Newspaper Page Text
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 1936.
FOUR FAMOUS WOMEN WHO MIX THEIR MARRIAGES
AND CAREERS NEVERTHELESS INSIST THAT THEY
Work Best With Husbands!
BY MARY MARGARET McBRIDE
(NEA Service Staff Correspondent)
NEW YORK — Wives of great
men all remind us we can make a
serious mistake by introducing
them merely as wsomebody's wife
these days when they swing a
beoming career with gne hand and
an efficiently-managed, exquisite
home with the othu.
Take for instance Helene Thi
mig, Lotte Lenja, Alma Schindler
and (Frances Waite. These four
well=known career women have
married nameg that you will also
recognize instantly. Helene Thi
mig is Mrs. Max Reinhardt, Lotte
fenja is the wife of Kurt Weill,
the composer. Miss Waite is mar
ried to Norman Bel Deddes, design
er, and Alma Schindler is Mrs.
Franz Werfel. Interestingly enough
the four husbands are associaizd
in the production of the great bibli
cal ‘spectacle, “The Eternal Road,”
and so are the four wives!
Miss Thimig is to play the dra
matic leading role (her American
debut). Miss Lenja will have the
leading singing part. Miss Schind
ler, composer, was chief literary
assistant to her husband, Franz
Werfel, while he wws writing “The
Fternal Road” and also “The Forty
Days of Musa Dagh,” which is still
a best seller. Misg Watte, design
er, has collaborated with Norman
Bel. Geddes in the costuming of
350 persons in the cabt of the
piece,
All the wiveg dectare that they
enjoy their work better when they
can be associated at the same time
with their own husbands.
Aid Husband’s Successes
You would think that slender
blonde Mrs. Reinhardt would have
a full-time job managing her east
side penthouse and taking care of
her husband, for his personal hab- |
it and the inverted life of the|
theater make for very special homcl
making problems. Thus, Mr. Rein- !
hardt always workg at night, pre-'
ferably from ten until dawn, ana
so it is his wife’s job during part!
of the day to see thar he gets much |
needed sleep. He is an epicure, too,'
and will eat and drink only cer
tain things. His wife, of 60urse,f
has to see that these preferences |
are looked after. In addition, she |
Calls Soviet Women
Happiest in World
ANNA LOUISE STRONG, RUSSIAN WRITER, SEES THEM AS EMOTIONALLY
: AND ECONOMICALLY INDERENDENT
By MARY MARGARET McBRIDE |
NEA Service Staff Correspondent |
NEW YORK—When is a woman |
happy?
When she has emotional as wellz
as cconomic freedom and an en
ergetic interest in life, dcclaresl
Anna Louise Strong, author, lec- |
turer and student of Russian af
fairs.
Miss Strong, in looking over the
world of women, finds that Rus
sian women seem to have these|
three in greater abundance than'
other women just now. l
“She had farther to go to at
tain independence, too, than many
other women — certainly farther
than American women,” Miss
Strong peints out- “In the old
days the average Russian wife be
lémged completely to her hutsband.l
She could not even have a sepa
rate passport from his, and if hel
said she was to stay in one plaee, g
she stayed there. They tell an
interesting story of a Tushkent
couple that illustrates the new or
der. I
Neither Can Ruin Other's Life ‘
“The wife wished to go to the|
university to study a certain |
course. The husband ol)jected.]
The wife ;went anyway, and her)
husband wrote that since she was|
disobeying him, he was divorcings
her. He added that he was al:o|
marrying a new wife, one who was ’
completely ignorant and illiterate |
and would give him no trouble. |
“he first wife wrote back that|
the divorce was quite all right |
but nevertheless she did not in-i
tend to lose touch with him. De-|
cause, just as soon as vhe hadi
taken her degree. she would come |
back to the village and teach the |
new wife to read and write!” :
Miss Strong believes that emo- |
tiopal independence, which she
(eon:élers the most important es<-|
sential to feminine happiness. can |
come * only after economic inde- |
pendence. Men, she says, havel
FLUFFY MASHED POTATOES
There is one big essential to
making the kind of fluffy, creamy
sfim mashed potatoes that you
séldom get in any restaurant and
XE;’H too few homes. This essen
t ’is plenty of arm power. Drain
and mash your hot, boiled pota
toes’ until you have worked out all
the lumps, add plenty of butter and
scalded milk or cream. Then beat
and beat until light.
GLASS BATHTUBS GAIN FAVOR
The new trend in bathrooms, ac
cbrding to an authority, is archi
tectural. Vanished forever, one
hopeg are all the fantastic decora
tions. . However, glass bath tubs,
colored, etched and plain, ar® com
ing in, while metal is being used
for wall covering.
GU“TITUTE FOR MASCARA
Moustache wax is a fine summer
substitute for mascara, giving the
eyelashes that desired starry look
without danger of smearing in
warm weather, -
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___..@_.—.—_————-—-—_———7?_—_-:_ ’
Helene Thimig (above), wife of Director Max Reinhardt; Alma
Schindler (upper right), wife of Franz Werfel. author, and Frances
Waite (lower right), wife of Designer Norman Bel Geddes.
'serv(rs him in an advisory capacity
ion directorial matters in the thea
‘ter.
Reinhardt, in hig turn, assists his
’wife‘s career. He has directed al
most all the productions in which
she has appeared, sometimeg with
‘her brother and father, with whom
she forms what has been called the
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Anna Louise Strong.
always had “both, which would ac
count for their greater emotional
stability.
“Today, we sgee a new Kkind of
waman,” say: Miss Strong exult
antly. “No man can ruin her life,
just as no woman for a long time
has bheen able to ruin any man’s
life. 1t is a better world, for that
woman is springing up every
where.”
Health Sole Job Determinant
Aceonrding to « Miss Strong, nd
trades nor professions in Russia
are closed to women. No married
women need worry about losing
HEAVY LINENS WEAR BEST |
If you have decided to wear |
white and pastel "linens this sum-+
mer, better pick the heavier varie
ties. They ‘are a trifle more ex-|
pensive, of course, but they stand |
up under constant trips to d;het
launrdy. stay in press a good deal
longer, and, likely as not. will be‘
good another season. ; ’
PRESERVING BOOK BINDINGS
Several times during the winter,
while you have the esteam heat
turned on, vou should rub your
leather bindings with a soft cloth
dampened in beiled linseed oil
This is to keep the leather from
getting dry and splitting. If the
rubbing leaves any excesg oil, wipe
that off with a dry cloth.
| HURRYING UP VEGETABLES
| To cook vegetables in a hurry.
ishce. dice or cut into matchlike
strips. Half a teaspoon of salt and
{half a teaspoon of sugar added to
{the water in which they are boiled
lwill improve thé flavor.
Royal Family of the luropean thea
ter,
Mrs, Weill met her hushand while
she was appearing in one of his
operas. ~ After their marriage she
continued to appear in his sue
cesses and at' the same time to
make a home for him in the most
approved hausfrau manner.
their jobs simply because they are
married. The only time a woman
is discriminated against at dll is
when the department of health de
cides that rfome particular task
i will be more lnjuripus'to her in
relation to health than it would
be to a‘man. But discriminations
‘are also ' made against certain
i groupings of men for the: same
redson: © & ‘v i
Miss * 'Strong sdys there are
moare. mechanically-inclined women
in ,Russia than in this country,
more who have taken up engineer
ing, for instance. As a matter of{
fact, forty-three percent of work- |
ers, are women, which is m'obabl}"
the highest percentage 'in the
world at the moment. There are
plenty of women writing, painting
anddoing other creative work, too,
but not strictly from the semi- |
nine point of view. Even wom
en’'s mqgazings are not preoccupied
with the feminine angle but with
i the more Jmportant human angle.
i Youth Has Real Opportunity |
! “The finest Lhing teo be seen in |
| Russia, though,” Misg Strong in-l
sists, “is the young man or wom- i
an, In contrast to the bewildered, |
groping hopelessness of young peo
ple elsewhere, these boys and girls
i have only to decide what they |
| want to be and do: and there is|
no question about their being able |
to follow their desires. They do |
not need to worry about jobs, sol
the world is their oyster. They
are full of vitality and joy of liv
ing. They know what they want
and don’t hesitate to say what it
‘; is because they know 'they‘can get |
it”.
Miss Strong, a tall broad-shoul-[
dered woman, with deep blue eyes.i
close-cropped white hair and -an
energetic manner. is in this c‘oun-}
try to finish a.new book on Rus- !
| sia.. She will try this time to pie- |
ture tne Soviet world as the hasi
‘ seen it in its- entirety, with its de-~
sects as well as its virtues. i
. -4 i
11 BLOUSES FEMINIZE SUITS i
| Soft blouses, frilly scarfs andl
other extremely feminine-lookingl
accessories are important with the |
| new strictly tailored suits. © If youl
i have chosen a severe suit of men’s{
"weur flannel or worsted, do dress |
it up with a ruffled blouse, chis- |
| son scarf and gay boutoniere of%
! loose, - feathery flowers. . |
HEEL ROAST IS DELICIOUS |
Did you ever hear of a heel roast? |
It is solid meat cut from the rump |
which when baked properly is d(-u!
licious and tender. ;
Feathers Vary In Usefulness §
¥illings for pillows in order of
merit are down, goose, duck and'
chicken feathers. Chicken feathers
are too stiff and hard to make |
good pillows. z
SOUP ACCOMPANIMENT
Dust diced bread with grated
cheese and then bake or toast in
the oven. This makes an attractive]
agcompaniment to soup, daed
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
1 Mrs, Werfel was gne of the first
‘to realize the genius of the author
|she had married. 'When publish
|ers showed less faith than her own
she stormed at them. Before they
‘knew it, they were accepting the
dreamy-eyed youth at her valua
ltion and almost immediately the
public’s relation' to Werfel’'s work
iproved his wife right in her judg
| ment.
. Designer’s Wife Aids Costuming
l Mrs. Bel Geddes has relieved het{
tdesigner husband by taking com-i
iplete charge of the research and
‘tdesigning for the costumes of “The
{ Eternal Road.” She and two as
| sistants worked for months before
‘they actually began to make the
1700 changes of clothes that will
be used. They dug deep into auth
-entic designs of the Old Testament
period, prepared thousands of draw
lings; pored over yards of mater
ials.
Working with her husband, Mrs.
Bel Geddes tested colors under
}stage lighting and decided upon
i make-up for principae=, gancers and
isingers. At the same time, she,
| too, kept the home-fires burning.
l “It requires energy anfd unre
| mitting attention to details, but
it can be done,” ghe declares. “More
iover, there is a satisfaction in it
that cannot possibly be known to
!anybody who has not attempted
it. . There is a thrill about calling
on all one’s powers and getting
a response from them. I am con
vniced that most people are capa
hle of accomplishing more than
they ever do.”
Incidentally, it is said that the
opening of *“The %¥ternal Road,”
staged as a charity benefit spon
{sored by the New York Exchange
{for Women’s Work, one of the
lcountry's oldest charitable ‘insti
j tutiong run by society women, will
set a new high in admission prices
]Tickets will be scaled from SIOO.
s
NEW! POTATO RECIPE |
Try serving boiled new potatoes
with the fat and sediment left aft
er broiling pork chops or pork sau
|sages. Use this instead of butter.
lSimply add the fat, cover the pan,
set over the burner for a minute
longer, then serve immediately.
Mrs. Caraway Sets
Admirable Example
For Feminine Silence
'{ By HELEN WELSHIMER
| Do women really talk more than
lmen‘.’ Consider the case of Mrs.
!Hame Caraway, the only woman
!ewr to be elected tg the United
i State Senate. |
l For five years Mprs. Caraway
' has added the only touch of femi
nine intuition to
I that august body.
I’%& Rl Vot only a few
days ago she
o(M arose and made
| o her first speech
| RoW in the senior
N W@l chamber! Taxes,
£ o‘:ss’ bonuses, investi
-3 \;_g gatious on one
#B% @ athing and an
:z“ ;’ other have come
:\\4%5‘;@%;6% and gone. She
Ny x#@%\, has been silent.
fifi%fgf&’ The senator from
g:,:‘.:‘ S apeatAd Arkansas, first
v‘;:;&.-‘.‘-é%:»ffil;:fi;’:}ffi._fi appointed to fill
LTSRS it her late hus
band's unexpired
Helen term, and then
Welshimer elected for a full
term of her own, let the men have
the floor. |
Then., how have women ;::u'n(»d!
the reputation of having tongues
that wiggle at bhoth ends, of]
phrasing words and saying noth- l
ling, the gentbmen of the jm;\"
ask? .
Chances to Tak
Are Limited
It is quite simple, my dear sirs!
- The majority of women remain at
home most of the day. When they
talk, its to their children who have
just come in from school; the
neighbors, or the huckster, the
laundry man, and the butcher’'s
boy.
~ All day long they store up the
things they want to say. When
it is six o’clock. the lamps are
lighted, their frocks are changed
‘and their noses powdered, and
their husbands come t¢ ainner,
they are in a conversational mood.
The day has been a preparation
for it. They want to talk!
~ Men, on the other hand, having
used words as freely as an auc
tioneer at a . fire sale, have ex
hausteg their vowel and confo
‘nant formations. They want some
peace. They are not in the ques-,
tion .and answer mood. When|
}their wives begin to recount the‘
day’s inconsequentialities, they
shudder behind .their newspapers
}and"wish“tbé,tflf women knew when
to.keep still. |
You. can't censure them. A load
of trivialities, rendered at one re
[hearsal, is too much for any man.
. However, it would ease the bur-
den if men would remember that
they have distributed their own un
important remarks among a couple
lof dozen people at various times
! that day.
l ——————————e—
iSileme Is Relief
i From Day’s Bustle
I Occasionally it is stated that
{ men and women, both of whom
have outside interests experience
more hermony and graciousness in
living than those where the wom
en has few extra-mural contacts.
| It this i= so. it may be due to the
!tact that they both, the husband
and wife, want an hour or two of
peace when they first meet at
dinner-time.
Occasionally people wonder how
a dynamic man finds such plea
sure in a wife who is the super-
Marriage Led Girl to Sleuth Career
BY ELISgABETH WALKER
NEA Service Staff Correspondent
CHICAGO — She’s an outdoor girl, yet she spends
most of her time working with microscopes and
eriminals in a sunless laboratory in America’s sec
ond cty. i
She blushes and hushes when she's questioned
about herself, yet her elogunce on the witness stand
has helped to lodge many a kidnaper and forger
behind the bars.
Bhe doesn’t care for datective stories and avoids
mystery movies, yet her own everyday life could
supply plots for a dozen scare tales and secreen
thrillers.
She can’t imagine being an unemancipated woman,
yet she admits her husband is HER boss.
This perfect paradox is Mrs.
Katherine Keeler, 29, one of Amer
ica’s outstanding women crimin
ologists, who, for love of her hus
band, Leonard Keeler, inventor of
the famous polygraph or ‘lie de
tector,” abandoned a career in ad
vertising to become examiner of
questioned documents in the Sci-
i o S A i SR -
BA O I
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b R R et 3
R T
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R - R
B iR R
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R T T L Sl =
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kAN R =
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e B G R
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Rl N
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EEg e T
entific Crime Wetection TLabora
tory of Northwestren University in
Chicago.
At Stanford With Husband
The day Katherine Keeler
(Katherine Applegate then) start
ed to work there, Professol
Keeler, its director, told colleagues
that in four years at Stanford
- University he neevi had known
' her to fail in anything she under
Writing Irwins Have Novel About |
Being Authors Though Wed.
AT ODDS OVER HOW TO WORK, BUT LACK OF PROFESSIONAL JEALOUSY MAKES FOR HARMONY
G e 3 b
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|\ IO
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e e s
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4‘% S : ? :
i 3 g
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B: E b
!
INEZ HAYNES IRWIN
|
| BY MARY MARGARET McBRIDE
| (NEA Service Staff Correspondent)
i NEW ¥YORK — Will Irwin and
| Inez Hayneg Irwin, bringing out
| their two most _recent books on the
| same day without benefit of press
] 1
agent, agree that the way to have
;plv'm\' of stimulating vonversation
iin the home and get yvour writing
done on time is to marry another
T
writer,
| “Propaganda and the News” is
Will Irwin’s twenty-fourth book
The ‘“Poison Cross Mystery” -is
Mrs. Irwin's twenty-fifth Next
| lative in quietude. Perhaps, it
is because she is a comfortable |
] sounding board, a nice relief from{
’the sharpness’ of the day's stac- |
, cato voices. It's a wise woman
who knows when it is best t.ui
keep stil]. |
| No, women do not talk more|
| than men. Society, being organ- |
. +
,ized as |t is. however perhapss
women should talk less than they ;
' do. . I
| dn {
i
Wise Woman Knows l
When to Talk i
A seriptural injunction, in keep- |
ing with the custom and usage of
the first century, suggests zhat'
women should keep silent inj|
church. The application ie evi
dent. Even then womén were con
| sidered the garrulous sex.
Being quiet, but intelligent en
oush to talk sensibly, and being
quiet because of stupidity whic
| makes it better to keep "Wtj
KATHERINE KEELER WINS RECOGNITION AS ACE CRIMINOLOGIST
Blue-eyed,
blond,
pink-cheek
ed sleuth,
Mrs, Kather
ine Keeler
(left) is
pictured at
Northwest -
work in the
ern Uni
versity
Crime De
tection Lab
oratory in
Chicago,
photograph
ing hand
writing
(center)
\and exam -
ining doc
uments
through a
special
microscope.
L N G D TSy N S CPIEN T
itook. Now, after six years of toil i
and study, years punctuated by
l marriage to her boss, his colleages
agree. .
They've =seen the pretty pink
cheeked eriminologist, =@ lock of
wavy blond hair tumbling overl
tone blue eye, bend over a micro-!
scope until it seemed her back‘
|rnust break, laboriously examin
i ing a kidnap note or extortion let
iter. comparing it carefully with
the identified writing of some‘
suspect. At chemical analysis of
knks, measuremefits of typewrit
ing and bringing to light vital
messages written in invisible ink,
she has won their further admira
{ tion. By her work, she helps put§
I police officials on the trail of writ
ers of suspected documents., e
month the pair will celebrate their
twentieth wedding anniversary,
which means that since their mar
riage they have turned out a little
better than a book a year, not to
speak of innumerable articles and
short stories.
“As soon as my manuscript is
finished, Will Irwin reads every
word of it, goes over it, in fact,
8s with a microscope, and then the
fun begins,” says Mrs. Irwin.
“Do we argue? I should say wae.
do! We have long, loud-voiced,
'abusive discussions that last some
times far into the night.”
“Yes,” put in Mr, Irwin, “Inez is
the kind of woman who vields
sweetly on unimportant points and
saves all her resistance for the
matters about which she and 1 hoth
feel strongly—and oppositely,”
t Real Life Jack Spratts
“Well, there’s one thing on which
3[ never qguestion your authority,”
!Mrs. Irwin reminded him. “That is
punctuation. He corrects my pun
ctuation, but I never do his.” 1
“No,” agreed her husband with
a rich chuckle, “she's a punk punc- l
tuator. She’s secrelive, too, abhout
what she is writing until ghe isg
'ready for me to read the finishedj
t'manuscript.
{ “You see, we wors very differ«‘
ently. She never talks at all about'
!wbat she is planning to do until it
iis done., She dictates a rough first
{‘dmft and then smooths it out. She
must have quiet for her work. 1,
on the other hand, talk everything
over with her from the moment 1
get the idea. 1 set it all down
| painstakingly in long hand pretty |
Imuch the way it will appear in‘
(print. And my work room opens
into the drawing room, so that‘
anybody can get at.me any time. |
1 was trained in a newspaper of- |
ficei” l
mouth closed, are two different
| things.
. The wise woman will know how
i to talk. Ewven more than that, she
{ will know when!
| TAFFETA USED FOR SUITS
| paffeta is used to fashion some
iof the smartest tailored suits for
{spring. Omne particularly pretty
‘model, of an imported taffeta that
ihas a rather dull surface, includes
{a slim skirt with one pleat at the
{front, a man-tailored jacket with
znotched lapels and smoothly fitted
waistline and a soft white blouse
&oi mousseline de soie. The blouse
has a jabot of self material at the
‘fflmt. |
i J
! TAGGING THE MILK BOTTLE
1
You can buy metal tags with
names of the days of the week ani
them to put on yourmiik bottles
8o that you will mfmiqttk&thej
newer bottle for the older one,
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I Her testimony is recognized .as
| expert]in the courts of a dozen
states. She has testifled in cases
invelving everything from fraud
ulent entries in the local poll
books to Lindbergh daw infrac
l tions. .
! Unlike the glamous “G" wo
] men of the screen, her work is not
ispectucular. She labors . behind
iihe scenes. unseen and—were she
to have her way—unstoried. That is
‘why. when you ask her what has
| been her biggest job of detecting
ishe answers apologetically:
i “A.‘ two week's trip into the re
‘mmv mountain regious of West
| Virginia and Tennessee, gathering:
| evidence on a kidnaping case that
Ino one’s ever heard about, Rvi
| adnce, incidentally, that resulted
Said Mrs. Irwin: “I have often
,tried to get him not to talk about
his idea until I can read it in the
final form because I am go afraid
I shall not be able to look at it
critically if I have heard too much
{about it. s
i SR R
| Lack Professional Jealousy
| In winter, the Irwins live in an
old house in Greenwick Village fill
jed with early Amerscan furniture
they have collected together. In
Ithce summer they move to Scituate,
{Mass., to a house that is also filled
[with antiques. In both houses, ac
fcm‘dlng to Mrs. Irwin, nhort. stor
{ies and novels are all the time
!huppening. Sometimes the Irwins
fput them on paper, sometimes the
gch'cumstunces are such that they
|cannot do that without involving
'real-lifp characters,
| One element that hus wrecled
fmflrriagvs of profesgional men and
{women is totally lacking in thisi
| combination. Neither Irwin is jea
‘lous of the other's writing. [ndeed,}
each is more concerned, if possible(i
iubout the other’s success than his
own, ’
| “The chief drawback to our mar
]riage from Inez's point of view,”
said Mr. Irwin, “is that I'm around
'the house all the time. Except that |
uckily, 1 do go off now and then!
lecturing and getting ~ material. |
There is another slight’ hitch when |
}we want to take trips. When 1
‘want to go, Inez is sure to be hav
ing a working jag and by the time
she finishes that and 1s eager to go
away, I have gotten an order that
must be finished on time.”
“Oh, but we have had some won
derful trips,” Mrs, Irwin protested.
“All those motor trips to the south. i
And then Canada and the Gréat
Lakes! Besides, there wasg our]
honeymoon. 1 think I still have a
! IMPROVING JAMS |
i s i
i Nuts added to almost any jamj
iwill improve the flavor. One es-'
| pecially good combination ig black|
| walnuts and damsons. Try add
jing almonds to your orange mar-l
!malade, and if you also use honey!
linstead of sugar yiu will have a
i confection that your friends will
| praise for days.
CLEANING SINKS I
§ Kerosene added to the soap andj
{water in. which you clean your bath
;tuh and porcelain sinks will help
‘to get them spotless.
' Shorteake in Main Dishes
3 For a luncheon or dinner dish
| that everybody will like, use cream
ied chicken, fish or vegetables with
hot biscuit fixed shorteake fash
e e S S e
PAGE THREE-A
in the conviction of more than
one hundred persons.” o
Work Prevents Housekeeping
Mrs. Keeler doesn't care for
parties. She prefers to spend her
leisure training her German shépi*-‘
herd puppy, watching wrestling
and fencing matches, reading
about the latest developments in
aireraft engineering. : 4
Her home is a fashienable sky
scraper apartment on the Gold
Coast. She furnished it herself,
but a competent maid manages it
for her, because, she says, she
hasn’t “time for anything but
work.”
Born near Walla Walla, Wash
nigton she attended ' Stanford
University. After graduation she
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B ————————————
set out to see the world. In
Honolulv she worked as forelady
in a pineappie cannery, learned to
fly an airplane, chauffeured a
sight-seeing bus.
Returning to the mainland, she
wrote advertising for a time for
a Portland, Ovre., department
store, then “followed Mr. Keeler
to Chicago.” The following year
she started to work for him, and
six months later they were mar
ried.
Was their marriage the result
of the unique career he opened up
for her, people invariably ask her.
And just as regularly she ans
wers: “No! My carveer is the' re
sult of my marriage.” .
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[ WILL IRWIN £
{newnpaper clipping which had us
i honeymooning in the trenches,
| You see, Bill came home from the
war, we were married, sailed im-<
mediately for Irance, and never
llett the war zone and the shoot
ing for two years afterwards.”
. Mr. Irwin's book, “Propaganda
and the News,” dealg with war time
and with later deve:opments in the
propaganda field. “The Poison
Cross Mystery” is Mrs. Irwin's sec
ond mystery novel. i
' MEATY HORS D'OEUVRES ;
FOR VEGETABLE MEALSL
‘A.To .start .off. summer meals
To start off summer meals
when vegetables are the main dish,
- cerve tomato stuffed with chicken,
erab or shrimp salad for hors
;d'oeuvres. Tot toasted cheese tid
bits are good, teo. For this, but
ter small squares of bread. add
grated American cheese and put
under broiling flame until cheese .
is melted and bread brown.
: oo A :
: Fixing Fruit For Shoftcake
~ Betore you use fresh cherries for
‘shortcake, sweeten and heat, then
cool. Blueberries need to be heats
ed with not only sugar but a little
Ewater and a slice of m%
s
g RS
TRY BAKING ORANGES
} Gl M ne e
served with chops and chicken as
with duck. Or you may slive tha
aranges and broil with the chal
: Glge: P MR AR T