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Star Tribune du lieu suivant : Minneapolis, Minnesota • Page 10

Publication:
Star Tribunei
Lieu:
Minneapolis, Minnesota
Date de parution:
Page:
10
Texte d’article extrait (OCR)

a a a a a a a a a a MORNING TRIBUNE March 27, ANN LANDERS Wife Old Enough to Be Choosier About Friends DEAR ANN: Can you save this marriage? My wife has become very friendly with a woman whose reputation isn't worth a plugged nickel. She has gone through three or four husbands. I'm not sure which. This woman got my wife interested in mixed-league bowling. At least three nights a week they are out until 2 a.m.

sometimes later. Last month they went to Toledo on an overnight bowling trip. Next week they plan to go to Columbus. I phoned the woman yesterday and told her to leave my wife alone. She read me off in pretty salty language, and said my wife is old enough to choose her own friends.

We have two children who are beginning to wonder what's going on. The house is always a mess and I've had to cook dinner for myself and the kids more times than I care to admit. Please give me some advice.THE SPARE. ANN SAYS: The woman is right when she says your wife is old enough to choose her own friends. And if this is her choice she doesn't deserve the respectability of home, husband and children.

Tell her she can go with you to a marriage counselor or a clergyman and discuss the problem. (Something is wrong or she wouldn't be running around.) If she is unwilling to make the effort to get the marriage back in working condition, then tell her to take ALL her clothes the next time she goes on an overnight bowling trip. DEAR ANN: I was interested in your reply to the woman who was upset because her guests insisted on helping her clear the table and do up the dishes in spite of her protests. When we entertain guests I'm perfectly relaxed about leaving the dishes until they say goodnight. But this one friend of mine is an absolute nut about orderliness.

She just can't stand it. I've begged her not to clean up, but she may as well be deaf. She goes right ahead, clears the table, washes the dishes, puts everything away, dumps the garbage, scours the sink and bleaches the dish cloth. I can't tie her to a chair, Ann, and she simply insists on cleaning up in spite of my pleading. In recent months I've let her go ahead and do it.

Am I being rude in permitting a guest to work while I sit in the living room? -SOUTH DAKOTA. ANN SAYS: Relax. You're doing her a favor. This woman obviously has a compulsion to clean-so let her enjoy herself and don't give it another thought. DEAR ANN: I'm 17 years old but everyone takes me for 19 because I'm so mature.

Three months ago I started to date a man who works at a supermarket. We saw each other about five nights a week. Then for no good reason he stood me up on a Friday night. I worried myself sick, thinking maybe something terrible happened to him. The next morning I telephoned him at work and he said, "I forgot." He has been very busy ever since and I have not seen him.

Yesterday I heard he's been dating a girl who looks like me. Do you think this girl is a substitute? Please tell me. I must PIECES. ANN SAYS: If this boy were interested in you, he wouldn't need a substitute. Forget him.

He doesn't have the nerve to tell you he has found a spring replacement. DOLLAR SAVERS Time to Catch Up on Small Projects By MARY HART Minneapolis Tribune Staff Writer If you are between the Two or three jars can then be rustle of Christmas holidays warmed in a single pan of and the bustle of bulbs to water. be put into the ground when Mrs. Carl 1 Stuhlreyer the first warm weather ar- 12101 Crooked Lake Blvd. rives, you'll like this first Coon Rapids idea.

Make good use of this lull Don't discard your wornbefore springtime activity. out card table if you are Catch up on thinking about making hooked rugs. It makes your scrapbooks, get an excellent photo al- ONE frame and is your bums in order DOLLAR Just easy cut to store. away ONE DOLL or sort out your collection of recipes. All pleasurable jobs, the center of the old top, and but time consuming.

you have a working surface Mrs. Adeline that is just the right height. Roseberg Isle, Minn. Mrs. Frank Staples, Minn.

When ironing long tablecloths, fold them lengthwise To keep a rubber sheet in to the width place, sew a piece of cloth of a clothes sheeting on each side of the hanger. This rubber sheet. Tuck these will keep them ONE under the edge of the matfree from SO tress. DOLLS folding wrinkles. A Mrs.

Ellen Webb many plastic bag over them keeps 10254 Central Av. NE. them clean as they hang in Blaine a Send your time and closet. moneyMrs. Max Singhurst saving ideas to Dollar Savers, Lemmon, S.D.

Minneapolis Tribune. Winners are shown by the round Store leftovers in glass dollars and each receive $1. jars. You can easily see what Other hints today are awardand how much is left over. ed honorable mention.

Everything but EVERYTHING for our Easter permanent wave specials Reg. $15 7.75 in our Petite Shop Reg. $17 8.90 Reg. $22 11.00 Reg. $27 13.50 Including restyle haircuts Restyled Haircut, Shampoo and Finger Wave $5 Navi's Come in with or without Coiffure Designers an appointment FE 2-8883 63 SO.

10TH AT NICOLLET Business Girls! We're Open Evenings for Your Convenience: ABOUT PEOPLE By MARGARET MORRIS Minneapolis Tribune Staff Writer When New York bank executive Roy L. Reierson spoke at the Minneapolis St. Olaf College alumni dinner meeting Monday, he brought along his bride and economic partner. Reierson, senior vice president and chief economist of the Bankers Trust Co. of New York, was married to Maria Alber the day before in Moorhead, Minn.

The partnership was secured by fellow St. Olaf alumnus Dr. Joseph Knutson, president of Concordia College. The bride, formerly of Germany, more lately was employed by the same bank as her husband. After speaking Tuesday to St.

Olaf students, the newlyweds flew off to honeymoon in Florida. Incidentally, another banker, Wallace E. Berg, Farmers and Mechanics assistant vice president, was elected alumni president to succeed Minneapolis physician Dr. Kenneth Hodges. Bonus Imagine the excitement for G.

H. Bloom, 16, when he discovered Zsa Zsa Gabor and her daughter installed in the suite across the hall at the Palm Beach Towers in Florida, where he is vacationing during spring recess. The Blake School junior gave up a skiing holiday at Sun Valley to accompany his grandmother, Mrs. P. B.

Juster, 3712 W. Lake Calhoun to Palm Beach. He is a son of Dr. and Mrs. Norman B.

Bloom, 4809 Knox Av. S. Brecht and Ballet Representatives took accounting of advance sales Monday in the home of Mrs. Peter Anson, 2121 Newton Av. and found most of the tickets sold.

Some tickets in the higher bracket ($5 and $6) are still available through Mrs. Henry See, 649 W. Ferndale Road, Wayzata, functioning as the clearing house agent. Proceeds will benefit scholarship funds of Mount Holyoke, Wells, Radcliffe, Barnard and Bryn Mawr Colleges. Dinner Plans Mrs.

Morris Levy Jr. and Mrs. Loring Staples Jr. are collaborating on plans for an April 5 and 6 drama seminar, to be sponsored by Minnesota Arts Forum at Minneapolis Institute of Arts. (Mrs.

Levy's husband is forum president.) A dinner will precede the first forum session April 5, with Mr. and Mrs. Louis M. Harris as chairman. Joseph Wright is planning decorations on an Elizabethan theme.

Dinner hosts will be Mr. and Mrs. Boris Sokoloff, Mr. and Mrs. George Legeros, Mr.

and Mrs. Alan Anderson, Mr. and Mrs. Louis N. Zelle and Mr.

and Mrs. Carl At Walker Art Center, 15 have signed for garde theater course opening tonight. University nesota associate professor of speech and Arthur H. Ballet will instruct the six weekly sessions Wednesdays at 7 p.m. in the center.

Playwrights to be discussed include Brecht, Ionesco, Artaud, Genet, Beckett, Albee, Plinter, Simpson, Richardson and Kopit. Enrollment is still open. And while we're in the theater department, tickets for the Guthrie Theater benefit performance of "Hamlet," being underwritten by alumnae of five women's colleges, are going well. J. Weinhardt Jr.

Catholic Families Will Meet The formal federation program of the Christian Family Movement in the St. Paul archdiocese will be held at College of St. Thomas Sunday. The day will begin with a dialogue mass celebrated by Archbishop Leo Binz. Mr.

and Mrs. Patrick Crowley, Wilmette, will speak on the Christian Family Movement on a national level at the dinner following the mass. Mrs. Crowley was awarded the "Magnificat Medal" for 1963 by Mundelein College, as an outstanding alumna of the school. At 3:30 p.m., the Rev.

John Gilbert, St. Michael, will give an address, "Why Organize for the Apostolate?" Mr. and Mrs. John Judge, 1842 Draper St. Paul, are in charge of the dinner.

Mrs. Robert T. Scott is accepting reservations. Spring Hat Review Planned by Zonta Club an avantof Mintheater arts Ballet Ballet A review of spring hats will be featured at the annual scholarship fund-raising event of the Zonta Club of Minneapolis. The fashion show and dinner will be at 6 p.m.

Thursday in Donaldson's Garden Room. Zonta sponsors the Nellie Gorgas Memorial Fund, which is a loan fund for women in medicine at the University of Minnesota; the Amelia Earhart Memorial Fund, which i is an international loan fund for graduate students in aeronautical engineering, and the American Indian Scholarship, which is awarded annually to an American Indian student at the University of Minnesota. Natural Bridge Shoes Fashion with Comfort Exclusive at Stendal's SHOEIST NICOLLET AT 10TH FE 2.6516 The House of Windsor Presents its Pre Sale MON. thru FRI. 9 to 5 STYLIST SALON: Permanent Waves Plus Regular haircut $20.00.

$1250 complete OPERATOR SALON: Permanent Waves Regular $15.00. Plus haircut complete To Complete STYLIST SALON: the Picture Virgin Regular Hair $10.00 Color of Beauty Plus shampoo and set $850 complete Manicure Pedicure OPERATOR SALON: Facial Virgin Hair Color Make-up Regular $8.50 Complete ConsulPlus shampoo and set complete tation For Appointment Call FE2-8737 Parking convenient in MAR-TEN 929 MARQUETTE -Enter direct Salon FURS and FASHIONS 829 NICOLLET Peck Peck MRS. ROGER LARSON AND MRS. RICHARD LARSEN Patrolman Richard Hansey 'arrested' them in skit City Firemen's Wives Organize an Auxiliary By JACQUELINE ANDRE Minneapolis Tribune Staff Writer In true feminine wearing lace-trimmed helmets- Minneapolis Firemen's Wives Auxiliary was born Monday night, Hoses and helmets, boots and song marked the membership rally at Russell Gaylord Post hall, when wives of Minneapolis firemen organized their auxiliary. Producer and director of the rally was Mrs.

Richard Larsen, 3314 Logan Av. chairman of the auxiliary committee. The auxiliary, an outgrowth of Firemen's Wives Social and Benevolent Club, was primarily her idea. It took five months of preparation, but Mrs. Larsen, who said she was "raised in a fireman's family" because her husband and father-inlaw are both Minneapolis firemen, saw that the auxiliary was launched right.

To begin the evening Mrs. cu Larsen and three other firemen's wives welcomed the other wives to the auxiliary in verse form and wearing the feminine version of fire fighting attire. The verse pointing out need for the auxiliary to the tune of "It Had to Be You" was the creation of Mrs. Larsen "one night when I couldn't go to sleep." The North High Polaires sang. Watching the festivities were charter members (1906) of the Firemen's Wives Social and Benevolent Club, Mrs.

Laura Loss and Mrs. Josephine Thompson. Speeches of encouragement were made by interested persons from other city groups. Prevailing over the rally was Mrs. Larsen's boundless enthusiasm for the auxiliary.

"Tonight is our moment of truth. Either we have an auxiliary or we don't," she said. DRAPERY HINT Tuck instructions for washing or cleaning new curtains and draperies inside one of the hems until the first time they are needed. After that, it's not so hard to remember how they should be treated. MR.

AND MRS. HERBERT B. BUDDING JR. Take trip to Europe Newlyweds Vacationing in Europe Mr. and Mrs.

Herbert Benjamin Budding Jr. (Margaret Audhild Serley) are vacationing in England and Norway following their wedding Feb. 22 in Mount Olivet Lutheran Church. The reception was in the Fellowship Hall of the church. Parents of the bride are Mr.

and Mrs. Olaf A. Serley, 4133 Dupont Av. The groom's home is in Boston, Mass. Attendants were Mrs.

J. Leonard Larson, Mary Lynn Kvalsten, Marilyn Alexis Serley, Philippa Jean Budding, Malcolm M. Budding, Olaf R. Serley, John Kralsten and Jay Leonard Larson. Mr.

and Mrs. Budding will be at home in Boston after June 1. Sharron Matwijewicz Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Matwijewicz, 4705 Chatham Road, Columbia Heights, announce the engagement of their daughter, Sharron Lynn, to Thomas Joseph Weglinski, son of Mr.

and ter Weglinski, 2327 NE. McKinley St. Miss Matwijewicz and her Miss fiance, attendMatwijewicz University of Minnesota, Mr. Weglinski is a design engineer for Washington Scientific Industries. The wedding is planned for Oct.

5. HAVE TRAVEL! I NEW SPRAY Jewel-Like refillable PURSETTE COMBINATION OFFER! CONVENIENT, PURSE SIZE Refill Dispenser 995 all for Regular $5.90 value! Sleek, handsome new bronzetone Style Pursette, with generous Refill Dispenser. So convenient so easy to use and such saving! Hurry. Limited time only, ON SALE AT ONLY Rouse $293 WALGREENS Silhouettes in straw head into Spring with '63's newer high-crown look. The Sailor, in white, beige or navy, 900 The Fedora, in navy with white facing, or all white, 900 The Breton in white, pink or navy with organza band, 800 Nicollet Avenue Shop open Thursday Night SOUTHDALE SHOPPING CENTER 932 NICOLLET AVENUE OPEN FRI.

9:30 A.M. TO 9 P.M. 356 ST. PETER STREET, ST. PAUL La J.G.'s snap of Spring is the subtle shape of a crashy rayon and silk shift, buttoned and back-belted for swagger.

By House of Jamison in navy with red stiching or beige with black. 8-16. $49.95. JACK SON GRAVES DOWNTOWN SOUTHDALE HIGH LAND VILLAGE Enjoy top comics Minneapolis daily in your Morning Tribune.

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