Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 January 1949 — Page 15

' Tea Room. speak.

1 will be the , Wednesday e Mt. Vernon . B. C. Rum« ostesses will . Thompson, | Glen Hols~

apter, ITSO, Vednesday in Valter Houpe

'hi Delta Pi at 7:30 p. m, ome of Mrs, 530 8. East

ett, 837 N., > hostess for ita Phi Beta Friday. be installed t, president; , Vice presiScott, secre me Stokes, nn Knight, 1 Mrs, Hern. ”

Sorority will tion at 6:30 ones’ Drive iff is chair. Mrs. Erle preside dur-

Mrs. Anna ce Williams,

pter ding dita Kappa Il celebrate anniversary ng at 6:30 - s Indiadagrs, J. 3 PR ile air trip, ‘rip Around

hall, social rge of the decorations oris Holmes ), and Mrs, duct initia

[ERS— are enter- | & neigh)Or on an peing the will come

* valges she didn’t have -and Mr.

C-KQJsg1s SOUTH (Mr, Champion) S~AK?SH

East! Pam

have made her content with a simple bid of four spades at this point. The four heart bid sounded like a slam try to Mr. Champion, He seldom makes allowances for the temperament of his partner like Mr. Dale does. . He doesn’t make any bidding errors himself and he bases his action on the assumption that his partner, too, is always bidding correctly. This often gets him into trouble but it sometimes makes him lots of points, too. Mr, Ch jon's five club bid was meant to tell his partner he had the ace of that suit. He took Miss Brash’s five diamond bid to mean she had that ace. So, holding such good fits in both of her suits, what was he waliting for? He put the hand into six spades,

Mr. Muzzy Makes The Wrong Return

Mr. Dale made the good opening of a trump. Miss Brash won in her hand with the 10 of spades and led the jack of hearts. Mr. Dale did not cover and the jack was allowed to ride, Mr, Muzzy winning with the ace. A trump return here will beat the contract because then declarer will be able to ruff only one round of hearts in dummy and

must therefore Jose another heart {ji

trick to East's queen, WER But Mr. Muzzy, upho dismal record of never doing the right thing in a crucial situation,

returned the king of clubs, Miss!"

Brash won with dummy’s ace, cashed the king of hearts, went

By ALICIA HART NEA Staff Writer If a snug woolen beanie is your choice of a hat for rugged

Eyes Doing

Empire. styled bob f ch nant severity sim Cutls dre mia ed at back of head.

: Cut Hair-Do

Sintering frame for this simple cap.

weather, choose a hair-do that en Ss a simple cap to yield more flattery. Able to oblige are short bobs

‘Close Work’

= Need Regular Rest Periods

EYES need more relief from strain when reading, knitting |

pastimes,

needles or finely printed pages

sewing or close:seeing games become the nation’s stay-at-home First relief measure for eyes that follow flying knitting

is to allow for brief periods of

rest. After 30 minutes of close-seeing, give eyes three minutes of

Knitted Stolelr

|

to her hand with the ace of diamonds, led another heart and ruffed with the king of spades. Then she led a club and ruffed it and followed with the fourth] round of hearts, trumping with dummy’'s ace of spades. On this trick Mr. Dale's queen of hearts died a needless death. Now Miss Brash has only to enter her hand by trumping a diamond, extract Mr. Muzzy’'s trumps and claim the balance. Poor Mr. Dale. He had no consolation except the conviction that if Miss Brash continued to bid

Champion continued to believe her, something gruesome was bound to happen to them eventually. Former Pianist Gives Her Blood BROOKLYN — Miss Eleanor, Judd, 38-year-old former profes-| sional planist of Brooklyn, has given 50 pints of blood in the last eight years. She has never seen the blood she has donated because she is blind. Since 1940, her work has changed from a patriotic hobby,

as she called it, to a kind of pri-| vate one-woman philanthrophy.

Beauty—

Protect Basic Health of Your Skin

By BARBARA BROEKING

By MRS. ANNE CABOT It's stole -time all over the country, so get your knitting | needles out and make this versatile lovely. Easy knitting and

fast work too, the fascinating |

pattern is made by “dropping” stitches after the stole is completed. Use two contrasting colors for instance, light and | dark rose, gold and beige, light and dark green or any two colors or shades of the same color you wish.

Pattern 5031 includes complete ‘knitting 1 nstructions, ~ stitch’ illustrations, material requirements and finishing directions. To order, use the coupon below. '

ANNE CABOT The Indianapolis Times 530 S. Wells St. Chicago 7, IIL No. 5931 Price 20c NAMES seevcvsce sonsssssncsssses

SANTINI NRNE ERR IRIRIRINENES

Btreet cocecsscsssnancase sesnnnn|

CY seaceustrroiass sensnssbssse)

ll lroutine, a bath of their own ap-

nm———— ————

recommended

rest. “Rest” may be merely a matter of changing focus from | la book to the distant corner of {a room. More relief is to be had} {from closing eyelids in order to; |relax' muscles and shut out light, | Soothing relief at the end of! ithe day for overworked eyes may be had from cotton pads, first wrung out in hot water and then placed over closed lids. The more fatigued. eyes are, the oftener the warm applications should be renewed.

Moist Heat It Helpful The woman who discovers how valuable . applications of moist heat to tired eyes can be will make a place for this ritual when she takes a bath. A wash rag wrung out in hot water is as effective to use as cotton pads. Eyes will shine their gratitude for another kind of bathroom

plied with an eye cup. Fill the cup with water or a four per eent boric -acid solution, fit it over the socket, and keep eyes open for the cleansing of delicate membranes. / The .light you use for closeseeing should be bright but not glaring. The worst kind that you can, use is the flickering light from an open fire. The best comes from lamps which uniformly light {up a room but cast no shadows lover you or the work at hand. {Shade out any glare that tends [to reflect on your work, your! {book or your eyes.

ring of vision is a warning signal to have an oculist check up on {your eyes.

DR. ANSWERS—

Question: My nephew accidentally swallowed a moth, Could it lay fits larvae In the body, and what could I give to get it out? Answer: Have no fear. The moth was killed by the acid juices of the stomach, if not smothered to death first. It could not lay eggs inside the body and would be eliminated through the ordi- | nary channels.

Question: Is it possible for

it the womb is misplaced backwards? Answer: Yes. Although it is somewhat less likely than when the womb is in its normal position.

is Marie Earle's

GETTING down to fundamentals is good for the soul-—and also Essential Cream, both a cleanser

good for the complexion, especially with wintry winds and steam {and a lubricator.

heat's hot breath upon us.

All the beauty tricks and the flurry of new products go for

augnt if the basic health of the

skin is not A-1. The skin ta

be protected by the well-groomed habit of daily care.

Care is spelled with a capital —

washing the face before retiring |

|make- “up at 725 a no a. m, #C"—and it doesn’t mean hastily pe clean.

i must

An essential cream is the an-|

Those tiny

|crow’s feet or smile lines will just |

get deeper and deeper if they're | not “oiled up.” This particular cream is sug- | gested for every type skin, for| even the oilliest needs protection from burning and chapping, |

and then plastering it well with swer and one that comes highly | Which coarsen the pores during

|

fulness is » cleansing cream that lubricates. Use upward and

skin lotion.

‘eeo

unfading youth- for results. Marie Earle advises

{the drying months, Vital to Use

» . : |Cream Properly ° : + And just as Important as finding an efficient cream is using it properly. Directions do accom{pany most beauty products and Keynote to |they must be read and followed.

| cleansing the skin both morning]

and night, Apply the cream with upward) and outward strokes, first from

[ne base of the neckline upward

to the chin, then from the chin!

[to the cheekbone, and finally outward strok {across the forehead, down the ” ‘nose and across the chin. and follow with | pag the face with cotton soaked

Reniove with tissue and gently|

a skin lotion—Marie Earle! kes soothing freshener lotion ~-before applying another Sx ben thy layer of cream to be on overnight or at least while

bathing, avi arith products

are Mayer and

A persistent headache or blur-| |

a woman to bécome pregnant | . |

which are softened around the face to relieve the severity of the simplest beanie. Examples of short hair-dos | that add glamour to simple caps are two new short-bob styles designed with this aim in mind by Vietor Vito. |

The added attraction of this |

New York stylist's hair-dos is

easy upkeep. After the hair is |

cut and shaped-—and it pays to invest in expert barbering, says Mr, Vito—all you need to do to keep locks neat is to keep them smoothly brushed.

» . NM ONE of the recommended bobs which is reminiscent of Empire-styled coiffures is cut no longer than two inches and has semi-curled bangs divided by a center part. Hair at the sides is pulled back above the ears and at the back of the ‘head from: crown to nape of neck. This loosely curled hair is brushed into a mass of fluffy ringlets. The other short bob is cut in graduating lengths from two to four inches and has all semiwaved bangs and feathery fronds at the temples. If you want to give this one. a tryout under your woolen cap, part hair at the side and cut in graduating lengths so that strands lie flat to crown. Fluff up curled ends and brush to cover ears. Curl feather-edged strands at the temples by brushing over finger.

T6HTLY spur that Buick thoroughbred IC of yours. Feel it surge ahead with a sure-footed stride, stepping out in front to set the pace — with never a murmur

or complaint.

Yes, you can have quiet, lively horsepower like this, and a chassis that’s free of stiffness and winter squeaks — if you let us keep your Buick in tiptop shape.

Take lubrication, for example. For the price of a routine “grease job” elsewhere, we turn our Buick-trained men

MONARCH.

mDLANAPOLIS s ees

Wet — Pick Type « Birthday Cake

Eels vy »

i s

Choice. of y Adds to Variety

By META GIVEN LET THE birthday celebrant judge of the kind of birthe, for dhats part of the

eir choice, for they should have either sponge or a chiffon type cake, which are most easily digested. Suit size of the cake to the size of the child and his birthday

a simple, thin icing to hold down the sweet content, with perhaps a little heavier icing for decorating and to hold the tiny candles in place, But older youngsters and grown folks can have their choice of cakes—angel food, sponge cake, devil's food, ‘chocolate, white, {plain, spice or any of, their many variations could be chosen. And a

1

: surgeon-general of the U. S, Army

io Hl Army to its care of newt. n personnel in peace and war, has

John Lovell, who was appomited

in 1918, made important contributions to sanitation, civilian as well as military. He also founded the Army Medical Library, probably the best medical {lbrary in the world, . " . IN THE same period, an Army surgeon named Willlam Beaumont laid the foundations for our present knowledge of the behavior and functions of the stomach. It came about in 1822 because a hardy French-Canadian named

dT Lh ee Noted

Ey EDWIN P. JORDAY, M D. {became famons rough te meat IT 18 Ag sometimes forgotten world.

. The surgeon-general during the Civil War, William A :

transportation of wounded frm the battlefield. X One must mention, however, the famous work of Walter Reed and assisted by James arto, Lazeas, and other volunteers, discovered that yellow.fever was carried

Alexis St. Martin had a portion of his abdomen shot away, leaving a permanent hole in the stomach. Beaumont seized this. opportunity to study the stomach juices in various stages of digestion, The information he published

slightly to obtain a pastel Pink or green which will produce a pleasing contrast with the pastel

yellow frosting. Enough frosting for a 2-layer 8-

[choice of icing adds even more inch layer ke and Secorations,

[chance of variety,

WEDNESDAY’ 8 MENU Ss Breakfast Canned grapefruit duice Cooked oatmeal Leftover buttermilk biscuits, split and toasted Butter

Luncheon Creamed eggs ir mushrooms on toast

lery Pruit gelatin with top milk Dinner

Jelly

wi th butte: rosting Milk to drink: One quart for each chi one pint for each adult, in addition to that used In he “fs menus,

x BUTTER CREAM FROSTING % c. vegetable shortening 12 ¢. butter, room temperature 1 tsp. vanilla 4 large egg yolks 34 tsp. salt 3 ¢. sifted confectioners sugar, tightly packed Cream shortening and butter until well blended and: smooth, then stir in the vanilla. Add the yolks one at a time and beat hard after each addition. Stir in the salt and the confectioners sugar until frosting is satinsmooth. Frost the sides and top of the cake. Then add a little more confectioners sugar to make it slightly stiffer for piping a name or mak-

BUICK CO.

1040 North Meridian Street

| 1

i

1d: heat until melted and a rich am-

ing little roses. If desired. this/out on racks and cool thoroughly thicker frosting can be tinted before frosting with the King.

2¢B

BURNT SUGAR BIRTHDAY ;

CAKE { 2 c. cake flour: 2 taps. baking powder, 12 tsp. salt |1; e. shortéhing {8 c. sugar 1 tsp. vanilla 2 eggs, unbeaten » ¢. burnt sugar syrup % ¢. milk

To make burnt sugar syrup, place one cup sugar in skillet and stir constantly over medium |

ber color. Reduce heat and add one-half cup boiling water gradually. Stir until dissolved. Cool. Sift flour, measure and resift with baking powder and salt three times, Cream shortening, add sugar gradually, creaming until light and fluffy, Stir in vanilla. Add one egg at a time, beating throroughly after each addition, Stir in the syrup to blend well.

Add sifted dry ingredients and milk alternately, beginning and ending with flour and beating well after each addition. Turn into two 8-inch layer cake pans lined on the bottom with plain paper, Bake in a moderate oven, 350 degrees, F., for. 25 minutes. Cool in pans five minutes, turn

~joose on a complete, tailor-made Jubrication service from hood latch to trunk handle. They make a regular habit of extra care, such as dropping a spot of graphite on the carburetor heat-control shaft, or using a special, non-sleeve-soiling lubricating stick on your door strikers—and we could list a dozen more.

The point is, these mechanics are Buick specialists of long and pdtient experience

~ they know your Buick and its needs better than anyone else ~ and they take

Buick care keeps Buicks bes

INC.

GOOD CLOTHES DE

by the bite of a mosquito. No one can calculate how many human lives have been saved as a result of this work.

The Army can fee] medical Department part it bas played in American

iy

SERVE GOOD CARE

* | 4

Your Draperies,

Please

a. C. CLEAN

emaree

ERS en

to the Meticulous Minority

pains to keep you happy with it,

Yet you don’t pay not drop in this week?

a penny more. Why

tion for protection: Drain radiator, engine

Cold Wave Coming? |

Let us set a date tor checking over your cooling system sometime this week. Here's our prescrip.

flush aut summer sludge. Inspect radiator core for leaks. Check hoses for deterioration or loose connections. Examine thermostat control, Adjust fan belt tension, Put in genuine Buick antifreeze

block and car heater ~

a A

Tighten cylinder heod.

COMMUNITY BUICK, se,

57 West 38th Stréet. Indinmapolia 8 Indias os

~