Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 March 1952 — Page 5
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and 0. H, . m. Butler n Center, 0 2 m. Mane mes R. 8, and Ruth 5. . of Delta . m. Miss 6357 Cenp. m. Mrs, N. Capitol, Mrs. G. 0. hair. And that’s not all. She also rs. W. P. may have carried this color fo scheme further into her eyensyivanin, brows. edgwood. Robert Lesleur, beautician, iger; Mrs, went into the wholesale dyeing d Mrs. T, business over the week-end. | program; Sporting this :green hair, eye- . : . brow and mustache look, the v's — 2:30 so-called beauty creator claims ‘Wings, he was responsible for a numon; Traile ber of green striped blondes ,” Mrs. W, and solid green-headed creatures yesterday. le—1 p. m. He's a brave man to make 505 Marcy this admission. gram, Mrs. % = 8 YOU DON'T HAVE to own 4 a television set to enjoy some rary—2:45 of the shows. All you need is thy Carey, friends who are willing to use at. their wits and brains. That's
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4 . what Bob and Margaret Johnson discovered last night. When their guests finished dinner, the host assumed the role of moderator and the
sr, and H. guests, who were panel members, joined with him in a game of “What's My Line?” nie Each person wrote an occupagtield, O.; tion down on a slip of paper
rs College -
taking turns for the interviews. This is one way to see a live
Bethlehem hoir, Dan- show, ow. . te College EASTER EGGS WILL be na Central wearing satins, laces, flowers jutler Uni- and veils this year. And what's : more, they'll don cosmetics too al church for the holiday parade. audience. Yesterday, Mrs. Margaret A — Redding invited a few friends over to participate in this handiwork. Each guest was given an egg with a face ¢ painted on it plus scissors, rib0 bons, laces and other trimhis mings. The women then proom Sororities— ter of es “ to dire Chi ng he n- Mrs, Collins, who received her law degree at the Univer- "- sity of Kentucky, has written a book, “Human Conduct and er the Law,” which is used as a text in law schools. She will become the administratorcouncilor of Chi Omega during
their convention in June.
Omega Nu Tau . Lambda Chapter, Omega Nu Tau Sorority, will start a series of rush parties tomorrow night with a pitch-in supper in the home of Mrs. Joe Hinshaw, 3655 Tacoma St. The second party will be Mar. 26 in the home of Mrs. George Carney, 524 Mills Ave. Pledge services will be in the Hotel Washington Apr. 2. Prospective new members are Mesdames Leon McCool, Mary Ann Murphy and Robert Gossett and Miss Jodie Bordenkecher. On the committée for the
Wacker, John Patterson, Joe Hinshaw and George Carney. Pi Lambde Theta Pi Lambda Theta, professional organization for woman in education, and guests will meet
event are Mesdames Harry
ceeded to create hats on the eggs. Actually, it wasn't a waste of time since from these minfatures, they intended to make the chapeaux to be worn on Apr. 13. “But why didn't you boil the ¢gRs, Mrs. Redding?” asked one of her guests. This woman evidenty isn’t familiar with the beauty power of egg baths.
. » ~ IF YOU HAD PLENTY of dollars and sense, you would have- left the Bob Sherwood home feeling guilty last night. -This is one time that losing money made the person happy. It took dollars to pay fines when teams lost and sense to hold on to the greenbacks. The Sherwoods are members of a group who enjoy losing money to make people happy. By means of a game of wits, congisting of questions and answers, they collect money to buy gifts for needy people. Last night, enough questions were missed to raise an amount adequate for purchasing a television set for some group. It pays (in happiness) to be unintelligent in this instance.
” r ” DOES YOUR WIFE have time to darn your socks? Or is she completely tied up with club activities? Don’t fret. Bob Warren has come up with a solution. Buy your socks by the dozen, all the same color of course, and throw them away when they. get holey. Oh yes, and if your friends ask you why you don’t change your socks, they aren’t implying what it may sound like.
Head of Chi Omegas To Speak at Meeting
MRS: MARY LOVE COLLINS, national president of Omega Sorority since 1910, will address Indiana Chi Omegas at their annual State Day luncheon in the Travertine Room of the Hotel Lincoln Saturday.
at 2 p. m. Saturday in the Hotel Lincoln. Miss Sarah C. Ewing, chairman of the legislative committee, Indianapolis Education Association, will speak on “Current Legislation.” Cochairmen of the hostess groups will be Mrs. Ruth Evans and Miss Virginia Cravens. Special invitations will be issued to Misses Betty Browne, Mollie Smoker and Irene Hunt of England; Miss Jean Fraser, Scotland, and Mrs. Momoe Furuya, Hawaii, all exchange teachers in the Indianapolis public schools.
Fashion Calendar Crowded at Ayres’
The fashion calendar is full at Ayres’ this week. Miss Irene Riordan, representative of Bali #Bras, will be in the Corset Department for consultation startng today through next Tuesay. Miss Louise Whitley, Roux consultant, will be in the Beauty Salon all week to advise you on Roux Color shampoos.
} & FLANNER mn BUCHANAN (2
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~the-mature -size..and rate
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The Mature Parent—"
Her Daughter
By MURIEL LAWRENCE
“N° MATTER what I ask my daughter
to do, I get an argument,” a mother’s letter complains. “It's getting so that I dread asking her to do anything. In the
. : to take to her all my re JNSTEAD of dreaming of Jeanie with the light brown ee se ee inane
hair, you probably dreamed of a creature with bright green hair yesterday. It was no St. Patrick's Day nightmare either. In fact, Jeanie may have really had green
for asking her to do a chore, I could have done it twice myself. I know that I am losing control of the situation and this frightens me. . . .” What is there to be frightened about? We have a youngster who has got the idea that her mother isn't sure that she makes good decisions. When this idea is corrected, she will stop arguing. Children do not make a habit of questioning parents’ orders or requests unless the parents themselves question them. If orders and requests are reinforced by convictions that seem just and good to .us, our manner, the
Mrs. Lawrence
Your Next Move: Outdoors—
.\ - THE INDIANAPOLIS, TIMES
tone of our voice, our facial expression reveal this peaceful certainty. wl ry? Children think to themselves, “My mother must think she’s right or she wouldn't be so quiet and certain I am going to do this thing. I
guess maybe she has something in what shé#& .
thinks. I better trust it, too.” Parents with argumentative children are apt to rely far too much upon words. They tend to let others process their convictions for them so they . have only words to give children who question their authority. Challenged, they have no real ammunition to defend their position. It's all been just flashy maneuver, a show .of émpty strength, ; ow L o AUTHORITY, SAYS WEBSTER, is “power derived from esteem.” Until we are certain of the steps by which we have reached a conclusion, the conclusion has mo life for us.- We can feel for it no true esteem, and we present it halfheartedly, doubtfully so that it carries no power. Let's see how a real conviction makes an order acceptable to my daughter,
Suggests Your Own Backyard As Outdoor Room for Summer
NOTE: The call of spring is a call to plan for more outdoors living in the summer. Ilere are suggestions and tested advice from an expert which may be adapted for almost any type of home. John Peter has been active for seve eral years as home living counselor for well-known magazines. This is the first of five . installments Mr. Peter has written for The Indianapolis Times.
By JOHN PETER IF THE man said he would add an extra room to
build.
will control
your home “for free” if you sated at y ; : ’ umber yards. would furnish it, you'd a
probably take up his offer.
Yet our backyards can be paint.
you build should be determined by their purpose and your purse. Board fences are easy Boards that run vere tically look higher. If run horizontally, they look By nailing alternate boards cn alternate sides of the fence you thes view without blocking the breeze. . A LATH TRELLIS ADDED
to a plain board fence makes it look less bare in the winter and gives vines a chance to grow along it in the summer.
Many kinds of rustic wood fences can be bought prefabriyour nurseries Red wood and
others should be protected with
Garden walls of brick and stone are. not quickly built but for attractive carefree protection they are hard to beat. Like open metal fenges of wire, they will look friendlier if you plant climbing vines along the base. Many new materials make good .fences—
to
longer,
corrugated asbestos cement, » translucent plastic and in California even sheets of
pressed seaweed:
If your lot has a slope, you can dig for privacy. Excavation and retaining walls sound like major undertakings but they needn't” be. How much ground you will move depends on your site. Often a hedge along the top will save spadework. Walls have been made of nearby stones or old railroad ties.
or
left natural,
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Argues About Chores, Mother's Letter Complains
Let's say she's>seen a: red plastic bracelet in a downtown window that she feels must have been especially designed to go withsher new navy-and-red plaid skirt. Since she has overspent her allowance, she asks me to lend her the dollar she wants, i * ¢ o
WHEN I REFUSE, she begins to protest. She calls me “mean.” By the time she finishes her protest, I have found the conviction I wanted that assures me that I am not “mean” but kind to deny this loan. - Ignoring the personal element.my daughter has tried to inject into our discussion, I say matter-of-factly, “Darling, grownups who borrow money to buy luxuries are considered untrustworthy people. If I loaned you the $1 to buy this bracelet, I would be suggesting that borrowing was the right way to behave in this emergency. Since I do not want you to get that ideg, I can't lend to you. You will have to wait for your bracelet until next week's allowance, In the meantime, however, I will be happy to lend you my red belt to wear with your new skirt, . o
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My esteem for my conviction would contagious. My daughter would yield to the power I have derived from this esteem and grant me the authority I need to teach her. While I was still speaking, she would have revised her opinion of my “meanness,” since I would be making it clear that though my conviction required me to make a disagreeable decision, love would require me to help my child adjust to it. ¢ 4 SH
be
IT'S A TERRIBLE STRAIN to try to be a
parent without convictions. It involves us in
the most complicated and vulnerable arguments with youngsters.
Instead of reinforcing our requests with
justice, we have to back them up with appeals for interest in the way. our heads ache or what Mrs. Jones will think of us. We have to say, “Come home on time because you worry me when you're late. .'. . Don't ask daddy for a raise in allowance or he'll scold me, . . . You'll end up by killing me if you see that girl again.” We can't blame them if they find such an argument prejudiced and insufficient.
Kokomo Girl
i offer protection “A pole fance with vines eh, VedcoMerp story viewing! Bushes are notural screens off the bah net brests d voy, Is Honored ii i j ( i fl Times Special fil BL JACKSONVILLE, Ill, Mar.
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PRIVACY OUTDOORS Dig os well as
build protection
Whether you plant, dig, or build, the trick of making a successful outdoor room is to combine them all for privacy. With this, it;won’t be long be-
house.
TOMORROW: for your “Outdoors Room.”
Modern fence is low. cost and easy to build
fore you find your yard is the most comfortable room in the
18—At a recent meeting of the freshman class of MacMurray
»
vice president of the MacMurs ation. Miss Davis 1s a junior primary education.
at the college tomorrow and Thursday. The theme of the celebration will be “Papa, the People’s Choice.” Classes will not be held » Thursday and a busy schedule has been planned for the dads, climaxed by a dinner at noon, Furnishings the Day” will be announced.
Miss Beverly Davis, Lafays:
College, Miss Judy Frazer, a: kindergarten-primary education’ ii" major from Kokomo, Ind. wag elected president of Main Halli i:
rete “a
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ette, has been named seconds - ra
a no
ray College Students Associ :
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majoring in kindergarten and
Dad's Day will be celebrated
an “extra room” all summer long if we will only furnish them. Take a look at your own backyard. Consider its possibilities as an “outdoor room.” At cost per square foot of living space it’s the lowest priced addition you can make to your house. The materials are inexpensive. Many of them are right at hand.
You might ponder a long time before adding a wing to your house but can build, yourself, an outdoor room even if you've never lifted a hammer or a trowel. Skill helps, but planning and imagination are just as important. 2 ” ”
ONE ‘REASON PEOPLE hesitate to move outdoors is the question of privacy, They may judge their neighbors the finest folk in the world, still they may not-be able to relax with the people next door constantly looKing on.
[You can't call your backyard an “outdoor room” until you have privacy. If you look at your yard as a room, you'll be surprised how easily you may achieve privacy. When youre inside your house, the roof and walls give you privacy. If you want privacy in your yard, you'll need “roofs” and “walls” there too. Unlike those of your house, which must protect you from the weather, the “roofs” and “walls” of your yard are only to give you privacy. This will vary, depending on how close you are to traffic and to your next door neighbors. If you have enough space you can grow your privacy. Trees and shrubs make wonderful roofs and walls. There is perhaps no finer or attractive screen against casual viewers than trees. They should not be in rows but grouped. The faller the trees the more underplants and shrubs you will need to fill in around the trunks. o ” ”
A GOOD TREE-SHRUB screen will take time to grow and use up about twenty feet of space. Bushes and dwarf fruit trees add color as well as “walls” to your yard. When planning to screen your yard with shrubs, check
of growth of all the varieties from which you can select. You should make certain they will grow well in your soil and with the moisture you can give them.
If you haven't enough space for trees and shrubbery, you can build your privacy. Fences are the walls of your outdoor room. They not only shield you from outside eyes, but they hide ash cans and clothes lines.
If you follow your natural impulse you will probably build your fence straight out from the house and parallel to the
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property line. However, landscape architects have learned that fences set al an angle or those that follow a curve will make your lot seem larger. Louvered fences set at the proper angle will catch the prevailing breeze to ventilate your garden. Some types have
movable fins that can be closed in the evening when the air is chill.
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Small symmetrical holes in a solid board fence will not only make it more attractive but actually increase the velocity of the wind as it enters your yard. Fences that do not go right to the ground but are held on posts a foot above it, look friendlier. There are as many kinds of fences for your backyard as there are patterns of wallpa-
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is PAGE ¥
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at which time the “Father of -.
