Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 May 1951 — Page 41
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ental poppies are bloom at: New sery and this is the se those you want ir. New Augusta ew Torch Tithonia g other bedding * cut peonies now, J. Schnitzius, New
sery, 5000 W. 59th x kat | find your and arden nplete uals Harmony hybrid perennials, and nts, vines (mornnoonvines, peren= porch-box matetillers (for both
lawn), also grape all fruits you can your shrub border. tore, 141 N. Dela~ 3733. FR. 7388.
ime to order your ly wreaths from r Shop. Also cut cemetery decora- . plants for your include verbenas,
as, petunias and s. Atkins Flower N. Capitol. HI.
weedless lawn, of weed-killers are lution. But they t on at the right tht way for real ge Fiel has the 1d the’ know-how effective job. Let give you a free etting rid of your tly weeds. George
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now. That's the Midwestern Tree move dead and now to protett Call H. N. (Miké) dwestern Tree Exendable tree serv-
de
*
al with a member napolis Landscape ou__deal s§ man who is local climate and 1so a man who's e in business right spot next year ar. after. So he pe satisfied with all a member of lis Landscape As~ dependable service.
LIE with rose rred You 8s of ier A= Hoosier Gardener tra snapdragons, , cleome, balsam, ilwarf coxcomb, 2, verbenas and , climbers, hybrid ndas. Porch box y basket and vase ere, too. Consult lener for dependa1 garden problems. lener, 741 E. Broad (rear). ‘BR-9121.
* OF FLOWERS
ow - tinted painted )egonias are ready Flowers this week. tuberous begonias, bud, for porch or variety of gerasome stocky delints. Flat plants
[louse of Flowers. ¢
's and snaps. Let Vn prepare a disket for your Medecorations or eful window and antnigs. House of 1 W. Washington drive Bass | see
ong e peonies, also car-
ete line of nursery
and this spring is ite and pink dogdouble flowering Nursery, W. 62nd US 52 and Ind. 29. Mots welcomes ~
with a
SUNDAY, MAY 20, 1951
Mixer Party The Teer of the Week—
{Planned by | Student Unit | Council Lists New "Officers
New officers, new council] members and a mixer party|
are announced by the student
council of Holladay Memorial, Library for teen-agers. © A 7 to 9 p. m. mixer will be| held in the recreation room Thursday. Hostesses will be St. John’s Academy with Ann Munshower "and Sheila Mears in chargé of arrangements,
# . .New officers are Phyllis Goebel,
Resident Herman Koehl, vice ident; Marnie Kemper, secre“ary, and Judy Fisher, editor of Ane library publication. { » New council members for next year will be Patricia Devlin, St. :Agnes Academy; Diane Aabye and ‘€ilia Turner, Shortridge; Jewel Polsey and Shirley Walker, At-! tucks; Hector Garcia, Charles] ‘Linder and Lou Ellen Dearinger, Tech. » Ann Pickett, 8t. John's Acadsmy; Dick Lahr, Sandy Grimes and Rex Durrett, Washington; Janet Crowmer and Nancy Tan-, gelle, Howe; Judy Rodman, Manual; Vivian Crousore, Broad Ripple, and Loretta Schoettle, Dorothy Culligan and Mary Ann Lindeman, St, Mary's Academy,
Supper Arranged Queen Margherita Society will sporsor an Italian spaghetti sup- | per from 5 to 8 p. m. Wednesday | in St. Mary's Hall, 317 N. New | # Jersey St. Chairman is Mrs. | i Josephine Vinci. | rr ————————————— Back-Saver A rolling table in the laundry is a marvelous back-saver. Push it wherever needed; in front of the washer for sorting clothes,! near the tub for sprinkling, along-, -side the ironing board and to and from the clothes line.
Capital Capers—
~Times photo by John Spicklemire
OSEPH CAIN is The Times Teen of the Week.
A
senior at Cathedral High School, Joseph hopes to teach
after he finishes college.
A member of the school paper and year hook is a member of the C Club, the Cathedral Junior C gram Club and the student theater.
Madison High School. Mr. and Mrs, parents.
Arthur T. Calin, 1717
staffs, he also O, the MonoHe transfered here from
N. Talbot Ave. are his
Each Sunday The Times will announce the Teen of the Week.
, Fill out the coupon below and send it to Joan Schoemaker, The | ! Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis 9, for your nomination of the
Teen of the Week before midnight Tuesday.
3 BOMIRALS ssevessersesercnces
0000 NNNIIIIRNINIOINRIOIIOIERIIRIIRTETSRTS
®e0rsstsvests sesso
000s 00esrsneessenetR ee ¢
ol
sses sess sssnnne
eres ren sess ssescsesssesnsssene
(School)
Terese Sess s esses senssnsnnenns
(Home Address)
for Teen of the Week. My reasons for the selection are given on a separate sheet of paper attached to this coupon.
Address
“sess sss eres essen
Two American Envoys Believed Due for New Important Positions
By ELISE MORROW
WASHINGTON, May 19— The two most triumphant offerings of the week in the social department here are two diplomats who may be headed for important new posts: John E.
ing to Washington to do a book on inside the capital. Since he is socially as well as professionally desirable, he will .probably be under a heavy barrage. He will doubtless do a better
the town, self-conscious and unintegrated. A CONGRESSMAN, having cornered an unfortunate group of constituents last week, was enlightening them on the Korean War. Carried away by his
"Teen Clubs—
Subdeb Groups Plan
Picnic and Initiation:
THE INDIANaTOLE TIMES
PAGE 41°
By JOAN SCHOEMAKER QUALITIES of the ideal mate are described: this week by three Washington High School seniors. Elmer Louery, Carol A. VanDevander and Bill Cook | set few rules on good looks, but
They List New Officers “is i ms
announced by local subdebs this week.
/HAREM Club and its guests.
| Picnic, Yor and initidtion plans plus new officers are A picnic in Brown County will be held today by the
New officers are Kan Bailey, president; Doris Hitze‘man, vice president; Namcy Edmonds and Joan Stanton,
have lots of pep. “That's why I favor red heads. Of course 1 want an attractive wife with a fair complexion, hut that's as far as I limit beauty.” “I want a man to be taller than I, of course,” says Carol. “He doesn't have to be outstanding; just clean and pleas-
recording and corresponding) seoretaries;’
‘sergeant at arms. ler, treR ana
Gretchen Farbach will be for-i cock: chaplain. mally initiated into the BOWS] Club tomorrow night. {held a joint rheeting last week] with the ZAR Club in the home of Gloria Jackson, 115 S. Ritter Ave.
The THREE T's organized group, scheduled a| dance called the Barnyard Swing |Friday night. Susie Rike, 928 E.| Drive, Woodruff Place, was host-| ess. : Officers of the group are Riva Wires, president; Pat Mayor, vice’ president; Donna Stevens Janet Campbell, recording and corresponding secretaries, Susie Rike, treasurer.
Party Hostess Jeanie Bryant, 2318 Villa Ave., potato was hostess for a birthday party one-half recently |Jerry Janke. Guests were mem- pieces,
A June 2
[Mary St. tion.
followed the birthday celebra- per,
New mascots are Sonny Weaver Wash Up Pots
A clean face for an old pot— The DREAMS Club entertained flower pot. that is.
and Jerry Janke.
guests at a wiener roast at Oak- | water plus a little scrubbing you| landon last week-end. Two club! can banish those cloudy white! candidates for Howe High School stains that form on most earthen-! {Violet Queen are Angie Evans ware flower pots. and Joan Hitchcock.
SHOP COLONIAL
~Peurifoy, ambassador to Greece, and Mrs. Perle j Mesta, minister to Luxembourg. They .are both on official visits to Washington for consultaa tion. ! : Mrs. Mesta SEH has been sug- npjes Morrow gested as a possible forthcoming envoy to The Netherlands, a suggestion which seems to have filled the -phlegmatic Dutch with some agitation. Also, the ambassador to Ireland, George Angus Garrett, has just resigned from his post; so the administration might decide to be perverse and .send Perle to that soggy green bewitched outpost of the Atlantic frontier. If Perle couldn't golve the Irish problem, no one could, 7 Ambassador Peurifoy is in a somewhat more interesting position: What President Truman —needs more than-anything else is a Secretary of State who gets along with Congress. Mr. Peurifoy is one State Department man with a completeIvy affirmative record on Capitol "Hill. He was formerly Deputy Under-Secretary of State for Administration. He goes back to Greece on the 31st of this month, but he may return to
job on the city than the unfortunate Mr. Mortimer and Mr. Lait whose “Washington Confidential” is still more unfortunately on the best-seller lists. This book is a slovenly, appallingly inaccurate collection of nonsense. There is hardly a paragraph without an error in it, and it nauseates any honest journalist who tries to be honestly critical of Washington. Still another writer is attempting a Washington book. Maj. Polan Banks, author and Hollywood producer, has announced he is writing a Washington novel, with plans for a film to be adapted from it. What this highly intellectual approach will bring forth is questionable. There have been no good novels or books ever written about Washington except “Reveille in Washington” by Margaret Leech, historical. and written almost 100 years later than the action it describes. Washington is a curious town,
own military genius, he strode over to a map on his office wall, He outlined his strategy, magnificently, poking his finger and orating on Pusan, Haegu,
Chang-jin, Chipyong, Yongdong, '
Seoul; airstrips, artillery positions, flanks, and counterthrusts. =
His constituents were quite |
impressed until they glanced at
the map as they left the office. |
It was a map of New Jersey. n ” = MRS. TRUMAN'S summer schedule is as unrelieved as usual. The First Lady is leaving for Independence shortly, and before then she will attend
a few worthy programs for
worthy causes. Mrs. Truman plans also to go to an annual party of the great Extra Man Brigade, the White House aid. The aid, young, socially-de-sirable bachelors who smooth the path at official functions, have a pirty every spring at Anderson House, a large, funereal establishment on Massachusetts Ave. owned by the Society of the Cincinnati.
i
A 1 Ki New officers are Alice Hunt, nge ing, ‘| president; Angie Evans, vice prestreasurer, and Patty Dunn, ident. and stcretaty Marilyn
wr cs
sergeant at arms, and Joan ‘Hitch:
hayride is scheduled The club by the TOZ-IES Club.
Judy Miller, Mary Bergen and Marilyn Gasten| were formally initiated into the| Club, a newly] |KI-AX Club last week. -
The CU-TEE Club plans a rush| |party tomorrow in the home of| Beverly Vargo, president.
Send news of teen club activities not later than Tuesday to Joan Schoemuker, The Indiand anapolis Times, Indianapolis 9.
2"4 Dressing Recipes Try these proportions for mak-| ing a super duper macaroni or| the cheapest salad dressing. Combine cup mayonnaise with! for Shirley Burks and|one-third cup ripe olives cut into one-quarter cup chopped {bers of the DE-VALS Club. A sweet pepper and one tablespoon [slumber party in the home of each vinegar and grated onion. | Jane Perry, 3725 Prospect Season to taste with salt and pep-|
100 per cent more attractive.
UTPOWN OR DOWNTOWN MONDAY NIGHT ‘i Q
ant to look at.” Understanding is one character trait Carol says she looks for. “It doesn't matter about the color of her hair,” says Elmer.
Fuling,
Teen Problems—
Phyllis Myers,
By JOAN IT'S HARD for a gal to know | what's what if a boy gives no indication of his appetite or his exchequer. Still, shilly-shallying over ordering is a sign of lack of poise. Now, naturally, it's best to err on the side of too little rather than too much, An afterdate snack shouldn't be a full meal. On the other hand, picking item may imply that the lad is hard-up or stingy. Usually, therefore, it's suave to choose a middle-priced dish —a simple sandwich or a plain sundae. If your escort is loaded with cash and extra-hungry, he may wish something more elaborate. Then, it's smooth tactics for him to say, “I'm having the double-decker-special. 8 re you won't have one?”
With soap and | ~ tJ ” IF YOUR date doesn't warn you, but just goes ahead and gives his fancy order, keep calm, Honey. Eat your hamburg
They'll look!
with—an atmosphere hard te
freeze in prose. There is a root- |
lessness, a fluidness which is | somehow inhibiting. Washing- | ton is not an organic unity. It
has a rather lovely backdrop against which many dramas are acted, but attempts to portray them have always been shallow and trivial and, like
Next Saran To Indiana Theater
$5
Will Hold
Your Washer
replace Dean Acheson. IT
House Chairman
A FOOTNOTE to this is that the new chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, Rep. James P. Richards of | South Carolina (replacing the | late John Kee of West Virginia) is an old, close friend of Mr. ‘Peurifoy, who is also from South Carolina. { Mr. Peurifoy, who looks like a very handsome truckdriver, has been entertained by the Assistant Secretary of State and Mrs. George C. McGhee; by the Greek ambassador, bachelor Athanase Politis; by the Deputy Undersecretary of State, Carl... Humelsine, ‘and other State Department people. “He is on this brief visit without his pretty wife, the former Betty Jane Cox of Oklahoma. | Mr. Peurifoy is encouraged and encouraging about Greece. He | says he is sure they are on our | side, and that it is good to know | . they are with us and not against us. |
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Ideal Mates Are Described by Teen-Age Trio
“She must be able to cook especially well and be able to sew, too. If she can keep house, is easy to get along with and doesn’t get angry too often, then I'll be satisfied.” Bill says his wife has to like athletic contests, but she doesn’t have to limit all her likes to the things he-is-interested in. “I agree with Elmer that she'll have to know how to cook and be easy to get along with, 190’ Bil} added. . 4 Carol puts a few, specific limitations on her
Carol
Hard to Tell If Date's Broke’
TLL JUST How ABourt HAVE A SANDWICH 2 SODA
Li
They
SHE STANDS AT ORDER = ‘NG TIME
or ice-cream with relish. Don't let his thoughtlessness give you an inferiority complex! When a boy is really broke, he should tell his gal so. It's no disgrace to be hard-up, these
days! And any gal will appreciate knowing where she stands at ordering time.
tinghouSe momen: wees ~~
with the
man. “I don’t like for anyone to smoke cigars, but I'll let cigarets or a pipe pass. I also dislike the idea of a lot of drinking. I think he should come home after work instead of going out with the boys.”
” ” - “A 50-50 marriage is my idea of the best home-life,” says Bill. “I want a wife who will stay at home most of the time. This business of going to a bridge
Bill Elmer
club every, afternoon 1s out. I | think each one of us should have an opportunity to go somewhere to a club once in a while, but the majority of the time it should be together.” Elmer and Carol added quick OK’s to Bill's idea with a couple of suggestions of their own. Carol believes a couple should not keep secrets from each other, and Bill says he thinks he should come before her girl friends. All three are staff members on the school paper and Bill and Elmer are both members of the Lettermen’s Club. Elmer is a member of the Spanish Club. Carol is a member of the DUTS and the BUNNIES subdeb clubs. Parents of the students are Mr. and Mrs. Fred M. VanDevander, 620 Exeter Ave.; Mr. and Mrs, James K. Louery, 323 Beauty Ave., and Mr. and Mrs, David 8. Cook, 30 8. Addison St.
Separate Bacon To separate bacon slices withe out tearing them, place the de~ sired amount in the frying pan in one lump. Then as the bacon
XK The Society of American Engineers awarded Westinghouse Ist Place fo advancement in the ~field—of taundry——
equipment,
iwarms, the slices can be readily separated with a fork.
