Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 16 October 1941 — Page 22
I
Times Special Oct. 16.~ ila 3 lie down andovopip, Shisminate. to get well bouncing around that way?” Sounds
‘Johnny, “Well, then, mummy, read to me?”
Jane are really sick, ~ ©old, they are content to doze. But let those recuperative powers swing into action and sensible diversion is a boon to to recovery, sickroom
” 8 = 8 8 =
OCCUPATIONAL THERAPY as practiced by experts in hospitals
stimulating patients’ interest, keeping minds minds and hands busy in Telation to physical capacity. Fish knows many of the tricks of occupational therapy. {Assistant director of the Boston School until she came to New York ‘several weeks ago to be assistant to the director of University Extension it Coltitabiay 850.18 adviser to stuicnts is) the Hew Wires-ysar ocoupapy: course inaugura ere year. : ents wi win & cortiloats of proficiency will be trained to meet the normal civilian need in this therapy. They will also be pre- ; Pared to rise_to any demands due to the national emergen if Naturally their work in allied fields—psychology, '. Jaboratory—qualifies them as topnotch instructors. Simpler procedure Hs may well be practiced by parents of quarantined boys and girls and by . those who care for chronic invalids. 8 First thing to think of is comfort. A clislr upside down on’ the BedsBrines sootiat the slanting back forms @ backrest, raises: the ‘mattress to a comfortable angle. A board, padded by.a pillow and tied with 2 to the head of a bed, forms a foot support. To complete the ent’s ease, try a half barrel hoop stripped with thin pieces of ‘wood ‘to elevate. the bed clothes. ¢ Now comes a Strong bed table. Johnny can’t be expected to paste
stamps um, retty pictures, if his materials: are slidSamp in 3 i io pretty Las evolved a simple table for ie ailing braod. -A board suspended between chairs on. either side .of
‘the bed works like a charm in that household. Miss Fish suggests stamp collecting, always. encouraged by therapists, as both educational and absorbing. There are letters Had ‘be
labo written asking for stamps. That's for a grammar le EY tx set up a globe of the world near their children, ny
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JANE JORDAN
.. DEAR JANE JORDAN-—I am a young married woman of 33. fT married my husband for spite. I never loved him but he loves me. ‘Before I married I went with a man and fell in love with ‘Wim. We had a quarrel and he left. I was so hurt that I married. Now he has come back into my life and wants to start all over domewhere else. He loves me and I feel that I cannot go on this
ny. Shall I start life anew with him or shall I go on the Way X'have? WORRIED JIMMIE. 8 » 8
| Answer—From the standpoint of duty it is clear that a woman fas no right to marry for her own convenience and then discard BE ro rts = im Ethical people feel an obligation toward those who love them and scrupulously fulfill those obligations which they have voluntarily incurred. Duty would have it°that you stay with your husband whéther you love him or not and do your utmost to live up to the letter of your contract even
| marriage with a woman who married him to get even with man. You were willing to hurt two men in order to gratify Jor vn hostile feelings.. Whichever man wins you premanently are ' to be the loser. This may sound like a harsh pronouncement, I ai afraid it is true. «In making your decision try, for once, der the. welfare of the two men inyolved. Which one deserves your hands? "Is it the one who married you for love, or
NE JORDAN 1 am a girl of 17 and I fell in love with hile visiting my aunt, He has been married before but he wife three days before he married her and says . They are not divorced and he asked me to marry 0 think it over, which Idid. I wrote back and told
received no answer. I know that deep down in my 30 fomget him by going with other boys myself to sleep Show every
man marries a gil whom he bas known only her. ‘Then he proposes to a girl whom ‘he res her acceptance. Why should you cry over is so unstable and changeable that no woman could find De Sa Ta It is your good luck that he changed his mind before he replied to your letter. Snap out of it Bnd thank your lucky Tha SiinS YOU Were saved SND YOUF Jolly against TON Sk JANE JORDAN.
’
Today's Times Pattern -
You'll love this individual jum; beca
fullness to be swingy. and yo You'll have g school or business ne fit you can wear through fall and winter when you make this pattern
up. . Pattern No. 8040 is for sizes 11
- for your copy today. Pattern, 14 cents; Pattern Book, 15 cents, One Pattern and Pattern Book together, 25 cents.
‘familiar, doesn’ rea * valine wil 3
complaining and certainly wear out their mothers, Wiken Jonny and ‘covered with measles or sniffing from a first fall |
and in homes has done wonders forsyoung and old convalescents,
la A.U.W. Director
Thousands of cardiac children are kept det and Rape by string.
ing beads or engaging in simple crafts, so that they may convalesce
quickly.
To Attend Play -
Dr. Kathryn McHale, general director of the American Association! of University Women, Washington, will attend the opening performance of Father's Day Yonighs at English’s Theater. The local branch of A. A. U: Ww. is sponsoring the opening for the benefit . of the fellowship. fund named in Dr. McHale's honor. ‘The national organization of A. A. U. W,. has been awarding’ scholarships since 1880. The McHale Fellowship, funds for which are being
be awarded for the first time next year, Dr. McHale's brother, Frank M. McHale, and Mrs. McHale will entertain several guests at the theater tonight.
Mrs. D. G. Walesby
| Heads Auxiliary
HUNTINGTON, Ind, Oct. 16.— Mrs. D. G. Walesby, Indianapolis, was elected president of the Woman’s Auxiliary to the Indiana Chiropractor’s Association at the group’s Suniinl convention held here re-
Other officers are Mrs. Floyd Walters, North Manchester, vice president; Mrs. C. V. Jackson, LaPorte, secretary, and Mrs. P. B. Burns, .Columbus, treasurer, The convention will be held in Indianapolis in 1942.
!
raised by the Indiana branches, will:
[In New York
- > .
patient, feels she is accomplishing something lasting. Once the long Mito 5 sefur mnt: i
teh each stamp comes on the map, th brought from the library, all about the land, its
customs, peoples, produc type of life: A weak child would have ' to forego stamp ec until but there are quiet erafts if ee ap ons wl tas, Sis Ee * 8.» ‘s #& =»
WEAVING with crepe paper is a colorful occupation, and the
jorsid 18 4adiing 1s 54Y be wound into a diss, then pasted or sewed
Children can make soft asimals from table oilcloth, sewing the A ) yarn, then stuffing them with soft cotton. Talent for modeling tn clay and sculpting from soap are often developed during a : stretch of convalescence. Pasting pictures in a scrapbook appeals to imagination, , Little girls take delight in furnishing whole “scrapbook” eng HVIAg-roou furniture in one magazine, a special lamp
; th ‘sewed together into an Afghan,
! chronic invalids. Weaving on burlap turns into cross-stitch pe for samplers, wall hangings, table-scarfs and seats. 41 ning is an odeipation that beguiles many long ‘hours, repays, a thousandfold the patient’s effort. Men especially enjoy ‘it and. the flowers they grow. Flat vegetable crates are contributed ch by mos; markets. Two inches of sail provide a seed bed. After the garden is .planted and sunned in a window seedlings are ed 0 deeper soil. There’s an ‘almost continuous round of pains. = sustain Tag and make the invalid forget
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MISS FISH codes such sickroom. activities constructive in the’ development of hobbies and skills, satisfying process especially for those handicapped by a spell in bed; Dutients have earned pin money by their efforts, a solace to the chronically ill. “Many a mother has blessed thé day that. occupational therapists led Ret io to planned activities for her ailing children, ” commented Miss . Fish.
Those are big words for Johnny. All he knows Is that he has fun now, even when he’s sick. .:
by Helen Worden
NEW YORK, Oct. 16—Mr. and Mrs. Carlos Salzedo are moving, but theyre keeping the same address and having just as much of a bother as if they were moving to another city. “We're simply changing apartments,” explained Mr. Salzedo when
I called recently. “But it's still a just returned from Maine wheré Colony of America. They have a place at Camden, a delightful spot where they've already spent several summers. Mr. Salzedo says its‘ideal for those _— ‘want to.combine work and rest, if harpists can ever rest. People who know tell me harp-play-is. the most nerve-wracking oe of the musical profession. The strain comes from tuning and tuning the harp strings only to have them snap, often at the first touch of the. finger or, what is just as bad, go off key.
A native of France, Mr. Salzedo
looks iike the Frenchman he is.
Brought to this country in 1909 by Arturo Toscanini to be solo harpist
in the Metropolitan Opera orches-
tra, he has the poetic brown eyes and quick gestures characteristic his people. His wife, the former Marjorie Call, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Carl Elmo Call of Roachdale, Ind, was the first harpist’ of the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra until her marriage. “We leave for our fall tour next Thursday,” Mr. Salzedo told me, “for Virginia then the mid-West. On
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of | Institute where his wife once was
CLIMALENE DISSOLVES THE GREASE
Take a tip from hundreds of thousands of wives who know how to get the grease and dirt out of heavily soiled clothes without back-breaking work. 1. Soak overnight in Climalene bath to
loosen heavy grease (2 tablespoons to tub).
. Wring,. wash in usual \ way=-=sprinkling 2 table. spoons Climalene in water before adding 24 usual amount of soap. . 14 tablespoon Climalene in first rinse, Grease soaks out when Climalene is ‘in the water. Soap suds better, and is more effec. tive. Clothes rinse
easier. Try it.
lot of trouble.” The Salzedos have they directed the Summer Harp
Jan. 16 we play in Indianapolis.” - While the Salzedos are touring, their young son, Jacques, visits his grandparents, the Calls, Although he is only 26 months old, the child is already displaying perfect pitch. “Unless - he’s unusually gifted, I don’t want him to be a musician,” | said his father. “I'd rather he be an engineer or a doctor or an architect, anything but a politician! His mother and I -have already given up enough for music. It's better that he spend his time with someelse.” Between tours Mr, and Mrs. Salzedo teach in New York. In addition he goes to Philadelphia once | a week to give lessons to the Curtis
Ned
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a student.
Quick Tea Cakes
If friends drop in: unexpectedly for tea, it’s a, quick trick to whip up a little uncooked white icing and spread it between plain cookies. A little almond or black wal-
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