Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 April 1943 — Page 12

» fluoride, cinchona, sulphur or other

but without in any way destroying

Jomemaking— | °

Return of Nylon Hosiery Expected Shortly After the End of the War

: NYLON PLANTS OF E. I. du Pont de Nemours & Co., Inc., will be _ @ble to shift from the manufacture of parachutes to stocking yarn in . few days after the war, the company has announced.

Although the movement of the

first post-war nylon from chemical

plant, through hosiery . manufacturer, wholesaler and retailer to the ‘buying public should be fairly rapid, the company said, it will require

‘some time to build up any apprecifible stock in all of the nation’s stores. ~The company predicts that eventtally an even wider choice of Weights, styles and sizes of nylon "Will be available than existed before it was drafted for military ~ “Proportioned sizes,” supplied on & relatively limited scale before the war, should become more generally available when the yarns return to peacetime uses. This will @ssure a purchase of a Well-iting stocking. Hosiery manufacturers have been sble to utilize nylon yarn in ways mever possible with silk. They have been able to manufacture superior full-fashioned stockings and also a much better seamless stocking. L » »

On the Moth Front

“WHEN HOUSEWIVES pack winter woolens away this spring, they'll be able to protect them from sabotage by moths. With production at ‘#bout 90 per cent of the pre-war rate, there will be enough moth balls and flakes to do the job, but not enough to waste. Ti “Pine oil, ingredient of the pleas-ant-scented sachets housewives like| te tuck away in clothes closets to repel moths, is as abundant as ever. Sprays for killing moths on the Wing are not so plentiful as before She war, 2 8 8 “Readily available for the most part are, moth-proofing solutions. The small quantities of sodium

chemicals they call for add up to 50 little that their use for this purpose has not been restricted. Non-explosive and non-inflam-mable moth fumigants are still available. Cedar chests come in somewhat fewer styles than before. Use of metal to hold moth-proof paper garment bags together also has been cut as much as possible,

efficiency of the bags. ! # a»

Good Meals for Good Morale

~ BREAKFAST: Applesauce, wholestheat cereal, enriched toast, jelly, coffee, milk. "esLUNCHEON: Waffles creamed chicken and eggs, tgompote, tea, milk. “DINNER: Clear tomate soup, oven fried chicken, peanut flour muffins, buttered kale, escarole salad, orange sherbet, sponge cake,

with fruit

none, gone along busy at making a living

coming out of Washington.

aware of something they had almost forgotten—they are Americans; they live in a republic; they have the power to delegate power. there is a stirring of spirit in the middle part of the U. S. A.

Deal; like to think although it could eas-|-ily turn out that way. even animosity against Mr. Roosevelt or the resistance to a fourth term. Some of the people who say that a fourth term may be necessary are the most frightened, and the most determined that the phrase “states’ rights” shall take on new meaning.

Woman’s Viewpoint— New Interest Is Seen in States’ Rights

By MRS. WALTER FERGUSON ? Times Special Writer HOPE. THAT FULLER responsibilities will soon be assumed by the states is expressed now in many quarters. The fear of complete concentration of government in Washington disturbs the minds of Americans, many of whom feel they are caught in af trap. Wherever you go you hear these fears expressed, especial-} ly by obscure peo-§ ple who have never taken ‘much interest in

That is to say, they do not let their

political prejudices run away with

them; indeed, a vast number have Year after year they have

and content to let the politicians

base.

Maccross plaid which originally was

Travel will be patriotically restricted this year, but many a Miss and Mrs. will journey on train or bus to visit “him” at camp or navy “Travel light” is the watchword, and the carryall and matching hatbox above aré part of a co-ordinated series including evegything from compacts to big traveling bags. .weight, covered with water-repellent cotton fabrics in the sprightly

cars. Bags are bound in natural pigskin,

They are extremely light

woven to upholster de luxe touring

In New York

by Helen Worden

and a ham sandwich.” .

run the government.

frightened, not of the Germans or his secretary. She likes them. i Japs but of those forces which the war has let loose at home—sudden pect anything,” she said today in regimentation of their activities; sudden cessation of little liberties;

tons of rules and questionnaires

#® 8 2 BEING SCARED, they are newly

And so It is not a revolt against the New as many anti-New Dealers

It is mot

In short, this restlessness and ten-

tea, milk.

Today’ s Recipe nie PEANUT FLOUR MUFFINS

Two-thirds cup. flour, % cup peanut flour, 2% cup corn meal, ¢ teaspoons baking powder, 1 teaspoon salt, 1 cup milk, 1 egg, 3 ~ fablespoons melted fat or peanut oil Sift dry ingredients together. Combine milk and egg. Blend the two mixtures. Add the melted fat or peanut oil. Bake in greased muffin or corn stick pans in a 425 to 450 degrees F. oven for 20 © 30 ‘minutes.

c. Y. O. Group Plans Roller Skating Party

@ Catholic A Youth Organiza- * Cadettes and Youth council have a skating party at land Wednesday evening. Miss fary Flaherty and Miss Ruth ger will be the co-chairman. 1 the arrangements committee “be Misses Joan Petit, Pat nlan, Mary Caldrone and Helen Kk. The proceeds of the party will used to further the activities of Bp service men.

directions. exist is important.

sult of all this confusion through which we are passing will be the awakening of a sluggard people to a sense of personal political duty.

Cheer guild will be installed at 2 p. m. tomorrow in Ayres’ auditorium.

president; Mrs. O. O. Johnson first

vice president; Mrs. Jane Schmutte, second vice president: Mrs. Hans C.

retairies respectively: Mrs. John G.

sion among the people is a sort of political renaissance—a rébirth ‘of the democratic spirit. So far only faint movements can be sensed, and these might easily lead in wrong But the fact that they

At least we can hope that one re-

Riley Cheer Guild Officers To Be Installed

New officers of the Riley Hospital

They are Mrs. Bérnard H. Jeup,

Jacobsen and Mrs. Roy W. Johnson, recording and corresponding sec-

Beale and Mrs. R. W. Cook, state secretary and assistant; Mrs. Carl L.

Jones, treasurer; Mrs. J. A. Garrett-

“I've long since learned to ex-

the office of the Sphinx, the magicians’ magazine which she helps Mr, Mulholland edit, at 130 W. 42d st. “The explanation usually is pretty simple. Mr. Mulholland wanted the rope and pack of cards for a couple of tricks he was doing for the Boy Scouts that night. He wanted the ham sandwich because he didn’t have. time for dinner.”

She fingered the ears of a rabbit-|

in-the-hat paperweight on her desk. “Even stranger was the incident of the Philadelphia mummy.” She had learned from Mulholland to prolong suspense. Getting up from her desk she walked across the room and turned the key in the door. : 8 # a “PEOPLE HAVE A way of barging into this office,” she explained. “Once a magician stalked in and told me he was going to jump off that porch. She indicated the terrace. -upon which ' the. office opened. “It took me two hours ‘to talk him out of it. When Mr. Mulholland came. the man had left. ‘That fellow wouldn't even try to jump,” he said. ‘The kind that talk suicide never do it.’” She sat down at her desk again. “He was wrong. The man finally committed suicide in. ‘Brooklyn. What about the Philadelphia mummy? Oh, ves.” Talk of mummies and suicides from her comes as a surprise. She doesn’t look the part. . She might be a co-ed from Iowa; the same pretty, wholesome type—cozy figure, gentle manner, round face, brown hair smoothly combed, neat white collar on navy blue dress all helped | emphasize that school-girl look. # u ” t J

«I GET A WIRE from Philadelphia,” she continued, “saying Mr. Mulholland wanted me to meet him at the Penngylvania station. He was arriving on the 1 a. m. train. When I reach the gate I see two porters carrying his bags, then him, then two more. porters lugging a great big mummy. Everybody was staring.” She smiled. “ ‘You take that in your taxi,’ Mr. Mulholland says to me, pointing to the mummy. ‘Tl follow in another with my traveling bags.’ I ask him what he’s going

NEW YORK, April 26.—“Meet me on the northeast corner of 59th st. and Lexington ave. at 7 tonight with a piece of rope, a pack of cards

Dorothy Wolf didn’t call the police when she got this message. It' was from her bess, John Mulholland, the magician. She’s had similar. Now all of a sudden they are orders, equally cockeyed, every day of the 12 years she has worked as

Sandals

.in competitions sponsored by the

+ | made by Mrs. John L. Whitehurst, A of the Scouts, assigned to the

Haute, 10 per cent of the county’s quota is $408,000, but the women’s organization sold $1,845,083 in their

mew county seat, the women’s organization sold $114,000 in bonds in flares hours. Sales now are far over the $114,000 quota that represents 10 per cent of the county's goal for April. Sales and quotas in other counties where women’s organizations have exceeded the 10 per cent goals are as follows: Cass. sales $144,662, quota, $135,000; Switzerland, gales, $52,887.50 quota, , $12,000; ippecanoe, sales $397, 091, quota, $253,000; Wayne, sales, $241,81875, quota, $217,000.

In Vigo county. and A

first week, At Columbus, Bartholo- |

8262

36-52

Award Prizes In Federation Competition

Two leaders in the Indiana Federation of Clubs are prize winners

General Federation of Wameris clubs. Mrs. R. F. Grosskopf, president ot the seventh district federation, received $15 in war savings stamps for the best written article on war service by a clubwoman. For her work in arranging .political science forums, Mrs. George L. Russell of Gary, chairman of American citizenship for the state federation, was awarded a $25 war savings bénd. Article Published Mrs. Grosskopf’s article will appear in the May issue of the General Federation Clubwoman magazine. The forums arranged by Mrs. Russell were conducted at Indiana university, Manchester college, and I. U. extension in East Chicago. ‘A fourth forum was held in Indianapolis preceding the November election when opposing candidates for state offices participated. Announcement of the awards was

national president.

By MRS. ANNE CABOT They're topnotchers — everybody likes them—and they take nothing from that precious ration ticket, No. 17! Soles are made of rug yarn in a quick crochet stitch,

To obtain complete crochet instructions and finishing directions for tie-on sandals (Pattern 5380) send 11 cents in coins, your name and address and the pattern number to Anne Cabot, The Indianap-

: |low has described as “unparalleled : in the entire history of the national

Cite 2 Local

Women for War Service

Two Indianapolis women have received special official recognition from the war department for service which Congressman Louis Lud-

This classic shirtwaist in one of the new cotton prints will do its wearer proud. Smart for day after day wear , , . perfect busy woman’s dress. Pattern 8262 is in sizes 36, 38, 40, 42, 44, 46, 48, 50 and 52. Size 38 takes, with short sleeves, 4% yards 39-inch material. For this attractive pattern, send 16 cents in coins, with your name, address, pattern number and size to The Indianapolis Times Pattern Service, 214 W. Maryland st. Now you can order a summer issue of Fashion, our helpful sewing guide and pattern catalog! Contains over 100 new patterns, has information on care of clothing, hoz to make over, how to plan practical wardrobes. . Twenty-six cents per copy.

“Girl Scout Head| Will Be Guest At Tea Sunday"

Miss Geneva Barrows, new staff executive of the Indianapolis and Marion County Girl Scouts, will be introduced to Scouts at a tea Sunday in the Little House. Miss Barrows has been field adviser for the Great Lakes region

northern section of Michigan. She is a graduate of Mount Holyoke college. She was at the New York School of Social Work for three months; served as a Scout leader in Springfield, Mass, and .at the . English club,: Middletown, Conn., and the Settlement house, New York. For the past three years her field advisory work in Michigan has in-

; cluded organizing councils, training

leaders and sponsors. She has taken several special courses in Scout

emergency.” | They are Mrs. Donovan A. Turk, president of the Indianapolis Council of Women, and Mrs, Maxwell Droke, chairman of’ the council's, Americanism committee, who fur-| nished 300 day or recreation rooms at Camp Atterbury, raising ‘the money for the project and trans- 3 porting more than 350 truckloads ° of furniture from Indianapolis of the camp. When Rep. Ludlow called the at- | tention of the war department | I this project, it was decided that the most appropriate recognition would be a series of letters to the two! women from the war department and camp authorities. | Mrs. Turk and Mrs. Droke re-. ceived letters from Robert P, Pat-|

work at national headquarters.

3

‘5 |band. ghould I move away from : her, or what would you advise?

{ean be kind to her, but firm in your

DEAR JANE JORDAN—I am #

| girl. of. 18.. 1 have been married " |over a year and have a baby. I love

my husband very much.” About five months ago he-was called .to service and my mother came to live with me. She is old and childish and thinks that’ I am still a child. I figure I should do things for her welfare buf she has tried. in every way. to turn me against my hus-

, TROUBLED.

Answer—It always is advisable for a girl to live away from her mother ‘after she. is married for. the very reason which you have mentioned. Almost Ainyariably the mother: treats her daughter as if she were still a child and will not let her make decisions for herself. The daughter wants to run her wn house and manage her own children and resents her mother’s interference.

While it always is desirable for a | married daughter to live apart from | her mother it is: not always practical. If your mother has no means and cannot support herself: you cannot put her out. In that case all ‘you can do:is to put up with the! situation, but you do not have to remain: a ‘child just because your mother treats you as one. You can treat her as if she were the child and you the mother. You

decision. to ‘run’ your own home. Eventually she will learn that she cannot dominate you as before but

|JANE JORDAN

you was strong enough he would | prefer to. spend his Sundays with you instead of with his sister. However, what good would it do you to raise ‘a row and make him spend his time with you if he doesn't feel . the urge fo do so on his own? Try having another date on Sundays, JANE JORDAN,

Put your problems ins letter te June Jordan, who will answer your questions in this column daily.

. : cer cals fOr helping “make up”

meat’s mi

must ‘fit herself into your home and Wi

adapt “herself to your ways, As for her attempts to turn.you against your husband it should be easy enough for you to tell her that you will have none of it,

will depend upon: your ability to be firm. 8 » ” DEAR JANE JORDAN—I have} gone with a certain boy for a year. I11 be 20 in May. When we started going together he said he loved me and wanted to igo steady. Here lately he goes to his sister's on Sunday and comes to seé me through the week. He tells me he doesn’t go with other. girls, .but do you think he is doing right? I know I love -him very ‘much. + WORRIED.

Answer—1¢ the, boy's interest .in

Your | 4 success: or. failure in handling her

or Ne Food Awntbopitie na recent

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son, auditor; Miss Alice Velsey, supervisor of contributions; Mrs. William M. Carper, hospital director; Mrs. S. G. Huntington, par-

terson, undersecretary of war, who regretted “that the war department has no appropriate citation to ac-'

to do with the. mummy but he. won’t answer.” She giggled. “I felt kind of silly

olis Times, 530 S. Wells st., Chicago. The new spring Anne Cabot album is ready for mailing. Contains

he La Velle-Gossett feterans of . Foreign Wars, was to

ave a benefit card/party at 1:30 clock this afternoon in the Food aft shop. The hostesses were to - Mesdames Olive Morton, Mary [ahn and Gertrude Kremer.

Tm tudy Club.

; s. Crawford Mott, 1820 E. 75th s will entertain the Tuesday Study; hb tomorrow assisted by Mrs. F. O. s and Mrs. Thomas Hatfield. , speaker will be Mrs. Edward dey: a member of the Hoosier

“New under-arm am Deodorant

| O'Sullivan, J. H. Gallagher, Charles { DeLaney, John MecNeff, Rose N.

-§| Madden, Mildred Hunt, S8arah Gree-

| Re furbishing Note . Bring last year’s floral print up

liamentarian, and Mrs. A, B. Clark, chairman of sewing. Miss “Eleanor Dee Theek, super visor of dramatics at Shortridge high school, will present a group of pupils in a program. Miss Margaret McFarland will be hostess, = Officers and committees will report at a board meeting at 1 p. m.

St. Rita Guild To Give Party

A spring card party will be given Saturday afternoon .by the St. Rita guild in Ayres’ auditorium, with Miss Catherine Fox. general chairman, in charge. She is being assisted by Mesdames David Connor, Albert P. Weber, Hilliard PF. Kett, William Carson, Harold Prather, M. ¥. Hanley, John Foreman, Anthony J. Fritz, Eugene

B. Haggerty, Margaret Egan, Hugh

Fritsch and Lillian M. Koontz. Other: assistants are Misses Catherine, O'Gara, Winifred Fox, Catherifie Fletcher, Nell McHugh, Mary

Hady

riding up Seventh ave. with a mummy but I do as I'm told. When we get to the office I ask Mr. Mulholland again how he’s going to use the mummy. He won't answer. Finally he begins ripping the wrappings. ‘You're like the people who go to mediums,’ he says. ‘You want to believe strange things. This isn't a mummy. It’s a bale of rope for my tricks.” s ” ” SHE LIT A cigaret. “He likes to play tricks on me. We'll be

walking along the street and all of a sudden hell vanish. Half a

block further there he is again.| °

He's not little. There's no store Lhe can hide in, I don’t know how he does it.” Because she books -his tours she knows the equipment he uses for his

tricks, but, to this. day, she’s. never

been abie to figure out how he does them. :

“1 still sit. ‘and marvel, n “she: said. ) “Like the night he got me torsit in] 8

the wings-in' a Boston, theater to. clock" some new tricks. “IT was'so

completely Booted 1 forgot. to Sime. 8 so

smgle, rick 2»

A .

hs oy wo

BOTH SHE AND Mr. Mulholland ; drive store clerks mad with their|

crazy requests, she said. They ask

for things like salad bowls that will]

bounce, wine glasses deep enough

to hold a card deck, $10 worth of|

beads in a 5 and 10 cent store, white silk handkerchiefs by the dozen gross and cloth to burn holes in.

“Only last week ‘we went to]

Stern's to buy some silk for a cer< tain trick,” she said. “The salesasked Mr. Mulholland how ‘much he w out. He asks inch

I get out of this?’

pg To orf “How many five-|

32 pages of spring and summer accessories, ways to save money on home decoration, aids to helping the family clothes budget in wartime! The brand new album is

knowledge our gratitude for such invaluable service.” Maj. Gen. F. W. Milburn, of Camp Atterbury, and

Col. Welton M. Modisette, also of,

the eamp, thanked them and the

priced 16 cents.

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