Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 March 1952 — Page 9

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Mrs. Richard nae director 4 renzen in iby t, State Day \ppointed the st her: Mesoung, Richard | Culp, Fred )avis, Dennis Ruth Fischer, yara Prim and

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FRIDAY, MAR. 14, 1952 ) 4

H°V would you like to live in a zoo? Walter and Sue Clark have practically become zoo

Recently, Mrs. Clark casually

mentioned to her Husband-how nice it would be to live out’

in the country. To her 9-year-old daughter, country meant animals so the youngster obligingly made the rounds of the neighborhood. The result, after a three-hour search, was the addition of three cats and two dogs to the Clark household (one in each room of the house). When the first animal was returned to its owner this morfing, Mrs, Clark said, “We're terribly sorry this happened but Walt and TI are thankful there wasn't a circus in town for her to choose

* from.”

~ » = WILLIAM JENNINGS BRYAN’S “Free Silver” presidential campaign issue is aptly applied when used tor 25th wedding anniversaries. And free silver is what Mr. and Mrs. ‘Wally Hess got from friends last night for their silver anniversary. Only there was a string attached to the gift. When the honor guests unwrapped the enormous package presented: to them by the geven couples, they found a silver cocktail shaker with 16 silver goblets. Tt was free silver but with it came a stipulation that each goblet belonged to one of the guests (as the engraved names on each cup indicated) and that the goblets were nnt to be used except when this same group assembled at the Hess’ home. This leaves the Hesses with one of two alternatives, Either they must. constantly invite these seven couples to their home else they will have to pack the gift away and forget about it. They could take the set with them every time one of the group entertains. 5 EJ ” IF YOU NEED A dental checkup but have that drillfear, here's what Miss Barbara Taylor advises. Go to the dentist's office around lunch time. Ask the nurse if he’s in (you know he isn't). Thank her for her information and ask her when he won't be in again so you can make another visit,

It's one way to -make your conscience stop bothering you about that checkup. » » ~ DON'T THROW AWAY that old necktie. Give it to your wife to make a skirt, And’ wives, if your husbands" are conservative in their neckwear selections, make them over, Ties from an extrovert result in a more colorful garment. Mrs. M. G. Morgan deserves credit for starting this new fashion, After a six-month survey, she discovered her husband buys as many ties as she does pairs of nylons and that he gets tired of them as fast as she runs her hose. The result was a patch-tie skirt which is completely meaningless in its color scheme. But you won't find another one like it anywhere and that, as all women know, is the secret of its value. Men should don their thinking caps and find some, use for those old nylons now.

” a ov THE NEXT TIME you're confronted witha man who greets you with, “Viva Zapata.” smile at him. He's no revolutionist. He's merely an honest man trying to earn a living. This creature with a seemingly two-word vocabulary isn't campaigning for Senor Zapata. He's campaigning for the Indiana Theater of which he is manager. Incidentally, his name is Al

Hendricks. ” 5 ”

.MEN WILL BE running around in shorts Sunday before a mixed audience of men and women in the South Side Armory. And the shorts will be similar-—all blue and white jobs. But don't get alarmed. This won't be a new type of entertainment. It'll be a basketball tournament for the Bears, a local team, followed by a dance. Guests will come from Ohio and Illinois to watch the players, consisting of such creatures as a Butler gtudent and a sports writer, exhibit their talents. This is the way the grislies’ strut their courting.

Ticket - Holders Added To Cooking School

AN ADDITIONAL list of Indanapolis ticket-holders for Cordon Bleu Cooking School to be held in" Ayres’ Auditorium from 10:30 a. m. to 12:30 p. m. beginning Thursday has been announced.

The school will be continued

for the four following Thursdays under sponsorship of the Indianapolis Smith College Club. They are Mesdames Theodore B. Griffith, John Grimes, Fred Holliday, Harlan J. Hadley, Louis Haerle, William 8S. Hall, H. G.. Hamer, Harold Hartley, Dan C. Hess, William R. Higgins, Samuel H. Hopper and Carl S. Hulen. ” n » MESDAMES Harry W. Hull, Andrew W. Hutchison, Helen M. Jameson, John T. Jameson, Karl Johnson, Ford Kaufman, William P. Keller, Thomas Kackley, James (. Katterjohn, T. Victor Keene and :Vincent Robert Kelly. Mesdames John.G. Kinghan,

‘Miss Margaret Hecker

Miss Margaret B. Hecker, 27 S. Butler Ave., of the English Department of Lebanon High School, flew to New York this week to speak before the Columbia High School Scholastic Press Association at its 28th annual meeting at Columbia University which started yesterday and will continue through Saturday.

This, is the fourth consecutive

time she has been a speaker before the associatien. She will

William J. Kothey, Kenneth Barr, H. L. Krimendahl, Alfred E. Kuerst, Fisk Landers, Earl =]. Larsen, J. K. Lilly III, 8S. B. _ Lindley, Ernest Lee and Lewis Lurie.

n = = MESDAMES Myron J. MecKee, Robert I.. Mason, Thomas Moore, Hiram McKee, Ken Mosiman, Marlow W. Manion, H. H. Martin, Percy C. McCown, J. T. McDermott, E. M. McNally, C. F. Merrell, Allan C. Miller and Wilson Mothershead. . Mesdames™ Cleon A. Nafe Frank 8. Napp and Arthur H. Northrup and Misses Bernece

Gray, Elizabeth Haerle, Constance ‘Jones and Patricia Jones. Is Press Speaker discuss school publicity. The meeting will be attended by representatives from every

state,

Pen Women to Meet

The Indianapolis Branch, Na tional League of American Pen Women, wh meet at 1:30 p.m. tomorrow. ir the Meridian Room of the Colonial Furniture Co. Mrs. Thomas Noble Jr. will talk on Navajo Indiars.

TE

ae

LOOKING AT A NEW YOU—Helena Rubinstein’s new three dimensional color “teleview’ which will analyze your skin color-

ing will be in Wasson’s all next week.

We, the Women—

Chain Store Cuts Prices On Men's Clothing |

By RUTH MILLETT CHAIN of men’s clothing stores has reduced their

prices on men's suits because, according to the president of the company, “business has been bad since last

March.”

And then he went on to add: “Men’s clothing Has been hard to sell because the man has always had what's left of the family income and now there's just not enough left for

a suit of clothes.” Is that so?

Well don’t feel too sorry for Papa. The best i clothing dollar he spends is Ruth Millett the one for what his wife puts on her back. After all, a man can get by with wearing a five-year-old suit. If it has a tweedy look and if he also goes in for a pipe and carelessly mussed hair he can look like an intellectual. If he doesn’t want to be a “character” his wife can just explain that George just won't buy a new suit—that clothes mean nothing to him. (It's amazing how many well-dressed women claim this fact about their drably-dressed spouses.)

My Day—

or

But let a woman try to get | by without replenishing her | wardrobe for a long period of | time, and there's no word to describe her but “dowdy.” ~ » - NOBODY assumes she just isn't interested in clothes. They decide straight off that George 18n’'t doing too well, because poor Sue ‘doesn’t have a thing to wear. So, if when the family clothes budget is limited, Papa makes the old suit do and lets Mama have a new one, he is really being smart. Mama's new suit will be a good advertisement for him. If he had bought the new one it would probably have gone unnoticed, anyhow, = » » MAMA will "be happy—and therefore easier to live with. It's suprprising what having |

just the right thing to wear !-

does for a. woman's disposition. |

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES _

Tells Your Ri ght Ce

lors

“QKIN tone is the key to make-up magic,” says Wayne Hutchinson,” make-

up expert from Helena Rubinstein’s, who will be visit-

*

ing Wasson's Monday through Sattirday. Bringing the revolutionary new “Three dimensional teleview” to the cosmetic department, Mr. Hutchinson will show women the 10 definite types of 1) correct each

complexions and the color co-ordinatjons type which is vividly displayed on the teleview, Looking through the teleview

for

will show you your own indi vidual color chart. ~ - »” YOU'LL SEE YOUR exact

skin tone and hair coloring as it should be color co-ordinated. You will’ learn what color powder base powder, rouge, lipsticks and eyeshadow will bring our your natural coloring to its hest advantage. In addition, Mr. Hutchinson will tell - you what colors in fashions are best for you. You will learn the pastel tones, bright colors ana: basic shades

- that will accentuate your per-

ional coloring. He will give you a few lessons in the art of make-up so that you can see for yourself how the merest touch of the right shade of eye shadow, for ex-

ample, will make your eyes look actually

more beautiful and light up your face.

And other women will think, {

“what a bargain she got in a husband. Look at how generous he is!”

Finds Pupils in India Studiéus, Eager to Learn

By ELEANOR ROOSEVELT TRIVANDRUM, India, Mar. 14—We arrived here in

the middle of the afternoon and immediately started out

to visit a country school.

This particular part of

with much of the Elementary education After

compared country. to the fifth grade is free. that one rupee equivalent to about 20 gents per mMeanth per child. is charged for secondary .education. The schoolhouse is not difficult to furnish It has just one room and the classes are in squares. The master stands up and demonstrates on a blackboard what talking about and ‘each child has either a slate or =a writing board. The earnestness with which they study i quite impressive.

ne Is

n on 5 AFTERWARD WE dro rough the town, stopping

‘members, pick their favorites.

hospital, © -

Times nhoto hy William A Oates Jr

KIDDIE ATTRACTION—A novelty booth at St. Francis Hospital Guild's spaghetti supper 3 to J p.m. Sunday in the hospital will feature youngster’s toys like these. bunnies, roosters and fosthalls. Ronnie and Bernard Weimer and Barbara Ann Robinson (left to right), children of quild

Proceeds from the annual event will be used for guild work at the

A

India is highly literate as

a few minutes at the rhuseum | where they have some beauti- | ful bronzes and a collection of | musical instruments. There also is a natural history section for the children. Then we made | a short stop at a lovely little art museum where there were small collections of paintings from different periods, a few of |

them old but most of them quite modern, | We drove on through the

town's main street, seeing some | horse - drawn rickshaws and some drawn by hand and being | much intrigued by -the boats | that plied the canals. The center part of most of the boats is covered over with straw mats | but some of them were open, | revealing loads of coconut peel The only thing that bothers ne on these drives is the contant honking of the horn. NobodV 8éems to mind, however,

ind I don’t suppose it would he - possible otherwise to get through the crowded streets

which have not only great numbers of people but -animals of every description wandering ‘about. ” » » WE DINED WITH his Highthe Rajpramukh of Trawho made some

1038 vancore very

remarks ahout the

the n the problem of food supplies land does

ot raise more than 40 per cent f the food needs 3 The line of succession here ig nverned by a curious inher ance law, or custom, which suppose might be called the matriarchal system. Fof in itance, the’ elder brother is head of the state and lowed in succession by the next brother. If there are no other brothers, it is not any of the

interesting

lifficulties province faces

"he limited arable

wrother’'s children who inherit wut -the sister's child. In this sort of system a

voman does not leave her home

vhen married and her children | “ire supported by her family. |

Chis may seem a little odd iccording to Western ideas but hey say it has worked well.

is fol- |

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Garden Gadding— TES

By MARGUERITE SXITH Times Garden Editor

PRUTLER botanical garden has a new garden house nearing completion. And “word's gotten around,” according to a harassed Butlerite, that it's to have a spot

for club meetings. So reservations are already

being taken for meeting dates. Dates after May 1, that is That's when building and land-scaping-are due to he finished.

¥ A lounge and a kitchen equipped with stove,

refrigerator and other conveniences are available to clubs for a moderate fee, “ oP WHEN GARDENERS go traveling, there's no telling, what ideas they'll bring home. Mrs, V. E. Sfroy, 1040 N. Holmes Ave. visited her old home in Yugoslavia last summer Now, says her daughter, Val Reinholt., they're both as a result, embarking on a new tuberous begonia project. Mrs. Strpy saw quantities of hanging basket or multifiora begonias used there and thought they wewre beautiful. Even .dark corners of houses were gay with the flowers. eS IF YOU'VE forced valley lilies or spring bulbs you just don't know how wealthy you are, Mrs. John McCullough, 2912 Boulevard Place, had occasion to buy some valley lilies recently. Only $6 a dozen. All flowers have zoomed in price because of increasing labor costs, “*e =O» PERENNIALS ar. stepping out as landscape plants. So if you're interested in following trends, you'll use low planting and color for those broad low picture windows. A local landscaper points out that small broad-leaved evergreens plus flowering hardy plants such as peonies iris and a number of other perennials tan make an interesting planting.

Clubs Rushing for Reservations In Butler's New ‘Botanical House

For odd corners, that old-fashioned favorite, the plantain leaved lily, variously called August lily, funkia, or sometimes hosts, is important, for it just goes to town in shade. > 3 Use=of ground covers is increasing. Rock gardens are going out at the moment. But rock plants are still important. For home-owners hard pressed for time find that rock terraces are much less trouble than those hard-to-mow slopes. One variety of myrtle (vinca minor) called Bowles variety is so much in demand (because it grows well in either sun or shade) that the supply i= usually short. &° o> EX HERE COMES A scientist all prepared to outwit aphids on tomato plants, (Little does he know his adversary.) , But here's his advice, Plant lice hatch very early in spring Their insect enemies, however, are softies. They insist on really warm weather before they bring their appeties out. Therefore, says the scientific gentleman, just don't start tomato plants early: Wait until six to eight weeks before you dare set them in open ground. That would be mid-March or thereabouts for these parts—again theoretically, for seeding. Then wait until peonies bloom or apple trees drop their last petals. By that time, says our scientist, aphid eating insects will be out in full force, tomatoes will be protected, no aphids, no diseases carried. (Sounds pretty complicated but who knows, it might work.) odd

A GARDEN EDITOR'S mail can get very exciting at times. Here, for example, is a release from (of all places) soap and glycerine pro ducers. I began to wonder if the garden column were in need of a hath, But no. They're just plugging the pleasures of indoor plants. And how they thrive on baths,

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After dinner they showed us !

ne of-the characteristic plays lone by dancers from this area who are not allowed on the stage until they have had at ‘east eight years of training These plays are a little like the ald morality plays and this particular one dealt with the foolishness of personal pride which always has a fall, >

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