Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 October 1937 — Page 28

PAGE 28

Prize Recipe

Gives Tasty Doughnuts

Potato and Sour Cream Varieties Popular With Many.

By MRS. GAYNOR MADDOX Y AY up state in New York] there's a gal who can toss a | doughnut—toss it better than any- | one else I know. And she isn't a | Salvation Army lass, either. Her | name is Lucy Maltby and in the Judgment of thousands of people | she 1s one of the best cooks and | food thinker-uppers of grand victuals in these hungry United States. And she’s hig hearted, too, which will explain why she has given me some of her pet doughnut recipes for this column. So here you are | for Miss Maltby's private doughnut | recipes. Doughnuts

(About 22 dozen doughnuts) Two eggs, 1 cup sugar, 2 tablespoons shortening, 4 cups flour, 2 teaspoons salt, 5 teaspoons baking power, 14 teaspoon cinnamon, teaspoon nutmeg, 1 cup milk. Beat the eggs and sugar until very light. Add the melted shortening. Sift the dry ingredients together and add alternately with the milk to the egg mixture. Roll on a slightly floured board to one-half inch thickness. Cut with a doughnut cutter and let stand 20 minutes before frying. Fry in hot fat (360 degrees F.), turning as soon as doughnut rises to brown on other side. Drain the doughnuts on brown paper and when cool roll in sugar.

Potato Doughnuts

(About 3 dozen doughnuts) Four and one-half cups all pur- | pose flour, 4 teaspoons baking | powder, 2 teaspoon nutmeg, 2 | teaspoon soda, 1 teaspoon salt, 3 | eggs, 1 cup sugar, 1 cup mashed potatoes, 2 tablespoons melted shortening, % cup sour milk. Sift together the first five in- | gredients. Beat

the eggs slightly, | add sugar gradually, beating it in. | Add mashed potatoes and short- | ening. Beat in a portion of the | sifted dry ingredients, add a portion of the milk, about *3, beat it | Continue alternating dry ingredients and liquids, stirring after each addition until batter is | smooth, but no longer, as over- | 1 make doughnuts tough. | Roll out a portion of the dough at a time to :-inch ic! Cut with a floured ighnut cutter. Fry in deep fat id to 360 degrees F., turning as as doughnut rises to the surce. Turn it over and brown the er side. Drain on absorbent and sprinkle with sugar

stirring wil Chill dough.

(1IESS.

Soon every wardrobe. Here are iwo, eit

§ 1

Sour-Cream Dougnuts

Style Trend to

(About 2 dozen doughnuts) ~ | I 4

ix egg yolks, 1 cup sugar, 1 cup | k, sour cream, 4 cups pastry | flour, 15 teaspoons soda, 1'2 teapoons cream of tartar, !z teaspoon | sal teaspoon nutmeg. | Beat the egg yolks until thick and | rion colored Gradually add the sugar, beating while adding. Add the cream. Sift the dry ingredients together and add to the first mixture. Place in the refrigerator five hours. Roll out to one- | third inch thickness. Dip doughnut cutter inte flour and cut out, cutting as close together as possible. | Lower doughnuts into the fat heated | to 360 degrees F. (a cube of bread

legance With Simple Design

By MARIAN YOUNG NEW YORK, Oct. 21.—Afternoon clothes have come into their own again. After years of a kind of on-the-shelf existence, they now appear, more glamorous than ever, to greet the winter season. It's a year when

a clothes-conscious woman goes on : 3 | to tea and dinner in the “little numbrowns in 60 seconds at this tem- | ber” she's been wearing since midperature). Fry only a few at a | morning. As soon as the doughnut rises | mpa mest handsome afternoon surface turn it over immedi- | nostymes are - essentially simple, <in2 a long-handled fork or wire whisk. Fry doughnuts until a golden brown. Drain from the fat, x e on absorbent paper and when well drained, sprinkle with powdered

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good lines rather than frills and fussy details. Furthermore, when picking one of these, you are no more limited than you are when buying a street or office frock. 4 There are types to suit every figure

Posture Check Every Durkin. And Exercises Arce Suggested

Elegance personified and fit for any duchess in the news are the costume suits of lame or rich silk with metallic details. Many are | trimmed with fur. The majority fare dress and matching jacket | types. Good, too, are two-piece afternoon suits of which formalized blouses are shown. But equally nice, and more within a moderate price range, are black silk or velvet frocks with short sleeves, interesting necklines and bodices that mold and emphasize the curves of the figure. Daughter will want an aftermoon dress for college. for bridge parties.

| | Lame Combined With Fur

By ALICIA HART _ If vou can afford to go to a reputahle salon to have an expert tell vou what is wrong with your skin, hair, figure, and how to correct the defects, by all means do so. But if vou can’t, don’t worry too much or decide that it is useless to try to improve yourself. Learn to be your | own diagnostician, severest crite, favorite beauty operator. Anyone can check her own posture. Stand in your accustomed manner before a full-length mir- | co im Skirts and vor and be truly critical of your | Yodioes there is a a VATELE figure Does your stomach pro-| 00 oF © nb ag é Oy wy trude or is it drawn up and in. | YORZEH of all ype: p nice and flat? Are shoulders square, A \a# g . chest high, backbone straight so no | y ag Wi SIteo Sioa exaccerated hollow shows, head up ana sun end neck straight? Write down | each of the things wrong with your posture. Then do special exercises to correct them. ; Stand against a flat wall with pare feet about eight inches away from the baseboard and backbone pressed firmly against the hard | surface. Notice that When the hol. 1 low in the center of the spina i es volumn is eliminated, stomach does | HO ae Sev SR Te not protrude and hips look inches | °° ions nlV sult, SS} glimmer. Touch fingertips to shoul- skirt and Shoe bronted ders, without hunching shoulders | o_o with Wide ig y forward. Raise arms, pressing €1|is bound with gold metallic braid pons Na J Chg ax abc | and fastened with large metal hooks repeat. his eS)

| to hold {and eyes. It is shown with sables,

From youthful,

i hemlines te

turbans with flowing veils. season of greater formality—and

—even conservatives like veils. I vou have a fur jacket or cape, you i might wear a toque with pompom of fur to match.

Velvet Bound With Gold

fitted

your chest high and gets rid of & |g iaq hat black suede bag, gloves |

lump on the back of your neck. Make-up Test a To test the importance of neat | sists of neatly tailored dress of dark (8 wh - a re " a : " grooming, put little or no make-up en nh V Shapes Ohh. on face and lips, don a wrinkled 00S e : at ess set an old, dingy felt hat | jacket, lavishly trimmed with red dress, S , 8) t he EA mtop a straggly, frousled coiffure, fox. rl then walk four blocks down the — street. Make mental notes of how wou feel during this stroll. Now go home and devote one hour | to beauty routines. Clean face and | throat, cover with cream and leave |

| and shoes.

Butler Sororities Initiate 21 Pledges Butler

Twenty-one University

it on while you take a warm bath. | sorority pledges were initiated by |

Afterward, remove the cream, pat) two active chapters recently. skin with tonic or ice water, brush | Kappa Alpha Theta Sorority inhair for five minutes, whisk nails | qucted 12 neophytes. They are: into shape, apply make-up ever sO Mary Weaver, Janet Stratton, Ruth carefully. | Rhem, Betty Macdonald, Mary HaPut on & neat dress, your best bich, Kitty Lou Fitzgerald, Doris hat and freshly shined shoes. Walk | Ellis, Norma Conder, Marion Bowthe same four blocks. Only, of | man, Virginia Blackley, Betty Behrcourse, you Will not stop at four mann and Jeanette Barnett. this time. Youll feel so much| Alpha Chi Omega Sorority initipetter that you probably will stroll | ated seven pledges. They are: Mara mile or two and drop in to see|cella Reynolds, Marv E. Hayes, a negnoor on your way home,| Janet Kimble, Virginia Darrow, meanwhile vowing never to look | Barbara Crise, Lee Wilson and towdy again. Rosemary, Newman.

_

iy

One clegant afternoon ensemble is a must

turn a simple luncheon or tea into a glamorous oc- | casion. The black velvet model, left, is fashionably |

relying on sumptuous fabrics and |

velvet with |

Mother needs one | square-nacked models with flaring |

slenderizing creations |.

ig something of the outer world

cloth or velvet toques, pillboxes and | In this |

| special clothes for special occasions

includes a slender |

The jacket

Another charming ensemble con- |

Rein

simple with met

in \ | ming.

her of which will

dress with encn

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Wardrobe ‘Must’

Child Often | Tiny Things Remembers

Emotion Associated With Experience Is Reason, Says Writer,

By OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON | When the children grow up, they | will surprise you, mother, by the | things they remember Things you have completely forgotten will stay in their minds in detail. But hark, they are also goIng to add, “—and I was so proud,” or “so ashamed” or “so scared.” This is why they remember little | things that seem unimportant to] you. They are always tied up with some emotion.

Fritsch Photo. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph B. Alerding have announced the engagement | of their daughter Cecilia to Edwin | W. Sunkel. |

Bride and a Bride-to-Be

Kindred Photo. Mrs. William F, Sturgeon was Miss Jean Cloud, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Glen C. Cloud, before her recent marriage.

You cannot remember the day at the zoo, for instance, when the ele-

and sniffed for peanuts. Mary is | surprised when you don't recall that | To Be Shown Here she had on her pink dress and carried the parasol that Auntie Lou| Miss Irene Duncan, a Central gave her on her birthday. “I| Avenue Methodist Church deacon-| thought he was going to take my | ess, is to present an illustrated lec-|

. ] ow. phant put his trunk over the bars Holy Land Views |Land.at 7:45 p. m. today at the

church.

Miss Duncan, who recently has returned from the Holy Land, spent one month in Jerusalem. The pictures will show both Palestine proper and also Trans Jordan, including

FRIDAY, OCT. 22, 1937 Book Fair Plans Are Mapped by

Committeemen

Plans are rapidly getting under way by the Literature Department of the Woman’s Department Club for the Book Fair to be held Nov, 18 in the L. S. Ayres & Co. audi= torium, Meeting recently with Mrs. Hers man H, Sielken were C. M. Davis and Mrs, Alice Wilson, of the store, and the Department Club commite tee including Mesdames C. E. Wol= cott, Hugh J. Baker, George M. Cor= nelius, Alvin T, Coate, John M. Williams, R. O. McAlexander, Howard E. Nyhart, Oscar L, Watkins, Hezzie B. Pike, Colin L. Lett, Alvin G. Jose, Edward Files, William C. Kasse= baum and Frederick H. Bowen. The conference was called to se= lect authors to speak, books to be displayed and booths and equip= ment to be featured.

Chinese War Topic Burgess Boone, who recently re= turned from an extended stay in China, is to talk on “Constructive Aspects of the War in China” at the Woman's Rotary Cub luncheon, 12:30 p. m. Monday, in the Coe

It is shown with sables. The softer version of the afternoon suit, right, includes a slim green

parasol, mother, don't you remember? My heart was in my mouth.”

First Impressions Remain

. There was the day you gave a | party, too, and Mary remembers {that Mrs. Darwin had on a green | dress. How in the world does Mary | remember that, you wonder? Mary | can’t quite explain, but she knows | that she sneaked out of bed and { peeped over the bannister. Guilt. | It was probably Mrs. Darwin who | came out into the hall and almost | spied the curious child who should | have been asleep. | Memory is an odd thing, very, but | In later life the things that cling will most likely be associated with | “feelings” at the time the event took | place. i | Children won't remember their | second ride on a roller coaster, but they will their first. Unless the second ride or the third, was associated | with something stronger than mere thrill. Perhaps Mary was ill, or worried because she lost her hat. | What do you want your child's | future memories of childhood to be? | Happy ones, or dismal recollections { of failure, disappointments and punishments?

Lessons Quickly Learned

Life holds all three, even for | child, because otherwise they would have to be wrapped in cellophane and kept in cold storage. Besides they need certain roughage and certain bumps to harden them. But here is the crux of the matter. Will | n “grown child” look back and weigh his memories of his father, for ex- | ample, and find that most of his

al closings and braid the only trim-

stations of metal cloth,

®

Career Women

Parents, Fannie Hurst Says

NEW YORK, Oct. 20 (U. P.)— Motherhood is highly overrated, believes Fannie Hurst, who has plucked the fringes of the sociological world in her writings.

“There has been too much senti- |

mental propaganda about the loving wife, the home and kiddies,” she said. | “After all,” and here Miss Hurst's | dark eyebrows raised expressively,

| “a woman's function in life is not | merely that of an incubator. And | yet if I were to line up 10 average | young women in front of me and | ask each one what she wanted most out of life, the majority of them would say: “‘A home and children.’ “The woman who is satisfied with that sort of thing is in a psychological rut. The smart woman, the modern woman, advances with the times and seeks expression in other | fields than motherhood.” { The author with her braceleted | arms and graceful carriage, might | be considered the epitome of the | modern woman. For years she has { battled for feminine independence. | For self-expression. She has always | resented the old-fashioned viewpoint | that all mothers are basically good | mothers. According to Miss Hurst, {the fact that a mother loves her | child does not necessarily follow | that she is a competent parent.

| |

Stresses Need for Thinking

“The love-instinct of a mother for her youngster is comparable to a | lioness for her cub. Animal instinct. | The test for a mother comes when her child has started thinking for itself. Then mother-love, so called, |is not sufficient. She must know to | teach and guide her youngster.” { And here the well-known short | story writer dropped another verbal | bombshell. | “A woman who goes out to business and earns,” she said, “a ‘career- | woman,’ is fundamentally better fit- | ted for motherhood than the home- | body!” | Miss Hurst went on to say that | children need worldly guidance just |as much as motherly love. Even | more. The businesswoman or pro- | fessional woman, she believes, has a

(black is the |Proader understanding of life and

[348 problems. So this woman obviously is in a better position to counsel and direct her children than the mother whose sole interest is her home, Miss Hurst doesn’t dodge issues. {She says what she really believes. Despite her modern views on life, | there is a bit of the old-world in her appearance, She wears her rich, | dark hair drawn tightly off her face and held in a large, low bun at the I nape of her neck.

| Modest About Writing

Miss Hurst is one of the world's { highest-priced short story writers. {| Yet there's nothing “high-hat” in | her manner. She's informal and | downright modest in her literary tri- | umphs and says that writing is sheer | labor for her. “Writers who have to wait for the urge to create are not really writers. | The real writer works hard. At least, that has been my experience. [I'm up at the crack of dawn and {write about seven hours daily. | Sometimes more. I prefer to see no (one of the outside world until I've finished my day’s stint.” | And talking about hard work, Miss Hurst said she had submitted 36 manuscripts (approximately 250,000 words) to various publications before she sold her first story. But she never thought of quitting whe the rejections came in, Her

— | recollections are unpleasant? | ‘There should be enough balance | so that the youth can review his | childhood and say, “My parents were fair. Sometimes I was a handful and deserved what I got. But | mostly I was happy. I'll never for- | get how relieved I was when dad bought a new paddle for the canoe | urge to write increased. After her | after I'd broken one on a rock. I | first acceptance, Miss Hurst began | was more careful after that, be- | sause he didn't scold.”

Make Best

| to sell with regnlarity.

al

H. P. WASSON & CO.

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SERIA heii ow

ture on

Palestine and the Holy

| views of Mt. Nebo.

lumbia Club.

Strauss Says:

CAMEL'S HAIR COATS full cut, all ages. 19.75 and 25.00.

DOBBS JR. Felt hats. 3.95. Others 2.95.

HOSE— A great showing at

29¢ and 35¢.

SHIRTS — the newest in color and collar and kind. 1.00 and 1.65.

OXFORDS including the reverse calfs with crepe soles. 3.95.

MACKINAWS— Everything a fellow would have in mind . . . at his price.

Store Hours Saturday 9 A.M to 6 P. M.

BE A OF STRAUSS . . .

THERE WILL CONVENTION STUDENTS at

on their own floor . . . the second & & « High School Students will please meet in Senior Hall.

There will be no debate or argument about it. Boys want clothes from the Man's Store.

They want masculine surroundings (there isn’t a pink slipper in sight).

They want the Man's Store . . . fondness for fabrics . . . its sureness in fashion . . . its realness in value.

Featuring: . +...

STRAUSS HI SUITS with 2 pairs of longs, 19.75 and 22.75

LONGIE SUITS, 2 pairs of longs, 14.98 and 16.98

HIGH SCHOOL OVERCOATS, 16.98 and 22.75

CAPESKIN JACKETS, sizes 8 to 20, swell, 7.98

SLACKS, Corduroys and Wools, 2.98 and 3.98

SWEATERS, a great selection of the smartest, 1.98 and 3.50

FOR LITTLE FELLOWS... overcoat sets (with cap and leggings) 8.98

These merely give a hint. . . . You must visit the store yourself . .. in person . . . to see how completely you can be taken care of . . . in this important matter of get set... for the unsettled winter.

RAUSS & CO.—THE BOYS" FLOD

Official Outfitters Boy Scouts of America and Cub Scouts