Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 May 1943 — Page 20
PAGE 20
oN
Parents of Summer Campers Asked To Follow ODT Travel Suggestions
PARENTS INTENDING TO ENROLL junior members of the family in children’s camps this summer should take account of the fact that war has made curtailment of summér travel necessary.
Indications from camps to be
in session this summer show that
enrollment, especially of very young children, will rise sharply this year as more and more mothers heed the government request for women to
take war jobs. Foreseeing heavier - than - usual travel to and from camp sites, the office of defense transportation has these travel suggestions for parents now formulating ‘summer plans for the family: ‘ 1. Select a children’s camp near + home. Coach travel, wherever possible, is urged by both ODT and railroads. Pullman cars are needed for troop’ movements and fox those, who must travel on war business. 2. Do not accompany children to camps unless absolutely - necessary. Arrange instead for children to travel with - groups under camp guidance. } +3. Forego the pleasure of weekend trips to visit children at camp. Week-end travel by intercity bus and train should be reserved for members of the armed forces and other essential travelers. In addition, camps) can promise no arrangements for meeting trains with special busses and automobiles. 8 8 8
Plan Ahead
. 4. MAKE INDIVIDUAL travel arrangements with camp officials far enough in advance to permit proper scheduling. Camp authorities have been asked to inform railroads and intercity bus companies of their travel plans for the camp enrollment. They must make arrangements well ahead of time so that schedules will not conflict with heavy week-end furlough traffic, troop movements or other essential travel. ' Railroads and intercity bus companies have stated that they will provide service to the best of their
{fat or bacon drippings.
ability. However, increased war travel plus the added burden of bona-fide vacation travel will
further tax already over-crowded |
travel accommodations. Full co-operation of parents and camp officials with the government request that there be no unnecessary travel will be needed to save transportation facilities for war
uses. »
Good Meals for
Sood Morale
BREAKFAST: Sliced oranges, cracked wheat cereal, muffins, butter, margarine or jam, coffee, milk. LUNCHEON: Carrot souffle, whole wheat toast, baked apples, oatmeal cookies, tea, milk. X
DINNER: Stewed kidneys cooked in left-over chicken stock, parsley new potatoes, green beans, radishes, bread, butter or margarine, rhubark pie, tea, milk.
” »
s
Today's Recipe
CARROTS FRIED WITH APPLES OR ONIONS
(Serves 6) Wash and scrape medium-sized
carrots and cut length-wise into thin slices. Slice apples in rings with the skin on, slice onions in thin rings. Place carrots and onions in a frying pan with a little melted Cover tightly and Book until almost tender. Add the apples, sprinkle with salt and sugar, and brown well.
6 GLORIOUS ‘DIAMONDS
Here's beautiy in all its . dazzling glory! Matched ‘rings hold’6 blue. sparkling diamonds in unusual setting of yellow gold. An exceptional value at only $617.50,
Wo
LE SUSSYAN, Ine.
239 W. WASHINGTON ST. ‘Opposite Statehouse
—LOVELY BRIDAL DUET
Richly engraved matched rings of yellow gold. Engagement ring has large diamond of blue white brilliance. A special value!
Dale Anderson, both of whom have
the wartime nurse shortage.
Local Women Answer Plea For Volunteers
Household and family responsibilities have not kept two Indianapolis women from responding to a plea for volunteer nurses to help during the war emergency. The Indiana State Nursing Council for War “Service has been conducting a drive to obtain recruits from the ranks of married women who' formerly were in the nursing profession. Mrs. John K. Lambie and Mrs.
2
been married and have families of grown children, Have taken refresher courses at the Indiana university school of nursing and have been on duty there for :many months. - Mrs. Lambie was graduated from the Park hospital in Denver, Colo., more than 30 years ago. During the last war she lived in Minneapolis and assisted in the laboratory at the City hospital there.
‘They Do Come Back’
. In preparation for, this war, she took the refresher course -at the I. U. medical center last year and now works at the Coleman hospital five and a half hours each day. Aside from this, Mrs. Lambie has a victory garden, keeps her house and attends to her social obligations. é © Mrs. Anderson is a graduate of the: Methodist hospital school. of nursing with the -class of-1913: She has two daughters and a granddaughter. Following the refresher course, she, too, is back at work at the I. U. hospitals. The nursing council points out that ‘there are’ mahy other nurses who have not yet volunteered to help. “They do come back,” a cquncil spokesman says, “~~but not in’large enough numbers.” |
Election. Held By Phi Chi Nu
Fhe Butler university freshman women’s honorary, Phi Chi Nu, recently elected Miss Katherine Armstrong, president. She succeeds Miss Clyde Holder.
Serving with Miss Armstrong will be Miss Mary Ann McLaughlin, vice president; Miss Betty Jane Heassler, secretary, and Miss Evelyn Peterson, treasurer. : The daughter of “Mr. and Mrs. Robert Armstrong, 5779 N. Pennsylvania st. Miss Armstrong is a graduate of Shortridge high school and a member of Kappa Alpha Theta sorority and the Home Eco nomics club at Butler. ;
Mrs. Metzger To Entertain
Mrs. W: Newell Metzger, 2406 Carroliton ave. will be hostess at a 10:20 a. m. meeting of the Meridian W. C. T. U. Wednesday. Her assistant will be Mrs. S. C. Fulmer. Miss Esther: M. Hoyt and Miss Lulu Somoners, missionaries who have returned recently from -Bel-
- votions and Mrs. Martha Best will
gium, will talk on conditions in that country and will .tell. of .their escape from the Nazis. Mrs. Cecil McMullin will give dehave charge -of the music... Mrs. Bloomfield Moore will preside.
ANNOUNCING HUGE INTERDENOMINATIONAL
CHRIST” RALLIES
"ENGLISH THEATER—7:30 P. M.—SATURDAY For the Masses of Our Youth of the
Roger Emerson Malsbory Managing Director
30
“YOUTH FOR
ARMED Soldiers, Sailors, Marines
AND YOUTH |
Speaker
DR. H. H. SAVAGE, Pontiac, Mich. ”
-.. SONG FEST , .
Place—English Theater—Time 7:30 P. M. Every. ‘Saturday Night
__ Free Admissi
FORCES . WAACs; WAVES, SPARS, N CIVILIAN LIFE
. . RADIO RALLY
Mrs. John K. Lambie, R. N. (left) and Mrs. Dale Anderson, R. N., are two Indianapolis nurses who have responded to the plea of the Indiana State Nursing Council for War Service for volunteers to meet
Three-Piece
Luscious three-piece to wear
right through the summer. Waistwhittling jerkin, classic shirt and kick-pleated skirt.
Pattern 8440 is in sizes, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17 and 18. Size 13 jerkin and skirt take 3% yards 39-inch material. Short sleeve blouse, 15% yards. } 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 ordér a summer is-
sue of Fashion, our helpful sewing
guide and pattern catalog! Contains over 100 new patterns, has information on eare of clothing, how to make over, how to plan practical wardrobes; 26 cents per copy.
PLEASE BE PATIENT!
With the United States postal service being hard hit by wartime burdens, and with spring pattern mail breaking all records, there has been some delay in the delivery of some patterns. Naturally, we regret this—and we want our readers to know that everything possible is being done to expedite pattern delivery.
Farewell Party
Is Given
A farewell party in honor of Miss Monica Lennox was given recently by Miss Jeanne Thompson, 4629 Rookwood ave. . £3 yn Miss Lennox, left this week with her mother and brother, Richard, to join her father, Lt. Richard Lennox in Wilmington, N. C. - Lt. Lennox is stationed there at Camp Davis. The guests at the party were Misses Patsy Scarilon, Caroline Rose, Nancy Pritchard, Hilda -Conkiin, Dorothy Adkins, Carol King, Mary Boyd, Patty Wilson, Adaline Black, Joan Knepper, Helen Iverson, Stella Jean Branham, Florence Waterman, Virginia King, Carol Lyn Blackburn and Jane Streight.
Army Is Rationed Nowadays, Too
Although ga self-imposed rationing system has been in effect at nearly all army commissaries ‘since certain food items have been on the critical list, official point rationing
1 of commercially canned, bottled and ‘1ifrozen fruits and vegetables now
applies to. all commissaries exactly as it does to the civilian neighborhood store. : a" ~ Military personnel, including commissioned ‘officers, enlisted men, army nurses and members of the
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES Two Former Nurses ‘Come Back’
Evansville;
A ArY. Wito Elect" Three At Convention
21st Annual Session Will Be Held June 15
The 21st annual convention of the Indiana division, American Association of University Women, will be held at 10 a. m. Tuesday June 15 in
the Columbia club. Three new state officers, president, first vice president and secretary, will be. elected following a report by the nominating
terms. men also will report. Mrs., C. Loren Harkness, chairman of the state guidance committee, will give a report on the progress of the A. A. U. W. state guidance project.
Program Mapped
Appointed in February at the request of the state guidance director, Fred Murphy, the committee has formulated a three-fold program of youth direction in Indiana. Through the program it has established local guidance programs in all A. A. U. W. branches in the state, has created a co-operative working basis with the occupational information and guidance service of the state department of public instruction and has enlisted the interest and co-operation of parents in local guidance units. Other members of the committee are Miss Helen Ederle, Terre Haute, co-chairman, Miss Helen Dernbach, South Bend; Mrs. John L. Sanders, Mrs. . Fred: Sykes, La Porte, and Mrs, W, A. Davis, Vincennes.
Miss Arthur to Speak
Miss Maude Arthur, Crawfordsville, clairman of economic and legal status of women, also will rerort on the results of A. A. U. W.’s state-wide effort at teacher recruitment. She will summarize responses to 1100 questionnaires on teaching qualifications recently distributed .to A. A. U. W. members and other qualified women throughout the
| state.
Appointed by Mrs. R. W. Holm-
stedt, Bloomington, state president,
the convention committees are Mrs.
Ward G. Biddle, Bloomington, chair-
man; Mrs. Walter -P.. Morton, Indianapolis; Miss Olleta Tyler, New Albany; Mrs. Wayne Clark, Connersville, and Dr. Mavis L. Holmes, Franklin, arrangements; Miss Mary Gibbard, Mishawaka, program; and Mrs. Alvin C. Schaaf, Jamestown, chairman, Mrs. W. L. Larson, Elkhart, and Miss Elizabeth Weintz, Evansville, credentials.
Serve on ‘Committees
Miss Agda Rafter, Logansport, has charge of the pages. The registration chairman is Mrs. J. W. VanNess, Valparaiso, assisted by, Mrs. Gordon Crowe, Portland; Mrs. F. M. Fargher, Michigan. City; Mrs. Charles Richardson, Rochester, and
Mrs. E. W, Staats, La Porte.
Other committees are Mrs. Wayne C. Kimmel and the state board members, hospitality; Dr. Mary Turgi, South Bend, parliamentarian; Mrs. Virginia Brackett Green, chairman, Mrs. R. B. Stewart, Lafayette; Miss Bess Lanham, Crawfordsville; Miss Eleanor Monnix, Gary, and Mrs. Ora Stegall, Richmond, resolutions, and Mrs. Byron Miller, publicity. ‘
Colonial Dames
Re-elect Nine
Mrs. Robert A. Adams has been re-elected president of the National society, Colonial Dames of America, in the State of Indiana. The other officers are Mrs. Harry V. Wade, first vice president; Mrs. Edmund Burke Ball of Muncie and Mrs. Theodore B. Griffith, re-elected second and third vice presidents. The re-elected members of the board of governors are Mesdames Clarence Alig, Noble Dean, Edgar H. Evans, Benjamin D. Hitz, Charles R. Weiss and Lucia MacBeth.
{
| |
committee § headed by Miss Alma Colmer, South § Bend. They will serve for two year § The state officers and chair- §
line Lewis (left), daughter of -Mr.
Mrs. Robert H. Bosson.
problem with my mother.
tired that I can't do my work ‘well Yet if I don’t work, she gets mad and says I don’t want to help around the house at all. She does my father the same, but he just doesn’t pay any attention to her. I am getting married next month and my mother says I am pi
married to get out of the Avprk at, | home. It isn’t true because I plan] on staying at home as my boy | friend is in the navy. My father tries to tell her how hard we work all day, but she just gets mad. I try to treat her nicely and buy her things the house. My dad and I are buying her some new living room furniture which she wanted. We feel that: she should keep the house clean. _ I went through high school in three years in order to get out of school and get a job to'relieve the burden on my parents. I. haven't any brothers in service, so I know it can’t be that that is worrying her. Can you help us in any way to solve ‘our problem? We are at our wits’ end." |, A WORRIED DAUGHTER AND HUSBAND. sen 8 ; ‘Answer—You say your mother does her work at home. Do: you mean that she has only the house-
work to do, or does she take in out-
If she has nothing but the housework, then she has no case at all and should not expect help from the bread winners. But, if she, too, earns money which she contributes .to the home, then her situation, while not identical, is similar to yours in that she has two jobs and is too tired to do them well. “In the ‘latter case, you and your father have two alternatives. Either you can contribute enough to make it possible for her to-drop outside work, or you c¢an pitch in and divide up the chores. If your work is more time-consuming than hers, you can take the lesser ‘share, but you need a fair agreement about who should do what.
"It oceurs to me that your mother | feels that you and your father|\ She } feels left out and abused because]
have ganged up against her.
you back each other up. The two of you get away from home all day
in your lives.
is one who feels unloved and lives in a state of constant self-pity. More attention and consideration from your father might help to alleviate the feeling of lack, Perhaps she doesn’t need help with the housework . half. as much as she needs appreciation and affection. JANE JORDAN, Put your problems in a letter to Jane
Jordan who will answer your questions in this column daily.
Have tended
® Worth Much More. Special! ® Long or Short Styles!
beauticians. Our state licensed ‘operators with this shop
Service P A.M,
Appointment Necessary! GUARANTEED
NEW TRU-CURL ti
PERMANENT
s 50
beauty needs experienced
your by
ELFIN BOB PERMANENT
Bring your loveliness up to par with
rush in place. fine summer style. Reg. $0 :
an * “Ein - Bob” wave—always looks : rand — "easy to ; ; °
.Shampoo and Finger: " Wave -$ “$425 I= f is
$395
‘Now You Can Come in as Late as 6
P. M. for Your Permanent ,
for Other Services.
NO APPOINTM
6th Floor
601 ROOSEVELT BLDG.
BEAUTE-ARTES
601 Roosevelt Bldg., 6th Floor—Service Starts '8 A. M."
i,
WAAC, are entitled to buy af com-
* 3
| misaries, but mut produce raios
N.:E: Corner Washingtoy
Guaranteed Hair Tints
-—any shade
:30 M.
‘6th Floor
ENT NECESSARY
and Hlinois Sts. LE. 0433 |
we
To Receive Degrees at Western
E -.
Two Indianapolis girls whe are 1 commencement exercises at Western college,
Brendonwood, and Miss Judy Bosson (right), daughter of Mr.
JANE JORDAN
DEAR JANE JORDAN—I am a girl of 18 years of age and I have a Everything I do is wrong. eight hours a day. She also works, but she does her work at home. After I get home she expects’me to do the housework. I tried it by washing the kitchen walls and. scrubbing the floors, but it makes me SO
side work which she does at home? ||
and have more interest and variety | |
As a rule, a chronic comiplainer \
"FRIDAY, MAY 281043 Guild President + Names Saff For Bulletin
4 A o£ ( Mrs. Harry L. Foreman, president tH of the Methodist hospital White =. Cross ‘guild, appointed -Miss Hazel McCollum circulation mangger of the White Cross Beacon at a recent executive board meeting in the nurses’ home of the hospital Mesdames James Crooks, S. M., Partlowe, . Robert Dick, Henry 8. Leonard, Clarence J. Carlson and | {Harry D. Case were named on the : |editorial staff. : : The re-elected officers. of the Broadway Methodist church guild, with Mrs. Ellis B. Hall as president, We
will be installed by Mrs. Fore at a special meeting Monday. 1a the nurses’ home. Mesdames H: Bx ° Elder, O. Z. Houser and Burton (Jardine have been appointed as a work committee of the unit, The Plainfield guild has reselect= ', | ed Mrs. J. P. Girard as presidenk § and Mrs. William Herfinglake, sec- / retary-treasurer. The<hew officers ar® Mesdames Flora : Coble, ‘C. Bs Thomas and Arthur Kirk, first. through third vice presidents.
#
x to receive degrees Tueseday in Oxford, O., are Miss Adeand Mrs. Montgomery S. Lewis of and
i ’ }
Vial '
¥
®
iE
3
I work hard
yoo
6 F
fab
YOUR ,OLD BATHUB
wn, IE $54
® Legs Removed : ® Tub Enclosed with Tile +® Flush Against Walls “® Lower, Safer, Easier to Clean
If tub is badly worn, an ALL TILE + tub can be furnished to fit any space, TI \ ASK FOR PRICES Also TILE FLOORS and WAINSCOTS at lowest prices in our history,
Work done throughout the state. at slightly higher prices.
WEG MARBLE and
TILE CO. 927 Architects Bldg. RI. 7531 2 2
I
‘MO
Oo you have replaced a burnt-out’ fuse you'll say : it’s nearly as easy to change as a light bulb. And by being able to replace a “blown” fuse yourself, you can restore your Electric service without delay—and at the’same time you help the government's wartime program to,conserve man-power, tires and gasoline, Frayed cords and defective appliances are the most common causes of fuses burning out. Remedy the cause, replace the “blown” fuse, and you'll have Electric service without waiting for outside help. It’s wise to have a flashlight on hand for changing fuses at night. Also keep an extra supply of fuses handy.
Wa
i
747
ONLY 4 EASY STEPS REQUIRED TO REPLACE A "BLOWN" FUSE
_
0)
Z
1. Disconnect the cord or appliance ~~ . : responsikle for the trouble. Go to the main Electric switch and pull to “open” or “off” position. This turns off the electricity. For safety stand on a dry board or a wooden chair. =
772%
i
¥
2. Locate “blown” fuse. You can tell it by the broken metal link and écorched ‘mica window caused by the melting : metal. In spring type fuse the wire. spring will be coiled tight instead, of, stretched out. A /
AN | : 3. With dry hands and touching only the face of the fuse, unscrew the burnt. out fuse and replace with a new one of the proper size—15 ampere fuses should be used for house circuits and 30 ampere fuses for main line. hh
4. Push up the main switch to “closed” or “on” position. If fuse “blows” again and you still cannot locate the trouble, call an electrician or notify the Indian. apolis Power & Light Company. Always keep extra fuses on hand. (
INSTRUCTION PANELS ON CHANGING FUSES | have been located on our display floors in the Electric Building and East Side Branch té show you how to replace a fuse, quickly, easily and safely. Also ask for folder on replacing fuses.
Do not waste Electricity just because it is not “rationed—for waste in wartime is not patriotic.
YU a [AGeyLL CC \
INDIANAPOLIS Power &
