Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 June 1942 — Page 12
PAGE 12
Names Aids for Red Cross Service Sunday
Mrs. John G. Kinghan, general chairman for the patriotic program of the Indianapolis Red Cross, has announced committees for the event
Homemaking—
Use a Fine Mesh or Net Bag for Washing Stockings
WE ALL KNOW how important it is to wash stockings after every rearing s P spirati i the i ; we ing so as to remove perspira ion quickly from the delicate silk or noon at Garfield park. nylon fibers. It is even more important with the rayon fibers now ; d BP. Wil being used so extensively in hosiery manufacture. | They include Mrs. David P. . It is just a matter of a few min-, ——— ok ——————liams and Mrs. Dale Hodges, pro-
utes for each woman in a family to - . gram; Mrs. W. D. Gatch, chairman, ‘Detense Unit
swish her stockings through Ilukewarm suds at the end of the day,|
but in some families the girls take | 2 nightly turns at doing the «woct- Pushes Study ings for all the members of the! . Ot Nutrition
family. The American Institute of Laundering has a suggestion for cutting] down on snags that come from; contact with rough fingers and sharp fingernails and that is particularly useful when a number of stockings are being washed at one
Knode Brown, Frank Hoke, G. B. Jackson, R. W. Murray, Isabelle Corbett and Miss Julia Brink, entertainment, and Mrs. Frederic M. Ayres, chairman, Mrs. James Carroll and Mrs The study ol nutrition and its re- | Te Bob poh ! rR Johti JLo ks HUBIh will be brought 0), “wipame chairman, Mesdames InAsnaBONS HO ye through Ad Albert Shouse, Thomas Fitzgerald, drive being launched by the nuttl=| oo ioh Myers and A. R. Tomlin, time tion committee of the Marion .... Mrs Garl Manthei, chaircounty council of civilian defense.
i t man, and Mrs. Willlam Young. Place them 2 ne mesh ys Lectures, class work and neigh-| , CM M t # bag before putting them in the suds, > | decorations; rs. urphy, trans S ie SALLIE i borhood canning groups are being AAR ¢ Mi M i says the institute, and the fine] ©.. >| portation; and SS arjorie Xe : jarranged for through the nutrition] ; ir d Mrs. Jame threads will have less chance of] : iis | Cowan, chairman. and Mrs. James : ¢ . committees in the council's 47 dis-| ww © special exhibits catching and snagging. If any of tricts Mrs. Robert H Tyndan| |< arr, special . the stockings show shoe soil from } ds thi i i's triti ° | Mrs. Walter Lippmann of Washpolish or whiting, wash out these Ee © Couey hulrluion Come shite, ASUeHSE @iNCEWeF of (he spots first by hand, then complete mo % & ska , volunteer nurses’ aid corps, will be unning semonstfations may De the principal speaker. Others on
the laundering in the mesh bag. i : Tk After placing stockings in the arranged for neighborhoods by eon- |), program will be Mayor Reginald
bag, the washing procedure same as always. Prepare water that is no hotter than lukewarm and submerge your stocking bag Douse the bag and contents up and down gently about three minutes, then pat out
as much of the soapy water as : possible. Follow this by 8t leas |Memansl 5, heal talks on five rinses in lukewarm water. Rol] Fiched Bread” by Carl Reis and in a turkish towel to remove excess| onning” by Mrs. Ayton. then open the bag!
i Names Aids smooth out the stockings and hang! : : up to dry | following district chairmen: Mes-
{dames Robert D. Coleman, Charles L. Kraft, Harold Botner, Cleo! Bettner, N. I Crim, ravmond| Dance Proceeds to
DeGirafl, 1. b_Einsiing, Bi M10 Service Club
Jackson, J. J. Milli, W. S. Baker,| Irene Akin, Howard Guion, Robert] , barn dance will be given Sat-
Tinkard, Frances Kafouri, Marvin ‘ Jones, H. L.. Schroeder. Theodore i] urday BIEN: BY iE WorEh of tae
Caldwell, David Venerable, John C.|Shore Country club. Proceeds of place St. Joan of Arc Rose, Ernest O. Marlowe, Robert|the dance will be donated to the |M. Dodd, Henry Schilling, Florence| service Men's club for Sunday
tory. The wedding will be fol<| lowed by a reception for members| Johnson, Madge Williams, J. M.| hight suppers.
of the immediate families and inti-| Guest, Luther Rich, Paul Lindlev,| ™q. oon nities in en f th Male friends ID. H. Lytle, Flossie Boone, Louise] ite Oe Miss Pepin was giaduated § Batties and Miss Ethel Ryle (dance includes Mesdames Fred Northern State “Teachers collins. — [oe des vo Br a met} Marquette, Mich, and Capt. Han. CIA Party Tonight |geservations mey be made with sen is a graduate of Purdue uni-| The Ladies’ auxiliary to the In-| Mrs. Scherrer. versity. The prospective bridegroom | ternational Association of Machin-| Mrs. Trimpe will entemain a Is now stationed at Wright Field, ists will sponsor a public card party| party at the dance in observance of Dayton, O at 8 p. m. today in Castle hall. | Mr. Trimpe's birthday.
wal
cloth
canning chairman. Her committee ter of ceremonies: Col. W. 8. Drvs-
includes Mrs. John R. Thrasher of 4q10 commandant of Ft. Benjamin New Augusta, Mrs. Wdgar Rennoe Harrison. and Lieut. F. M
and Mrs. John R. Brayton. : ho: tak uk yl, head of the navy medical unit in the The district nutrition chairmen will meet at 2:30 p. m. tomorrow | in the west room of the World War!
"En-f,arine recruiting: Capt. Edward J.
Gracy, post chaplain at Ft. Harrison, and W. I. Longsworth, Red i Cross chapter chairman, who will Mrs. Ty : y S. Tyndall has announced thei, unt certificates to more than
2000 Red Cross workers.
is the
sudsvy
in it al IX
its 2
Talks also will be given by Capt.
Cant. Carl V. Hansen Is Engaged The marriage of Miss Aldea Pep-
of Hammond to Capt. Carl V. Hansen of Indianapolis take
in will June 27 at
ey
LOAF AND LOVE IT IN
( ” lod PLAY SHOES
So Bright and Gay . . . Little to Pay
So
moment in our fourth floor Play Shoe section. The and the blues,
whites and stripes are in close com-
There's never a dull
reds the greens, petition for first place in public fa: vor. You never saw so many styles. You never enjoyed such solid com. Come
fort, We show you a few.
and see the rest!
TD lock ¢
Play Shoes, Fourth Floor
PAN
which will be held Sunday after-
tacting Mrs. Themas Ayton, the H. Sullivan, Mrs. Perry Lesh, mas-/ u
1 elected president, will be Installed. all,
city
{Ralph Boulton, officer in charge of}
Mesdames Shirley Murphy, Royer| RN L. E. Gausepohl :
sponsoring a benefit garden party (right), the chapter president, and
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES ‘Give Benefit Garden Party
The Temple Sisterhood chapter of the White Cross guild was
today at the home of Mrs. David
Lurvey (center). Assisting the hostess were Mrs. Sidney S. Aronson
Mrs. Harold I. Platt.
Clubs— Altrusa Club to
Featured in club notes today are
Install Officers
At Dinner Tomorrow; Ladies Federal to End Season
an installation of officers and a lee-
re. At the June dinner meeting of the INDIANAPOLIS ALTRUSA club
tomorrow evening in the Columbia club, Miss Irene C. Boughton, newly
DEAR JANE JORDAN-—This is not my problem but that of my girl friend whom I wish to help. She is 18 years old and works in a downtown store. Her homelife is of the best and she has everything the average girl could wish for except the boy with whom she is in love. He is about 19 years old and his job is steady. He is a Jew, although he does not adhere to that religion or the traits of the Hebrew race. She is a Catholic and adheres to her religion although not too strictly. She has been in love with this boy for over a year, ever since they first met. Both are of high moral character as I know very well She loves him deeply and most likely he knows it. However, he has not said anything about love to her. {She has thought it is because of | their races and her faith that he | has not committed himself further as to his feelings. Do you think she should tell him exactly how she feels and ask if that fact is what stands between] them, or do you have some other solution to this problem. It means
a great deal to me as I love her as I would a sister and do not want
her to be hurt. Bill. s 8 @ | Answer—The average man does|
not like to have a girl pin him
down and demand an explanation of his feelings. In the majority of | cases, the girl takes a more serious | view of the affair than the man
and when she confronts him with her feelings, he is embarrassed and doesn't know what to do but duck. If he wants to marry a girl, usually he says so of his own free will and accord. Uf he has a conflict about it he wants to settle it by himself. It is better to let him bring up the| subject if he wants to talk it out | with the girl. | Perhaps he likes her companions | ship well enough but foresees the difficulties of such a marriage. I} do not say it could not succeed for | I do not know. Occasionally a partnership which seemed foredoomed to failure surprises everyone by turning out to be a success, but not | very often. i In this case, the couple not only have racial differences to adjust but religious differences. Even though] the man does not follow his own] religion he may not be willing to! adjust himself to the requirements iof the Catholic church. A friend-| ship between such a pair may be very satisfactory but a marriage certainly would present more than ithe usual amount of difficulties. | If the man wanted to discuss the] |problem he would do so without | ‘prompting from the young lady. In| our culture a girl is obliged to work | by indirection. Her technique is to| make a man aware of her as a woman and then make him fear that he cannot get her. All the girl can do is to interest herself in other men ‘and if this does not stir him to aetion, nothing will.
JANE JORDAN. | Put your problems in a letter to Jane | Jordan who will answer your questions in | this column daily.
‘Home Ee. Teachers ‘Meet at Purdue
Times Special LAFAYETTE Ind, June 17.— Special discussions on adult education, school lunches, textiles, consumer education, housing and nutri tion are being held at Purdue university this week at the summer conference for teachers of vocatione ‘al home economics in northwestern |
| bands,
Others who will take office are Miss Lucy Branch, vice president; Mrs. Elizabeth Ann Boyle, secretary; Miss Stena M. Holdahl, treasurer, and Mrs. Alice N. Jones, Mrs. Marie Roberts and Miss Mabel Guttery, directors. Miss Boughton, who is national executive secretary of Delta Zeta sorority, was active in Altrusa for several years before coming to Indianapolis. She was president of
| the Cincinnati chapter.
Altrusa is an international service club interested in vocational education work among young girls. In
{addition to other activities, the In-
dianapolis chapter extends counsel each year to girls graduating from Technical and Manual high schools.
G. T. Fleming Roberts, detective story writer, will give a public lecture entitled “Writing for the Attic Trunk” at 7:30 p. m. today in the Rauh Memorial library. This lecture will be the first in a series designed to give practical advice to writers. The series is sponsored by the STORY-A-MONTH club. Other speakers at future lectures will be Prof. Gerard DeGre of Butler university and Robert N. Hughes. Mis. Garrison Winders, club president, will preside and stories by club members will be read for criticism.
The LADIES FEDERAL club will close its season's activities with a covered dish luncheon at the home of Mrs. William B. Norris, 1416 W. 34th st., tomorrow. A business meeting will follow the luncheon.
Plans for a week-end outing at Lake Tippecanoe were discussed at a meeting of the C. G. O. club last night in the home of Miss Olivine Buenaman. As a club project, members have volunteered to take a course in first aid given by the Red Cross.
Tea Cloth
y
$379
TERRE By MRS. ANNE CABOT The “four-leaf” clover—the luckiest of them all—is right in the center of this stunning tea or luncheon cloth. The entire cloth measures 46 inches square. Three each five inches wide are Joined together by a 3% inch stripe of bright blue. Three-leaf clover
| motifs are used in the banding
The mesh is big and quickly crocheted—the filet chart is easy to follow! Make this “clover” cloth to add to the charm of meals with your
own family or start one now to give to a bride. A “lucky clover”
tea cloth for a happy June bride!
TO obtain complete filet crocheting instructions for the lucky clover teacloth (pattern No. 5379) filet chart for working, all materials
, | sorority, meeting at 8 p. m. tomor-
We, the Women— Kin's Country Place Is Not a
Summer Hotel
By RUTH MILLETT
ARE YOU HALF-WAY planning on sending the kids to visit Aunt Minnie for a couple of weeks this summer because you think all children should have experience living on a farm? Well, maybe you had better wait
for Aunt Minnie to ask them, instead of just taking it for granted she would like to have your small fry pushed off on her. Before you write Aunt Minnie saying that you'll put the children on the train next Tuesday and for her to be sure and meet them, it might be a good idea for you to read a letter one “Aunt Minnie” wrote me the other day. Here it is in part: “I have been praying that you would hit on the subject of the city woman who moves to the country, having to get accustomed to doing without most modern conveniences, etc.—and the inevitable result. “All the kinfolks from one end of the U. S. A. to the other just can’t seem to keep from dropping in at any time for a visit—short or long. “I get a telegram at 9 a. m. to meet the noon train—six delightful
Play Suit
| |
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 17, 1942
Health— Picnic in Your
Own Backyard
This Summer
By JANE STAFFORD SBefence Service Writer
ONE THING we need not give up this summer because of the war is health-building fun of outdoor ree creation. Vacations will be shorter and fewer and holiday or week-end outings to the country in the family car will be out. But nearby parks, playgrounds and swimming pools and the family backyard can be made into satisface tory substitutes. Some of the fun of outdoor camping can be brought to the backyard picnic by building & fireplace there for campfire meals. Most outdoor fireplaces are made of materials that are not restricted, such as field stone or brick. They can be built for as little as 30 cents, according to the U. S. Department of Agriculture bulletin on construct ing chimneys and fireplaces. If your backyard has been turned into a Victory garden, you may have to forego the campfire but picnie meals on a screened porch have the advantages over other outdoor meals of being free from the dise comforts and health dangers of chiggers, ants, flies, mosquitoes, ticks and poison ivy.
relatives are arriving. “Sister Bertha from Boston writes, ‘If we are bombed can I ship the] kids out to you?’ (There are five| of them.) “Cousin Pauline, who did not) know me very well in town, tells mother she wants to ‘run down some day and have a good old gab-
fest with Minnie.’ ravishing picture in this cunningly s 8 | designed bonnet pantie and frock “I'M SURE I don't know what with its bright rosy red apple for we'd gab about. I hardly know her,|a pocket! The pinafore frock just but her two little youngsters nojties in place at the sides and has doubt would make a wreck of me, no seams at all so it is very, very keeping them from drowning in the simple to make. brook and away from the stock, etc.| Pattern No. 8198 is designed for “Grandmas and uncles and aunts, sizes 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5 years. Size 2
Knee deep in June she'll be a
they love to drop everything and rial, 7 yards braid to trim, drop in on me. The round of a For this attractive pattern, send country woman is a nightmare if 15 cents in coin, your name, address, she has a bunch of relatives. | pattern number and size to The In“It’s a round of meals. Kill a dianapolis Times Today's Pattern couple of chickens, fire up the | Service, 214 W. Maryland st. range, change the beds for over| Look further for more style ideas night. Forget about the garden in our summer fashion book, a comto be hoed, the limas you want to plete catalogue of our patterns for pick and cold pack — you have the new season. All sizes from 1 to company. 52. Day, sports and home styles. “It is not that my husband and, Pattern, 15 cents; pattern book, I are not hospitable. But we moved 15 cents; one pattern and pattern onto this place that needed so much! hook ordered together, 25 cents. Enrepair and we have had to workiclose 1 cent postage for each patday and night to make it go. And tern. now that my husband is working, in a distant defense plant, I get| up at 4 a. m. and have so much more to do this summer, I am desperate. So please don't spare any punches and give the country woman a break in your column— or we shall be swamped again this summer.”
Park Newton to Be Wed Tuesday in East
Mr. and Mrs. George A. Newton, 5859 E. Michigan St., were to leave today for Montclair, N. J, where they will attend the wedding Tuesday of their son, Park W. Newton, and Miss Geraldine FitzGerald, both of Montclair. Leaving with the Newtons was to be another son, George Newton Jr. who will be his brother's best man. Norris Houghton, Princeton, N. J., formerly of Indianapolis, will be one of the ushers.
Gamma Phi Alphas Elect Tomorrow
An election of officers will be held |
23 To
wo
Whether it is lemon-ade, many cola drinks, be sure
tal-clear POLAR ICE.
your summer drinks eye
by Alpha chapter, Gamma Phi Alpha |
row at the home of Mrs. Robert!
Obergfell, 5918 College ave. | { Plans also will be made at the ‘meeting for an outing to be held during the summer. All members | have been asked to attend.
2302 W. Michigan St.
TODAY'S BIGGEST BARGAIN IN NOURISHMENT
well meaning and kind, but how set takes 2!{ yards 35-inch mate-|
KEEP
| POLAR
2000 Northwestern Ave. 1902 S. East St.
2&7 VI % 774
Plan Project Lesson
| Members of the Liberty Garden | Homemakers’ club will meet tomore {row afternoon with Mrs. Robert H, Maples, 1433 Spann ave, There will be a project lesson.
SURROUNDED BY THE .
Ll . P se ket Le % Me FORA gg BRACING TaN
| |
i
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Ask about the Special Rates at Banff Springs Hotel for stay of one week or longer. Room | with bath, table d’hdte meals. Privileges of golf, tennis, swimming in sulphur and cool water pools, concerts, ballroom. Also unprecedented bargain vacation rate for guests staying one month. Half rate for children under 12. You'll return to your wartime job refreshed and invigorated after a zestful holiday lin the Canadian Rockies at Banff Springs
Hotel. Remember—No Hay Fever, | See Your Travel Agent or C. F. Keiser, Agt | . 30 Merchants Bank Bldg. Indianapolis, Ind., Phone Riley 8393
ores SOY! Hotel
Tolar
COOL
fruit juices, or one of the to chill it with pure, crysPure Polar ICE will give
and taste appeal. Use
ICE lavishly, it's economical tool
ICE AND FUEL CO.
ee
i
| Indiana. Sessions, which started specified (cloth may be made larger | Monday, will continue through Fri-|if desired), send 10 cents in coin, day. | your name and address and the patApproximately 200 teachers from tern number to Anne Cabot, The {23 counties attended the opening Indianapolis Times, 211 W. Wacker ‘meeting at which Dr. F. B. Knight, drive, Chicago. Enclose 1 cent postdirector of the Purdue division of age for each pattern ordered. education and applied psychology, My new album, about which 80 spoke on “Teaching Does Coun: many of you have inquired is now A panel discussion on “The Relr- recy, it is an attractive 32<page tion Between Community Agencics bum of the lovely designs you Lane Teachers” was have asked for and admired — , conduc n May L. Mat-|neediework designs of all types— thews of the Purdue school of Home| for HL he Jomily..i the home and
au
LLY
WED)
ONTAINS NAT
” ¢
