Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 August 1942 — Page 18
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: New Window Ensemble : Simplifies ~The Drapery Selection Problem
THE PROBLEM OF CHOOSING drapery fabric ‘that “ties: in” with glass curtain fabric as well as with a room's decorative scheme
is one that is solved neatly by a “window ensemble” appearing recently
on the market.
The new window dress is a féestoon valance set combining curtain
and drapery in one unit. It is styled simply, with soft, sheer curtain
fabric for the side drapes and printed satine for valance, founce and bow" tie-backs. © . The 'fast<color satiné comes in rose, blue, yellow; green or natural ‘backgrounds printed with large sprays of flowers. The festoon vas ance topping the curtains is three yards lohg-—more than ample if length - and width to drape over most windows. The side curtains of dotted fabric in eggshell tone are the regulation 21; yards in length. Others of the festoon sets cbinbine eggshell rayon with satin in rose, blue, gold, green, peach, rust and Wine.
Refrigerator Care
REFRIGERATORS get hard use fn the summertime, and this year special care should be taken to keep them in good condition. They should be defrosted ofice every week ‘and never overloaded with foods that do not require refrigeration. Hot dishes should be allowed to cool at room temperature before ‘Being put ifity the refrigerator, and the door should be left opén as $ { Bitte as possible. a . ~~ BEFORE thé heating season i starts agaih, the wise houséwife * will have hér entire heating plant | cleaned and checked for defects. . Chimneys shold be cleaned every year and rebuilt if they are unSound. Flues, furnaces and stoves all re- ~ | quire periodic atténtion if they are : to perform their fuhictions without 8 hitch when fall’ eomes again.
He
{ Good Meals for Good Morale BREAKFAST: Orange juice, oatmeal, raisin toast, coffee, milk. LUNCHEON: Vegeiable salad fvith cottagé cheese dressing, hard enriched rolls, choclate chip cup cakes, icéd tea, milk. - DINNER: Beef soup in cups; chicken and vegetable hash, coun- & try fried potatoes, summer squash, : watercress salad, baked apples, coffee, milk.
| Today's Recipe STUFFED FRANKFURTERS Slit frankfurters lengthwise and + fill with a narrow strip of cheese. § Gover with pickle relish, fasten with toothpicks and bake in a hot oven {450 degrees ¥.) until the cheese 4s melted and the frankfurters browned, about 15 minutes. Serve on toast atop broiled slices of onion.
E J 7 ” ‘The Question Box * @—How much meat must I buy to serve eight people at dinner? '%® A—Meat shrinks from one-third : to one-half in cooking. Therefore, - © allow one-fourth pound of meat ~ § without bone for each serving, and & one-half pound oi meat consisting | & of lean, fat and bone as a minimum = for each serving.
3
Pinafore F rock
Pinafore and panties which you can turn out on your sewing machine in just a few hours! Snug little bodice top, full, flouncing skirt, buttons down the back and a lovely big bow make the frock as cunning as any you've seen in a long while. It will be mighty smart in a cheerful gingham——or a plaid wool for fall—trimmed with ric rac. Pattern 8204 is in sizes 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5 years. Sizes 2 pinafore takes 13% yards 35 or 39-inch material, panties 3% yard. Two yards ric ric. For this attractive pattern, send
pattern number and size to The Indianapolis Times Pattern Service, 214 W. Maryland St. For styles fof youi entire fall wardrobe consult the fashion book, just out. This smartly illustrated catalog of latest patterns may be yours for just 16 cents! Or you may request a fashion book with the next 16-cent pattern you otder
Send 26 cents for both.
Safeguard Their Health and Brighten her Report Cards
MAROTT SHOES
“Brogandi.”
Popular saddle ox - ford, white and brown. 398
2
ja
Boys’ fine leather mil~itdfy ox- \ ford. 4.50
THIRD FLOOR
est and most Somplete
The stock of Indiana.
a Bere and Girls’ 8
1%
ot All Purehanes at Marott’s Month of August Will Be Given thé Stag. Salvation Army Penny Ice Fund.
tor Entire
‘BUY SHOES AT
. “Save for the Soldier as Well as Yourself War Savings 3 Stamps on 1 Sale on Fifth Floor
A SHOE _
¥| (ous life.
16 cents in ¢€oin, your nanie, address,
: Health 7 > = | Health Rules
Vary With
By JANE STAFFORD Science Service Writer
ator George W. Norris, of Nebraska, celebrating his 81st birthday, you probably wondered how you could live that long withoilit becoming senile. What rules did he follow; what ones should you follow? Senator: Norris’ manner of livirig is ‘well known.- “He has always worked. hard and avoided the gay social whirl of parties ‘every night in the week. He eats. moderately and smokes moderately. - He does
eare ‘of himself and conserved his strength for his work. His way of living has succeeded
{in his case. It might or might not
succeeded in the case of anyone else who wanted to live a long and vigorThat is the crux of the problem. No blanket rule, no set of do's and don'ts, can be given
we grow old. ss 8 we become more and more individual, Dr. Edward J. Stieglitz, consultant on gerontology in the Na[tional Institute of Health, U. BS.
one man of 60 years, smoking tay be poison, but another at 60 years may need his 10 cigars a day. “If we took 1000 babies and fed them all alike, we would make few mistakes,” he says. “If we took 1000 men and women of 40 years and fed them all alike, we might make a lot of mistakes.” At the age of 40 years, “each and every person has accumulated 4 highly personal set of .experiences, infections, toxications and mental actions and reactions. The greater the age, the greater the individual
J variability,” he declares.
Health after 40 is a matter of private health, not public "health, and depends on the individual making efforts in his own behalf. Public health departments can protect you against many diseases by maintaining pure ‘drinking water, safe milk and food supplies and by mak-
{ing available vaccination against
smallpox, immunization against diphtheria, and the like. But you cannot be vaccinated against, and the health department cannot protect you against, the diseases likely to afflict people as they get older, such as rheumatism and
hardening of the arteries.
DEAR JANE JORDAN—I am 2i years old, married and have a child two years’ old. We live with my mother. My stepfather died about three years ago and she started going ‘with one of my husband’s friends who is only 28 years old. Whenever my husband went out with this man my mether had a fit and I just found out lately that it was because she didn’t want us to
‘| know she was going with him.
My mother is supposed to be a
ji | religious woman. She has been good
to us, kept her, children with her and worked for us when she divorced dad. 1 We have had a hard life, boarding and being pushed around. I remember other indiscreet things she did when we were young. How can I ever respect her again? I think she is old enough to know better by now, don’t you?
any more. Sometimes I think I hate her for embarrassing us before our friends. Please tell me how to .get over this let-down feé€ling. YOURS TRULY. 8 = s Answeér—It is a shock to any child to discover that its mother is subject to the same temptations and wayward desires that beset all the rest of the human tace. Each person likes to regard his mother as above reproach, as one who can do no wrong, who is as stable and unchanging as the rock of Gibraltar.
maintain her dignity and avoid adverse gossip. No child can bear to have this mother-ideal upset. Your feelings are understandable and justifiable. Nevertheless, your mother has stuck by you ini spite.of everything: However else she has failed she has hot deserted her children and deserves your respeet for her loyalty. Try to understand that she too has had a hard time in life and feels deprived of the things which other women have enjoyed. Her interest in" a young man is only a sad attempt to recapture
her conduét is obvious from the fact that she tried to coneeal the truth from you: To be sure she is foolish and misguided. This she will see for herself in time.
to her as she has stuek to you. Of gourse; you are ettibarrassed. and ashamed; §0 is she:
forget her conduct. You can’t recapture your illusions regarding her
There is nothing else to do. JANE JORDAN,
ih this column daily..
Plan Penny Supper’
WHEN YOU READ about Sen-|
not drink except perhaps once aj. year at the rare social’ gatherings] He atfehds. He has always taken]
THE REASON is that as we age}
public health service, explains. For].
1 can hardly look her in the face}
Above all a mother is expected to}
something of youth whieh she has} missed. That she is ashamed of}
- The only thing you can do is to admit the fact that she is ‘humant’ | after all and stand by her through thick and thin, In other words, stick}
put you ean learn to forgive hes]:
Put your ghobiems th a letter to) Jane] Jordan whe will answer”. youf Sumtvng]
which will keep all of us healthy as B
‘Flexibility, outstanding blessing of ‘modern furniture, is strikihgly embodied in this group, designed with exceptional foresight to serve
many purposes. The library table
a\bookshelf section. It would do equally well with two other top units available in the saine lie—a cabinet with matching mitred doors, or a cabinet -with grill doors. The bench, topped by lime green leather, is at home here, of with dressing table and native oak are used in the Wes.
a
Butler ‘Mothers’ Informal Tea at
Freshmen Students to Attend
Freshman students at Butler univérsity and their mothers will be honored at an informal tea given by the Butler Mothers’ council Sept. 4, the opening day of freshman week. Mrs. Paul Ulrich, thé couiicil’s
sotial ‘cominittee head and general
.rangements.: > The ‘purpbse of the tea, which
will be. held from 3 to 8 p. m. ih the Jordan hall recreation room, will be to acquaint the guests with faculty members and the. Mothérs’ council organization. Thirty-three faculty freshman advisers will be present to answer questions of students and their mothers.. Music for the évent will be provided by a studeht trio from the Arthur Jordan Conservatory of Music. In the receiving line will be Mrs. M. O. Ross, wife of Butler's acting president; Dr. Elizabeth B. Ward, dean of women, and Mesdames Frederick’ D. Kershner; P. M. Bail and Gino A. Ratti, wives of the deans of the Colleges of Religion,
“IB8ucation and “Tiberal Arts and
Sciences, respectively: Officers and chairthen of council committees dlso ‘in: tHe receiving line will be Mrs. Alfred Buschmann,
~ /
After a while people will find] : something else to talk about and}
Members of Theta chapter, Delta *
| “putting on lips ; | stick and looking
vs | We, the Women—
Rut Millet tt
— A Rip Van Winkie
Jamon United States congressmen
~maybe more than ‘one~but one
He is “Rep. Beverly M. Vincent of
|icentucky Who thinks the whole
ides ©f & women’s navy auxiliary feserve is ridice ulous because girls are more : need. Bt
.} in mirrors” than
‘With imitred top is used here with
or desk. Americah walnut
Council to Give School Sept. 4;
tea chairmah, is in charge of ar-
Patient Mrs. Frank Cramer, | treasurer; Mrs. Lynn Adams and Mrs. Albert Spiegel, recording and corresponding secretaries; Mrs. Floyd Bell, ways and means; sMrs. Floyd Shorn, prograifi; Mrs. PFrafik Koch, telephone; Mis. Harold Cross, membership; Mrs. W, P. McQuire, publicity; Mrs. Harry H. Coburn, historian, and Mrs. Ratti, clearing house. : Serving on Mis. Ulrich’s committee for the tea will be 15 Mothers’ club presidents of camplis social organizations. In addition to Mesdames Buschmann, Bell and Koch,
those assisting will be Mesdames D. S. Langell, Paul D. Loser, Paul H.
| anything else.
aged not to no-
tice that the {hand that puts
on lipstick 16 the Ruth Millett
|hand that is doing a good share of
the work of the world? It he hasn't been sleeping, he must have noticed that in defense plants throughout thé country over-all-clad girls and ‘women are weld ing, working on assembly lines, doing “men’s work” as competently as men--even though they do replenish their lipstick at the noon hour and find time in the evening to study their faces inh their mirrors fo see what they can do to make their new, short, practical haircuts
3 2 8 = IF HE HASN'T been sleeping, he must have tread his newspapers enough to have been aware of the heroism of English and Russian women, who not only have done a magnificent job wherever their governments have placed them, but who are just as ready as their men to risk their lives in the defense of their homes and their countries. Now .that the congressman has shaken the sleep from his eyes enough to realize that there is such a thing as a women's army in America and a women’s navy auxiliary reserve some one ought to take him around and introduce him to a few women=1943 model. He is sure to notice an amazing fact, and that is that while they aré experienced at putting on lipstick — they are also experienced at a good many other things — things like engineering, chemistry, flying, welding—even voting. The last is a fact which must have slipped the congressman’s mind. |
Club Has Luncheon
Members of the On-Ea-Ota club
Brown, August Duesenberg, Smith] were to meet-for.a 1 p.m. luficheon
Burns, J. F, Lichtsinn, John P. Robinson, C. F. Endicott, O. L. Mummert, Dan Hackerd and Earl Stur-
today at the home of Mrs. Glenn L. Hefférman, 1510 N. Shannon ave. A Business session and bridge party
— - a CE a
man.
n
TEES +
1 were to follow the luncheon.
oy & % a
4 inches! « Stem i8 3%
bs S traw al ot
By MRS. ANNE CABOT
It's like & strawberry out of & giant berry T by T% : Jong and
falry tales
e bright .green leaves are
perocheted separately and then sewn on. Strawberry is
lusciously ® with the green.
You'll need one ball of bright red crochet cotton and one ball of bright greéen—and you'll have a double thickness potholder that will defy any hot-handled skillet! And it’s so handsome that your friends will give you fio peace until you've to make one for them. To obtain crocheting instructions for the Giant Strawberry Potholder
red
(Pattern 5333) send 11 eents in coin,
| your name and address and the pat- :| tern number to Anne Cabot, The :| Indianapolis Times, 211 W. Wacker
drive, Chicago. . My popular album32 pages of
the designs you have admired and
asked for-=needlework of all types— is now available. Bend for your copy of the “Anne Cabot Album. »
; The price is 18 cents.
| Sorority to Meet
At 8 o'clock this evening, mem-
Mrs. Tschudi Hostess
Beta Chi Theta sorority met foe
bers of Alpha Pl Omega sorority|a business session last night at the will meet with Mrs. N. E. Brennan, home of Mrs. Anita Tschudi, 512 N,
5150 Crawfordsville » rd.
YOU HAVE UNTIL | P. M. SATURDAY
to see the entries in
TT lock: .
BRIDAL HEIRLOOM CONTEST AUDITORIUM=—Sixth Floor
Gray st.
CLEARANGE
for use OVER WALLPAPER on plaster or brick walls,
Just add % gallon water to wall with a smart, dull finis cheers. Will not rub off!
Pearl Grey
‘Paint Dept. Fifth Floor
STREAMLITE
CASEIN PAINT
a gallon of paste and cover your h that lightens, brightens and
Buff Cream Green
+ Limited Quantities
B { Quart, 59¢ - :
Ivory Rose *
Tan White
Pls g:
YE RR Ars
an
% May we count on your co-operation in hing 8 Unele Sam first call on the tclephone lines?
War has jammed Long Distance facilities with the green est flood of calls in histoty, particulaily to far-away points fad outside the state. Ordinarily the Telephone Compaty tol would build new lines to take care of the greater loads, = but that would take materials needed for weapons to wis
the war.
So we are asking you to think twice before you telephone to busy cities across the country, Please don’t call Wash. ington, D. C., or other centers of war activity except on urgent business. Avoid making any Long Distance calls + ualess they are really necessaty . . . and make the essential ran ones as brief as possible. leat We'll do our level best, and we're confident you'll gladly give the help we ask—86 that when Uncle Sam reaches for the Klephone his calls will go fhiough without ial
»
INDIANA BELL TELEPHONE
~~ comPA
NY
or AR AR Ee A
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