Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 March 1951 — Page 5

of the early :

Apr. 5 “hoeore Country

ft and right) :

00

eon Mark ay

) Delta Game bers are exe Apr. 7 lunch » Indianapolis ing state and

Jeddle is state C. A. Wacker, , and Mrs, ce chairman. being handled »der and Mrs, wn, and Miss out-of-town

8

he 78th anninding of the [nstitute, Oxthe members h local meetits founders, n, Eva Webb fort Leonard. ude 76 colle168 alumnae 1e world. The sight conserblindness.

was adopted steadily inblishment of f the blind, hoptic train»f pre-school ind veterans, nae have esg library of ht conservaublic schools,

sr Corn

own by more n any other alled Turkish , Sicilian at, Spanish eat, Guinéa heat, Indian this country e apt to call

———

;

Notions, Floor

re se my

- a AN F \ > iat

TUESDAY, MAR. 27, 195!

Eat Well for Less—

Here's New - Recipe for

Apple Pie

Garnish With Six Hearts of Cheese

By GAYNOR MADDOX

APPLE pie with a hunk of Good

sharp cheddar cheese! thought for any meal any time.

Here's a new recipe using

Roman Beauty »

APPLE PIE

cooking apples. EJ td

One recipe plain pastry (enough

to make a -two-crust pie), six Roman Beauty apples, one-half cup firmly packed brown sugar, one-quarter cup granulated sugar, one-half teaspoon nutmeg -or cinnamon, one-half teaspoon grated lemon rind, one-quarter teaspoon salt, two tablespoons butter or

margarine.

Line nine-inch pie pan with onehalf the pastry, and fill with apples pared and sliced; sprinkle

. with mixture of sugar, spices, salt

and lemon rind; dot with butter.

Moisten edge of crust, cover with top.crust and press edges togéther. Brush crust with milk. Bake in hot oven (450 degrees F.) for 10 minutes; reduce heat to moderate (350 degrees F.) and bake for 45 to 50 minutes.

Wednesday's Menus BREAKFAST: Orange juice, French toast, crisp bacon, sirup or honey, coffee, milk. LUNCHEON: Chicken-tos mato soup with rice, crackers, chopped egg and mayonnaise sandwiches, canned fruit, cupcakes, tea, milk. DINNER: Creamed leftover chicken, baked potatoes, canned peas, enriched bread, butter or fortified margarine, apple pie, cheese, coffee, milk.

. rie Sa

Beauty After 40—

over the blue. Wear a deep red rose on the lapel of your jacket and

with a mint rose lipstick. For evening glamor con“sider the possibility of silver nail polish over pink polish! If your hair is black and white, try a blue rinse. It will give a soft blue tone to the white hair and deepen the sheen of the black.

» » » USE pomade on the back “of your hair to give it a sleek, off-the-neck look, Try the flattery of sheer, misty-white face veiling. Consider the charm of a white straw hat covered with coarse-mesh black veiling. Wear white gloves and chalkwhite jewelry.

4. 4 «a GREET spring by wearing a huge bunch of artificial vio-

the freshener absorbs the oil.

cially pearls.

your hair.

nails until they gleam.

* buttons.

match it in color and fragrance |

Hints on Evening Glamor

: ' By EDYTH THORNTON McLEOD SPRAY your hair with silver lacquer in the evening. Try wearing blue eyeshadow with a film of silver eyeshadow

lets, sprayed with violet perfume, and try violet eyeshadow. A little fluid rougse, blended with skin freshener, makes a nice powder base for oily, sallow skins. The rouge gives color and

To soften heavy contours, try 4 light blending of rose-toned powder along the contour, over your regular face powder shade. When you show your ears it’s pretty to touch the earlobes with rouge. It gives & ‘nice background for your earriwgs, espe:

#

The flushed skin looks clearer and paler in the evening when green tinted face powder is worn, and you can use a light film of it under your daytime powder, too, with good effect. “

» » " 5 5 ” DON’T wear a chignon at the nape of your neck if you have

heavy shoulders or a dowager’s hump. Always change your makeup when you change the color of

If you like a blue-red lipstick but do not like the matching nail polish, choose a silvery iridescent, nail polish or buff your

Decorate your black gauntlet gloves with a row of tiny silver

Tomorrow—Questions and Answers.

Beer From Bread

leavened barley bread, also figs, dates, turnips, onions and goat cheese. From hread they brewed

beer! :

Times Sewing Contest

Ancient Babylonians had an un-

Entrant Registration

HERE IS MY official registration for The Times’ National Sewing Contest. I will bring, my contest garment, in mid-April, to the place to be announced later in The Times.

“NAME .evc.oeteaessscscessssssscscssesesss PHONE

ADDRESS .vicoavetrscgeesessecsessscacsssesssssens Severs ven I plan to enter in the classifications marked below: (Check one or more. You are not obligated to remain in the classifications checked, if you should change your mind later.)

esssssssSenfor Standard Pattern Group, for contestants above 18 years of age. Every entry in this group must be

made from Standard Commercial pattern. (1) Coat or suit........ (2) Tailored dress........ (3) Soft or dressy dress........ . Br itaws High School Group, for students in junior and senior high schools. (1) Date or school dress........ £23, Coat or suit........ j Creve » . Glamour Group, no age limit. (1) Evening clothes, lounge

clothes, negligee ensembles and beach wear.

essses..0riginal Design Group, no age limit. Garment must be '! an original design by entrant for-adult or upper teen-

age wear.

(1) Dress, coat or suit. esesesss Children's Clothing Group, no age limit.

(1) Clothes

must be for children between the ages of 2 and 8.

@4i-24% By SUE BURNETT Particularly . pleasing to the woman of slightly shorter figure is this stunning two-piece frock. Half sizes save you many hours in altering your pattern. Pattern 8702 is a sew-rite perforated pattern in sizes 141%, 161%, 1814, 2015, 22%; and 241;,, Size 16'2, short sleeve, 47 yards of 39-inch. You'll like the, many interesting sewing suggestions con-

The Times Pattern Service

¥

By MRS. ANNE CABOT

Flatter your feet with a pair |

of these air-cooled lounging slippers with flirtatious butterflies perched on each toe. They are easily and inexpensively crocheted from hemp twine and straw yarn. Pattern 5165 includes

plete crocheting instructions for small, medium and large sizes, material requirements, stitch illustrations and finishing directions. Needlework fans — Anne Cabot’s big new album is here.

Fume son, "Se simpls | ROT Sf AIAG rev 2 Ey ws git Special features . . . plus four book. Send today for your patterns and directions. copy. ANNE CAEOT SUE BURNETT The Indianapolis Times

The Indianapolis Times 214 W. Maryland St. Indianapolis 9, Ind. No. 8702 Price 25c¢

8ize......

Fashion Book Price 25¢ Name

eess cesses sssRnssne

Ses es seesesescassssssssrssncceee

Breet ceccoscsesessssscsscscsne City :

State Send an additional 5¢ for firstelass postage for each pattern to receive 1t tore quickly.

essesssgeesesssnensennens

ees ssRINB INITIO ERIOR IRN E.

372 W. Quincy St. Chicago 6, Ill.

No. 5165 Price 20c

Cabot Album 25¢ NEGMe ..cacsccssccisesscnnsonss

tessa CE EE EEE

Stre6t ...icecvvvccciscscnnncens

City State

Sess EsRNRNIN RENNER

| Send an additional 5¢ for first-| class postage to receive’ pattern

more quickly.

com- |

Question: Is it true that sunshine through ordinary window glass is not very beneficial as a sun bath? Is it necessary to have special glass? Answer: Ordinary. window glass will prevent most of the ultra violet rays from the sun

from passing through. For this reason a person who sits in the sun shining through .a window may get warmed but not

tanned. Special glass is needed

for the passage of these ultra

A Bald Spot

Now Comes Toupee With

I's Called 'Tashay,' Or 'Doughnut’

By ELIZABETH TOOMEY United Press Staff Corr dent

NEW YORK, Mar. 27—A man’

|

now can buy a toupee that has a'

bald spot. It’s the newest design of Louis Feder, a slightly-bald hair piece maker who's devoted most of his

life to eliminating the bald-headed |

row at, the burlesque. “We're doing it gradually, but

we smust make these hair pieces| more and more natural” Feder

explained. The new toupee, which he officially calls a “tashay,” and unofficially a “doughnut,” simply

receding hairline, with hair long enough to be brushed back over the hole in the middle, or brushed to either side to show his own bare scalp peeking through at the pate.

'Ease Into Hair’

feccang marine, win me os. ' Correct’. Call Not Always Winning One When Mr. Muzzy Is Your Partner

WHEN. NEITHER YOU nor your partner have entered the bidg, rer |ding and you double your left hand opponent's final bid of three no! South dealer.

“This way a man can sort of bid by dummy. -

ease into hair, so people used to

seeing . him bald won't suspect| “always.” This right away he’s wearing a toupee,” must be tempered with the use of said Feder, whose last experiment good judgement based on the par-

resulted in .crew cut toupees.

“Those crew cuts have been our biggest sellérs, but I think our

doughnuts are going to, replace

|

them,” he said, though he’s only,

doughnut,” he speculated. .. “It There Goes Muzzy

| | |

sold three of the hole-in-the-top versions since he perfected the idea a month ago. * : “Men_ Jike Bing Crosby and Charles Boyer should prefer a

gives them a little hairline, but doesn’t change their appearance so drastically.”

Stuck on Tight

Feder's own center fringe, bounded by a receding hairline on two sides, obviously is natural. The thick grewth of hair behind it, he admitted, after insisting

{that a visitor yank it sharply to |see if it was solid, was stuck on

with his special adhesive process. Actually, he never uses the word toupee in his small Fifth Avenue office and workshop, because “the name is connected with

|

|

|so many stories of ‘hair falling off | {or being put on backward.” The iword tashay, he explained, means |“cover” in French.

“About 40 per cent of the busi- |

|nessmen who come here have |been sent by their wives,” (said. “Women realize we're living lin a new age where you just don’t

he

have to put up with nature's

violet rays. drawbacks.”

Telephone Riley 7411

& ula

cas AG

wr’

— —— — — — — —— —— —— — —

H. P. WASSON & CO. (Mail Order Dept.)

Indianapolis 9, Indiana Please send the following Carter's Men's Knit

a

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

a

The Mature Parent—

Child's Poor Report Card in

Here is another of Muriel Lawrence's articles | | os | —one of her columns that go to the heart of ' American life, the family. They are about the everyday problems of parents with their children. The author writes from long experience as a counselor on child guidance.

-— Mrs. Lawrence ; By MURIEL LAWRENCE * OUR youngster’'s bad report card does not necessarily represent his failure; it could be our own. Our demand for good marks may have been the reason he got bad ones. When children are led to believe that we measure their success only by results, they forget what produces these results. And their fear of failing us makes them do poor work. Has any of us

the right to ask another to “prove” himself?

“a8 NH 4, - ONLY too often this emphasis on results stems from our own tangled values which rate success in terms of money, social prestige and power.

Blackwood on Bridge—

trump, the double usually asks your partner to lead the first suit

Note the use of the word N playing convention is a very handy tool but jt spades, three diamonds and the ace of clubs for nine tricks. Near uation 34 hand. about | It is true’'that Mr. Muzzy should this type of double. He follows the (have used better judgment. Surely “rule” blindly. When his partner Mr. Champion would not have doubles three no trump he always been asking for the lead of. the leads the first suit bid on his left Suit which had been bid three and if that turns out to be the times by Mr. Abel and in which wrong lead, he can always say he Mr. Muzzy himself held as many was commanded to make it by aS five cards. his stupid partner. Should Have Known ; ON THE OTHER hand Mr. Champion should have

“ushally” rather than fhe. word

known |

|

LOOK WHAT HAPPENED in better than to double. Without the |

today’s deal. Mr. Muzzy woodenly double, Mr. Muzzy almost surely opened the trey of spades and would have opened the unbid suit, Miss Brash took the finesse, los- hearts. And Mr. Champion knew ing to Mr. Champion's

| |

Shaking his head in disgust, Mr. enc¢e to the conventional meaning

Champion slapped down the king of a free of hearts, which won. Miss Brash trump. In other words Mr. Chamwon the heart continuation with pion’s double was a “correct” call the ace and rattled off four —but was it a winning one?

{

|Q—I want to make a new rose bed this spring. Since our lot is extremely low we will have

YOU ‘are told some ‘ugly gossip about a young girl. Wrong: Accept the gossip as fact, saying how shocked

drainage. Would you please tell you are by it and don’t hesi-

tate to tell it to someone else. | yge? Or any information. Right: Stand up for the | Shelbyville. girl and don't repeat the |A__Raise the bed enough so roots

story, since gossip, often without any real foundation, can ruin a girl's reputation in her community.

water for days after moderate to heavy rains. A wall of flat stones makes a good looking

| | | | |

will not be likely to stand under

double of® three no!

+ ee — (a , DISHING THE DIRT— | By MARGUERITE SMITH | edging and holds dirt in place. v Times Garden Editor | Excavate the bed as deep as

| | |

| |

to build the bed up for proper |

me just what kind of soil to]

king. about his partner's blind adher-| SOUTH WEST NORTH EAST

PAGE 5

School May Be Our Fault

A business man whose boy had accumulated too many “D's” on his report card “attended” to the situation this way: “I told my son,” he wrote to the boy's sthool, “that he would bring home a‘B’ or else. I just don’t have time for this nonsense’ since I have been made vice president of my firm.” He was a “successful” man, But soon after his wife divorced him and his hoy ran away from him because they couldn’t stand

the strain of his drive for “results.” u n » » »

» THIS world of ours is filled with pressures calculated to make us forget that those who concentrate on destinations often find them disappointing when they have “arrived.” If our goals for our children have been academic and social successes alone, there is still time to change. There is still time to forget the report card “A” and to direct our young people's attention to where it belongs. : 5 " o ‘ o ” » BE QUICK TO PRAISE the self-denial that impels your son to forego a football game to bring his algebra up to date. Encourage the initiative that drives him to read extra books for his English composition. Then you will be releasing more self-denial, more initiative and patience—and you will probably get your “A.” If this involves a conscious reorganization of your own values,

.it will be good for you as well as for him.

Nails Are

Important

" Poor Nutrition

Lessens Strength By EDWIN P. JORDAN, M. D.

ihe Doctor Says—

-

Both sides vulnerable,

NORTH : THE finger nafls and toe a Mr. Abel nails are taken .pretty much S—A QJ 1009 for granted, but anyone who H-9 83 has temporarily lost a nail req 3, ‘realizes how important these ° C-=-8 v3 ‘structures are. fn WEST © EAST +A finger Mr. Muzzy Mr. Champion | seems pracS—8 6432 S—K § tically useless H—7 2 H—KQJ104 | without a D—4 2 D—J10 9 7 nail. It Is C—KJ104 c—9 2 not surprisSOUTH . ing therefore Miss Brash : that someS17 thing wrong H—A 6.5. with one ‘or D—AKS865 more nails C—A Q63 y Sauses a good The bidding: deal of au pr. Jordan

people don’t like bad looking

1D Pass 18 Pass nails, either. 2 s 28 P "= 3 y Pass 3s ry POOR nutrition, especially 3 NT Pass Pass Dble. the lack of vitamins or cerre tain minerals, may also be re-

All Pass flected in lessened strength or poor color of the nails and any chronic or wasting disease of

the body can do the same.

your back will allow. (European gardeners sometimes go as much as three or four feet down

in preparing perennial beds.) If}

drainage is an extreme problem, pile tin cans and debris in the bottom to provide a well for that extra water. Discard subsoil, fill in with good top soil mixed with cow manure if you can get it. Mix in bone meal-or a high phosphate general gar-

Besides all this the nails can be damaged by a number of skin diseases such as psoriasis or ringworm. The result of all this is that a disorder of the nails is no simple affair for which one can recommend some local application or some pill or food to be added to the diet. In each case there is first the problem of identifying the source of the dificulty and then

‘den fertilizer. starting the proper treatment.

| Underwear: I “Item | Quantity | Size | Price | | & I Name .oveeiciersinsssasserssersransneees | | | | Aadress ersatesanirassrssnnneterainrnneee 4 City och eines edeis Male vooiees | O Charge: [1 CheckorM.O. -OC.0O.D. | fi ee a a — vie. Su vol

Another Wasson’s Exclusive!

You'll Be More Comfortable in

~ Carter's Men's Knit Underwear 00 295

To

SIT EASY, BEND EASY. The trick is in the knitting

(and Ladies, remember that cotton knits need no

ironing). Try a pair of trigs and see how they fit smooth and snug. How soft and comfortable they feel. No binding, bunching, no riding up. The sturdy waist and elastic stays "alive."

You've never worn such underwear before.

A. LIGHTWEIGHT UNION SUIT. Sizes 36 to 48. 3.25 Also in medium weight. 3.95 B. MID LENGTHS in sizes 30 to 44. 1.40 C. COMPANION SWISS RIB athletic shirts in cotton. Sizes 36 to 46. $1 D. TRIGS in sizes 30 to 44. 1.10

Famous Carter's Men's Underwear Exclusively at Wasson’s in Indianapolis,

Men's Store, Street Floor . b