Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 August 1952 — Page 35

17, 1953 Are

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Is and win. e features arden and 5. Details

Y y—7-30-p. Ms. 11 H. Brown, Road, hosts, 'ficers. JAY len (Mooresm. Pitch-in rthy's cabin, 'orthy, hoste

v — Holliday ow for memes Allan H. k on “Home g Flowering

DAY ) a. m. Meet jal for car

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SUNDAY, AUG. 17, 1952

Women Branded Worst ‘Washroom Wreckers’

D° YOU rate a cleanliness citation for the way you leave a public washroom after using it? Many large gasoline companies give their service station dealers citations for maintaining sanitary wash-

room facilities—but what about the public who uses these rest rooms? Alas, railroad porters and garage station attendants aren't so sure the public knows what washroom manners mean. Strange to report, women are the worst offenders. The greatest horror is the ‘washroom wrecker” — the woman who leaves soap in the water, dirty streaks around the bowl, and lipstick-smeared towels on the floor. She also drops hair and hairpins that clog up the dmin. Powder-blobs and cigaret butts

are other signs of the ‘“washroom wrecker.”

As housekeepers they may be regular fuss-pots, but traveling in trains or automobiles seems to bring out their suppressed desire to leave a wide trail of dirt. Vacation-time, say the rest room owners, is the season to realize that plénty of people will be using the washroom after you have finished with it. Whenever you feel “too

rushed” to pick up after your-

self in a publie washroom, re-

member you may suffer at the

next stop you make from a mess left by a fellow-wrecker.

Mote-Lutes Rite Read

Starched marquiset over white taffeta was worn by Miss Joyce M. Lutes when she became the bride of Richard W. Mote at 10:30 a. m. yesterday. The couple exchanged vows in All Saints’ Episcopal Church with the Rev. Fathers James O. Mote, nver; Felix Cirlot and William E. Weldon officiating. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Rufo Lutes, 4252 Crittenden Ave. Mr. Mote is the

son of Mr. and Mrs. Harley Mote, 4813 Broadway. Mrs. Robert Below, South

Bend, matron of honor, and Mrs. Earl Owens, Mrs. Charles Chimento, Miss Mary Hull and Miss Jean Mitchell, bridesmaids, wore white organdy waltzlength dresses over pastel taf-

feta. i

” ” » AFTER A reception the couple leff for Lake Freeman near Monticello. Aug. 24 they will live in 2238 N. LaSalle St. The bride belongs to Sigma Alpha Sorority. Mr. Mote, a graduate of Canterbury College, is attending Butler University.

Applying Lipstick an Art F YOU are a teen-ager who is satisfied with nothing

less than make-up perfection, here are a few lipstick tricks that may prove helpful. :

First, become an expert“with the lipstick brush.

no time at all you will be able to achieve a smooth, sharp outline. Fuzzy edges will be a thing of the past. % Hold the brush firmly between your fingers as you would a pencil. Whether you use a long or short brush must be determined by your own

' personal preference.

Pick the one you find most

Opal Story

The 'Bunk'

Times Special "NEW YORK, Aug. 16— Women are once again buying opal jewelry, thus proving that the .superstition concerning this “gem of evil omen” has lost most of its power today. The bad-luck taint associated with opals has existed for centuries, notes designer Stanley Church, but during that time there have been cycles when the gem regained favor. He adds that the current revival of popularity commenced with the conclusion of World War II. For a two-decade period prior to the war, the American public regarded the opal as something “possessed,” with the result that sales of the stone were infinitesimal. sn ” s OPALS are now being combined with palladium in a wide range of jewelry, so that palladium’s dictionary definition of a ‘safeguard’ or ‘‘protection” may possibly be counter-

_ acting the bad-luck symbol.

But jewelry producers are more inclined to believe that their educational campaign to debunk the superstition has been the real reason. Like most precious and semiprecious stones, opals come in a variety of colors and qualities, However, experts judge a top gem by its “play of color.” A fine opal has shades of green, red, purple, yellow, blue, as well as many values of these colors. The less desirable type is the milky opal.

Keep Tab on Oven Heat

To insure success in your baking, keep a close check on oven temperatures. The most practical way to do this, no matter what type of oven you own, is to use a portable oven thermometer. If you have an oven with the latest thermostatic controls, this little oven thermometer will give you a good check on their accuracy. And if you own an old-style oven, an oven thermometer is essential. One with a round, clocklike, face banded in chromium and encased in a greaseresistant black enamel finish, is practical since you can read it easily without putting your head too near the hot oven. The thermometer should hang or stand in the oven.

Club Meets Tuesday

Judy Benway, 401 N. Beville Ave., will be hostess for a meeting Tuesday of HOW-DS Club. Members will complete plans for a slumber party late in September and a rush tea early in October.

Originated in Persia Shoe heels are of Persian origin, and originally were attached to sandals so wearers might keep their feet above the burning sands of the deserts.

The Happy Folks Who + Make a Habit of Eating at

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comfortable and natural to wield. If your hand feels shaky as you draw, lean your thumb against - your chin and use it as a pivot point, » - 2

THE NEXT STEP is for you to study the natural outline of your mouth so you can decide whether or not it needs to be improved upon.

This is the point where you can really perform some sleight-of-hand magic. If your mouth is too small, for instance, widen it by drawing above and beyond the natural line. Watch out for over-exaggeration, however. Soft, rounded curves Should always be your aim. - ‘Set your lipstick by first-ap= plying a foundation of powder, and then after the lipstick application itself, press a tissue against your lips to remove any excess.

Dressing

Your Baby

Dressing your baby s ho uld be as simple as is possible. Complicated openings and closings will only irritate the infant and perhaps even cause her discomfort.

If this is your first baby, you will find a little practice will solve many problems. Make every effort to be especially gentle during the dressing period. Take care not to twist or pull a tiny leg or arm.

Get into the habit of reaching through the sleeve for her hand. Work with one arm at a time, gently rolling the baby on her side so that you can straighten the back of the shirt before you put on the other sleeve. You will operate most efficiently and quickly if you lay out baby's clothes on a table or chair in the order in which you will put them on. Hasty, lastminute gestures only tend to make your baby feel nervous and fidgety,

Pick clothes that can he easilv washed clean. You'll also save yourself a great deal of trouble if the fabrics aren't the kind that need to be ironed. During the cold weather, baby's clothes should fit loosely to allow her to move freely and generate her own body heat. The only vital keynote in baby's fashions is comfort. Guide your-

self accordingly.

| NSP

CALL FOR

DECORATOR’S BOOKLET

. hi Times photo by Willlam A. Oates Jr.

The Teen of the Week—

MERRILEE HOLLENKAMP, The Times’ Teen of the

Week, will be a senior

in St. Agnes Academy next

month. She represented the academy at Girls’ State this

summer and was elected graduation she hopes to enter St. Mary's College, South Bend, In the Indiana High School Achievement contests she took a silver medal in both adgebra

and geometry in her freshman and sophomore. years and a gold medal in English. A model last year in the an-

Eavesdrop

On Yourself

Have you ever wondered how people sound. to each other? What tone of voice, for instance, have you heard used when a customer is expressing

displeasure with a saleswoman ra a laundry clerk? Do the

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Words flow softly and sweetly, or must you admit ‘they are h little on the raspy side? Then there's the woman who screams and screeches around thq house at her husband and children, only to turn into a purring kitten when she answers the phone. No doubt you've also been forced to listen to the ear-split-ting chatter among friends on a bus or tmain. Each one seems bent on outshouting the other. Wouldn't it be much pleasanter if they kept their conversations private? It isn't enough to have a smooth well-modulated voice if it-is saved for special occasions only. Listen to your own voice the next time you are angry or in a hurry. Be really critical. If you are not satisfied with what you hear, start pratticing voice control. : With determination, you can beautify your voice.

city clerk-treasurer. After nual St. Catherine's Day style show, Merrilee is a staff member on the school paper and a member of the Sodality, the CSMC, and the National Honor Society. She is treasurer of the Wham subdeb club and a member of the YDKDY subdeb club. She is the daughter of Mr, and Mrs. W. B. Hollenkamp, 4156 Carrollton Ave.

Fach 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.

I nominate ..ciisvenvacecinse

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(and City)

Css assests sates tat acres

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for Teen of the Week. My reasons for the selection are given on a separate sheet of paper attached to this coupon.

My Name...eeescecssscsseses

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

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PAGE. 35

Just Cooking, Thanks—

Food for Teen Part

ON VOYAGE can take an about face at the end of a vacation and be

just as much of an excuse for a party at the end of the summer, For the crowd who wants to compare vacations and all its doin’s, a post-travel party is in order. Whether the party is strictly feminine or co-educa-tional, set the pace with a travel atmosphere, Road maps can be use® to cover the buffet table or the card party if that's the slant of the program. Even a globe

could be used for a center-, piece. Whether the host or hostess is a Girl Scout, Boy Scout, Camp Fire Girl or just a good scout, gather the mealtime goodies around a campfire of carrot sticks and lunch meat tepees filled with cottage

cheese or coleslaw, ~ EJ »

THE TEPEES are easy to make by rolling round slices of the lunch meat into cones and fastening with toothpicks. Fill ‘the cones “with the cottage cheese or slaw and invert on the plate. picks in the point of the cone to simulate tent poles. The relish plate at a party can be as simple or as elaborate as the talent: and time of the cook will permit. For those who like to he different let artistic talents run rampant in the form of tomato or’ radish roses and turnip and carrot daisies. Cut the top not quite off a tomato, leaving a bit of the skin attached. Then, with the piece of skin! <'‘ll connected to the tomato, “pare “around and around. Turn the top upside ddwn and coil the paring on it, dropping the end into the coil. Use the peeled tomato in a tossed salad.

a on » RADISH ROSES are easy to make by cutting off the root of the washed radish and cutting four petals on each of

«+ at their

people.

Insert extra tooth-

the sides of the tiny round vegetable. To make turnip and carrot daisies, just cut very thin slices cross-wise of the turnip. Then cut holes in the centers of the slices with the tip of a Knife and insert a tight -carrot curl. Now with Kitchen scissors, snip the turnip up to within '4-inch of the carrot, making about 20 petals. Snip off a diagonal piece from

the tip of each petal to make a

pin-wheel effect. For field daisies make the petals fewer and wider, Almost any type of

flower can be duplicated by layering the turnip slices. Calla lilies can «ye made by blending two thin slices gently around

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a carrot stick stamen, leaving the tops open. Fasten at the bottom with a toothpick and crisp in ice water, The meat course of the party can be happy face patties right in keeping with the party mood. They incorporate inexpensive cuts of meat, sense of humor and artistic talent, ” ~ n HAPPY FACE PATTIES 1 1b. ground beef or lamb 1, ce. milk 1 small egg, beaten 1, ec. soft bread crumbs 1 thsp. minced onion 1, tsp, salt ls tsp. pepper 6 slices bacon

Schoemaker.)

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rAAPPY DAYS ARE HERE AGAIN—With happy faces.

Pearl onions Green pepper Onion rings Combine beef or lamb, milk and egg. Add bread crumbs, onion, salt and pepper. Mix lightly. Shape into six patties and wrap a slice of bacon around sides of each pattie, fastening the ends with a toothpick. Press two pearl onions in each pattie for the eyes. Cut green pepper in small triangles and place for the nose. Cut onion rings in half and place for the mouth. Place in a shallow pan and bake in a moderately hot oven (400 degrees F.) for 25 minutes. (By Joan

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