Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 November 1937 — Page 9

WEDNESDAY, NOV. 3, 1937

Reduce Costs of Living With New, Tasty Dishes; Expert to Offer Menus

Selected Recipes Allow Use of Low-Priced Meat

That Still

+ L

Cuts

Appeal to Most

Finicky Family Members.

(First of

a Series)

By MRS. GAYNOR MADDOX

The welfare of the average denly. at the approach »1 winter, we tive costs allowance do about it?

=i nls

duced an increase in the cost of living—about 15 per cent ? Should they | prices drop again to where they were?

en rise un and attack the politicians and hoid out until A bovcott a two-edged weapon nd the inexperienced might easil; Whenever women buy groceries or against high prices, ventually have dropped for But it is not as simple as The local butcher may have 1 to dispose of stocks and, but the large packers may sit tight and lock their refricerator doors. It's the little felow who takes the rap, not the big And if the housewives’ boycott ] very long, the family suffers from lack of essential and expected items in the diet

What of Living Standard?

The

AD

themselves refused to

rotest

prices

question now our American in the

living?

is, ‘can standard the high

much of our

we maintain face of Too

living”

cost of

“standard of is composed and love a good prime roast Ne regard porterhouse and sirloin steak a national birthright. Both lamb chops rib chops but the inherent privilege of any good citizen

waste ricans

bee]

Ame 01 as loin

seem

and a leg of lamb for Sunday din- | a!

is little more to us than flavorsome weekly habit But all these choice cuts put todo not use up the entire of the beef or lamb which the wholesaler on the the total weight -the animal from which ‘your choice cuts ‘are ‘cut sold by total weight, not bj the weight of sirloin steaks and loin chops. Someone had to feed and pay for the rest of the meat h the American taste S up its nose Do vou y who feeds and pays for the eat? You do

gether carcass was sold to hoof and by Mark that point

Was

spoiled

at

at you do not

Buyer Takes Loss

A lamb usually weighs from 40 to pounds. The rack from which y chops are cut weighs from five six pounds. The butcher, rememhad to buy entire lamb, weighing 45 pounds. But you will use only more than seven or pounds and the legs Sunday’s come to no than seven or eight pounds. In the wasted 15 or more pounds meat on that lamb carcass are shoulder and breast, as tongue, liver, brains

oY he be the no eight

more

roasts

of 1 or well heart, and

as kidneys tain a good table and still not annihilate the family food budget, you 1ust learn to use up all the carcass. Veal is a meat too little appreciated. Leg, loin and rack chops everyvdne likes; brains and kidney, too. afford not only delicious variain the diet but bring down the costs of the more familiar cuts.

Cross Rib Is Fine Roast

And with intelligence, you can prepare a cross rib of beef, which is a clear piece of meat shoulder, intp a roast Chuck roasted chuck steak all belong in the ‘list of usually unwanted cuts, but cuts paid for in the price of the more favored sections That is why there will be a series of articles on this practical subject. ow can you change your food hapits? Your husband doesn't want

tions

rib, too, can

American family is threatened.

self-indulgence. |

If you want to main- |

but shoulder, breasts, | if used regularly, |

from the] tempting Sunday | be | Short ribs, flank steak and |

Sudfind ourselves facang almost prohibi- |

for the meats regarded as a necessary part of our daily food If we can't lower meat prices to former levels, what shall we |

sing food costs without a corresponding rise in income have pro-

Should wom- | boycott butcher shops |

Music School’s | Pupils to Play

8 psa

Irvington School of Music pupils to be presented in a fall re-| cital at 7:30 p. m. Friday. Featured on the program is to be : Miss Dorothy Woods, violinist, who | has recently been added to the fac- | ulty. Pupils who are to appear in-

are

| clude Betty Jean Hoff, Julia Roden- | beck, Thornton Biddle, Doris Jean |

Speiss, Carmen Featherstone, Joan |

Richey; Mr .and Mrs. O. K. Horner, |

R. H. Lindstrem, Ruth Johnson and

Harold Bryant. | Also LaVonne Ryker, Paul Emer- |

son Lindstrom, Audrey Simon, Louise Miller, Alice Wickizer, Lillian Bodensick, Margaret Sanford, Dorothy Ziegler, Mary Jane Sutherland, Betty Meiers, Nell Marie Kruzel, Carolyn Gould, Juanita Ahlers and Mary Katherine Brooks.

Others on Program

Ruth Ann McDonald, Margie Von Willer, Evelyn Moyer, Martha Hus- | ton, Barbara Hall, Beverly Dicker- | son, Lorraine Jergens, Shirley Frick, | and Betty, Judy and Mary Tor- | rence. Also Lillian Lucas, Barbara | Schaefer, Tommy Cannon, Mary

| Elizabeth Hite, Joan Hite, John Par- |

| sons,

Robert and Donald Hooten, Elizabeth Schmidt, June Burgess, Patricia Wycoff, Billy Hoover, Lela Ruth Groves, Roberta Featherstone

| Methodist

| tonight

| rangements

and Celia May Reck. |

Edward H. Holloway has an-

nounced the award of the fall voice |

scholarship to Miss Virginia Keller-

scholarship. Miss Kellermeyer is to sing the title role in “The Bohemian Girl” to be presented by the Indianapolis Light Opera Co.

| meyer. She attended Louisiana State | | University for two years on a music |

| | |

Nov. 19 in the Brightwood Meth- |

odist Church.

Christamore

for |

Aids to Meet

Mrs. William Henley Mooney is to | be hostess at a luncheon meeting of | the Christamore Aid Society 12 m, |

Tuesday at her home, 4480 N. Meridian St.

Mrs. Mooney is to be assisted by |

| Mesdames Irving Fauvre, William | C. Griffith, Batist Haueisen, W. R. |

| Longworth and Charles E. Rogers.

Dr. Westfall Talks

| vision of Publc Health, is tc speak | at a meeting of the Florence Nightingale Club at 2 p. m. Friday in the board of directors’ room of the Indiana National Bank. Hostesses are to be Mesdames Mary Allmeroth, Charles J. Gisler and O. R. Stevens. Plans are to be completed for a benefit card party

Friday to Nurses | Dr. Mary E. Westfall, Indiana Di- |

| |

Mrs. Gaynor Maddox, The Indianapolis Times’ nationally known food expert, takes up the cudgel against the high cost of food, by preparing macaroni and cheese for her family—just one of the ways to ease the strain on the meat budget.

] . . Roberts Park Church | Entertain at Dinner Class Sponsors Talk and Mrs. Frank ‘W. McClelJ oN J . he A

| Mr. 725 N. Delaware St. enterThe Marytha Class, Roberts Park tained recently at a 6 o'clock dinChurch, to present

land, ner and cards. Yellow chrysanMrs. Demarchus Brown at 8 p. m. | themums and yellow and black in a travelog, “A Summer candles decorated the tables. Guests in France.” included Messrs. and Mesdames The committee in charge of ar-' William Webb, D. W. Avery, Rusincludes the Misses | sel Higgins and Joseph Avery, CoAbie Marie Kantz, Charlotte

lumbus; Mrs. George McKay, Miss Wright, Grace Roberts and Mabel Nelle Burkher and Bert Stafford, Allen

is

I Shelbyville.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

PAGE 9

STATE AWARDS

$53,000 GRANTS

‘Richmond Hospital Boys’ School at Plainfield To Do Building.

| Two appropriations totaling $53.- |

| 000 for institutional building pro- | grams had been made by the State | Budget Committee today. | The Richmond State Hospital was {allowed $36,000 for a Kitchen buildling and the Indiana Boys’ School at | Plainfield was given $17,000 for com- | pleting repair of Tippecanoe Cot- | tage. contingency

the $2,650,000

| | 1837 Legislature. The Budget Committee also au-

[vision to spend $10,000 for equip- | ment, the money to come from the | qivision's receipts | State Senator Walter Vermillion, Anderson, presided at the budget session, and Wiliam P. Cosgrove,

and yoru WOOTEN,

| |

The money was appropriated from | in- | | titutional fund authorized by the |

[thorized the Gross Income Tax Di-|

| State Board of Accounts chief ex-|

{aminer, represented Edward Bren{nan, budget director, who is ill in St. Vincent's Hospital. | ———

ANDERSON HEARING SET

The Indiana Public Service Com- | hearing at |

| | | mission is to hold a [1:30 p. m. Nov. 23 on the petition filed by the Indiana Railroads to | discontinue four streetcar lines in | Anderson. The utility plans to sub-

| stitute busses on these routes, it was |

said. FT. WAYNE TEACHER DIES FT, WAYNE, Nov. 3 (U, P).— Miss Madge Hoppes, 43, teacher in {the Ft. Wayne public schools the [last 18 years, died yesterday | pneumonia.

ht B Offers This New Model

BOTH of these

Creat Features for Only

69

Reunion

| { | 2 INSTITUTIONS '| Oklahoma Wheat Grow-

er Sees Sisters Here After 20 years.

a wheat grower of Aline, Okla. was a busy man today trying to appor{ion his time between his two Indianapolis sisters he had not seen since 1902. The sisters are Mrs. Gertie Elkins, 711 BE. McCarty St. and Mrs. Bertha Bailey, 337 Parkway Ave. The family was separated after the death of the mother, who died when Mr. Wooten was 9 days old. He was born in Oklahoma, Mrs. Elkins in Arkansas and Mrs. Bailey in Kansas. n un HEIR father, George Wooten, came to Indianapolis 20 years ago, living here until his death two years ago. With him came the girls, while the boy went to live with Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Mott of Aline. Six half-sisters, daughters of the father by his second wife, who still is living, are included in the reunion, They are Mrs. Edith Sandifer, Mrs. Delia Gillum, Mrs. Velma Estes, Mrs. Dorothy Coogan, Mrs. Violet Dillinder and Miss Mildred Wooten, all of Indianapolis. Before coming here Mr. Wooten planted 170 acres in wheat. He said he found Indiana corn and hogs of interest. Corn raising in Oklahoma is virtually impossible because of recent droughts, he said.

been named Indiana head of the | Save the Children Fund.

SAVE-CHILDREN FUND | The fund has national headquars

| ters in New York City and is an in=

ternational organization for obtaine Dr. Charles H. Winders, former ;.o ood medical attention, and betw pastor of the Downey Avenue and | ter living conditions for undernour

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‘DR. WINDERS HEADS

| | |

fr. Ls Lato

A» TAI reli of anythin

When Mr. Bruess emphasizes “quickest ree lief,” he's only one of thousands who have commented on the speed with which REM works. REM is thorough, for coughs resulting from colds, because it works two ways . , . in the throat and also systemically. REM is much more than just a “tickle stopper.”

— uu — .

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any cheap cuts and he won't eat ! SERVES BEST

liver or any other of “those things.” | 10 be held Nov. 19 in the Banner- COSTS LESS

That's what he thinks. In this se-| Whitehill auditorium. ries of articles on Slashing the Cost |

of Living, I shall try to convi | N qe A ’ you with Were Moy ne Narrators Tx avel For Dinner Courses

cially worked out menus, so that | unfamiliar and low-priced cuts can] be introduced to your family with-| Ihe Narrators entertained husout any protest on their part and | Pands with a costume dinner party without any lessening in the nu-!| recently. trition vaiue of your meals. | The first course of the dinner was Sy served in the home of Mr. and Mrs. NR XT—Outflanking high meat | Albert Neff, 3462 N. Meridian St. costs, | From there guests went to other rr | members’ homes for courses. The - he ~ PY Jp. | final host and hostess were Mr. and Rusheces to Pe Feted | Mrs. Donavan Turk. Mrs. Merton Miss Evelyn Eichel, Miss Pauline | A. Johnson was in charge of arWorkman and Mrs. Robert McAllis- | rangements. ter, Alpha Tau Chapter, Alpha Zeta, | — " Beta Sorority members, attended the | Beta province meeting in Hunting- | ton over the week-end. Rushees| are to be entertained at bridge at | 8 p. m. tonight in the Blue Bell| Inn, 2343 N. Meridian St. Mrs. |

Roland Bussell is arrangements | chairman.

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