Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 October 1942 — Page 24
Put Summer Clothes Ay This. Y Joop Double the Usual Care
for the
pretty much of a “must” in this’ war year of “make ‘em last.” In fact vs no longer a custom—it's a duty, what with the present rising. prices
ages and the future possibility of clothes rationin an to put your, summer thinzs away so carefully erfect condition’ when you
ace of Phil Cooper, head of lew York's largest ary clean-
1. Do not select a rainy day to do your packing. Garments must be absolutely dry to be preserved. If packed on a damp day the moisture in the atmosphere will be absorbed by the garments and if left for a long time they will then streak, discolor and deteriorate. 2. Make sure garments are thoroughly clean—spots and dirt are ‘what moths feed on in woolens and gritty dirt will eat nto silks and cottons. 3. It is always advisable to take more precauticns about your sum- ' ‘mer .clothes after seashore vacations. The salt in the air is ab‘sorbed by the garments, and the ‘acids in sea salt are more dangerous even than moths. Be sure that all clothes from the ‘seashore are freshly cleaned before packing, or if not, are hung in - strong sun and wind for a whole day. 4. Pack silks, wools (such as bathing suits and sports jackets) and white garments separately. White clothes should be dry cleaned ‘before packing or they. will turn yellow. If you do not dry clean them, at least air and sun them very well. Once a white garment has turned yellow, it is almost impossible to whiten it again. ‘5. If ¢amphor or moth balls are used, it is most advisable to put them into corners, separating them with € paper so that they do fnot gome into direct contact with the fabrics, and at the same time -to ow the vapor to permeate freely. 1 6. Don’t iry to preserve rubber articles such as bathing suits, bath‘ing shoes, etc. Give them to the rubber salvage as it is impossible to _keep rubber from drying out in the average home. 7. As a rule, clothes are better preserved by hanging in moth and dirt proof bags than being packed , away in boxes, but stretchable ma- * terials such as silk Jersey and waffled fabrics, should never, even during wearing seasons, be hung in # closet. ; If you cannot pack them lightly in boxes, hang each dress on two hangers, the first-for the shoulders ‘and the second for pinning up the
that. they will
hem of the dress so that the weight ,| is evenly distributed. Delicate fabrics such as taffeta and lace- should be packed with rows of tissue paper in the folds. 8. Straw hats should be packed loosely in boxes and stored away in
a cool, not too dry place. 2 » f J
Good Meals for
Good Morale BREAKFAST: Orange juice, oatmeal, raisin toast, coffee, milk.
LUNCHEON: Cream of lima bean, sotip, enriched hard rolls, cottage cheese mold with fruit, tea, milk.
DINNER: Chicken giblet soup
-| with rice, boiled tongue with horse-
radish sauce, baked potatoes, eightminute cabbage, apple brown, betty, cream, coffee, milk. # ”
Today's Recipe COTTAGE CHEESE MOLD WITH * FRUIT (Serves 6 to 8)
One envelope plain gelatine, % cup cold water, 2 cups cottage cheese, 3% teaspoon salt, 1s teaspoon paprika, 1 tablespoon lemon juice, 14 cup cream or whole milk, 2 cups diced fruits. Soften gelatine in cold water and dissolve over hot water. Mash cheese Very fine or put through sieve. ‘Add seasonings,’ cream or milk, and dissolved gelatine. Turn into individual ring molds (or one larger one) that have been rinsed in cold water. Chill. Unmold on salad plate and fill centers. with diced fruits. Serve with mayonnaise.
G. O. P. Rally To Be Held at Columbia Club
Miss Marian Martin, Washington, national vice chairman of the Republican party, will be the principal speaker at a “win a vote rally” to be sponsored at 7:30 p. m. Monday in the Columbia club ballroom by the J1th district Republican women. " City, county, district and state candidates and party officials will attend. Mrs. Fern E. Norris, district vice chairman, will preside. Other speakers will be Mrs. Agnes Todd, county vice chairman; Ralph Gates, state central committee chairman; Mrs. Eleanor B. Snodgrass, state vice chairman; Joseph J. Daniels, district chairman; Henry Ostrom, county chairman; Mrs. Grace Reynolds, national committeewoman; Mrs. Georgia Branaman and Mrs. Arthur R. Robinson. Among special guests will be Mrs. Marjorie Roemler Kinnaird Gundersen. A musical program will precede the speakers’ appearances. Chairmen of committees for the rally include Mrs. Howard <M. Meyer, reception; Mrs. Marjorie A.
‘WHY BE SATISFIED WITH | ORDINARY RAYON STOCKINGS?
No run that starts
&oid stripe |
You can buy the best at no extra cost. Gotham Gold Stripe Futuray «rayon stockings are made by the same famous Gotham mills known ‘the world over for . quality hosiery, Every day we hear more. and more women commenting on the luxury, the ‘beauty, the ~~ .w o nderful sheerme ss
= and -t he of Gotham's new
ee rayons. You must buy them and wear them to really appreciate what lovely stockam's’ are hy ing today, ‘and [remembes, Gotham's famous Gold Stripe that helps prevent garter runs is an added assurance of exira service, and
jalities
last i noi
Larr,. registration; Mrs. Lee Reed, social; Miss Amy Krauter and Miss Mary: Catherine Stair, ushers; Miss Ruth Davis, hostess, and Mrs. Mary McDonald and Mrs. Maude Smith, decorations.
Mrs. Doty Is Y. W. Speaker
Mrs. Dordthy Doty, Red Cross nutrition aid, was to discuss “Diet and How You Look” from 10 a. m. to noon today at Central Y. W. C. A, Her lecture was one of six scheduled in the “Look Your Best” series being sponsored there. The series is open to the public. A half hour period is devoted to posture work and correctional -exercises for those who wish to participate. Miss Mary Lou Beck, as-
. |sistant in the health education department of the Y. W. C. A, is in|}
charge of the exercise period. ‘ss 8 a New Red Cross classes are to be started at Central Y. W. C. A— home nursing Thursday nights from 7 to 9 o'clock and first aid on Wednesday evenings from 8 to 10
at the Y. W. Sa a Miss Briseis Teall, a member of the advisory staff of the national ¥Y. W. C. A, arrived in Indianapolis
{Tuesday for. conferences and meetings withthe local Y. W. board, committee mémbers and staff. Today and tomorrow Miss Teall
Training conference for Girl Reserve advisers at Central Y¥. W. Her subject at a dinner tonight
o'clock. Registrations will be taken]
yesterday and will be here until:
will assist the Southern Indiana}
8 8 8
Began, Back in
rounded figures and wasp waists.
legs,” he explains. Today Mr. Brehm is one of New York's top-notch illustrators. You see his drawings in the Saturday Evening Post and other national magazines. He does the pictures of Florian Slappey and his 18th st. companions in the Octavus Roy Cohen stories. “But Indiana is still home to me,” He told me today. Conrad Brehm, the artist's grandfather, was one of Indiana's pioneers. He came from Germany in 1848 and settled in Hamilton county. With his German carpenter’s tools, he built a farmhouse boasting black walnut underpinings. «It’s still standing in Hamilton county,” said Mr. Brehm. Jacob Brehm, the artist's’ father, moved to Noblesville, where George and his brother, Worth, were born. Worth became a popular children’s artist, illustrating the Tom Sawyer and Penrod books. He died in 1928.
Studied at I. U..
After studying at the Art Students’ league in New York and Indiana university, George spent two years doing newspaper work in Indianapolis. -- His job was sketching fires, accidents and murder trials. Among his friends was James Whitcomb Riley. “He always wore huge, hornrimmed glasses with a big ribbon dangling down,” said Mr. Brehm. «T still have the book he gave me with a poem written and -‘auto-
poem is called ‘K-I Could Draw as Youf Have Drew.” Mr. Brehm has been a Post illustrator for 30 years. He sold his first picture to them by walking into their office and showing it to the editor. It appeared as a cover design. The Post, he told me, always lets the artist select the situations which he will illustrate in a story. Good Housekeeping, on the other hand, plans a complete layout of their magazine in advance. They tell the artist the specific scenes that must be shown. “The Post method allows for more leeway, but it once got me in trouble,” said Mr. Brehm. “I pictured some people riding a railroad handcar. The sun was shining down on them.” After mailing the: {llustrations, Mr. Brehm happened to glance through the story again. He discqvered that the scene took place not in .the daytime, but at night in moonlight. He called the express office, but found the pictures were already in New Jersey on their way to Philadelphia. “I hurried over to the railroad station and began hunting through
Bride
. Artist George Brehm in his studio.
George Brehm s Career in Art Noblesville, - With Copying Circus Posters
By HELEN WORDEN Times Special Writer
NEW YORK, Oct. 23.—When George Brehm was an Indiana school- - | boy, the old-fashioned circus posters intrigued him. He used to spend hours copying the pictures of the lady bareback riders with their
graphed for me in the front. The}.
ss 8 8
He covered the shingles of new
houses .in Noblesville with his sketches, to the carpenters’ consternation. “They were appalled that a. 13-year-old boy should draw a woman’s
the packages,” he said. “When I found the pictures, I took out my crayons, charcoal, and fixative and went to work. Luckily I was able to put a tone over the whole drawing, achieving the effect of moonlight. The editors never discovered the mistake!” Daughters, Model
Mr. Brehm often spots his models as he roams about the city. For the Florian Slappey stories, he roams Harlem for his characters. “The Negroes have a talent for posing,” he ‘said. - “Theyre much better. than white people at it.” His daughters, Elizabeth and June, have posed for him since they were small children. “I even use them as models for colored wenches,” he said, laughing. Last spring Elizabeth married Elmer W. Athearn of Martha's Vineyard, now in. officer’s training camp at Ft. Belvoir. - June is theatrically . inclined. She appeared with Helen Hayes = in “Twelfth Night.” I saw Mr. Brehm today at his apartment, 176 E. Tist st. Mrs. Brehm, wearing a smart blue crepe dress, came in before I left. “We call this our war apartment,” she told me. “We expected to spend the winter at our new home on Martha's Vineyard, but we had to come back to New York because of the shortage of gas, heat and telePhones.
DEAR JANE JORDAN—My problem may seem a bit childish to you, but it is very important to me. My young husband loves me very muéh or at least he seems to, but he has a very bad habit of telling me about the cute girls he works with "in his factory. - He compliments me some times, but not very often.
What hurts me is that almost every night he comes home with & tale about some girl who is “cute as a button” or “really built.” Now I'm not very attractive although most people say I have beautiful eyes and a nice figure. My teeth are not even and my skin is coarse. 1 have a bad inferiority complex.
When he starts talking about what snappy black eyes and beautiful teeth some girl has, and when I know that my eyes are blue and my teeth aren't even, it is humiliating, for after all, I want to be the most attractive to my husband. I have told my husband that I don’t like to hear these things, but he seems -t0 enjoy hurting me.
I could cry. 2
J. M.
" 2
jealousy is a proof of love and talk about the attractions of other women in order to keep their wives on the anxious seat. If your husband’s purpose is to keep you aware of his superior charms and make you.worry for fear someone else going to win him away from you) his method is succeeding all too well. When he hurts you, naturally you have the impulse to strike back. Now perhaps if you:keep him. reassured as to his personal worth in your estimation, he will not feel - the necessity to. stir “you up by admiring others. . (No matter how much he. admires b. eyes, he married a blue-eyed girl. No matter how.much he admires even teeth he married a girl with uneven teeth. Why? . Because you had something over and above the black-eyed maidens with the pearly teeth which he wanted. Let
_| this be your reassurance.
A man usually clings to the wom-
wants to feel comfortable and secure in some woman’s esteem. And when
but most of them have sense enough not to talk about it at home. It he ‘were an older ant
Please help me for I'm so miserable
Answer—Some men think that|
an who knows how to make him}| feel adequate and important re-|i gardless of the color of her eyes or the perfection of her teeth. Hel’
he doesn’t, he feels aggrieved and|: many times resorts to -peculiar(j}. ‘| methods of assuring himself that|}: | his wife admires him, « Praise your husband as much asf he needs to be praised and fry to ignore his references to other girls.| | All married men admire pretty girls, | |
| Conteibute to Victory F and
Set Goal of $311.80 For Campaign Here
The Girl Scout victory fund drive is in full swing in Indianapolis, Mrs. Thomas J. Blackwell Jr. commissioner of the local Girl Scout council, announced today. The drive, inaugurated Oct. 8, is to serve the“double purpose of helping to alleviate war born distress among children of the world and to make a war loan to the government. Each Girl Scout member in the country, both girls and adults, will asked to buy one war stamp in addition to her regular purchases and to contribute the extra Stamp to the
-| national fund.
The public will not be asked to make contributions to the drive,
‘| which will end on Thanksgiving day.|
Results of the campaign will be announced nationally on Dec. 7, the anniversary of Pearl Harbor. On the basis of one 10-cent war stamp, purchased by each scout, the Girl ‘Scout national organization, now numbering more than 725,000 members, is expected to realize more than $72,500 for the fund. The Indianapolis and Marion county membership includes 3118 girls and adults and hopes to contribute approximately $311.80 to the project.
Leader Cites Objectives
“The accumulated stamps received at the Girl Scout national headquarters in New York will be converted into war bonds and held in trust for the alleviation of distress among the children of the world as soon as conditions permit,” Mrs. Blackwell said. “Under details of the plan worked out with the treasury department, the bonds need not be held until maturity if need for the money develops earlier. “Our government wants us to buy more war bonds and stamps now,” Mrs. Blackwell continued. “Through this victory fund the Girl Scouts ‘can help realize both of their general objectives—winning the war and winning the peace.”
Allen-Watson Service to Be
Read Tonight
Miss Mildred Watson will become the bride of Lewis W. Allen at 8:30 o'clock tonight in an informal ceremony at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Leslie H. Watson, 3237 Guilford ave. The bridegroom is the
Tipton. The Rev. E. Arnold Clegg, pastor of the Capitol Avenue Methodist church, will read the / ceremony. Miss Francis Wainscott, Frankfort,
She will wear a beige wool dress with brown accessories and. a corsage of Talisman roses. The bride, who will be given in marriage by her father, has chosen a beige wool suit. Her accessories will be brown and she will have an orchid corsage.
Reception Follows
Barclay Peters will be best man. Both Mrs. Watson and Mrs. Allen will wear blue crepe dresses and corsages of Talisman roses and baby chrysanthemums. A reception will follow the ceremony, after which the couple will leave for a short wedding trip. They will be at home after Wednesday at 1040 Fairfield ave. Out-of-town guests besides the parents of the bridegroom will be Mr. and Mrs. A. R. Ford, Ladoga, grandparents of the bride, and Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Williams, Danville.
Mrs. Horne Hostess
The Junior auxiliary of the Public Health Nursing association will meet Monday at the home of Mrs. william M. Horne, 5264 N. New Jersey st., for a 1 o'clock luncheon.
THE PROPER
Foresight
WILL SAVE YOUR
Eyesight
IRV AR
EXAMINED
son of Mr, and Mrs, Orzin Allen, :
will be the bride’s only. attendant.|-
8129
Pattern 8129 is in sizes 32, 34, 36, 38, 40, 42, 44 and 46, Size 34,
short sleeves, takes 43 yards 35 or 39-inch material. For this attractive pattern, send 16 cents in coin, your name, address, pattern number and size to The Indianapolis Times Pattern Service,
| |belt set will cover a multitude of | |old dresses! This ome is crocheted ; | |lero in two shades of blue. It would
| white and red flowers, in wine color | with blue and pink embroidered
, | color combinations that can be used | — that you can have a bolero that we
By MRS. ANNE CABOT Match ’em up=—a good bolero and
of rose-pink wool: and the flowers are embroidered on the finished bo-
also be pretty in dark blue with flowers. There ,are so many lovely;
fit beautifully with your wardrobe
color scheme, To obtain complete crocheting
sizes 14, 16 and 18 (pattern; 5334) send 11 cents in coin, your name, and address and the pattern number to Anne Cabot, The Indianapolis Times, 211 W. Wacker dr., Chi-
instructions for bolero "and belt—
Beta Alumpae Of Pi Beta Phi To Open Season
Highlights of today's’ sorority notes are skating and bridge’ parties
‘| planned by two orga:
Members of the INDIANX ALUMNAE association: ‘of ‘PI!BETA
¥
| PHI sorority Will meet for the first =
time this season on Tuesday evening at the home of Mrs. Will Karsell and Miss Polly Priddy, 1831 N.' Delaware st. A covered dish supper will be served at 6:30 o'clock. Pi Beta Phis from the Indiana; university chapter are invited to at-: tend the meeting. All sessions-this; winter will be held on the fourth} Tuesday of each month. Miss Mar+ garet Coombs is the new president;
Proceeds from a skating party tq be sponsored by ALPHA TAU chap< ter, ALPHA ZETA BETA, tonight at Rollerland, will. be used for Christmas charity. Miss Dorothy Rubbert is in. charge of ticket sales,
‘Mrs. Gerald Johns will entertain KAPPA chapter, DELTA SIGMA KAPPA, with a bridge party Mon= day at her home in Acton.
im
Luncheon Monday
Members. of the: Etcetera club will be entertained: Monday at a 12:30 p. m. luncheon in the Colonial tearoom by Mrs. Reébert’ L. Davis and Mrs. Fred B. Robifison. Bridge play will -follow" the: lunchiéon.
A
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