Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 May 1948 — Page 28
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Hybrid I Lilacs Beat Others, “Grower Says Parrot Tulip Reach
‘Dinner Plate Size’ * By. MARGUERITE SMITH
FOR REALLY knockout lilac. blossoms, raise the French hybrids. That's the
opinion of Mrs. E. F. Hamaker, 8101 E. Washington St. She started out years ago with some of the first stock the French hybridizers sent to this country, The French hybrids, says “Mrs. Hamaker, excel in numerous ways. They start blooming when they're mere infant bushes. They don't need a lot of
care, - “Set them out carefully, pack ing a good lunch under the roots, and from there on they'll thrive on pot luck,” she says. (A good lilac lunch consists of bone meal ‘and rotted cow ma-
nure.) “French are not as susceptible to mildew as the old-fashioned lilacs are. But in either case, it's shade that causes most of their troubles.” For fat flower trusses next year, trim off dead blossoms as soon as the bushes are through blooming. ' Don’t do any pruning of lilacs except in this afterPerot
= OCHRE you're just. cutting away next
good crop of privet or other ‘rootstock ts. " A TULIP with rufed tail
2
Tourney Play And Rubber |
»
plonship, Miss Barbara Srenco .and Jerome W. Brier of New
ork. Clty. Jo in..a. eld of. 100, a tir rss maker | pairs. 3
Today's hand caused quite a discussion a8 10 the correct technique of play. I think Miss Srenco followed the right line. Sitting North, she was forced to win the opening lead of the
suit did not break she might have trouble making her contract. . nn . . SHE led the queen of hearts and followed with the 10. East covered this with the jack, was a tipoff that the
ace of diamonds. She led the nine of diamonds from , West won with the ace led a club, Now the cone tract was safe. In rubber bridge. the diamond suit should be played before cashing the third heart, but Miss Srenco made the right play for tournament bridge and thereby a top ‘score.
Bridal Dinner Set ‘At Terre Haute
TULIPS WITH ‘TAIL FEATHE
RS'—These tulips, growing in the
yard of Mr, and Mrs. J. W¢ Barker, 6630 Hillside Ave., are called Parrot Tulips because of their ruffled “tail feathers."
flufty - fringed flower.” / "Culture
is just like that of other tulips.
ra res Bao Bh den, IN THE VegelADIS gAYdeHT Cut seed stalks off your rhubarb... Fool. the. plants - into - growing more leaves, Or save one stalk, increase your plant- .. Ing by sowing seedd as soon as. they shell off readily. For popcorn, nothing beats Purdue hybrid for production and popping. The little red strawberry pcorn makes
decorative tiny ears for gourd
strings and pops well, too. Sow a row of tomato seeds at one side of the garden now, and you won't have to buy late tomato plants. Nice, too, when you
“want one to stick Into a spot
vacated by cabbage or caullA QUESTION from Mrs. . Margaret Batiow. 3 3540 Balsam Ave. . . , what to do with a_ hydrangea gift plant, Keep this tender ‘tot- house plant indoors until the weather settles, . then transplant out-
doors. A partly sunny spot with some protection from the north is preferable. It will need plenty of water
Times Pattern Service
iy SE BY; 3 Sa
By MRS. ANNE OABOT
lampshade covers inexpensively and easily. A fine way to make an-old shade new-as-the crocheted plece may be slipped over the old shade. Simple shell stitch makes the drum ‘shapé while the bell shade is crocheted in dainty knot stitch. These lampshades will give a: soft flattering light and a “custom- made” look to any room. To order complete crocheting instructions for two shades shown, stitch {llustrations and finishing directions for Pattern 8777, use the coupon below.
ANNE CABOT
The Indianapolis Times 530-8. Wells St. Chicago 7, IIL No. 5771. Price 16¢
Name cevscevcncccnsvrsnssene Street SEseesetsttrttinrtinene
City.covveecenaaes Btate......
Youth Hostel Group Will Take Trip
The Indianapolis American Youth Hostels Council will take a week-end trip to the Versalles State Park: The group will leave at 2 p. m. tomorrow from - the
{central YWCA.
Times State Services
TERRE HAUTE, May 7-Miss|
Barbara Louise Duenweg and Albert 8. Goldstein Jr. will be hon_ored at a bridal dinner tonight "in the home of the bride-to-be's mother, Mrs. Rudolph Duenweg, ~ Terre Haute. The couple will be Javed, Suna
in. the Terre
A “pitchsin” dinner will be held at 6 p. m. next Friday in the YMCA. Miss Lila Knisely 1s chairman,
DR. ANSWERS— By E. P. JORDAN,-M. D. QUESTION: What is beri beri? Is there a cure? ANSWER: Beriberi 1s a
«Want flowers another year, :
“Crochet these distinctive
this summer and a basket or burlap jacket for winter if you
HERE'S what comes of following -garden column advice! A “devoted reader” slipped her Christmas poinsettia according to Instructions. Bhé now has such a quantity of young poiansettia plants (“enough Jor the whole street”) she's afraid she won't have room for anything else in her garden. Incidentally, pbinsettia plants should go into a sunny pot tor 81 Simmer,
INDIANAPOLIS - = gardeners-in-national-magazines promises to be a regular garden column department. This time it's Leo Matthews, editor of the Glad-
~land News (which-travels itself - aver a good part of the country).
He has a piece in Horticulture about his tuberoses. They are no harder to raise than onions, he sdys. He plants the little bulbs after weather is warm, gives them a side dressing of fertilizer as they grow. With a few good soakings during dry weather, they produce plenty of fragrant white flowers and the bulbs muitiply fast.
ireceptions.
‘Silvertime’
ps (Week Planned |By Ayres’
New Silver Pattern To Be Introduced
A modern, California-inspired silver pattern as well as the introduction of two ‘additional silver- companies to its silver line will highlight “Silvertime Week” at ‘Ayres’. The displays, which include settings of hollowware and flatware, table and room set and special events, . will through Satur
Big news in the Spent is the California-crafts pat: , “Starlight,” which is some-
: io modern interiors have
needed ever since “free form” furniture became so popular. Allan Adler created the pattern and it takes its cue from Cali-fornia-made pottery, linens and
; _|furniture, Massive, the silver flat- []
ware has grace of form and yet is formal enough to appear at dinner parties. Ayres’ is introducing flatware and hollowware by the Towle Silver Co., and sterling and plated flatware by the Reed and Barton silver people. Representatives from these along with the other silver companies handled by Ayres’ will be in the store, some in the silver department which will be redecorated and enlarged. A landscaped patio arrangement designed by Fritz Loonsten, New- Augusta, will cover the entire main aisle of the store. Real flowers ahd evergreens will be planted there, and three tables will ‘be. in the setting, two for terrace dining and another for Scattered “throughout the “store will be. other - UWnderscor: ing the general silver theme, Dorothy Thorpe of California has designed “a “handmade ‘tablecloth of linen and lace especially for the occasion. The color, howdver, is the unusual part=it's muted beige-pink, a ‘shade that's de vised to accent the silver, itself,
Many Table Settings |,
In ‘Silver. Aisle’
Modern and period treatment will be given to the tables in the “silver Male on Ayres’ fifth floor. One of the most distinctive of these is that provided by the International Silver Co. ver, linen and ¢hina on it all 1. passed the century mark, but it's the silver that really “shows its age.” The flatware has bone handles, a type that formerly was used for “dress up” occasions. Two model rooms on the sixth floor, one a dining room, the other a library, will show silver in its “natural habitat.” - The dining room will display a between meals
-|setting, together with ‘a hutch
lcupboard of silver hollowware, The library will be set with a buffet-type service. ‘Other parts of the silver dis
fl tion board, showing the steps in
“By SUE BURNETT A neatly tailored slip and | “panties set for “the “matron makes a perfect foundation for pretty summer frocks. The turn it
beginner in Sewingacan out easily and quickly—just five :
pattern pieces. Dainty lace can be added, if desired. ° “Pattern 8198 is for sizes 36, 38, 40, 42, 44, 46, 48, 50 and 52. Size 38, slip, 2% .yards of 35 or 39-inch; panties, 1% yards. Send today for your copy of the spring and summer Fashfon; 52 pages brimful of sewing information; free gift pattern printed in book To order pattern or the Fashfon Book, use the coupon below.
school auditorium. Mrs. Oscar
_ SUE BURNETT The Indianapolis Times 214 W. Maryland St., Indianapolis 9.
No. 8198. Price 2bc Biz sovvnnne
Fashior Book Price 25¢
Name ceevviennendhine
“-
fees Street SRSA NIINNIININ IRIE RNS
City sesssseccnsses States
Sarority Chapter ‘To Have Luncheon
[i manufacturing the ware; master-
‘pieces of sterling, lent by the \various silver companies, but not ifor sale, and copies of “occa sional” dishes that were wedding gifts from people of Plymouth to Princess Elizabeth. (These may ‘be purchased). } by Jon
Two - paintings Whitcomb, “A Kiss.” and “Stair Rail,” also will be displayed. - Along with the silver exhibits will be special Lenox China displays. include a series of | plates, (Lenox has been {designing White House china
‘china and figurines, and
! ttern. |dotted “with blue
|design.
Pike Township Plans Party
The annual | Mother- Daughter Pus will be |at 7:30 p. m. tomorrow in the
Stewart will “preside, “and Mrs.
aster J Spivey will difect a musical presentation of “That Old Sweetheart of Mine" (Riley), and--music--will- be Misses Virginia and Mary Rose Dillion and Mrs. Howard Guion. Mrs. Corna Edwards will make the annual scholarship award. w . - The ' Pike Township Mothers Study Club will have a covered dish luncheon at 12:30 p. m. Tuesday in the home of Mrs. Spivey, 79th 8t. and Zionsyille Rd.
Beta Phi Chapter
Plans Installation The Beta Phi Chapter, Beta Sigma’ Phi Sorority, will meet at 7:30 p. m. Tuesday in the Ober Building. The new officers will be installed. They are: Mrs. Ralph A. Fox, president; Miss Dorothy Trot man, vice president; Miss Marianna Ricketts, recording and corresponding secretaries, and Miss {Mary Ann Erk, treasurer.
Chapter Will Give Banquet Tonight
Kappa Sorority, will have its an-
Restaurant, Morristown,
sell Herr will be hostess,
:
play will be a hollowware evolu-|
since the days of Woodrow Wilson), the process of making Lenox table ‘setting of a precious Lenox china
This; china 1s “green enamel enamel beads {and decorated with a solid gold
. By JEAN : HAVING A good" time? Teen . time is fun time. That's the American idea, anyway. You and your parents and your community take it for granted that youth is entitled to happiness. Maybe you never thought of 4t, but, America is unique in + this. Other countries lay little, if it any. stress on good-times as the “right” of adolescents. . J »
FOREIGN’ education is, in
sil-| general, more rugged, family . discipline “severer than ours.
TEEN PROBLEMS
Work Hard, and. Then Play Hard
PLAY TIME — Barbara Slocum {the voitey Bail courts at Ladywaod play. in-a required -physical- education class:
The chief relaxation is in or§antnsd sports.and Youth ovements, designed to promote health. Even in pre-war days, teen years were considered a period of preparation for life. And life is even grimmer now. Yes, American teeners are fortunate. Naturally, you aren't dizzily happy every minute. With the best intentions, society can't protect you from a normal amount of suffering.
And, of course, you have work
to do—at school and on jobs. * 5 =»
THE importance of play, both.
Jolt) and Margarita Rincan. go _jnto action, on. chool. These teeners. are combining work and
however, is a fundamental
philosophy -of .our--way of -life.*
Time spent in friendship, in hobbies, in gaining social ex« perience is not wasted time. But we must all learn to work while we work, play while we play. The joker who romps through classes will be the office clown in later years. And the brain who disdains to meet his mates on a friendly footing ~—he’ll make a poor adjustment to family and business life. So work hard and play hard. _And be thankful that you live in America where you can _do
FRIDAY, MAY 7, 108. |Let’s Eat—-
Easy to Make, Good to Eat— Angel Pie Spring Parties Call For Special Dessert By META GIVEN "SHOWERS, announcements and graduations call for a des sert that's easy to eat but looks
difficult to make, Arigel pie rates
high on both these scores. Noth ing is less involved to make, but‘ a few tricks. must be learned to avoid a flop. - Have the egg whites at room
|temperature; they beat to a great.
er volume when ‘warmed to around 70 degrees F. The eggs should be medium in size to sup. ply the right degree of egg White, The instant the meringue is fin.’ ished, spread it lightly in the ple plate, and then into the oven. Make sure ahead of time the required low temperature can be maintained in your oven. Don’t try to serve the ple in anything but the pie plate in which it is baked.
sa. » ANGEL PIE (For Monday dinner)
15 tsp, cream of tartar % c¢. sugar 34 pt. whipping cream 1 pt. fresh strawberries Have the egg whites at room temperature, Combine - the whites and salt and beat with a wire whip, not a rotary beater, until frothy. Add cream of tartar and beat until stiff. Add sugar
Lin. tions -and beat well after each addition. Mixture should be smooth, chick and
glossy. Spread the mixture lightly on
buttered, 8-inch pie pan. Bake in a very slow oven (225 degrees F.) for about one hour. If the oven does not register below 250. degrees F, keep the door slightly open. A Remove from the oven and cool. Loosen from the pan carefully but leave the meringue shell in the pan if desired. Fill with half the whipped cream, ‘hen the sweetened strawberries and then top with the remaining whipped
before serving. Berves six to eight.
Men and Women—
fooling a woman-——it's awfully hard to do in some ways but it's a cinch in others. "She's like a mind reader, through
ing off a log. You can’t fool her, either, if you try to sell her something; she’s suspicious the minute she looks at a sales-
Kappa Chapter, Delta Sigma
nual - Mother - Daughter Banquet at 7 p. m, today- in the Blue Bird
The chapter business meeting will be held at 8 p. m. Monday in the Acton- Schoolhouse, Mrs. Rus-
J. Norman, Ely. will be ‘toast- Tr
Is It True That Women “Are Too
man. She'll finger the goods, the cantaloupes, watch e meat scales and count - her change. : - R80 Pa BUT SMART as the little gal is in these things, she’s likely to lose her keen, penetrating judgment completely, as soon as the problem gets
-an’s life—her love, her children, ‘her homie. Then she'll believe what ~~ #he wants to believe. That's why a mother will say, “John-
“hold everything E
“in your tote-it-all billfold
. Ee Easily Fooled? ny could not have done it! Johnny's a good boy!” Or why a babe will fall like a ton of bricks for some guy's promises and compliments. When you hear of a nice gal. marrying a loafer or rascal,
you can bet he handed her a
lot of smooth talk and showered her with attention—and she believed the bum. As Aeschylus said almost 2500 years ago, “Too lightly opened are a WOMAN'S ears;
College Announces Student Activities
Nine Marian College students are tutoring patients at Veterans Hospital in English, French, mathematics and music. They are Misses Mary Carson, Billie Jean and Mary Louise Eilers, Dorothy Fox, Mary Haugh, Ethel James, Claudine Lentz, Patritia Parker and Mary Lou Reder, 2 8 » The World Affairs Club of the college discussed the Marshall Plan at an assembly today. Taking part were Misses Parker, Reder, Joan Coyle and Mary Pa-
her fences downtrod uy many trespassers.”
lock 'S
- STORE HOURS: Monday through Saturday, 9:30 to 5:00
Fashion of the Week
tricia Sullivan. Miss Barbara Schenkel was moderator.
the bottom and sides of a wellv .
cream. Chill for 15 to 30 minutes
No fuss, no fumbling in your purse . . . this billfold “holds
everything" at your fingertips. Roomy money come. partment for yout bills and change . . . miniature ball-point pen and memo pad to dash down all you want fo remember . . . key chain (no more keeping your date waiting while you fumble for your key). Match it up with your costume in red, green and saddle-toned plastic,
A business ‘meeting will precede the noon luncheon Beta Chapter, Delta Kappa Gamma
Sorority, will hold tomorrow in! {Methodist
on the recent sate cohvention.
Mrs, Paul G. Iske, chairman, Mrs. Th
Units Scheduled
“The folowing units of the Hagpital White Cross the Holliday Park Community| Guild will meet next week at the House. “Miss Ruth -Gorman and Service Center: Miss Cecilia Galvin will report Methodist, Calvary Baptist and
Wednesday —
¢ Broadway| : . In charge of arrangements are Methodist and Perry Township;| — ! ursday
Tuesday-—Grace
All for only $1 plus tax
P 8.~Don't forget that plastic is washable! ;
BLOCK'S High School Hang-sut, Third Floor
Written for BLOCK'S by Patricia Doyle Burris, Muncie
FRIDAY, =
Planto
Cityin| Agains
Use of Tr
A dog pound cated in various
against rabies. This was the | councilmen
was expected af meeting May 11 However, only licenses will rece ment designed t public health t! cases of rabies | reported in Ind Plans provide be bought at | cination as a © Oclals' ackno sibility that sor stay away for forestalling the program. Few Bu; “We don't | though,” declar Kempf, city “Those who like to feed it and no will pay the ta: the free vaccin: the animal,” he “We can't ve other way on tion. If an own license for a d recognize this f
vo 40 DUR one.”
Relatively fe bought _licenses tice. If the funds b and ..councilmen their approvalvisitations ' to © hoods will be ar
Mrs. Laura
Funeral Ton Rites for Mr Owens, who di her home, 415 E held at 1 p. m. Moriah Baptist will be in New 42. —e i Born... in. Owe: Owens -had lve Bhe was a memt
Church ‘and tres
dies Chorus of t Survivors incl Mrs. Susie Owe Hawkins, and Millie, all of the ers, John Huston Charles and Wil of Indianapolis, Elizabeth J. Ja nepliews and five city.
Thousand to In Tech Mus
More than a “will ~ take part spring music fe today at Techni J. ‘Russell Paxto Each organiz music Separtmer lections and all other selections. Ten teachers v in the program, direct the orche
Swan will dire
|
girls group anc will direct chors
‘Australia P On Horror ! BRISBANE, r
henceforth will Australia, becan of “cultural or peal.” 80 announces the final say-so, chief Commonw He adds that apply to thriller Sangster films.
Army Tran Pacific War
OAKLAND; ( “ThE KY O'Connell docks fifth shipment ¢ the Pacific. ~The. -Q'Conn - bodies of 2024 died during Wo! Solomon Island Zealand, - the India, Burma sa
.. Islands.
The USAT Al May 17 with a
Italian Poli Rare Book
UDINE, Italy Frontier police EBroup of expert stole rare book lion lire from brary in the ne Daniele Delfriul The books 1 century Byzar Bible and one copies of Dante
' Including the
mentary,
Czech To La
Five Pe
Among the in the Royal Al Plot with a pis Zone of Austr Munich,
