which repells prospective suitors. With a married man they feel completely at ease because they know that marriage is out of the question. In other words they do not ask the married man to assume responsibility but humbly show their willingness to make all the

sacrifices.

Again it may not be the first time in the girl’s life that she has

yearned for the exclusive love of a man who was married to another. She may have been jealous of her own father and resented playing

second fiddle to her mother. In winning a married man she enjoys a sort of vicarious atonement in compensation for her first defeat. The actors have been changed, to be sure, but the drama remains the

same.

This situation she will seldom admit because she cannot.

recognize the obscure motives back of her behavior. All you can do is to encourage her to believe that she rates more than she asked for in life, and that when she raises her own estimate of herself men will tend to accept her at that estimate. A girl who cannot bear up under disappointment is seriously lacking in courage. Alcohol may give her a false courage but it will not help her solve

her problem,

JANE JORDAN,

Put your prvioms in a lefter to Jane Jordan go will answer your questions

in this column daily.

Rupa re wd erache;

By MRS. ANNE CABOT Enchantingly feminine is this little ruffled doily.

It’s crocheted

on a tiny round of white linen gnd its ruffle makes a frothy frill when it is lightly starched. Doily is 10 inches in diameter. For complete crochet instructions for Ruffled Doily (Pattern No. 5203), send 10 cents in coin, your name and address and the pattern number to Anne Cabot, The Indianapolis Times, 106 Seventh Avenue,

New York.

+ |luncheon of the Olnosi Study Club| vi be held tomorrow at 1

Uniform for School

Pattern No. 8947 is in sizes 4 to 12 years. Size 6 jerkin and skirt require 2% yards 39-inch material, short sleeve blouse, 134 yards. Pattern No. 8948 is in sizes 12 to 20; 40. Size 14 jerkin and skirt require 3% yards 39-inch material. Short sleeve blouse, 1% yatds. * Two separate Patterns 15 cents each. For this attractive pattern, send 15 cents in coin, your name, address, pattern number and size to The Indianapolis Times Today's Pattern Service, 214 W. Maryland St. For other smart sewing suggestions, send for the fall Fashion Book, just out. It is a complete review of new styles for the coming season.

“Double Blend” Chocolate of Brazil

Taste Better Than Homemade Or —Your Money Back Doubled!

with the color that is vivid redbrown—pressed from the beans of

* Here's the taste of the chocolate with theflavor that is heavy as musk —crushed from the beans of Cacao Almonado, the

: palm-shaded treasure of the Gold Coast.

{To Address

| Accountants

‘|Fires,” illustrating the address.

- {Dawson, Louise Enderlin and Amine

‘land Miss Beaftice Joiner. News-

| beth Riley, Hazel Rogers and Miss Olga Kaiser, Listorian and assist-|-

~ |George A. Saas

Committees for Season Named

Geurse A. Saas, advertising manager of the Citizens Gas & Coke Utility, will speak on “Six Years of Progress” this evening at a meeting of thes American Society of Women Accountants’ Indianapolis chapter. The program at the Spink Arms Hotel also will include a motion picture, “Keeper of the

Chapter president, Mrs. ‘Marguerite McCoun, has announced the following committee appointments: Program and publicity— Mrs. ‘Edith Lott, chairman; Miss Evelyn Vick, co-chairman; the Misses Ruth Richter, Ruth MecDonough, Retha Hershberger, Anna Louise Adkins and Harriet Bateman. Hospitality——Miss Elizabeth Cook, chairman; Miss Opal Williamson, co-chairman; Mrs. Ida Broo, the Misses - Esther : Fleming, Esther Steup, Margaret Forcht, Edith Wade, Clara Dux and Christine Grimm. Legislative and Public Relations— Miss Phoebe Comer, chairman; Miss Myrtle Stein, .co-chairman; - Mrs. Ada Mozelle Osborne and the Misses Elizabeth - Waggoner, Anna Reed, Amelia Klipple, Beulah Brewer and Ruth Baer. Library—Miss Bernice Fleeharty, chairman; Miss Gertrude Smith, co-chairman; the Misses Cora Dixon, Thelma Houser, Myrtle

Brauns. Social—Mrs. Edna Brown, chairman; Miss Marguerite McCoy, co-chairman; Mrs. Eva Shellhorn, Mrs. Christine Clapp and the Misses Edythe Mae Adkins,- Ether Kantz, Isabelle Nelson, Lucille Sheafer and Jean Dunbar.

On Membership Committee

Yearbook—Mrs. Emma Wilson, chairman; Miss Matilda Schroeder, co-chairman: Mrs. Mary Lou Klobucar, Miss Eleanor Rugenstein

paper—Miss Margaret Stagg, chairman; Mrs. Ruth Pickett, co-chair-man; Mrs. Dorothy Smith and the Misses Miriam Boswell, Mayme Anderson, Clara Silverman, Kathryn Deakyne, Mary Virginia Hall and Margaret Bourgonne. Membership—Miss Louise Stadler, chair-

chairman; Mrs. Della Crews, Miss Katherine Graves and Miss Charlotte McHugh. Other committee members .are Miss Emily Berry and Miss Edythe Brannon, finance; the Misses Eliza-

ants; the Misses Mabel Jane Ham-

and Mrs. Edna Merlau, cheer; Miss Helen Deerberg and Miss Bonnie Bennett, correspondents to C. P. A

The Bridal Scene— Parties Honor Brides-to-Be

News of showers for brides-to-be appears in today’s pre-nuptial notes. Miss Marjorie Willsey, whose marriage to John Allen Coyle will be Sept. 28 in the Emerson Avenue Baptist Church, will be honor guest at a miscellaneous shower and breakfast given at Ayres’ Tearoom Saturday morning. Hostesses will be Misses Pauline Muench, Elizabeth Cook and Nellie Jeanne Baker. The bride-to-be is

Coyle is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Orvel R. Coyle, 1004 Hosbrook St.

mother and Mrs. Coyle will be Mesdames Bertha Cook, Leland King, Emalie Jones, Ervin Scott, Samuel Arnett, Wallace Kern, Walter Heck-

|man, Herman Trautman, Simon A.

Reisler, Clifford . Hardin, Misses Martha Chapman, "Elizabeth Russell, Margaret Schumacher, Genevieve stumpf, Mildred Robinson, Sarah

Davie and Catherine Shepherd.

8 #8 8

cently by Mrs. Lucille Sublet and Mrs. Bernice Cox at the latter's home, 549 Warren Ave. the honor guest was Miss Helen McKay who

Gilliam in a ceremony on Sept. 27. Miss McKay is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harvey McKay, 542 Warren Ave. : Attending the party with the

grandmother, Mrs. John Kantner, were Mesdames Roy Thomas, Everett Trackwell, John Robinson, Gerald Leamon, Bradford Ogden, Leona

erdy and Pat Sanders. Also Mesdames Lucille Capehart, Susan ° Hightower, Edward Henry, John Andrews, Gilbert Sublet, Frank Gilliam, Virgil Dunn, Edward Russell, George Greenlee, Thelma Horseman, John Thomas and Harry Winegar. :

Mrs. Stokes Hostess

Mrs. R. Bertram Stokes, 1034 W. 35th St., will be hostess to Victorian Chapter members of the International Travel-Study Club Friday for a 12:30 o'clock luncheon. “Panama and the Canal Zone” will be Mrs. John W. Thornburg’s travel

topic.

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Clubs—

The INDIANAPOLIS JUNIOR WOMEN'S CLUB will hold its first meeting of the year at’7:30 p. m. Thursday in the Woman's Department Club. Taylor Land will talk on flower arrangements.

Its first meeting of the year will held tomororw by the BUTLER INDEPENDENT MOTHERS’ CLUB. Mrs. Ernest Freyman, president, will preside at the 2 p. m. session in the recreation room of Jordan Hall at the University. Mrs. Robert Hammil will be in charge of the program. Mrs. J. C. Goodlet is social chairman.

The MOTHERS’ CLUB of the ROBERTS KINDERGARTEN will hold a covered dish luncheon at 1 p. m. tomorrow at the kindergarten with Mrs. Alvin Leeb as chairman. Mrs. Martha Olney will discuss “The Child afid Daily Living.”

Mrs. Frank Mock, 5228 Pleasant Run. Blvd., will entertain the TRI-O-DICE CLUB at a 1 p. m. luncheon tOmMOrrow.

A card party and dance will be sponsored at 8:30 p. m. tomorow by the O-DELL CLUB’ at the 5050 Clubrgoms, 211 N. Delaware St. Gilly Banta’s orchestra will play.

The U. S. S. SACRAMENTO SWEETHEARTS’ CLUB will meet this evening with Miss Kay Campbell, 2617 N. Delaware St. Meetings are held the first and third Mondays of each month. Officers chosen at the recent organizing session are: Miss Irene Shull, president; Miss Harriett Dick, vice president; Miss Campbell, secretary; Miss Ruth Baker, treasurer; Miss ‘Virginia Groce/ chaplain; Miss Dorothy Hamilton, ways and means; Miss Mary Lou Mitchell, program; Miss Dorothy Winzenread, “go-getter;” Miss Chris Kyle, hospitality, and Miss Alma Jo Monroe, membership.

A President’s Day luncheon at the Marott Hotel tomorrow will open the WY-MO-DAU'’s club year. Mrs. C. Frank Albright will present the president’s message. Roll call responses will be “Summer Experierices,” and Mrs. John W. Thornburgh will talk on “Let Us Visit Canada and Our Narthern Neighbors.” After a musical program arranged by the music committee, Mrs. Harry A. Burkart will speak on “The Unfortified Boundary Line” and Mrs. Lena B. Ebert on “Nova Scotia.”

The GROLIER FINE ARTS CLUB also will have a President’ Day luncheon at the Marott tomorrow. Talks by the retiring and incoming presidents will be made and the program chairman will outline the year’s study. A guest speaker and a musical program will conclude the ‘program.

Mrs. Bjorn Winger will speak before the TUESDAY QUEST CLUB tomorrow. Hostesses will be Mesdames Hany Irwin, R. F. Kerbox and H. E. Hill,

Mrs. L. L. Benton and Mrs. J, N. Hardy will be hostesses at the HOOSIER TOURIST CLUBS President’s Day meeting tomorrow. Mrs, A. F, Lewis will talk on Elbert Hubbard and the Roycrofters.

Mrs. N. M. Talbert, 5329 Boule-" vard Place, was to be hostess at the - NEOPHYTE GARDEN CLUB buffet luncheon today, preceding a horticultural .round table led by Mrs. Robert W. Mannfield.

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