Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 16 July 1948 — Page 19

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By ALICIA HART, NEA Staff Wri

HIS SUMMER'S SQUARE-DANCE COTTONS and other folk-

type fashions almost dictate that y styled to match the picturesque charm Shown here are some with popular summer cott

ou wear a simple hairdo of your clothes. pert new hairdo’s designed to team up ons; to keep your coiffure under control for summer sports or the Square dance’s spirited Do-Si-Do. Because these styles are simple you are reminded again that the beauty of such arrangements depends upon the satiny texture and light-catchnig shimmer which only comes from clean shine.

If your hair is sun-dried or hard to manage try washing your locks with liquid shampoos which have a hair-coniditioning action. Such shampoos are formulated to tame unruly locks. If your hair is long, hoist it psyche-fashion. Such a coiffure is shown on the model (left) whose locks are pulled up and back and released in

Country Club

Plans Dances

3 - On July 24 a Stay-at-Home| Dance will be held in the Woodstock Club. Swimming in the pool will precede the dancing. Mr. and Mrs. Norman A. Perry Jr. are chairmen for the event. Also on the Woodstock calendar is a dance August 7. Mr. and Mrs.“ W. Stewart Roberts will serye as chairmen.

Mr. and Mrs. Walter Hiser will be chairmen Aug. 21 for a Dog Days Dance, final event of the club's. summer season.

Gardenin g—

Lats

Ave,

By MARGUERITE SMITH “VISITORS get their first impression of you and your house at the front door,” says Mrs. C. D. Williams, 247 8. Butler Ave. speaking of the Williams’ attractive front entrance. “I found it a problem to give our Cape Cod house a welcome air, for there’s no porch. So I contrived a side-of-the-door bracket to hold a potted red geranium. It's blossomed all summer.” And clematis growing on the other side of the steps frames the doorway with starry white blossoms from July on.

By MRS. ANNE CABOT Embroider these demure oldfashioned figures for guest room glamour. Pillowcase and matching towel set can easily be teamed-up with a bureau scarf and night table covers.

Each design measures from five to 15 inches and the stitches used are of the easiest. To order hot-iron transfers for four designs, color chart, stitch illustrations and complete directions for pattern 5627, use the coupon below.

canners who keep at it all sum-| mer long: Next week is National Home Food Preservation Week, | by proclamation of the Secretary| of Agriculture, Charles Brannan. | “Food is still the most important | single factor in the fight for! world peace,” says Mr. Brannan. |

= = = { “I WANT to surprise my mother by telling you what a good] garden she has,” said Mrs. Leora | Pruitt, 6548 Cornell Ave. “I wonder if anyone else can match it?”|

Her mother, Mrs. Ella Hess, of!

ANNE CABOT

« The Indianapolis Times Tw 530 8. Wells st.

. FLOWER-FRAMED DOORWAY—A potted geranium says welcome to visitors at the C. D. Williams’ front door, 247 S. Butler

HEARTY "chuckle for home MAITIage insurance, says a gar:

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dangling curls.

For this, part hair on the nape of the neck and back from the

side, brush up from the face and bind strands

securely at the crown with a rubber band. Brush ends into loose curls. Garden flowers may be tucked into the topknot to conceal

the rubber band; tg/acoent sum Is your hair ghort? For this one, pgft hair

mer freshness.

Try the feather-edged cap style (right). ow on the side, finger-press a slight wave

at the temple. Brush hair over the crown and forward to cover the ears. Fluff up just the tips to outline the smooth cap effect. : Another fetching style (center) which lends itself to long or

short hair puts a smoothly curled bun divide hair into two sections by means of

ver each ear. To copy, center part from front

to back. Now, pull each section back behind the ear and bind with a rubber band. Brush ends forward and turn under to make a bun. Attach big ribbon bows to a bobby pin and slip over each rubber

band.

{about a tablespoonful for each plant in plenty of water, then it {won't burn). » ” - EASY-TO-DO, good to look at {and worth copying next year: {Moss roses massed around a tiny |pool in the George Fisher back(yard at 422 W, 29th St.; sedums {banding rectangular beds of hy{brid tea roses in the Otis Denny

{yard at 702 Congress Ave.: mixed | | Shirley poppies graceful above a|

{low white picket fence in the {Leon Belden yard at 1222 W. 29th St. Shared interests make good | den magazine. They're thinking naturally ‘of two hearts that bragy as one when the first tomato ripens. Of course, there's the question of what happens when Mom

\The Doctor Says—

An Attractive Front Door Watch Diet Welcomes Your Visitors

In Pregnancy

v By EDWIN P. JORDAN, M. D. THE DIET in pregnancy is important because the needs of two must be supplied. The infant is starting from scratch and has to build bone, muscles, organs and all- the other tissues. The rate of growth of the fetus (unborn child) is terrific, and it needs a lot of different substances in a hurry. If these substances are not supplied in the mother’s diet, the child takes them away from the mother at the expense of her own health and nutrition.

= = = ALTHOUGH THE diet must supply adequate quantities of certain substances to both mother and to infant, there is no excuse for tremendous overeating. Nature endows most pregnant women with excellent appetites and if they ate all they wanted most of them would eat too much. As one writer put it, the pregnant patient does not have to eat for two hér own size. The gain in weight caused by the growth of the child alone usually does not amount to much more than about 15 pounds. Some obstetricians feel there is no need of total weight gain greater than 20 or 25 pounds during the entire pregnancy. If the diet supplies the necessary minerals and other needs of the child the excess weight gained by the mother is likely to be a drag on her. both during the pregnancy and afterwards. A pregnant woman should be guided by the advice of her obStetrician in matters of diet, as in other aspects of her motherhood.

Charming

Unusual Hand By

E. McKENNEY Authority

SAN * y PNone |W te|v3 4K S$ |eJ2 *31087 Degler [#942 : Beynon [11] | VAISS ®Q8754 &K3 Tournament—E-W vul. South West North East Nr 9 Pas Pam Double + Optning—g A

played, East followed with the seven and Beynon overtook with the eight.

ace, and when the singleton king dropped, Beynon played another diamond from dummy and won with the queen. The third round of diamonds was trumped by East with the deuce of hearts.

AT THIS point East made the mistake of returning a spade. Beynon discarded a diamond and trumped in dummy with his last heart, the six-spot. Now he cashed the ace and queen of clubs, and on the queen discarded his last diamond. Thus he was left with the ace and 10 of. hearts, while East was left with the jack and nine of hearts. Beynon led a diamond from dummy and he had East couped. East trumped with the nine, Beynon overtrumped with the 10 and laid down the ace for the last trick, 3

Engaged Couple To Be Feted

Miss Marcia Frances Silverstone, St. Louis, and Dan Wolf will be honor guests at a party tomorrow. The couple will be married on Aug. 21 in St. Louis. Hostesses for the event will be Mrs. Alexander 8. Wolf and Mr. and Mrs. Jack A. Goodman. The party will be held in the Goodmans’ home, 301 W. Kessler Blvd. The bride-to-be is the daughter of Mrs. Leon Feinstein, St. Louis, and the late Mark Silverstone, land prospective bridegroom is the son of Mrs. Wolf of Indianapolis.

He led a diamond to dummy's 4

Your Home—

room” from ture of your own

For proof that a little sleight-of-hand with carpen

try can be used to fill

and in gaps, take a look at the “before” and

with hat hooks provided for hanging garden tools. Replacing

old -wooden pickle buckets. One stencil tracing were all that was needed to beautify these pots. The tea cart shown shining with fresh paint equipped with a removable plywood top. This was

coat of paint for disguise, an

fitted into p! transportation for dishes.

Nae 2

paint brush after” pictures below. Sawed in two and painted with two coats of enamel, the discarded hall-rack (left) makes the chair you see (right) and the dart board

rack’s mirror in the dart board is a black-and-white lindleum target. The attractive jardinieres shown flowering with geraniums were made of the is the child's wagon four corner screws. Holes were bored into the plywood top to insure safe

Furniture You Can Make Yourself - Peps Up the Outdoor Living Room

| De IN ANY GAPS in decoration which keep your “outdoor living being comfortable and attractive by adding terrace furni-

the hall-

other for

lace with

LET'S / Meta Eat 4 Glven DOWN IN THE deep South they serve little fried corn pones with their fish which they call hush puppies. Cooks in the different localities vie with each other in producing the best and have set up certain standards. In Florida and Georgia they add finely chopped onion to the corn batter before frying it. That's what we have done in the recipe Toke. a5e epories so. pres sae| crusty brown. 1 the hush pupcakes just plain. However, they Pies are deep-fat fried, they are : ; done when they float to the top are made, the pones must come to f the kettle. Drai bsarbent the table blistering hot with a [Of the kettle. Drain on abso

paper and serve blistering hot on rich, brown Srunshy stust. hot platter.

HUSH PUPPIES (For Monday dinner)

Free to Readers

114 c. yellow cornmeal | x 1 tap. salt rent] of Meta Given 1 egy | Food Columns 2 tsp. soda ih

Cookie Recipes’

2% ¢. buttermilk ® Meta Given has pre-

2 tbsps. melted shortening 14 c. chopped onion { pared a collection of 16 Lift the cornmeal by the spoon- cookie recipes which any ful into the measuring cup. Then| homemaker can concoct level it off. Bift the cornmeal ang with wonderful results, salt together. Beat the egg ° L sk for thoroughly and add the soda and| TE ha a buttermilk. Beat until-completely include a self-addressed,

mixed. Add to cornmeal mixture | 3-cent-stam envelope, and stir until the i are! . ped pe

\ r to blended. Add the Hot melted sending, Your request shortening. Beat again, then add Meta Given the onion and blend in. The Indianapolis Times Drop the batter by tablespoonfuls into a skillet that fish has 214 W. Maryland St. been fried in and fry until a rich, Indianapolis 9

We, the Women— Make Summer ‘A Real Vacation

By RUTH MILLETT NEA Staff Writer

WAYS TO “beat the heat” and make the summer months a real vacation time:

Choose your clothes first for comfort so

that “getting dressed - to go out” isn’t

something you dread.

Change your winter ways of entertaining to summer ways. No big dinners indoors, no parties that take a lot of planning and Ruth Millett fuss. Make your entertaining as easy and as informal as possible. You'll enjoy it more and so will your guests, Take a summer vacation from a set housekeeping routine. Be content with less than perfect housekeeping. Don't be ashamed of loafing. Loaf whenever you get a chance. Relax enough to enjoy having your children at home. Above all, realize that summer living should follow an entirely different pattern from winter living.

decides the beans need hoeing and Pop thinks the family needs! fresh-caught fish,

Guild to Sponsor | Gift Card Party

The St. Francis Hospital Guild | will sponsor its annual gift linen| card party at 1:30 p. m. Sunday|

La Chicago 7, IL No. 5627

Price 16¢

the same address, picked ripe to- at the hospital. Mrs. William Los-! matoes early last week and has|gin is chairman with Mesdames| roasting ears ready this week. |Fred Koch, Ed Trimpe, Charles »

| Schneider and Carl Kiefer assist-

NAME srseivisanstfinsssvessse

hard-to-see red spiders. Glenn Eitel, 24 N. Kenyon St., says he gets good insect control on- his fing evergreen planting by washing them off once a week during hot, dry, red spider weather with a hard spray from the hose.

Breet yiiuiivnssiniscvinssris

CHY verersoasee BAO Sunaves SII oddone di bhi

= ” = IT’S time ‘now to water window boxes twice a day (make a second watering early enough so leaves dry off before bed time); to set! the lawn mower high (the longer the grass leaves, the better it's | equipped to stand hot dry weathler); to order pansy seed (best | time to plant is late July-August); {to plant more cucumbers (some | gardeners think late started ones are best tasting, less bug-ridden); to give fall-flowering chrysanthemums quick acting chemical fertilizer to boost bloom (dissolve

= » WATCH evergreens now for ing yellowing needles, caused by tiny

Assisting with arrangements are Mesdames Andrew Wettrick, Orville Hayworth, Henry Wellinghoff, Amos Huegele, William Murphy and Daniel Cangany. |

Noland-Swain Vows Read on Saturday

Mr. and Mrs. Stephen C. Noland are at home now in Indianapolis following their marriage on Saturday in the Thompsen Chapel of the Goodwill Industries. The Rev. Howard G. Lytle, executive secretary of the Goodwill Industries, read the vows. The bride, the former Miss Rosalind Marie Swain, is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harry F. Swain, 1629 N. New Jersey St. Miss Nancy Swain was the maid of honor and Randolph Coats was the best man. ‘Mr. Noland is editor of the Indianapolis News.

By SUE BURNETT ! A “simple sewing” special | spotlights a lovely daytime dress that goes together like a | charm—so simple a beginner can be proud of her sewing results. Try a dashing flower print—or dark sheer. Pattern 8355 is for sizes 12, 14, 16, 18, 20; 40 and 42. Size 14, 45 yards of 39-inch. Don’t miss the spring and summer Fashion — better than ever - with special features, smart styles — free pattern printed in book. To order pattern or our Fashion Book, use the coupon below.

Shower Will Honor Bride-to-Be

Mrs. Ray Knoop, 1225 N.. De-| Quincy St., will be the hostess tonight at a personal shower in her

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SHERWIN-WILLIAMS

RESEARCH

home. The honor guest is to be Miss Phyllis Dodgson. She will {be married to Darrell Shelburne, Aug. 22, in the McKee Chapel of Tabernacle Presbyterian Church. Miss Dodgson, 404 N. Grant Ave., is the daughter of Mrs. Mary!" y | Kennedy, Kokomo. Mr. Shelburne {is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Harry [] Shelburne, 416 N. Alton Ave.

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SUE BURNETT The Indianapolis Times 214 W. Maryland St, Indianapolis 9 Priee 25¢ Bize..corsinss Fashion Book Price 25¢

Name Sessssssssnnnnensn un Street

No. 8355

Clty sassessesas State. ...ss

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H. P. WASSON & CO.

: % WASSON'S IS SUMMER AIR CONDITIONED

WASSON'S WILL CLOSE EACH - SATURDAY AT 1.00 P. M.

Remain Unchanged MONDAY Thru FRIDAY? br

DAILY STORE HOURS 9:30 A.M. Til 5:00 P.M. |

TO.AND INCLUDING AUGUST 28. roi

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