Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 January 1946 — Page 14

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g the’ Holiday Intetlude

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calendar

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BEFORE THE HOLIDAY FOWL Nas appearance (in hash) social and club activiover again after the Christmas-New Year's

includes a couple of Junior ;, on the 11th and the 25th at the Womrent club, a pair of Town Hall lectures on the ;, a Players’ production on the 26th and, high

the speaker, will talk on “Tibet.” The J. Lammers, O. E.

m. Saturday in the D. A. R. chapter house. Transition” and the hostesses will be

Reeves

their friends, the opening of on the 20th in Block's audiFeb. 2. . x» its new year's activitigs is Delta sorority, The group

Delta in the sorority's Butler university

Mesdames O. J. Brinkworth, Buts, R. W. Beighe

the Government Science club Clemens O. Mueller will be the

. tivities with an election wthorn room on Jan 13, in charge and the Montgomery, William Pelz, J. B. Kenneth N. Rider Jr,

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Meta Given

Indianapolis and Washington, the holidays with her family,

dianapolis. (P, H. Ho photo.)

Youth, Inc. Strikes: = A Snag

By MRS. WALTER FERGUSON Scripps-Howard Staff Writer

WELL-BEHAVED adolescents must be awfully tired of hearing about juvenile delinquency. 1 thipk we over-emphasize it and so neglect to mention constructive efforts on the part of the majority of . young people. Today, I want to give you a report on Youth, Inc, a new organigation in our town. Present mem-

school students.

entitles a member to all club bene-

Saturday night. It is held at the Y. W.C. A. Although they consult with an adult advisory council, these young people choose their own officers, representatives from each senior high. They manage the entertainments and finances of their organigation. The leaders impress you with their intelligence and balance. ss = THERE WAS a profound need for wholesome recreation for teenagers in our city as there is in most places. The public shortsightedness on this matter is evidence of adult

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.|FEATHERY (DESSERT) WAFFLE “is. (For Sunday dinner)

2 c. cake flour season, the practice for| 3 tsps. baking powder products. ” %- tsp. salt - 4 eggs, separated A perfect waffle is tender, golden | y, ¢ sugar snd crisp all the way| 1e mik This necessary crispness|% ¢. melted shortening ving the right| gift flour and resift three times all ingredierits and a of eggs. ; egg whites until just a stiff froth, appearing today is for| Add sugar gradually and continue may be served cold. | beating until mixture stands in firm cake flour and is as | peaks. : Nabisco wafer, Beat egg yolks slightly; add milk oh . » and melted shortening, and pour CREOLE SLAW into flour mixture. Beat until mix-

ture is smooth. Fold in egg whites lightly but completely. Using % c. of batter for each waffle, bake in a hot waffle iron until golden brown. Serve imme~{diatély with ice cream, a rich butterscotch sauce, -or . cooked fruit.

materialism and stupidity. We

spend money for every sort of build-}. except the building of charac-|

Ing, ter. Anyway, taken things into their own hands.

They planned and created their club which draws crowds into one fun

center, where they enjoy the right}.

kind of amusements away from the dangers which beset them in most commercial places.

with baking powder and salt. Beat] PRESENT ambition is to find for

larger permanent quarters, they've almost outgrown the present one.

So far they've struck only one

" Prindipals in Bridal A

Mr, and Mrs. Martin H. "Walpole announce the engagement of to Francis L. O'Brien, son of Mr, and Mrs. F, V, O’Brien, Denver. marriage will be in the spring. Mr, O’Brien, recently released from the army, and Miss Walpole spent (Hessler photo.) ' The marriage of Miss Ferne Bitner (right) to Frank J. Murray is announced by her sister,

Sechrist. | The ceremony was read last Wednesday in Ft. Smith, Ark, and the couple is at home in In.

bership is about 750, all senior high Monthly fees are 50 cents, which

fits, chief of which is the regular downtown party and dance each

our youngsters have

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By EPSIE

pursue. mothers—and teachers, too—it is

as widely read by adults as it is by 13 to 18-year-old for whom it is published. 5 3 Educators are so agog over what the magazine is doing that 2800 have asked to receive advance pro= motional material on what's - coming up next. Knows From Experience The idea for such a magazine was developed by Editor Helen Valentiné, She has a daughter of her own not many years out of her teens. Leaving an executive job with

Good Luck

IN TN

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daughter, Mary Louise (left), of Colo. The

Mrs, Ralph

The Teen-Agers Find a Champ In Magazine Created for - The ‘Forgotten’ Age Group

KINARD

NEA Staff Writer NEW YORK, Jan. 2.—Believing that six million teen-agers can't be wrong all the time, the year-and-a-half-old magazine Seventeen has become an acéepted arbiter of problems which arise between. parents and teen-agers who have their own ideas about how they want to dress, who their friends should be and what carebr they want to Packed with straight-from-the-shoulder talk for confused

Will Meet

W. T. Barbre.

Roads Council

Tuesday

% In Claypool Hotel

The mid-winter meeting of ‘the sna Roadside council will be

university; C. C. Eyer, landscape supervisor of the state highway commission; Mrs. John W, Gray of the state conservation department

The resolutions committee members are Mesdames E, K. Montgomery, E. W. Cowley and Fred Lucas, Dr. O, F. Hall, Frank Wallace and

Bunce-Group Marriage

Is Announced

Mr. and Mrs, Arthur K. Group, 837 N. Bancroft st, announce the

another young woman's maga-

zine to create one for the almost

forgotten little girl, Mrs. Valen tine says she knew from her own mother - daughter relationship that there was a need for a forum where teen-age problems could be aired. “If a problem exists, it's going to be tackled,” she declares. “We figure that if the girls can take it, then mothers ought to be able to also.” Varied Features

There's proof of this, all the way from the medically sound article dealing with acne to features which explain in simple terms such issues as Bretton Woods and Dumbarton Oaks. Deadly serious advice on how to talk to boys, behave on dates, dress tastefully, choose a lipstick,

order a nutritious lunch, or fur<

nish her own room is palatably served up to the teen-ager as amusing features. Proof that mother gets her innings, too—and make no mistake about that—are letters in Seventeen's heavy mail bags which say, “Thank goodness, you tell them when to come home from a date, They wouldn't take it from us.”

Arbitrates Arguments Teen-agers’ squawks are aired at the Tate of several hundred a week, which a staff of teen-agers reads, answers and selects for reprint in its monthly letter column. Full of parent-child friction which hinge on such trivia as the first date, the black dress, what an allowance should be spent for,

marriage of their daughter, Wilma, {to Donald L. Bunce. The ceremony was ‘read at 7:30 p. m.,, Dee. 21, in the Wallach Street Presbyterian church. The Rev. R. Emory Mueller read the double-ring service before an altar banked with ferns, palms and candelabra. Couple’s’ Attendants Given in marriage by her father, the bride wore a pale green wool suit with beige and black accessories. Miss Mary Ellen Gumerson, her only attendant, wore a& deep green wool suit with brown accessories, Mrs, Harold Christy was the’ organist and Mrs. Robert Fidler sang. Mr. Christy served as best man.

Reception Held

After the ceremony, a reception was held in the home of the bride’s parents. The assistants were Miss Gumerson, Miss Helen Bunce, sister of the bridegroom, and Miss Karen Lou Group, the bride's sister.

Bloomington where they will attend Indiana university. Mr. Bunce, son of Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Bunce, 1518 N. Olney st., was discharged from the navy Dec. 16 after serving three years in the Pacific area.

3 Sororities

To Meet

Three sororities have announced meetings for today and tomorrow. The program for tomorrow's meet-

Session to Be Held :}'

The couple will be at home in!

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__ WEDNESDAY, JAN. 2, 106

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Will Be Noted |By Sorority Sigma Beta Chapter To Install Officers

| highlight . of organition activities

scheduled for the remainder of this A formal installation of officers

founders’ day banquet of .the Lambda Mu' chapter, Sigma Beta sorority. o'clock - in: the Marott hotel gold room. !

A. Jones, president; Mrs. Katherine F. Todd, vice president; Mrs. Sheldon Cox, secretary, and Mrs. Russell Chatham, treasurer, Mrs. Edward Meyers is in charge of the banquet arrangements.

The North Side Study ‘club will meet tomorrow at the Childrén’s _ |museum. Following a review of | ~|“Palace of the Soviets” (Charles Rice) by Mrs. Roy Martin, meme bers: will tour the muséur.

Mrs. Prank M. Smith, 536 Suthers land ave. will be the hostess toe morrow when the Thursday Lyceum club meets. A talk on “India” will be given by Mrs. H.xTalge Brows.

The “Circus Day Parade” chapter of the Riley Cheer guild will meet | Friday. in the home of Mrs. H. B, Grismer, 3740 Boulevard place.

The monthly card party of the Wayne Township: War Mothers will be held at 8:30 p. m. tomorrow in the American Legion post home at 6566 W. Washington st. Mrs. Fred Klies, chairman, will be assisted by Mesdames C. D, Fansler, T. O. Bush, Herschel Bare rett and James Campbell.

Turnabout Is Trick

To New Costumes

“Turnabout” is what they talk about now. It's just the old trick of wearing one item of apparel in a number of -different ways, and with precious jewelry it really means something. Mary . Pickford started it six years ago with one of those necklets on which you snap diamond clips. Mary's outfit made five different piéces of jewelry, including a junior tiara. Now Connie Moore is using her diamond bracelet as & center ring and ornament for a wide. gold kid belt and Joan Bennett has put .four-inch hat pins on two Victorian enameled violets with tiny diamond centers so she can jab them in her hat.

A

‘Want some exciting new aprons to brighten your wardrobe? Here are three gay styles that can’t miss —practical as well as ornamental. Choose the cover-up bib version or a short tie-on for special entertain. ing. Pattern 8053 is designed for sizes 14, 16, 18, 20; 40, 42, 44 and 46. Size 16, top apron, requires 2 yards of 35 or 39-inch material; bottom style, 2% yards; tie-on, 1% yards. For this pattern, send 20 cents, in coins, your name, address, size desired, and the pattern number to Sue Burnett, The Indianapolis Times Pattern Service, 214 W. Maryland st., Indianapolis. Send today for your copy of the winter issue of Fashion, Brimful of ideas for home sewers. 16 cents.

School Mothers Club Will Meet Friday

The Mothers club of Our Lady of Lourdes parish school will hold its first open meeting for parents at 8 p. m. Friday in the school hall, E. OC. Belzer will be the principal speaker and the hostesses will be mothers of fifth-grade pupils, directed by Mrs. Bernard Mathews and Mrs. George Lawler.

RRA ttl

H. P. WASSON & CO.

(ray mam . NEWS

No More Dyeing

I

5.00

90-Day Treatment

snag. They want to hire high school bands for their dances. They see in that an advantage of practical experience for the budding musicians, less expense for the club and the fellowship which comes from having all participants in the frolic of their own age group. Union officials refuse to permit this. It has been ordained by James Petrillo, head of the A. F. of L. musicians’ union, that high school students can hire only professional orchestras, whose players belong to his union. These usually come too high for the teen-agers, so they're

Make and send this big four-leaf clover potholder to a friend as a token of good luck fer 1946! buying dance records—which also chet it in" two shades of green cot-

or why shouldn't she have her own room, Seventeen'’s service here is a help to both sides. Picking it up and turning to the page, either side may be able to say: “Why don't you read THIS?” “This” will be a frank discussion of the problem which may enable either the mother or the daughter to sit. back while the other one cools off under her collar, }

By MRS. ANNE CABOT Kids 0. K. It While Seventeen has earned mothers’ plaudits for taking a certain stand, it has received. rousing huzzas from the kids because it

4

Cro-

ing of Chapter AJ, P. E. O, Sisterhood, will be presented by Mrs. G. 0. Q. Johnson. She will discuss the organization's state

constitution. ~

The hostess for the meeting will

be Mrs. Charles E. E. Maple road.

A business session will be held tonight by the Zeta chapter of Phi Delta Pi, meeting in the Lemcke

building.

Epsilon chapter, Epsilon Sigma Alpha, will meet tomorrow night in

Science's startling new Vitamins for restoring nafural color to gray hair can now be had as Nix Vitamins. No more dangerous hair dyeing or firesome rinses. Nothing arti: ficial. These Vitamins as described by national magazines supply harmless anti-gray hair vitamin substance to your system. Simply take | a day until graying stops and hair color returns thru roots. Age 22 up. Don't look old before your time. Get Nix Vitamin tablets today. Don't wait,

» Sorry . .. No Mail Orders

by-laws and

Haywood, 1501

WASSON'S TOILETRIES, STREET FLOOR

Sterling Silver

Fine sterling has permanence and character and a radiant beauty that grows with the passing years.

As a gift for the bride-to-be,

birthdays, anniversaries: or as a gift to yourself, you'll make no ‘mistake if you choose PRELUDE.

ONE &.PIECE PLACE SETTING $22.63

_. Consists of: Luncheon:

~~~ Knife, Luncheon Fork,

Teaspoon, Salad Fork,

Butter Spreader, Cream Soup Spoon. Tax Included >

thep. top milk Makes about seven seven-inch ‘tsp. salt or slice cabbage very fine. In Florida parsley and green pepper. Mix| Miss Catherine Callis, 6130 Critsauce, mayonnaise, milk, sait|tenden ave, is spending a week In sugar and pour over ¢abbage.| Miami ‘Beach, Fla. Miss Callis . is 2 Serve immediately.| music director in the “Otterbein ’ : schools, ET i’ 1" HITHER Tene PROUDLY CHERISHED

i

E| and Robert'Coomler, | A Lift for Old Dish

=to make an egg or two go a long =| way. A bit of dried fruit also goes =a

greases the Petrillo palm indirectly.|ton thread. As it is double, its thickness affords protection when : » ' handling hot pots and pans, HoldBeauties’ Hints— Balanced Diet

May Stop Cold

To obtain complete crocheting instructions for the four-leaf clover potholder (Pattern 5703) send 16 cents in coin, your name, address, and the pattern number to Anne By ALICIA HART NEA Staff Writer “IP YOU'RE A push-over for the common cold—cause of an estimated eight-day-a-year loss of

has set parents straight-on other mighty important issues. Many a parent -may be set back on her heels, for, instance, by reading that she has no right to impose autocratic ideas on her child when it comes to picking her friends or choosing her college career, A mother’s guidance and leadership are important, but the one who thinks that parenthood gives her .the right to dictate a daughter's taste in péople or a career will not find encourage-

Cabot, The Indianapolis Times, 530 womanpower—check up on your

ment in this magazine's pages.

8. Wells st, Chicago, 17. You'll want to crochet, knit, embroider or sew dozens of the warm, winter accessories and garments in the new Anne Cabot album. Send diet. Your best defense against winter's sniffles are foods which build up resistance to diseases ‘of the| respiratory tract, particularly those yielding vitamin A.

for your copy of the 32-page Book. "Know wheére to stock up on

Price 16 cents. vitamin A? You'll find it in eggs, and even one a day is good defense against a runny nose. » ~ » EAT VEGETABLES of the green and yellow varieties, such as -spinach, kale, winter squash and parsley. Dairy products — butter, cheese and whole milk-—are rich sources of vitamin A. Try to drink at least two glasses of milk a day. re Cod liver oil is a source of both

Whoa, Granny! Young Brides DO Know

vitamin: A and D, which you may need if a lack of sunshine is another | reason why you catch cold" so easily.

Mothers’ Meeting

.- Miss Lola Connors will be the speaker tomorrow before the Irvington Kindergarten Mothers club. Hostesses for the meeting, at 1 p. m. in the kindergarten, will be. Mesdémes John Gansman, Eston Sterns

3

* Bread puddihg is an -ideal way

37 W. 16th St. -

[Za

long; flavorful way when added

fines

There's not much they don't know about the important subject of nutrition. For instance, she might tell YOU that actual tests prove that ICE REFRIGERATION protects, foods against Vitamin loss far longer than any other method, She wants ONLY THE BEST for her family +. she has a Modern ICE Refrigerator.

POLAR

2000 NORTHWESTERN AVENUE _=-1902 5. East St.

ICE AND “FUEL C0.

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the Rauh building clubrooms.

MILK keeps you healthy,

MILK makes you strong, MILK gives you ENERGY - /

~~ dll day long

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IS RICH IN VITAMINS, MINERALS AND PROTEIN FOR LASTING VITALITY

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Founders’ Day

A ‘founders’ day. banquet: is. __ 3

Will be held tomorrow night at the §i The dinner will be at 7 &

The new officers are Mrs. Walter &&

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Forrestal Retu

rier SLASHINC Secretary of has taken s diserimina tic color” in t troops by tl today. "In a direc tions. Mr, 1 personnel to ulations ain crimination. His order port that 1 left at Le escort carri lacked “sul The army sponsible fc ship the N “ Croatan. | Mr. Forre issued to av derstanding.

“N “In the 2 personnel,” differential

of race or to authorize armed sen aboard nav, tions and a “In their conduct of and enlisted ly and imp: tions in w made ...Db Meanwhil predicted conditions troop returr become mor and Februs They said tions this worst in mq

FOOD ¢ INP

WASHIN( Rep. Thom is adding a that Ameri probably m ‘ The pred! 8. Willis, p Manufactur

Willis said 11 per cent before the At the s: agriculture prices to d Supplies gt _although s ‘oils will re: Mr. Jenk the 1046 1 whether co control. FE house Rept mittee. In a radi Jenkins pr ernment of “unnatural, scarcities” ages result and unwise istration. . He said *the price than the sugar shor from an prices.” -