Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 January 1938 — Page 9

THURSDAY, JAN. 27,

Milk Given Vital Place In Luncheon

Cracked Wheat Chowder, Mixed Vegetables, Are Favored.

By MRS. GAYNOR MADDOX A sturdy luncheon is the beginning of wisdom for school children. If you are looking for well-balanced menus for your committee to prepare for the local school noonday lunch, study this partial list from Miscellaneous Publication No. 246, U. S. Department of Agriculture: 1. Peanut butter and tomato soup, toast or bread-and-butter sandwich, fruit and cookie, milk. 2. Cracked-wheat chowder, bread-and-butter sandwich, fruit and raisin cookie, milk. 3. Creamed mixed vegetables with egg, whole-wheat bread-and-butter sandwich, fruit, milk. 4. Creamed salmon with noodles, chopped cabbage sandwich, fruit, milk. Any one of these menus would be good for the adult home luncheon, too. Note the regular appearance of milk. In a community where market milk is too expensive or where its quality is questioned, canned evaporated mink or dried skim milk may be used for part or all of the milk needed. Each growing child must have at least a pint and preferably a quart each day.

Cracked Wheat Chowder (50 servings, each 1 cup)

Two and one-half pounds cracked wheat, 5 quarts water, 4 pounds scraped carrots, diced 1 1-2 pounds trimmed celery, cut, 2 1-2 quarts boiling water, '1 pound salt pork, diced, 1 pound peeled onions, chopped, 2 ounces flour (1-2 cup), 4 quarts milk, and, if desired, 9 ounces dried skim milk, 5 tablespoons salt. Boil the cracked wheat in the 5 quarts of water for 30 minutes. Cook the carrots and celery in the 2 1-2 quarts boiling water until tender. Fry the salt pork until crisp, remove it, and cook the onions in the fat for a few minutes. Stir in the flour and when blended add 1 quart of the milk and cook until the mixture. thickens. Add the carrots and celery, including liquid, and com- , bine with the other ingredients. Stir constantly until thoroughly heated. (To increase the milk solids in this recipe, add the 9 ounces of dried skim milk mixed with the fluid milk.) Creamed Mixed Vegetables With Egg (50 servings, each 2-3 cup plus 1 egg)

Two and one-half pounds pared turnips, diced, 4 pounds scraped carrots, cut in strings, 4 pounds pared potatoes, diced, 2 quarts water, 6 ounces butter or other fat, 3 ounces flour (3-4 cup), 2 1-2 quarts milk, and if desired, 6 ounces | dried skim milk, 5 tablespoons salt, | 3 1-2 pounds trimmed cabbage, | chopped, 50 hard-cooked eggs, cut | in halves. { Boil the turnips, carrots and po- | tatoes in the water, covered. Pre-| pare a sauce of the fat, flour and milk. Add the cooked vegetables, salt and cabbage, and simmer about 10 minutes, or until the cabbage is tender. Serve over the hot, hardcooked eggs. (To increase the milk solids in this recipe add the 6 ounces of dried skim milk mixed with the fluid.)

Sigma Phi Gamma ¢ : ) A Plans ‘Wimpy’ Party About 25 members of the Sigma Phi Gamma Sorority are to attend a “Wimpy” party at 8 p. m. tonight at the home of Mrs. Charles Watkins, 256 Buckingham Drive. Games In which each guest will represent a comic strip character, are to be played during the evening. Decorations are to be simple to provide a background similar to that found in the cartoon section of a newspaper. Miss Evelyn Durbin is to be a guest. On the arrangements committee are Mesdames Watkins, J.

Mitchell Hamer, Walter Frick and Miss Joan Hays. !

New Chintz Keeps Glaze

| visit

1938

Lilly Dache Dashes in to Ta

Lilly Dache, an outstanding designer in the international fashion field, may help Indianapolis women lift their clothes out of the midwinter doldrums when she visits the H. P. ‘Wasson & Co.

French Salon tomorrow.

That something trick atop your head is to be discussed for salon patrons by one whose intuitive feeling of what will become the big success in fashion has become a byword.

Miss Dache

arrives just at the time when the smartest midseason hats are just plain silly—and rightly so. Later your spring wardrobe may be interesting enough to demand a conservative bonnet but the old fall suit of which you are getting pretty weary won't look so

Miss Dache

drab if the bon-

net above is

made of bright velvet flowers.

Even the old black silk dress that doesn’t interest you a whit, regardless of what accessories you

put with it,

will sparkle under a sleek straw

Breton with an exaggeratedly wide brim.

There are gay turbans in all sizes,

shapes and colors. Look at the flower petal versions, of course, at those of bright colored wool or silk jersey, at pert suede numbers in pastels, especially pink and blue. If your face is round and moon-like, see that your turban is high at the front. If your face is long, lock for a symmetrical turban—something to replace long lines with circular ones. There's no telling where this craze of veils is going to end. So far, we haven't seen any that trail below the hipline, but there are waistlength versions all over the place. And those that tie in front or back are even more popular than the types’ which hang straight down, Also, it’s smart tc have the veil cover back and shoulders instead of face and shoulders. The bell-shaded cloche and the sailor are two styles to watch for. Because spring hats wiil depend on fabrics and lines rather than daffy trimmings and upshooting points,

,and so on, these old favorites will be

very much in the picture. If you want to wear something attention-getting, buy it now. Compared to midseason hats, spring models will seem pretty conservative. Ribbon trimmings, however, will carry through. Your Easter bonnet, as well as what you buy to wear from now until then, is more than likely to be finished with grosgrain, velvet, silk, jersey, satin or felt ribbon. Flower trimmings, too, along with ribbons, probably will crowd feathers and fruit out of the bicture. Particularly interesting is a dinner hat which appears to be one huge flower. Straws in flamboyant colors will outshine somber blacks, blues, browns. You'll top a dark gray suit with a scarlet Breton, wear a bright pink toque with black, search for a green bonnet to wear with a suit the color of golden wheat. Maybe Miss Dache will add a lot more to this sumup during her . + perhaps she'll even get an idea for a new hat while she’s here!

Society to Sponsor

Review of New Book

The Phi Beta Tau Sorority is to sponsor a book review by Kathryn Turney Garten at 7:45 p. m. Thursday, Feb. 3, in the Athenaeum, Mrs. Garten is to review “The Citadel” by J. R. Cronin. Mrs. Robert Manion is chairman of the arrangements committee assisted by Mrs, Ralph Johnson and Miss Loretta Herndon.

Plaid Handba 08 New

If plaids have completely captured your fancy this season, look at the new velvet handbags, lined with authentic tartan plaids, that fasten with huge gold-metal safety pin clasps. Cigaret cases, compacts, lighters and combs may be had in matching plaids. The velvet, by the way, will not crush nor mark.

Wedd ing Nears

Glazed chintz has been a popular | 3

material for curtains, slip covers and other decorative purposes, but many housewives have

not cared for it because great caution had to be used in cleaning. Now, however, a new process in finishing the yarns of which the chintz is woven produces a glazed surface which will not fade, shrink or dull, even after numerous launderings. Simply use the ordinary care you would employ in washing any figured or colored materials—a bland goap and lukewarm water. Neither tloes a hot iron harm the finish.

Sweaters Have Bells If you would have bells jingle while you ski, look at the Indian sweaters that button up the front with bells. The sweaters, in seven different designs, symbolizing old Indian weather legends, are handmade, in gorgeous colors,

bedspreads, |

" Kindred Photo. Miss Ruth Niedhamer, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. F. J. Niedhamer, is to become the bride of Kennard O. Vogel on March 26.

The Lilly Dache afternoon and dinner hat (top) is of purple straw with velvet roses in blue, rose, yellow and salmon pink, a purple veil and fuchsia streamers. The sombrero-like model (lower left) is Qf black straw, covered with black chiffon stitched in

emerald green, and has an emerald green chin strap with streamer ends. The other gay midseason Dache bonnet (lower right) in stitched chiffon-covered straw, is trimmed with patent leather loops in bright colors.

PAGE 9

Overcaution

Often Fault Of Parents

Mother Urged Not to Let Worry Rule Action Toward Child.

By OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON Parents can be too cautious in the day-by-day decisions they hand down to their children. Often the overcautious parent has had a bad experience that has put ‘ear in her heart. Once when Mother gave a doubtful ‘“yes” to Billy’s plea to go on an overnight

hike Billy burned himself quite badly. And now, whatever small adventure Billy wants to enter into, Mother remembers the time she regretted her “yes” and so she says “no.” When Billy says, “I don’t see why I can't go when all the other kids are going,” Mother says, “You remember what happened when you begged to go on that hike and I let you,” Or she comes even more to the point and says, “I don't want to worry about you all the time you are gone.”

Worry Is Poor Adviser

It’s quite natural for a mother to worry about a child for a long time after he has had an¢ unfortunate experience, but she should not give in to her worry. It is wrong to let her heightened fear for her child’s safety influence every decision on what he can and cannot do. This is no plea for mothers to say “Yes” to their children against their own better judgment. But one unhappy experience shouldn't be allowed to color a parent's reasoning. Sometimes a mother’s overcaution is a result of trying to bring up her children in the light of her own childhood. “Mother would never let us do such and such a thing,” she reasons. Entirely forgetting that her children are living in a very different world from the one in which she was a child.

Boys Hate Ceddling

There would be nothing serious in this overcaution in which some parents indulge if it did no more harm than to deprive a child of a few pleasures and adventures. They are probably more unhappy over being wrapped in cotton wool than girls, for there is always the danger of their being called “Sissy” or “Mamma’s boy.” Next time Billy wants to do something don’t say “no” until you ask yourself *“Is there really any danger or other reason why he shouldn’t do this, or am I tempted to say ‘no’ because it is easier to have him stay home than to worry about him?”

Aids Celebration

Miss Anne Simon is chairman of the musical program for the 35th anniversary celebration of the Ladies’ Auxiliary to the United Hebrew Congregation which will be held at the Synagog, Madison Ave. and Union St, at 6 Pp. m, Sunday.

Prosecutor’s Aid Will Address Club

The January meeting of the Perry Township Women’s Democratic Club is to be held Saturday in the home of Mrs. Nettie Brown, 1054 E. Epler Ave. Dave Lewis, deputy prosecuting attorney, is to be the guest speaker. Officers have been elected for the year. They are Mrs. Helen Costello, president; Mrs. O. D. Ludwig, vice president; Miss Grace Massey, sec-

retary; Mrs. Lucy Benjamen, treaslirer; Mrs, Ida Horn, program; Mrs. Guy Pectledge, ways and means; Mrs. Fred Nordsick, membership; Mrs. Marcia Murphy, flowers, and Mrs. Ruth Harrell, publicity.

Simplicity Best Asset for Girl Still in Teens

By ALICIA HART

One still in her ‘teens should adopt these rules to insure making

the best possible impression. Strive for natural effects. Her very youthfulness is her greatest asset, and it’s a mistake to go in for sophisticated makeup or to try to wear exotic clothes. Simplicity ought to be the keynote of her wardrobe. Be curious about the newest alle purpose creams. Unless her skin is exceptionally dry or her budget not all limited, a cream which cleanses and softens at the same time is a blessing. Know the importance of metic ulous cleanliness. A daily bath, fresh underwear and stockings every morning, neat clothes, clean hair, tidy nails—these are musts. Brush her hair each and every night, change her coiffure at least once a year. Use a nail brush once a day, apply cuticle cream three nights a week, have a small manicure set of her own,

Avoid Exotic Nail Polish

Avoid flamboyant shades of nail polish and queer tones of mascara and eyeshadow. These are wonderful for the older sisters and mother, but on her, they are likely to seem too-too unusual. Learn, at this early age, to organize her beauty routines, to allow ample time for personal grooming yet never get into the habit of spending too many precious hours fussing with face, hands and so on. Realize that glowing health is the foundation of true beauty, the kind which doesn’t fade all too quickly. This means plenty of fresh air and exercise, enough sleep, a sensible diet. Know that ih order to be popular, she’ll have to be intelligent, sincere, kindly, light-hearted and gay as well as good to look at.

...GET Yoru PART OF YOUR

Wise creditors will not ask you to pay them ALL you earn. Part of it belongs to your cash reserves which may be needed for

emergencies.

Protect yourself and family from financial

worry. account now!

Ave

L SAVINGS AND

a Cie

Start an INSURED savings share

LOAN ASSN.

INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA

TODAY'S PATTERN |

HE collars, cuffs and belt of this dress are desirable so that you can change its appearance quicker than a wink. Wear it one day with linen collars and cuffs as shown in Pattern 8120, and the next day with bright jewelry, a scarf of a flower boutonniere. The waistline lifted at front and the panel skirt are extremely becoming. It is the pencil silhouette at its best. Note, too, the short puffed sleeves— a detail that emphasizes the slender waist. It is a dress that young girls like very much because they find it flattering. Business women, too, approve the adaptability of this mode to their needs. Make it up in a rayon print or in a printed silk for early spring. For summer wear, you will find it smart in fine broadcloth, linen or shantung. . . Pattern 8120 is designed for sizes 12, 14, 16, 18, 20, 40 and 42. Size 14 requires 3'%¢ yards of 39-inch ma.terial, plus % yard contrasting. To obtain a pattern and step-by-step sewing instructions inclose 15 cents in coin together with the above pattern number and your size, your name and address, and mail to Pattern = Editor, The Indianapolis Times, 214 W. Maryland St., Indianapolis. The new WINTER PATTERN BOOK is ready for you now. It has 32 pages of attractive designs for every size and every occasion. One pattern and the new Winter Pattern Book—25 cents. Winter Book alone —15 cents.

Makeup Kit Popular Almost every girl likes to carry enough makeup in her purse for emergency freshening up. A neat little sectional gadget, just a little larger than a lipstick, has space for rouge, cold cream, powder, hand cream, or any other preparation you may deem necessary. A tricky little spade comes with it to transfer cosmetics from your regular jars to the purse kit.

8120 ®

Neckwear Is Novel

One of the smart Fifth Avenue shops is featuring a novelty in

neckwear—two bunches of artificial violets fastened on a black velvet ribbon.

SPECIAL FOR SATURDAY

JANUARY 29

Lee Moore — who judged 1 million Ibs. of tobacco in3 weeks-explains why so many independent experts “go for” Luckies

" Y LIFE has been tobacco,” says Mr. Moore. “I started as a tobacco farmer. Then, in 1909, I became an independent buyer—in 1920 a warehouseman—and since 1927 I've had my own tobacco warehouse in Georgia. “It’s a matter of dollars and cents to me to be able to judge tobacco quickly and accurately. Now I know exactly what kind of tobacco Lucky Strike buys. So I've smoked Luckies for 11 years.”

This is the honest opinion of an impartial expert who sells tobacco to all cigarette manufacturers, but who is not connected with any. And there are many other such experts who agree with Mr. Moore. Sworn records show that, among independent tobacco experts—not connected with any

EEE Sl CR SOR ESRB nN 3 i a ole

hi BRE

SILVER CREAM LAYER

A new ceke value by Freihofer’s. Two layers of rich, snowwhite cake, with a delicious butter cream icing that melts in your mouth. A real taste thrill that makes old and young call for more. Family size , , .

39:

ORDER OF YOUR FREIHOFER SALESMAN OR

all DR. 5600 _g Shi "

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cigarette manufacturer— Luckies have twice as many exclusive smokers as have all the

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