Indianapolis Times, Volume 43, Number 142, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 October 1931 — Page 17
OCT. 23, 1931.
Celery Can Be Useful in Cooking BY SISTER MARY NEA Service Writer ALTHOUGH celery is primarily a raw food and of definite value in this state, it also has possibilities as an excellent cooked vegetable. Those wide outer stalks of every head of celery that seem too coarse to use as raw foods can be served In various cooked dishes to good advantage. Cream of celery soup is appetizing for luncheon or dinner. Celery sticks are a fritter-like concoction that will appeal when the meat course is light. Creamed celery fin toast with crisp broiled bacon or Trilled tomatoes Is acceptable for breakfast or luncheon. Good in Cheese Sauce Celery in cheese sauce is a good combination. The English make a scalloped dish of celery, a little onion, macaroni and white sauce that is piquant and unusual. There is a celery loaf made with celery, nuts and bread crumbs that is novel and delicious. In order not to break the rules of meal planning and repeat flavors, do not serve a cooked celery dish in the same meal in which celery is used as a relish or in the salad. While care should be taken that celeiy wanted for cooking should be quite crisp, there is no objection to cooking the green unbleached stalks. Leaves Are Satisfactory These unbleached blades arc usually discarded by discriminating housewives, but now science tells us that the green pieces are richer in vitamins than the carefully bleached blades. The leaves of celery are as satisfactory for flavoring soups and sauces as the stalks are. Carefully washed and coarsely chopped, they impart a strong celery flavor. If these suggestions are kept in mind when preparing celery, you will find that your original purchase answers a two-fold purpose and that a delicious, hearty vegetable develops from the usual w'aste included in a bunch of celery. Game, fowl, pork and beef can be accompanied hy cooked celery of some sort with good effect. nun CELERY LOAF Two cups minced cooked celery, 2 cups coarse stale bread crumbs, i 1 cup chopped nut meats, 2 tablespoons butter, teaspoon salt, 1 s teaspoon white pepper, Vi I cup hot milk. Cook celery as dry as possible, , letting water cook away. Add all ingredients and pack into a well buttered brick-shaped pan. Bakp one hour in a moderate , oven, basting several times with two extra tablespoons butter melted in Vi cup boiling water. Unmold and pour hot tomato sauce or medium white sauce around the j loaf. Garnish with sprigs of ! parsley.
(MAN N£R5 an AADI\ALSI ;qx By Jan€: Jordan /w
What’s on your mind? If it’s trouble, write to Jane Jordan. She will help you to seek a solution for your problems. Address your letters in care of The Indianapolis Times and inclose a self-addressed and stamped envelope if you want a personal reply. Old-fashioned parents took the physical punishment of children as a matter of course. ’’Spare the rod and spoil the child” was an axiom. But the enlightened thinkers of today argue against corporal punishment at home and in school. Bertrand Russell writes: “Physical punishment I believe never to be right. In mild forms it does little harm, though no good: in spvere forms I am, convinced that it generates cruelty and brutality. It is true that it often produces no resentment against the person who inflicts it; where it is customary, boys adapt themselves to it and expect it as a part of the course of nature. “But it accustoms them to the idea that it may be right and proper to inflict physical pain for the purpose of maintaining authority —a peculiarly dangerous lesson to those who are likely to acquire posit: of power.” Dear .lane Jordan—l wish you would tell me what to do with my little boy. Although only t. 8 years old, he has the most indomitable will I ever have encountered. His father is dead and I am employed. I have to leave him to the care of others in the day time. He is the sweetest little fellow you ever saw unless his will is crossed. Then he flings the most terrible tantrums. My friends think I ought to whip him. but I can't, bear hitting the child. Although I frequently lose my patience. I always take the longest way round, by triyng lo reason with him. Althtmgh he is an exceptionally bright child, he always gets low marks in school. His teachers think he is lazy, but I know he is boiling with energy He spends his time in the .classroom pretending that there are mice in his pockets, which are going to Jump out and bite the other children. He ear. not read well, yet he has an astonishing speaking vocabulary. While he never knows his lesstom lie knows more about what is in the newspaper than I do. He ha*es school and when you ask what part ok it he likes best, he says. ‘ Recess." Can you tell me how to make him take an interest In his lessons? And do you think I ought to whip him MYSTIFIED MOTHER. Dear Mystified Mother—No I don’t think you ought to whip your child. Whipping of children may be good for parents, because it relieves Their emotions, but it is damaging to the nervous systems of children. The trouble with your little boy is probably that he got a wrong start. I’ll wager that when he was little you took him up every time he cried and walked the floor at nights to hush his wailing. He must have learned very early that the way to get your attention was to yell for it, and he still is working his yell system overtime. The best thing you can do for his tantrums is to ignore them, for no child ever flings a tantrum without an audience. Let the penalty for a tantrum be complete isolation for a long period of time. Let him understand that he can’t make the people who live with him uncomfortable without depriving of their company. As for his school work, have you ever tried getting him moved up a grade, where his work will be harder and therefore more absorbing? Probability is that his mental age
What’s in Fashion? ' mmuWm ™ 1 -mw. uu Exciting New Accessories
NEW YORK, Oct. 23.—1f you're up against that annual problem, “What can I do about last year's clothes?"—take heart and remember that details make the costume. There’s just no limit this year to what a wily woman can do with a good handful of exciting new accessories.
occ nimt w licit j jgffgcollarette —direct descendant of th< Wear it over a wool dress—over gpjSMre w suit—over your unfurred winter cc igflr Now r your costume fairly bristle \ g) points. The new width across the ' in ncw higher neckline—the news
ric and trimmed with its fur. This muff matches the collarette. (They are copies of those made by Chantal, Schiaparelli and other Paris-ites.) But it's just as fashion-right to carry a muff even if you don't wear the collarette. Have it match your fur coat or the fur trim on your cloth one, and you get the feel of an entirely new costume.
I your last year's ankle-lenj w-* dinner dress? Well, your ankles can 1( new, anyhow. Lace stockings are the m very feminine idea for formal aftemc
Not much stocking shows with these long dresses. But ail the more reason why that little should be intriguing.
Daily Recipe GERMAN MEAT CAKES Mix one pound of finely ground beef with one small onion minced or grated, one teaspoonful each of salt and sugar, Vi teaspoonful of pepper, 1 tablespoonf'd. of fine bread crumbs, and one wellbeaten egg. Make into rather compact cakes. Place in a heavy frying pan with Vi cupful of water, Vi cupful of sugar, 1 sliced lemon and Vi cupful of raisins. Simmer half an hour, then thicken the liquid with 1 tablespoonful of butter or other fat rubbed to a paste with 1 tablespoonful of flour. More water may be required during the cooking, but do not add too much.
is more advanced than his chronological age, and that his lessons aren't hard enough to challenge his attention. His knowledge of news and his unusual vocabulary prove that he can learn whenever his interest is aroused. When lessons become as interesting as news, your child will learn realiy enough. Get the cooperation of his teacher and find out what his intelligence quotient is. This can tell you a few things about his mental capacity that may be helpful in placing him in his school work. I do not think your child is lazy. Let him be as active as he lives in outdoor sports and, above all, make him responsible for something, if it is nothing but watering the flowers. Let him feel that he is necessary to your household . . . that there is something he can do better than anyone else. Find out what interests him most and keep him too busy for mischief. Visitor to City Entertained at Shower Party . */s. Dale Lentz. 3?20 East Michigan street, entertained Thursdaynight with a bridge party and miscellaneous shower in honor of her sister. Mrs. William V. Fitzgerald, Newark. N. J.. who was Miss Alice Miller, this city, before her marriage Aug. 27 in New York. Mrs. Fitzgerald is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Miller, and is visiting them. Chrysanthemums and autumn foliage were used in decorating. Guests were: Mesdames Robert Crawford. Lionel Chandler Donald Demree, Ray Stewart. Thomas Horan, Eleanor Woodfin. Misses Ruth Hitchins. Imosene Piersons. Dorothy HillißOss. Zelma Hendricks. Ruth Otte, Haze? and Marie Rush, and Mary Mahan. Mrs. Lentz was assisted by Mrs. Chandler. ALUMNI TO GIVE ANNUAL PROGRAM St. John's Alumnae Association will held its annual home-coming from 2 to 5 Sunday at the school. Program will include a group of i songs by Miss Frances Scherer, accompanied by Miss Gertrude Whelan; readings by Miss Mary Genevieve Statz. and violin solos by Miss Lillian Beck, accompanied by Miss Margaret Fox. Officers of the association are: Misses Ann Barton, president; Rita Hess, vice-president: Marie Murphy, recording secretary: Anna Kavanaugn.' correspond- ; ing secretary, and Nell Moran, treasurer. Screen-Bridge Tabic The screen-bridge table solves the ! problem of where to put the bridge table between games. The table folds into a foot stand and be- : comes a screen for the fireplace or a decorative note for any corner. Maps, leather and many other coverings make atractive tops. A Times Want ad will help you rent that vacant room.—Phone RI. 5551. A competant want ad girl will assist youJfAdv. '
See what happens When you put on a little collarette—direct descendant of the middle 1800's. Wear it over a wool dress—over your collarless suit—over your unfurred winter coat. Now your costume fairly bristles with fashion points. The new width across the shoulders —the new higher neckline—the new fashioned, old-
Wearing your last year’s ankle-length dinner dress? Well, your ankles can look new, anyhow. Lace stockings are the new, very feminine idea for formal afternoon and evening.
Dark accents make any bright colored sports costume look new. So the popular hand-sewn pigskin sports gloves are now being made in black. And have you seen the new wool
mesh sports globes? (You remember the cotton mesh gloves worn for summer sports.) These promise to be warm as well as smart.
n n st It’s simple as pie to modernize the leftover, plain colored dress. Haven’t you noticed the tricky belt and girdles on the new ones? Os aluminum mesh, string, alligator, soft kidskin that crushes and looks like satin, silk stripes, colorful beads. Here’s anew beaded one. Sttands of different colors —twisted together into one rope.
The 1890 plastron—one of the old fashions revived in new dresses —offers lots of chances to dress up an old dress or give variety to anew one. They’re oval, square, V-shaped, or long like this one sketched, and made of everything from lace and
silk to pique. In colors, too, so you can get the fashionable color contrast into your dress. Fur cravats help modernize the unfurred suit or coat. Soft, tieable ones of flat furs like galyac, lapin or Persian. And if you have a red wool dress, try real “flag” blue accessories. Red and blue combinations are Chanel’s latest pet. * (Convriaht. 1931. bv Amos Parrish) Next: A smart new fashion is the “half-and-half” dress and Amos Parrish tells you about it.
If you’d like free information on what colors look best with hair that’s turning gray, write Amos Parrish, care of The Times, enclosing stamped, addressed envelope.
New Kind of Salts Taking Country By Storm They Revitalize the System—lnduce Youthful Activity —Keep Body in Splendid Condition —Free from Fat.
It doesn’t take long for Americans to wake up to a good thing—only 3 years ago Kruschen Salts were introduced into this country and the welcome news of their superior goodness traveled so fast that at one time the supply was many carloads behind the demand. All ot which goes to prove that Americans know good salts when they take them and want their friends to benefit also. I'nlikt most salts Kruschen isn't simply a laxative—if that’s all you want any kind of salts with any kind of a label may do—but that all you wan t ? When yon take Kruschen Salts you not only your bowels, liver
Club Dinner Will Honor Bridal Pair Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Prentiss will entertain tonight with a bridal din- ! ner at the Columbia Club in honor iof their daughter, Miss Gervais Prentiss, and her fiance, Ewing Hass, Los Angeles, who will be married at 3:30 Saturday in McKee chapel of Tabernacle Presbyterian | church. The dinner table will be centered with a bridal cake, ornaments of which will be gilded in bronze and gold, the bridal colors, and which will be flanked by low T plateaus of bronze and gold chrysanthemums. White tapers will light the table. Covers will be laid for: Mr. and Mrs. Miss Prentiss, 1 Mr. Hass, Mr. and Mrs. Byron Moore, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Edwards, Mrs. C. K. j Alexander. Miss Betty Carter. N. A. Glad- ; ding and C. J. Clark. Los Angeles. CHAPTER TO HOLD WEEK-END PARTY Epsilon chapter, Epsilon Sigma Alpha sorority, will hold a house | party over the week-end in Brown county. The party will leave the English hotel at 1 Saturday. Horseback riding and hiking will furnish I entertainment during the ttvo days. | Miss Thelma Gates is chairman of : arrangements. Miss Beaver Hostess Gamma Theta sorority will meet tonight at the home of Miss Velma j Beaver, 3805 Kenwood avenue.
fashioned air. Or just a little thing like . a muff. For I muffs are deIcidedly in. I Tiny fat round I ones larger [ flatter of es. Some of the newest have purses built right into them and some are made of the coat fab-
Patterns PATTERN ORDER BLANK Pattern Department, Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Ind. Enclosed find 15 cents for which send Pat- 1 O A tern No. I & Size Street City State Name
ATTRACTIVE UNDERWEAR SET You’ll love this attractive set consisting of a bandeau and sideclosing panties. The flat slimness through the hips is marvelous. And note the unusual flare given the lower part of the panties through its clever circular cut. The bandeau closes at the center-back. Style No. 124 comes in sizes 14, 16, 18, 20 years, 35, 38 and 40 inches bust. Size 16 requires 1% yards of 39-inch material with 5% yards of binding. Pale pink crepe de chine with pa.le blue binding is a very practii* choice. Eggshell crepe satin is exquisite. Our fall and winter fashion magazine is ready. Price of book 10 cents. Price of pattern 15 cents in stamps or coin (coin is preferred). Warp coin carefully.
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and kidneys to function naturally and perfectly, but you assist nature to dispose of excess fat. A bottle of Kruschen Salts that lasts a weeks costs but 85c at Hook's Dependable Drug Stores or any any drug store in America—take one half a teaspoon in a glass of hot water every morning before breakfast—in just a few daj> indolence changes to activity and life grows brighter. Before the bottle is empty you’ll feel younger—eyes will brighten—step grow sprightlier—nerves steadier—you’ll sleep sound, enjoy your meals and after a hard day’s work you’ll be ready for wholesome recreation—and lose fat—a host of wise Americans know all this—if not joyfully satisfied money back.—Advertisement.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Two Couples to Be Honored at Reception Mr. and Mrs. Myron McKee, 4320 Cold Spring road, will receive informally this afternoon after 4, in honor of Dr. and Mrs. W. W. Boyd and Dr. and Mrs. Ralph Hickock, Oxford, O. Dr. Boyd, Mrs. McKee’s cousin, is president-emeritus of Western college, and Dr. Hickock is president. Mrs. McKee will be assisted in the dining room by Mesdames L. E. Gausepohl, Arthur A. Brown, J. T. Hoopingarner and E. P. Van Der Veer. Trie tea table will be decorated with autumn flowers and tapers, in shades of yellow. Flowers in the autumn will be arranged about the home. All alumnae of Western college are invited to attend. There are no invitations. PEARLS EFFECTIVE WITH DARK DRESS With the new dark colored dinner dress, anew necklacb of pearls is most effective. Four or five strands of medium sized pearls make a collar or lei effect with a large bow knot clasp of pearls and rhinestones. A separate pearl and rhinestone pin matching the bow knot clasp is used on the belt.
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Nerves on edge. A head that throbs. You can’t stop work, but gou can stop the pain—in a hurry. layer Aspirin will do it every time. Take two or three tablets, a swallow of water, and you’re soon comfortable. There’s nothing half-way about the action of genuine aspirin. If the box says Bayer, you will get complete relief. These tablets should be in every shop, office, and home. Ready to relieve any sudden ache or pain, 'from a grumbling tooth to lumbago. Don’t suffer with that neuralgia,
BAYER®ASPIRIN
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/ C (T? / / VEGETABLE ts. CQMPOUNd
OCTOPUS IN THE MODE
Fashion knows no fear even of the dangerous octopus. This is a smart oxford designed by Delman as the newest thing in footwear fashions. It is in a dark green tone, and is trimmed with kid.
Krf oh ijoiir days
She Never Misses a Dance
FREE from the curse . . . she never has to “break” a date. —- She dances . . . and enjoys it. She’s always on her feet. The modem girl has learned now to ease those “trying times.” . . . you'll find her taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Gone are those dreadful backaches . . . those awful head-
BROADMOOR DINNER, SISTERHOOD EVENT A dinner 6:30 Sunday at Broadmoor Country Club will be the first ; of a series of entertainments sponsored by Temple Sisterhood of the Indianapolis Hebrew Congregation. Following are the hostesses for the occasion: Mesdames Hannah Kahn, Mattie Kalich, Harry Goldstein, Sol Solomon, Delle Stein, Harry B. Jacobs and Isaac Born, president of the sisterhood. Reservations may be made with any of the above committee. Archeologist Tells Sorority of Experiences Edward H. Thompson, archeologist, lecturer and writer, read from his recent book, “Child of the Cave,” before members of Alpha chapter, Epsilon Sigma Alpha sorority, at the meeting Wednesday night at the Spink-Arms. Thompson also told short anecdotes of his life as an archeologist in Central American jungles. Thompson is visiting his daughter, Mrs. Glenn Diddle, who is educational director, of Alpha chapter. Miss Adelia Prichard, Kansas City, national director of Epsilon Sigma Alpha, was a special guest of the chapter, and talked on “The Life of Jessie Bennett,” who prepared the sorority handbook.
neuritis, rheumatism, etc; or lose any time because of colds or sore throat. Get some Bayer Aspirin and just follow those proven directions for instfint relief. Get the genuine tablets, stamped with the Bayer cross. They cost very little, especially if you buy them by the bottle. Any doctor will tell you they are harmless. They don’t hurt the heart. They don’t upset the stomach. So take them as often as you have the least need of their quick comfort. Take enough for complete results.
aches . . . those morbid, stay-at-home blues. Gone too are the nervousness . . . and the terrible pain. Won’t you buy a box of the new tablets . . . and take them when you're “not well.” You’ll feel so much better . . . and you’ll be more attractive. Many women say Lydia E. Pinkham's Tablets help to keep aw r ay those “tell-tale" pimples.
Many Plan to Attend Club Frolic One of the colorful events of the season will be The Harvest Moon dinner dance to be held by the Columbia club Saturday night. Halloween decorations will prevail and guests have been asked to come in costume, for which prizes will be awarded following a grand march at 11:30. Judges will be Mrs. Florence Webster Long, of the News, Miss Kathryn Pickett, of the Star, and Miss Mary Bingham, of The Times. A continuous floor show’ will be held during dinner and between dances. Among those who fiave made reservations for large parties are: Dr. D. J. McCarthy. C. Fred Klee. C. N. Lodge. Charles T. Moreland. H. C. Tyson. R. E. Willey, Alex Corbett. F. G. Weisberger. Paul W. Knowles, Captain B. B. Lattimore, L. R. Thomas. E. E. Martin. Other reservations have been made by: Norman A. Perry. Wallace O. Lee. L. G. Wynn. J. Harry Green. John Carter, L. C. Huey Jr.. FTank T. Sisson. E. F. Danner. Joseph J. Cole. Dr. Charles F. Bayer. William Schoen. Leslie Meyer, Ed Petri. Paul H. Moore. M. A. Ftshbein. Charles C. Gorman, G. W. Lambert. E. J. Sowar, H. L. Gwinnup. J R. Surber. Russell C Allen. Mortimer Schussler, Edward Schurmann Jr.. Clarence C. Wysong. Charles TANARUS, Moreland. E. G. Frazier. E. R. Kruger. Charles E. Bowser. Wade. J. Whiteman.
Again We Feature The Season’s Newest Suedes 1 Savings. Buy an Extra Pair straps. 1 ies. rumps! Oxfords! Sale of ~/M BRIDGE SLIPPERS . J 59 c Colors Styles ! See Our t" 1 Mail Windows f Orders Before \il HjmlAl 1 Promptly Buying ■, Filled (Will Washington Sir set
Entrance Through Rite’s Jewelry Shop I 43 South Illinois Street I l£|k "coats" I jjH DRESSES ij I Men’s All-Wool SUITS and OVERCOATS We’re setting the pace —Styles and sizes for with these marvelous every man and young values. man. Wrfh # 16= and $24.50 [JL w ///% and f24.50 Pay $1 ll pay $i 1 a Week! yj j| a Week; Rites—Open Until 9 o’Clock Saturday Night
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A Day’s Menu Breakfast — Chilled honeydew melon with lemon sections, cereal, cream, creamed finnan haddie, cornmeal muffins, milk, coffee. Luncheon — Scalloped onions and cheese, toasted muffins, stuffed banana and peach salad, cup cakes, milk, tea. Dinner — Plahked hamburg steak with stuffed green peppers, turnips de luxe, hearts of celery, plum tapico pudding, milk, coffee.
Richard H. Kurts. Newell W. Ward. Russell C. Rottser. A. L. Rust. R. L. Tompkins. W. S. Campbell. J. E. Asptnall, Harper J. Ransburß. Herbert A. Payne, John C. Ruckelhaus. R. A. Norman. H. H. Jackson. J. T. Godfrey. H. L. Drake and Frank A Butler. Entertains N. B. Club Mrs. Peter Fisher. 1324 LaGrande avenue, entertained members of the N B Club with a bunco party Thursday afternoon. Mrs. P. A. Ransdall will be hostess to a masquerade party to be given by the club next Thursday at her home, 1313 Bradbury avenue.
