Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 August 1952 — Page 5
5, 1953
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“TUESDAY, AUG. 5, 1952
F YOU ASK Sgt. Walter Joe Price how many more days
there are till Christmas, he'll probably tell you Christ-
mas just passed this week end. And for the recently-re-
turned Korean veteran, it really was Christmas.
Mr. and Mrs. Ottie Price, 149 Leota St. his parents, honored their son with a delayed Christmas dinner Sunday. The GI was in Korea last Dec, 25. Also at the celebration were Mr, and - Mrs. Joe Ellis and their son, Bobby Joe, Chicago. Mrs. Ellis is Mrs. Price's sister.
o o o THE WYNN-GROSECK feud won't have to go to court. Luckily, the first party in this case is an attorney.
But something more than rulings and legal words is needed in this instance, since
the defendant and plaintiff are both dogs. It seems the Stephen Grosecks, 885 West Dr., Woodruff Place, own a substantial-sized bulldog. .-Their neighbors, the Earl J. Wynns, 906 Middle Dr., Woodruff Place, have a dainty Pekingese. And In this instance, power comes in the smaller creature. ' Every time the two dogs are let out in theif respective yards, the Peke can’t’ resist making vicious attacks on the Grosecks' pet. Now, the situation has come to such that merely mentioning the bulldog’s name in the Wynn household makes the little Peke belligerent. It's true big things can come in small packages.
un » ” DR. AND MRS. THOMAS O'DONNELL, and their daughter, Mrs. Tom Branton, Anchorage, Ky., should have rented a hall this past week end to greet their friends. On their way to Canada, the O’Donnells, formerly of this city, stopped off in Indianapolis Saturday to invite personally a few of their friends to a late August barn party on their Kentucky farm. In a period of four hours, they managed to make personal appearances in nine homes here leaving a corn husk and a note where people weren't in. It sounds as though the O’Donnells need harvesting help,
= o o IT MAY SEEM strange to discover talent in the front seat of an automobile. . But that's where Mrs. Emma Kominers, R10 Washington RBlvd., found t.
As Mrs. Kominers was getting into the car, she saw four clay figurines obviously molded by masterful hands. Upon questioning Mrs. Aaron Intrater, 3243 Washington Blvd, owner of the vehicle, she disSovered the works were done by er. And all this time the two women have been close, yet Mrs. Kominers never knew of her friend's talent.
A HAUNTED HOUSE may hold allure for a visit. But when it comes to actually living in the place, Mrs. Clara Hawkins hag different ideas about it. The Hawkinses recently purchased an old farm house outside Zionsville at a very reasonable price. Its low cost was due to its neighborhood reputa-
tion for being haunted. Chil-. dren claimed noises were heard
at night — sounds. And to make matters worse, Mrs. Hawkins, who isn't a superstitious person by nature, moved into the house and fell
strange shrilling
under the same mysterious spell. « Last night, determined to
put an end to this strangeness, she followed the sound to the basement and there discovered the ghost. Every time a breeze stirred, the curtains would move, causing a tinkling sound. There were miniature bells attached to the ends.
That's pulling a- fast one on
the real estate man.
Safequard Hair in Sun
Even though summer is almost over,-the sun's rays can still wreak havoc on your hair. That is why it is absolutely imperative that you continue to protect your coiffure whenever you are out-of-doors. One manufacturer of hair preparations has created a creamy white, lightly perfumed lotion “which contains ‘sun screen” ingredients. It actually helps to prevent the hair from getting sunburned, discolored and dried out. Apply the dressing before exposure to the sun, and it will perform just as a sun-tan lotion. In other words, it screens the ultra-violet rays.
n s s THE HAIR dress also con‘tains the new scientific antiseptic, G-11 ‘(Hexachlorophrene), which deodorizes and helps to keep your scalp healthy. It aids in preventing infections which are sometimes caused by comb scratches and skin eruptions. : : ® Whether you are on. the beach, driving or engaged in some other outdoor activity, such a preparation will help you feel confident "that your hair will not suffer from over-ex-posure to the sun and wind. Don’t greet fall with fuzzy, dried-out hair. Take the necessary precautions now—while you still have time.
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THE BIRDS AND THE BEETLES—Designer Edward Harvane, London, is displaying his new fall
models and he's right proud of the head-hugging beanies pictured above. “Feather Brained” is the word for the brow-hiding topper (left) of drooping red feathers climaxing in a top-knot held erect by a gold-studded clasp. The “Beetle-Browed” fumber (center) really doesn’t have an army
of black beetles descending on the models face.
It just looks like beetles. The flaring, wild fea-
ther that tops it is supposed to “de-emphasize the hair.” “Strange Fruit” (right) looks like a wellslit melon. It features larva-shaped beads on pink velvet.
The Mature Parent—
You Said Ugly Words Once
By MURIEL LAWRENCE
A MOTHER writes me she has failed as a
parent. “This afternoon,” says her letter, “my only child—a daughter; 10 $ears old—called me an ‘ugly old hag’ and said she wished I was dead. How can I go on, knowing that she feels like this about me? My mother tells me that I have spoiled her and that what she needs is a good sound thrashing. But somehow I cannot believe this is the anSWAr, « + +" My reader is right. Thrashing is not the answer. She is © wrong, too. She has not failed with her child. We cannot be said to have failed as parents when our youngsters, despite our shock and alarm, still trust us enough to tell us that they hate us. My reader's problem is not her little girl's hate of her, but her own reactions to it. Why the shock and alarm? What kind of
Glaze Baked Ham
For Extra Flavor
Mrs. Lawrence
little girl was my reader? Did she always think her mother as gentle and beautiful? Really? Always? What was her secret wish when she was thrashed without being given time to explain herself? What was the word she scribbled on the wall beside her bed when she was bundled off to her room? Why did she erase it quickly at the sound of a step on the stairs? Why did she say “I'm sorry” for doing wrong? Was she really sorry, or was the “I'm sorry” a trade she had to make to be loved again? Probably. ” ” ” IT IS because our own childish hate. was shocking and alarming to us that we are now shocked and alarmed when we see the same thing in our children. What should my reader do? She should reconstruct her own childhood and remember her
own moments of normal, grow-ing-up-type hatred, After she has thought back, no ugly name, no evil wish flung at her will be able to disturb her. She will be able to say words that resemble what psychiatrists say to children struggling with hate, » o ” _ IN SINCEREST love and understanding, she will say, “Go on, I know there are other mean names you want to call me. Get them all out. Take that piece of paper and write them all down. The very worst names you can think of. Get them all out, my darling. T used to write them down, too.” Hate is an undigestible emotion and children are wise to spew it out, It is our pompous and romantic training that makes contact with it terrifying. It isn't tergifying when we realize that leve is waiting to flow in the moment the hate is gone.
My Day—
Gloomy Warnings Grist fo
By ELEANOR ROOSEVELT HYDE PARK, Aug. 5—I was going through some old files today and I came across a clipping labeled “Bad News for Pessimists.” 1 am a determined optimist and am always glad to see items headlined in that way. But one item in this clipping, it seems to me, is not too far wrong. In 1919, when Lord Grey said, "Every-
thing is tending to convulsion,” we did
have more or less of a convirlsion. -In that year after World War 1 we never really settled down, and one might almost say we are still going sults of that sion, The ¢lipping, however, {s an interesting one, so I give it to vou here. I cannot tell where it was taken from and I cannot give credit to the newspaper that published ft, but it may turn some pessimists into optimists, It reads: » ” ~ “IN 1781, amid the darkest days of the American Revolution, Gen. Rochambheau wrote: ‘This people is at the end of its resources. The country {is at bay. America is in distress. “Rochambeau was wrong.
postwar convul-
“At the close of the same century Willlam Pitt said: ‘There {8 scarcely anything
around us but ruin and despair.’ “Pitt was wrong. “At the beginning of 19th century Wilberforce clared: ‘I dare not marry, the future is so dark and unsettled.’ “Wilberforce was wrong.
n LJ » “IN 1848, Lord S8haftsbury vowed: ‘Nothing can save the British Empire from shipwreck.’
through the re- |
the | de- |
“Shaftsbury was wrong. “In 1851 the Duke of Wellington, on his deathbed, thanked 30d he would ‘be spared from seeing the consummation of
ruin that is gathering around us.’ “The Duke was wrong. In 1931 Bertrand Russell declared: ‘The British Empire is breaking up.’
. PAGE 5
r Optimists’ Mill
“Tomorrow some pessimist will say something equally sincere and hopeless, He will have
all observable facts to back his statement. But will he be. wrong?"
Of course, he will be wrong. As we have met each difficulfy we have become stronger, and 1 feel sure we are going to meet the problems of today as we have met the problems of
“Lord Russell was wrong.
the past.
A baked ham slice of about
one inch thickness will have anj
extra fine flavor with this glaze— two tablespoons of brown sugar mixed with orange juice concentrate. It's best when you add it about 15 minutes before the ham is done. . Or for another tasty way to cook a ham slice, spread brown
sugar and mustard over the surPour 1, to one cup of the reconstituted orange juice over
face.
the slice and bake the required length of time. scrumptious.
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