Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 January 1952 — Page 7
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» TUESDAY, JAN. 20,1952
Charter Day Celebration
* Set Feb. 15
HE Indianapolis Chap-
ter: of the University of Nebraska Alumni Associa-
ticn has set its’Charter Day celebration for Feb, 15, The group will meet at 6:20
p. m. in the Hawthorn Room for dinner. : Dr. Juul Nielsén, university
alumnus and head of the Indiana Mental Health Council, will be the speaker. s » » MRS. W. H. GADD, graduate of the class of 1891, will be the honor guest. Invitations have been sent to all known alumni in the city. Any other Nebraska former students and alumni also are invited to attend. Reservations should, be made with Mrs. William R. Frank, The guiding committee planning ‘the event includes Messrs. and Mesdames Frank, Orville Rose, Ray D. Dennis, Walter Glaser and Fred M. Qlney, Dr. and Mrs, Herbert 1.. Sedam, Dr and Mrs. John A. Robb and Dr and Mrs. Donald R. Adams
Soap Is Essential
NO MATTER what your age or skin condition, you can't afford to omit soap from your daily beauty ritual. For, no matter how many creams or lotions you may use, in the final analysis, only soap does a complete and thorough cleanging job. Of course, you won't want to use just any soap on your delicate skin. Some are =o harsh they actually can cause dryness and red splotches. One ideal cleanser is a hardmilled, long-lasting complexion soap made with cream of almond base and true almond fragrance. The almond-shaped cakes of soap come three in a box, and each js individually wrapped in pliofilm fastened with gilt leaves. » ® » BESIDES ITS decorative and cleansing properties, this particular soap helps put natural oils back into the skin. When you wash your face, actually work in the soapy foam with the tips of your fingers.
Allow it to dry. Feel how your skin tingles,~Rinse the =oap off with alternating
splashes of hot and cold water. Your skin never outgrows the need for soap and water washings. In faet, it is one of the requisites for a bright, clear complexion.
AMERICAN IN PARIS—Mrs. Connie Wiener, Brooklyn (extreme léft) attached te the United |
Nations’ secretariat, arranges transportation for Mrs. Rajeswhar Dayal, Wife- of alternate delegate for India; Mrs. Dhingra, UNESCO, and Mrs. Bhandari, Indian guest delegate (left to right)
American Girls on UN Staff Find Hot Water a Luxury in Paris
By ROSETTE HARGROVE Times Special Writer
PARIS, Jan. 29—To the American girls on the secretarial staff of the United
Nations who are seeing Paris for the first time, home was never like this. Hot water and lots of heat, they find, are counted as luxuries in France, and therefore are available only in hotels. Similarly, the small things that an American girl takes for granted —nylons, bobby pins, cleaning tissues and stamps cost more than they do back home. » = » MEALS IN restaurants are not cheap either and since the girls can’t afford to pay $2 or more to dine out, they take their meals in the canteen or snack
¢ bar where they can eat for less
than a dollar. But these disadvantages, weighted against the marvel of being in Paris, are mere nothings, the girls sav. “Just think!” exclaims Brook-lyn-born- Connie Wiener, “we had a free trip to Paris! Most
The Times Pattern Service
By SUE BURNETT PRETTIEST gress ever for a. junior spring wardrobe—the fitted basque style is so popular with the soda-sipping crowd. Simple in design, young in line, it takes handsomely to a variety of fabrics. Pattern 8797 is a sew-rite perforated pattern in sizes 11, 12, 13, 14, 16, 18, 20. Size 12, 47% yards of 39-inch. Let the spring and summer issue of basic fashion guide you in planning a smart, versatile wardrobe for a new season. Gift pattern printed inside the book.
.
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people have to save a long time for a trip like that.” Social life in Paris is friendlier and easier, the girls say, and tHey love it. = on n “PEOPLE HERE are warmer, less inhibited than they are
back home,” says Elaine Brei- -
sacher of the Bronx, “We get more invitatiens here in a week than we could expect in a month at home.” Both girls feel that they have interesting jobs that place them in constant contact with important people. Connie, as a delegate's aid, arranges personal contacts, transportation and solves many
other problems for the delegates. But she: still finds time to
write daily, glowing aécounts of her life in Paris to her husband back home. She's been with the United Nations six years. Elaine, as a secretary tached to the Security Department, deals with the thousands of admission requests made hy the general public. ” » » “PEOPLE HERE seem more interested in the workings of the United Nations than they
We, the Wome ie
at-
do in the United States" she says. “We get more admission request from. men than women
while back home women’s clubs
I RSI hy
or. ’ : : : - Sw re hd 3 a Sed
JHE INDIANAPOLS TIMES: 1
. PAGE 7 .
County PTA Council Plans Celebration of Founder s Day
HE Marion County Parent-Teacher Associ
ation Council will celebrate
Founder's Day at 6 p. m Feb. 6 in the Central Christian Church. Council past be honored. Guest speaker Momoe Fureria, teacher from Hawaii, now teaching in School 39. Mrs. Owen Johnson will read a paper “Founder's Day.”
presidents will
will be Mrs. an exchange
on
v n ” A MUSICAL PROGRAM will he givén by a Ben Davis High
School trio. including David McCalmen, Neil D. Hansel and Louie Petty. Michael Andre,
father of a Ben Davis High School pupil will give a tap dance. »There will be solovox numbers by Mrs. Robert Butterfield of the William Evans School. Among the special guests will be Robert Gladden, county school superintendent. , Mrs. A. M. Feeley is council president and oficial . hostess for the observance.
Ice Tray Stick?
If ice trays stick in the freezing compartment of your. refrigerator, coat the bottom with olive oil. y
BEN DAVIS TRIO—Dayid. McCalmen, Neil D. Hansel and Louie Petty.
Petticoats Are Trying to Stay Stiff Minus Liquid
PE ITTICOATS are the number one problem in America today. Men are taking a relaxed view of the subject and are content to let nature take its course. Women must wrestle with the problem of stiff.
keeping their petticoats Just in haven't heard are what makes fashions fashionable this season. The first few times you wear
case you
these petticoats
an old mattress which is not “tres chic” as the designers in tended them to be. ” n » THE NATIONAL Institute of Cleaning and Dyeing has taken the problem to heart and published some facts about petti coats that every woman ought to know. Fabrics that get limp wearing and from cleaning are cotton tarlatans, cambric, erinoline, buckram and crinolast with a non-permanent fin ish.
from
water providing the colors will run in water. If the petticoat is made of Crintex, which ig crinoline laminated with a
not
-non-woven fabric called Mass-
linn you are safe, providing vou have it drycleaned. Don't try to wash it! n ” n IF YOUR petticoat is made of
rayon nét that has been stiff-
ened either with a resin: or starch and gum arabric, do not try to press it yourself, The
More advice on the net petticoat—if it has heen used as an interlining, it may imprint itself on the outer fabric when vou press the garment. Your drvcleaner has steam-air equip= ment that avaids this imprint. ing. Science has certainly progressed with such wonders as Crintex and Magsslinn and the invention of such processes as Laminating, but they still haven't beat color-fast natural cotton fiber washed with soap
and other such organizations show the most interest as outside visitors.” Traffic, ne adds, is heaviest on days when Vishinsky, Acheson, Schuman or Eden are scheduled to speak. Both girls love to go to a Left Bank cafe where they can
sit for hours over coffee and |
watch the passing, colorful | crowd. : un ” n BUT THEY'VE also found |
time to visit the famed Louvre and other museums. They feel that they have .a chance to get a liberal-education and they're making the most of it.
The. girls know that they're not going to save money in Paris but they don’t mind. Their $10-a-day allowance just barely covers their hotel rooms, transportation and meals, Still, who cares? Not are they in Paris-—when vacation time rolls around, they'll be seeing more of Europe. They may, the girls say. even spend some time on the Riviera.
Putting These Thing s Off Make ‘em Harder o Do
By RUTH MILLETT HE longer you put these things off, the harder they
are to do:
Making up after a quarrel. Writing a difficult letter when an immediate answer
is indicated.
Admitting you are in the wrong. Cleaning out a closet. Teaching a child good manners. Reducing.
Tackling a hard job, one that you dread. Mastering your temper. Returning social obligations. Making friends in a new place.
Breaking a bad habit.
Ruth Millett
Asserting your independence. |
Learning any skill. Adding new interests to your life.
n » » ASKING for a raise. Improving your personality. Finishing a book. setting
“bed.
Getting out of bed after the alarm gpes off,
Changing your hair style.
! | { {
the children off to_|
Calling on a new neighbor, Admitting to your true age. Getting a husband. Teaching a child obedience. Giving up a job to make homemaking a full-time career.
Deciding that it is the right |
time to have a first child.
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heat of the iron may cause the resin to become sticky and you. may find more petticoat on the iron than on the ironing board.
and water and stiffened with laundry starch. It's clean, it's crisp and wears like iron.
them they're fine, but on a rainy day or after a little hard wear they're liable to sag like
The dry cleaner can bring back the crispness by using a stiffening agent dissolved in
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Girls’ Nylon lips
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WHETHER A YOUNG LADY is the tender 7a ; age of two or a pert fwelve, she'll be delighted with thesé lacy, beruffled slips for Valentine's Day. So dainty-looking, yet so very durable,
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A. BUILT-UP SHOULDERS, nylon tricot, lace, net trim. ! Pink, White, 3 to 6. 2.98 B. TODDLERS’ SLIP, nylon fricot, net, lace 4rim. Pink, | ; White. Sizes 2 to 3: 2.98 C. NYLON TRICO]L SLIP, net ruffle, lace, embroidery trim. Pink, White. 7 to 14. 4.98
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