Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 16 April 1942 — Page 21
Consider Six Of Carpet
Factors In Co-ordination and Room Decoration
SIX BASIC FACTORS that must be considered to achieve harmony in a room when a new carpet is chosen were outlined by Mrs. Dora Ogden, interior decorator on the staff of Adams, Inc. talk before the Anderson branch of the American Association of Univer-
sity Women. In her talk on “Co- ordination of | Carpet and Room Decoration,” Mrs | Ogden pointea out that the effort) to beautiful one’s home is instinc-| tive but often misdirected. She added that experience shows that although most women recognize and enjoy beauty and charm in a room, they are unable to create] these gaulities to the degree they wished expressed in their homes. The six basic rules on carpeting which she outlined follow: 1. Study the architectural features of the room and decide whether you wish to give the impression of increasing or diminishing the! size of the room. Patterned rugs make a room look smaller and plain] ones give illusion of larger size. 2. If the sense of balance and] | foundation of a room is to be se-| curred by color, the floor coverings, should be of a deeper tone or heavfer in color than the walls and ceilings. 3. If the foundation texture, the floor light, or even lighter, walls and ceilings
sense of balance and is to be conveyed by covering can be! than the!
4. Avoid any excess of pattern in... party Sunday at the church,| ters will be in the Hollywood Beach
the room, keeping in mind the design of your upholstery, wallpaper, and draperies.
5. Irrespective of shape, design The party will be held during the | bishop of St. Augustine and host to
or pattern of rug, it should never be laid diagonally. It destroys the; room's composition. 8. Either a rug or wall to wall carpet is correct. reference in! these days is given to wall to wall carpeting. =
4 =»
Good Meals for Good Morale
BREAKFAST: Orange juice, erisp bacon, oatmeal muffins, coffee, milk. LUNCHEON: Lima bean and tomato casserole, watercress salad, | honey nut cookies, tea, milk. DINNER: Lamb stew with spring vegetables, spring salad bowl, ginger apple cobbler, coffee, miik.
brown sugar, firmly packed,
| with sliced apples, mixing the syrup |
St. Ann Churc
| Busald, Grover { Paul Collignon Jr.
| tory club will be held at the home
last night in a
Today’ s Recipe GINGER APPLE COBBLER (Makes 9-12 servings) Three tablespoons butter, 2 cup 14 cup water, 2 cups peeled and sliced apples, 1 package (14'2 ounces) gingerbread mix, 1 cup water. Melt butter in bottom of a square 9-inch baking pan. Add sugar and water, boil gently until syrup is clear. Line bottom of pan
well with the apples. Mix the] gingerbread mix (following direc- | tions on package) and pour batter over apple slices. Bake in a mod erate oven about 50 minutes (350 degrees F.). Cut in squares before]
| remov ing from pan, lift each square
ouy carefully with a spatula. Serve warm with hard sauce, sprinkled { with nutmeg.
To Give Dinner
The April committee of St. Anh church will give a chicken dinner|
2850 Holt road, Mars Hill. Dinner will be served from 11 a. m. until {2 p. m. and supper from 5 to Tp. m.|
afternoon and evening. There will be a low mass at 11; | o'clock Sunday morning. The Rev. | Fr. Ralph S. Pfau, M. A, is pastor. Those assisting with plans are] Mr. and Mrs. Harry Thibo, cochairmen; Mrs. Clay Britton, pub- | licity chairman, and Messrs. and | Mesdames Michael Busald, William | Etter, Harry Kohn, Winfield Poole, Lowell Amos and John Schubert, Mrs. Stella Miller, Miss Helen Walden Jr. and
Victory Club Supper The monthly meeting of the Vieof Mrs. Thelma Champion in May-
wood this evening. A supper will be followed by a business meeting.
ito be uo a
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| those seeking to degrade mother-
Mrs. Turner
N.C. C. Ww. Will Convene 1n
Hollywood, Fla.
Mrs. Rollin A. Turner, president of the Indianapolis ‘diocesan council of the National Council of Catholic | Women, has been asked to represent | | this diocese and speak on the co-| ‘ordination of the council with the |
Catholic charities in this diocese at| {the 21st national convention of the | N. C. C. W. Saturday through Tuesday in Hollywood, Fla. Headquar-
hotel. The convention theme announced {by the Most Rev. Joseph P. Hurley,
| the convention, is “Catholic Women 'in the Service of God and Country.” According to Bishop Hurley, “The keynote of the whole convention Iwill be a deeply supernational one, because it will bring Catholic women of America together at a time when the fate of their country and religion hangs upon the issue of war. . . It also will be a pilgrimage of mothers to the Blessed Mother herself at a period in our history when
hood are putting forth their best efforts.” Informal sessions opening Saturday will present opportunities for comparison and presentation of plans for council leaders to aid in wartime efforts. The formal opening Sunday morning will be a pontifical high mass at the Church of the Little Flower. “Unity in This Crisis” will be the subject of the Rt. Rev. Msgr. Michael J. Ready, general secretary of the National Catholic Welfare conference. Main sessions of the program will be devoted to the work of the council in wartime, post-war life and the distribution of new literature on the subject. A tour of Hollywood and St. Augustine, and a tea at Barry college, the newest Catholic woman’s college in the country, also will be features.
Gene Mary Scully Is Wed to T. C. Webb
Mr. and Mrs. Claud Pitsenberger announce the marriage of Mrs, Pitsenberger’s sister, Miss Gene Mary Scully, to Thomas Cleveland Webb of Nashville, Tenn, The couple was married April 13. Mr. and Mrs. Webb will be at home in Nashville.
To Show Films Mr. James P. Tretton will entertain the Garden Study club at 2 p. m. tomorrow in her home, 124 E. 58th st. Colored films of rose and rock gardens will be shown by Mrs. Alex Tuschinsky,
Miss Wilde Entertains
Miss Olive Wilde, 2358 N. Kenwood ave., will be hostess to Phi chapter, Delta Chi Sigma, at 8 o'clock tonight. Miss Wilde is beginning her second term as president of the sorority.
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Plan to Attend G. F. W. C.
Convention
Mrs. Walter 8S. Grow, chairman of art and the penny art fund, Indiana Federation of Clubs, has been asked to speak on the fine arts program at the general federation's
convention in Ft. Worth, Tex, Mav 1. Mrs. Oscar A. Ahlgren of Whiting, I. Fx C. president, is serving on the resolutions committee and Mrs. Edwin I. Poston of Martinsville will be chairman of a dinner meeting of the American home department at the Hotel Texas April 28. Indiana women who will attend the convention are Mrs. George W. Jaqua, Winchester; Mrs. Fred Bell, Rushville; Mrs. Edwin F. Miller, Peru; Mrs. Poston, Mrs. Ahlgren land Mesdames Fred Pettijohn, W. 'D. Keenan and Grow, Indianapolis. Women planning to attend the convention are urged to take the post convention tour to Mexico City by Mrs. John L. Whitehurst of Baltimore, Md. president of the G. FP W. C “The post convention tour to Mexico is more than a pleasure trip,” according to Mrs. Whitehurst. “In addition to the many sightseeing trips an education forum | during which Mexican women and visitors can exchange views on public welfare, education, international | relations and defense, has been arranged.” Mrs. Ahlgren and Mrs. Jaqua will take the trip to Mexico.
DEAR JANE JORDAN-—I am the father of three daughters and a son. My concern for the two oldest girls has increased since there are going to be more soldiers in and around Indianapolis at Ft. Harrison, the state fair grounds and the camp in the southern part of the state. I know what soldiers are because I was one in the last world war. I realize that morale is going to be a problem. There wil! be soldiers about, flirtations, and a lot of girls are going to be misled and ruined. I am almost on the verge of moving to a small village. : What would be your confidence in a daughter? Would you try to
—A WORRIED PARENT. #§ & #
who have been hidden from experience by their parents. Since you will not always be on hand to guard your daughters from danger, their greatest security lies in knowing how to take care of themselves. A smail town is not necessarily a safe haven, Girls who are not equipped to deal with the risks of life come to grief as easily in a village as in a city. The girls whose fate it is to be misled by some soldier probably would have been as easily misled by some civilian. Certainly you should tell your girls the facts of life, but I think you should take care not to unload your own fears on them. Girls who have been taught that all men are bad and not to be trusted are apt to be too fearful to make a good judgment of the other sex. Doubtless you want your daughters to marry and lead normal lives, and you would not willingly prevent this adjustment by filling them with prejudices against men. In spite of the fact that you were a soldier, you have made a good husband and father. Doesn't it stand to reason that many of the soldiers whom you fear will come to the same conservative end in life, and that not all of them are menaces to your daughters? If your girls have been brought up with a reasonable sense of caution in choosing their friends, if they are free to entertain them in their own home, and have confidence in the justice of their parent's judgments, surely you have nothing to fear. If they do not have this trust in you, I do not see what can be gained hy fleeing with them to a small town. The trouble with such problems is that they are internal, and when you go they go with you. JANE JORDAN.
Put your problems in a letter to Jane Jordan who will answer your questions in this column daily.
Mrs. L. M. Miller
To Give Review
The University Heights Book Review club will hear Mrs. L. M. Miller review “Young Ames” (Edmonds) at 7:45 p. m, Monday in the home of Mrs. Amtha Tomlinson, 929 Gilbert ave.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
explain a few things about life to 3 3 them and tell them to beware of! | soldiers, flirtations and attentions? | |
Suited
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Sister will be as cheerful as a first spring robin in a new suit for school—which you can easily make her at little or no cost. Pattern No. 8109 is made for sizes 4, 6, 8, 10 and 12 years. Size 6 ensembles takes 4'i yards 39inch material; 27: yards 54-inch. For this attractive pattern, send 15¢ in coin,” your name, address, pattern number and size to The Indianapolis Times, 214 W. Maryland st.
\ | just
We, the Women—
‘Remember the Soldier’s Pocketbook’
By RUTH MILLETT “REMEMBER . his pocketbook” ought to be the slogan of every girl who finds herself dating a soldier. And there are more ways of being | considerate of a man’s money than remembering to look at the | price side of a menu when ordering. . The girl who dates a soldier (especially i f she is a working girl earning five or six times as much as he does) should hedge away from dinner dates. | Not only that, if they stop | somewhere for a drink she should see that it's really just one drink — or else stick to something cheap ‘like beer. Furthermore,
Ruth Millett
ways. If she can furnish transpor- | —all right. Otherwise, she had bet- | | ter keep the evening informal. Another thing, she ought not to | plan to double date with anyone] who will insist on going to ex-
make things awkward for the soldiers. fy & = SHE ought to keep still about her birthday, and any gifts she gives him ought to be inexpensive—so that he won't feel like a heel because he- can't but her something as nice as she gave him. And if other men spend lots | more on her than he can afford to! —that is a fact she can afford to| keep to herself, since with her sol- | dier it is a question of not having | the money to spend. |
she shouldn't drag]; him to a formal dance if it means’ he'll have to spend taxi fare both |:
tation and doesn’t expect flowers! :
pensive places. That is bound to |®
THURSDAY, APRIL 16, 1942 Mrs. Lucid Hostess" |Luncheon Tuesday
The Stokely Juniors were to meet| The Christian Park Women's club at the home of Mrs. Leo Lucid, 618| will meet for a covered dish lunch« Weghorst st, for a covered dish|eon Tuesday noon at the com-
luncheon and business meeting to-| munity house. The regular bus. ness session will follow.
ud
day at noon.
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MAIN DISH S ads
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Answer—Probably the most gulli- | § ble girls in the world are those! |
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