Indianapolis Times, Volume 42, Number 209, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 January 1931 — Page 9

JAN. 9, 1931

Cereal Usedin Tasteful ‘Leftovers’ BY SISTER MARY NEA Service Writer HUMAN appetites are fickle and It’s almost impossible for the 1 ook to gauge the exact amount of a cereal that will be needed for breakfast. When a cereal has been cooked lor four persons and only three want that particular breakfast porridge. the fourth portion must be ! aken care of in some fashion. If a large amount is left, It can he molded, sliced and friend for luncheon or breakfast the next morning. A small amount, even ■'’•a little as half a cup, can be used m a pudding. Cereal puddings usually have much food value and should follow light meal. Gtve Energy and Fuel The milk and eggs combined with <he grain of the cereal furnish :r tany calories of energy and fuel. If •he meat course was light, these < alorle6 will be needed to maintain *n adequate diet. The finely milled and lightly parched cereals make more delicate puddings than the whole grain and well-parched cereals; but almost any kind of grain and condition of

DAILY MENU BREAKFAST—AppIe sauce, cereal cooked with figs, cream, crisp toast, creamed eggs, mlik, coffee. LUNCHEON —Parsnip souffle. rye bread, hearts of celery, fruit cereal pudding, milk, tea. DINNER—B ak e and halibut, steaks, cottage fired potatoes, creamed turnips, banana and peanut salad, grape juice sponge, milk, coffee.

milling found In the ordinary to-be-cooked breakfast cereal can be used to good advantage in a pudding. Cereal loaves suggest another possibility for use of left-over cereal. Nuts or chopped vegetables are used alone or in combination with a, porridge. Milk Is used for moisture and eggs to bind the whole, much as in a meat loaf. Croquettes Easily Made Croquettes can be made using equal parts of chopped meat and cooked cereal. Mix meat and cereal thoroughly, adding milk and egg If necessary to make mixture hold together. Shape, roll in crumbs, dip in slightly beaten egg and roll again in crumbs. Fry in deep hot fat. Cereal often Is used in place of bread crumbs in meat loaves. Another excellent combination is cereal and cheese. Molded in a shalolw pan, the cereal Is cut In squares and sprinkled with grated cheese. These squares are arranged in a buttered baking dish and baked In a moderate oven until the cheese Is melted. Cornmeal or a wheat cereal is particularly good this way. BANQUET ARRANGED BY DEGREE STAFF Degree staff of Banner Temple, No. 37, Pythian Sisters, will have its annual banquet at Cooper’s restaurant, at 6 Wednesday. Mrs. Minnie H. Johnson, toastmaster, has arranged the program, Mrs. Mary Seelgrove. 1931 president, will submit her plans for welfare of the staff and its work. Mrs. Lou Ella Tucker, retiring president! also will speak. Guests of honor will include Mrs. Hettie McKittrick, district deputy grand chief; Kathryn Perry,, most excellent chief, and Mrs. Jessie Hawkins, past chief. Officers ■ for the year are: Vice-President, Mrs. Amelia Whitsit; secretary, Mrs. Alice Driggs, and treasurer, Mrs Edith Margaret Carter. Everlasting Flowers Preserved flowers are in vogue ■•EveriasUngs" or straw flowers,' dried grasses, combined with fresh greenery often make a most effective decoration at a minimum cost.

\ 20 to 50°T ®N your account Saturday LADIES' OR GENTS' A£ “ Shockproof ’ ' hBEL W rist Watches VMB 45c DOWN! 4F These Watches Will Make Ideal Graduation Gifts! j BOOOOOMODO® j NEW "HOLEYWOOD” gBSf US Wrist Watch Bands I I The very latest styles. Fits any watch. I I While they last— Our Regular 925 Our Regular SSO Diamond Ring Diamond Ring Finely engraved Fiery diamond set 18-ljt. solid white In s o 1 id ' $19.75 '"556.45 Only 50c Down! Pay 50c a Week; High School Bings and Pins, 98c Up Jmt n Few Doors North of Washington Street Open Untit 10 o'Clock Saturday Night

Patterns PATTERN ORDER BLANK Pattern Department, Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Ind. Enclosed find 15 cent* for which send Pat- _ . . _ tern No. 7 0 17 Size Street City Name State

DAINTY FROCK FOR TOT 7017. Batiste and all-over embroidery is here pictured. The model is also nice for crepe de chine, pongee or China silk. Short waist portions, shaped over the front, are joined to plaited skirt portions. The sleeve may be a wrist length model, as shown in the large view, or a short puff as shown in the small view. Cut in six sizes; Six months, 1,2, 3, 4 and 5 years. A 2-year size with long sleeves requires 1?; yard of 35inch material. With short sleeves 1% yard will be required. The waist portions of contrasting material requires % yard. To finish with ruffled edging or lace will require 3 yards. Price 15c. Send 12 cents in silver or stamps for our up-to-date fall and. winter 1930-1931 Book of Fast ions. Initiation to Be Held

Gamma chapter, Nu Sigma Phi medical sorority, will hold initiation services at the Lincoln, Friday, for Misses Margaret Maisoll, Helen Richards, Louise Schnute and Gertrude Stangle, students at the Indiana university school of medicine.

CciiPS H \ INADAY m ® HILL’S • Af 4-in-l ■ M WAY v Take two tablets of , Wi safe HILL’S CAS- . ' ; J CARA QUININE right aw a y—follow dirgetions—and almost before you know it that nasty COLD IS GONE. HILL’S works faster, surer because each tablet is a compound of four medicinal agents that combine to KNOCK COLDS IN A DAY. If not satisfied, druggist will refund your money. DEMAND THE RED BOX

Gardenias Add Beauty to Costume BY MARY KNIGHT Cnlted Press Staff Correspondent PARIS, Jan. 9.—An American woman drew the eyes of a very fashionable gathering as she entered the Lido a few evenings ago at a smartly late hour. She had found anew and very decorative use for artificial flowers. Gardenias, they were, and they formed a complete garland all the way around the extremely low decolletage of her evening gown. The gown Itself \yas richly cut from the sheer elegance of velvet in fathomless black, and the flowers of superb whiteftess made a contrast quite breath-taking. She had been inspired by the charming Indian custom of greeting an honored guest by placing around his neck a garland of flowers. It was conceded generally that the American woman’s use of artificial blooms in this way was distinctly novel. Nicole Groult uses pale mousseline roses in a full bunch, of beige color, at the very center of a square neck to add the note of charm to a dark brown velvet gown on which rippled tiers appear in groups. The same brown leather belt is detached from the cloth coat and holds in the one piece frock of

m| Greater Values, Lower Prices and Easier J|| During the month of January we want 1,000 additional families to see the wisdom and convenience of buying their home furnish - on the Victor plan of Easy Payments. Come! Let nothing keep you away during this great progress event, Tomorrow , Saturday Only, We Offer GCHUHIC "E-Z^lumber' Mattress mfft\ Wt l?®li MATTRESS J|4/■ V I=§His J^jjp>s 'mP 111)1 °w=r s** oo DOWN! /TVH" ]“Commander’ r ßadios „ n . r iXJ , ... ~ f j 'lt 1 “Commander Jr,” “Commander” o re. Venetian Mirror L fl scr een -Gridradios screen-GHd radios : Bedroom Suite 4 L | DOWN! With Smart New “Hollywood" fl J? IS ' ~~~~ ! /"NI.. c P e .? f Guaranteed Furniture - ’ is conveniently located vanity as riCtUTea tor \JnLy —- TU PryTs on Washington street. Just 1% blocks west of Illinois IILTn yj y street, directly opposite Statehouge. BtJ,Chm cl Drauten and Zanily , 231~1137 W. Washington ' SSS A£ nAISvAKC Iff H ~ jr Open Evenings by Appointment —— Wliv Ur* 1( Call LI ncoln 7555—L1 ncoln 7556 2 8111 l Hill

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Mrs. F. R. Kautz Is Elected Public Health Nursing Chief

Mrs. F. R. Kauts was elected president of the Public Health Nursing Association at the annual luncheon meeting Thursday at the Claypool. She succeeds Mrs. Ethel P. Clarke, president for four years. Other officers elected were Mrs. Robert Dorsey, second vice-presi-dent; Miss Julia Walk, corresponding secretary, and Mrs. W. A. Eshbach, assistant treasurer. The offices of first and third vice-presi-dent will be filled by the board of directors. Directors elected are Mesdames J. H. U. Gauss, E. M. McNalby, Ethel P. Clarke, Montgomery Lewis, William H. Insley, George Haerle, Louis Hollweg, and. Miss Deborah Moore. Holdover directors are Mesdames James A. Bawden, Robert Bryce, Niles Chapman, Mortimer C. Furscott, Philander Lewis, Wililam F. Millholland, George A. Van Dyke and Miss Helen Sheerin. Mrs. Ronald C. Green made the report from the nominating committee. Miss Beatrice Short, superintendent of nurses, reported that there are thirty-three graduate nurses and four clerks working for the organsimilar material in brown, overlaid with tiny black designs. The gored and fitted coat belongs to many day-time dresses of crepe and fine wool, according to Groult. It is worn in the house for additional warmth, or under a long coat, but always so that it can be removed leaving an underblouse of the finer material.

izatiort. During the past year 77,574 visits were made to 10,232 patients, and an average of nine and threetenths visits made by each nurse each day. This is an increase of 1,097 cases over last year. Nurses who gave reports of actual typical cases taken care of were Mesdames Ethel Blinn, Loretta Roehm; Misses Etoile Sw’arthout, Allene Sherrill and Ruby Rogers. Reports were gii'en from the committees by Mesdames Dorsey, bureau of promotion; Christopher Coleman, auxiliaries; Kautz, membership, and Henry B. Heywood, nursing committee and scholarship fund. Mrs. Eshbach gave the treasurer's annual report. Anew branch of the organization, is the forming of classes in home nursing and child care at the Holy Trinity school, in charge of Miss Rowena Harrison. Guests of the organization who sat at the speakers table with the officers and Mrs. Clarke, who presided, were the Rev. T. R. White and Mrs. White, David Liggett, Community Fund executive secretary, and Hetman Morgan of the city health board. Miss Keating Hostess Theta Beta Delta sorority will meet tonight at the home of Miss Helen Keating, 2602 East North street. Meeting Is Called A special meeting of St. Agnes Academy Alumnae Association will be held at 8 tonight at the academy.

Bridge Party Is Arranged in Bride’s Honor Mrs. Johnny B. Collins, Mrs. Frank B. Nusbaum and Miss Alice McGinnis will entertain with a bridge party tonight at Mrs. Nusbaum’s home, 5526 University avenue in honor of Mrs. Harry Greshem Jones, before her recent marriage, Miss Irma Ulrich. The guests, with the bride-elect, will include Mrs. R. Scott Ham, Greenfield; Mrs. Orion Spaid, South Bend; Mrs. Clarence Drayer, Bedford; Miss Mary Kinneman, Lebanon; Mesdames Robert I. Boyer, De Forest O’Dell, Joseph Casle Matthews, John H. Bolte, Francis W. Meyers, DeWitt O’Keiffe, Emil Linegar; Misses Jean Coval, Jessie Soltau. Kathryn Bowlby and Elizabeth Matthews. Miss Virginia Kerz will entertain Thursday with a bridge party in honor of Mrs. Jones. Bulletin Board A good kitchen idea is to have a little bulletin board made of linen, bound in your kitchen colors. On to this, stick new recipes which you see in periodicals, or a pretty picture that you may want to look at once in a while as you move about your work, or a scrap of appealing poetry that you would like to learn. Needless Dishwashing Save dishwashing by preparing your baked foods in glass dishes or earthen casseroles that are pretty enough to appear on the table.

FOR ANY CHILD

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CHILDREN are happy and carefree by nature, so when they cry for no apparent reason any careful mother worries. No one can always guess just what is wrong but the remedy can always be the same. 'Good old Castoria! There’s comfort in every drop of this pure vegetable preparation and not the slightest harm in its frequent use. As often as

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baby has a fretful spell, is feverish and cross and can't sleep, let Castoria soothe and quiet him. Sometimes it’s a. touch of colic. Sometimes it is constipation. J ust keep Castoria handy and give freely for any of the above conditions; relief will follow promptly. All through babyhood, Castoria is a mother’s standby, and wise mothers do not change to stronger medicines as the child grows older. Just increase the dose of Castoria and keep the youngster’s stomach sweet and the bowels in good order. To be sure of getting genuine Fletcher’s Castoria you should lr g k „i o t r u“-^®r