Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 September 1939 — Page 24

FRIDAY, SEPT. 22, 1939

FOOD

By RUTH CHAMBERS Member of the National Livestock and Meat Board There are many things we can learn along the way. It's possible even to add to our cooking knowledge as we go traveling. Any observant homemaker can gain a tip on what will satisfy keen appetites if she will note the number of barbecue stands and the way hungry travelers “go for” this hearty, savory, satisfying food. For one thing. she can give meat that delicious barbecue flavor by broiling or browning it in her broiler. And she can serve with it or simmer it in quite as tasty a barbecue sauce (“come-again” sauce, the youngsters call it) as any roadside barbecue stand can boast,

See Columns 3 and 4 on opposite page for details of The Times’ Cooking School.

: Economy cuts lend themselves well to serving in this way. Spareribs, lamb riblets, ground beef are among the dishes which at once come to mind for serving in this way.

Barbecued Spareribs

Place spareribs in a baking dish and brown them uncovered, in a hot oven. Or you may brown them in the broiler. Season with salt and pepper. Slice celery over the top. Add one-half cup catsup, onefourth teaspoon tobasco sauce, one-eighth teaspoon chili powder and one cup water. Cover and cook in a moderate oven (350 degrees F.) about two hours. Onion rings over the top give a decorative touch to the browned spareribs. Serve with sliced raw cabbage and green pepper rings.

Beef Patties Mexicano 1 onion 3; teaspoon chili powder 1 clove garlic 12 teaspoon pepper 2 tablespoons lard 13 teaspoon cayenne 1 No. 2 can baked beans 1 pound ground beef 15 cup tomato sauce Lard 1 teaspoon salt Cut onion in thin slices. Chop garlic fine. Brown both in hot lard until tender. Add the beans, tomato sauce and seasonings. Simmer about fifteen minutes, stirring frequently. Form the ground beef into six flat patties about four inches in diameter and one-fourth inch thick, Brown in hot lard, cover and cook slowly fifteen minutes. Place on a platter and pour the baked bean mixture over all.

Barbecued Lamb Riblets

Have lamb riblets made by slicing between the ribs of a breast of lamb from which the breast bone has been removed. Brown the riblets without adding extra fat. Season with salt and pepper. Cover

with barbecue sauce and simmer gently or cook in a moderate ovene

1350 degrees F.) until tender, about one and a half hours.

Barbecue Sauce medium onion tablespoons butter 3 tablespoons Worcestershire sauce tablespoons vinegar 1 cup water tablespoons brown sugar Salt tablespoons lemon juice Red pepper Brown chopped onion in butter, add the remaining ingredients and pour over the riblets.

JANE JORDAN

EAR JANE JORDAN-—Last evening a group of friends gathered at my apartment and during the course of the party the con=versation finally centered on Bessie Breuer's “Memory of Love.” One of the men present had read the book and broached the question, “Has a wife the right to compel her husband to remain married to her when neither loves the other?” Considerable discussion followed and ill-feeling was created among some of my friends. I'm sure you can be of service in this situation hy bringing this problem before your readers to get a majority opinion on a subject which is vital to most adults and which carries broad social implications. M. L. B. 5 n ” Answer: No one can give a general answer to this question and hope to be right in all cases. The rightness or wrongness of the woman in question would depend largely on what her circumstances were and the nature of her own motives. For example, take the woman with small children who does not know how she could support them without the father's aid, and who could not depend on him in case of divorce. Which is more important, that the adults should enjoy the raptures of love, or that they should fulfill their responsibilities toward helpless children? In general I think you will find that men who are able to pay alimony have less trouble in getting a divorce than those who have nothing. It is a proved fact that in many cases the poor man’s divorce amounts to desertion. A few women have been able to rise to the situation and support themselves and their children, if any, but the majority have their devotions mixed up with their security and hang on to the sham of love in order to eat. After all they have some reality on their side in that they devoted the years when they could have been preparing for the commercial field to the interests of the man they married. In an economic situation where men have difficulty in getting a job, what can an untrained wife do when she is discarded? Discussions such as vou cite often become acrimonious because those who engage in them have not defined their terms. For example, the word love connotes different things to different people. Some people conceive of love as perpetual bliss and excitement. To maintain such peaks of feeling, frequent changes of partners are necessary. Some people are so fixated on their own adolescence that they seek to relive it by falling in and out of love over and over. What stirs men to fury is the vindictive woman who, with no better reason than her desire for retaliation, hangs on to a man who has learned to hate her. Her stubborn pride simply will not admit defeat. She sugar coats her hostility by the claim that she is still in love and that her husband will come back when he has had his fling. We can feel sympathy for the woman who is terrorized by the economic aspect of her problem, but not for one who is reasonably able to shift for herself but will not do so in order to prevent some other woman from enjoving the man whom she hates with enough energy to hold down a dozen jobs if only she could be persuaded to turn it into constructive channels. JANE JORDAN,

1 cup catsup

Put vour problems in a leiter to Jane Jordan, who will answer your questions in this column daily.

Sunshine Club ot Sunnyside

To Sponsor Card Party Oct. 5

PATTERN 905

TRIM YOUNG DRESS HAS NEW FEATURES

Sweet-and-young enbugh for any fond mama's taste . . . smart and “different” enough to suit daughter, this entrancing new style, Pattern 905. Topping everything is that devastating collar that breaks out into wing-like, pointed revers. Make both the collar and the cuffs in fresh, crisp white—there's nothing more radiantly becoming. Now cast your eyes down apace to the very smart, {double-breasted bodice—one of the {leading vogues of the season. Amusing novelty buttons will point up its style. There's still a third stunning new feature in those pairs of partly stitched, unpressed pleats at both front and back. They are stitched to make you look tiny through the waist, and they give a pleated effect to the skirt without giving you any of the work of real pleats. Pattern 905 is cut in junior and misses’ sizes 10, 12, 14, 16 and 18; bust sizes 28, 30, 32, 34 and 36. Size 14 requires 3% vards 39-inch fabric and !; vard contrast. Send 15 cents t15¢) in coins for this pattern. Write clearly size, name, address and style number. Send orders to Pattern Depart(ment, Indianapolis Times, 214 W. Maryland St.

‘New Crusade Council Will Install Officers

Recently elected officers of the New Crusade Youths’ Temperance Council will be installed at a candlelight service at the annual banquet of the organization tomorrow evening at the Marott Hotel. Arthur PF. Williams, secretary of the Y. M. C. A, will speak. Officers who will be installed by Mrs. Maryellen Mendenhall, past president, include Miss Catherine Boothe, president; Mrs. Mildred Sullivan, vice president; Mrs. Charlotte Davis, corresponding secretary; Miss Esther Swinford, recording secretary, and Zack Sullivan, treasurer. Department chairmen who will take over their duties are Mrs. Jane Nicholson, Christian citizenship; Miss Boothe, evangelistic, Miss Irene Neal, flower mission; Miss Mary Gross, .international relations; Mrs. Mendenhall, music; Mrs. Mildred Sullivan, parliamentary usage; Miss Swinford, publicity; Miss Ellen Taylor, scientific temperance instruction; Miss Mary Ellen Buhmiller, institute, Mr. Sullivan, social activities; Miss Dorothy Bishop, social morality, and Miss Lois Bishop, literature. Bibles for perfect yearly meeting records will be given to the Misses | Lois Bishop, Tayldr. Boothe, Swin- | ford, Buhmiller; Mrs. Nellie La Roche and Mr. and Mrs. Sullivan.

The Children’s Sunshine Club of Sunnyside wi'l sponsor its annual Miss Boothe is to speak on “I Bebenefit fall card party Oct. 5 at the Columbia Club to raise funds for pur- long to the Y. T. C.” and Miss cinasing new furnishings in a children’s unit at the Marion County Tu- Rosalind Cook on “Expressions”

berculosis Sanitorium,

Music will be furnished by Mr. and

A unit at the hospital is being remodeled for children and the club Mrs. Curtis Davis.

hopes to provide the furnishings. In)

S————————.

this work the club will be continuing Travel Group to Meet Q. T. Club Meets Sunday

its 18 years of service for children) parambers of the Erin Isle Chapter

there. each month at a party and children cijyp will meet today at

Members of the Q. T. Club of

The youngsters are feted ofr the International Travel-Study Shortridge High School will be hostthe esses at a rush tea Sunday after-

whose birthday anniversaries COME home of Mrs. Donald Stroud. 1418 noon from 3 until 5 o'clock at the within the month are presented somerset Ave. Mrs. Harold Milburn home of Miss Betsy Walker, 5267

gifts. This summer the club paid|will be assistant hostess.

| Broadway.

for the maintenance of six children] - at the Bridgeport Nutrition Camp.

Mrs. Curtis Burke is general] chairman for the benefit event.| The following committees will as-| sist her: Hospitality, Mesdames A. | J. Clark, John Connor, Alva Crad-| ick, W. J. Overmire, R. C. Griswold, | August Soutter, Donald Brodie, W.| C. Thomas and E. B. Boyer; tickets, | Mrs. C. R. Lovick, chairman, Mes- | dames D. P. Barrett, Albert Marshall, Edward Rippberger, Carl] Strack, Harry B. Mahan andj George Livingston; donations, Mrs. | B. L. Byrket, chairman, Mesdames Harry Kennett, John O'Brien! Charles Bogert, William Ott and| Harry German; door prizes, Mrs. | J. F. Moriarity, chairman, Mes-| dames H. D. Kramm, Ure M. Fra- | zer, John E. Hampton, Letetia|

NOT FOR SISSIES!

This tooth paste cleanses teeth— wakes up mouth—but DOES NOT TASTE LIKE CANDY,

Riviera Club's Boosters Plan 4 Fall Dances

Group Also to Give Dinner and Card Parties Before Thanksgiving.

The Riviera Club Boosters will open their fall and winter social season with a dance Friday, Sept. 20. Four dances, one dinner party and a special card party are among activities planned up until Thanksgiving. Dr. George M. King, president, announced two other dances will be Friday, Oct. 13, and Saturday, Oct. 28. The Boosters’ first pitch-in dinner will be held Nov. 5 in the club dining room and the annual card party will be Nov. 8.

The annual Thanksgiving din-ner-dance will be held Nov. 16. Mr. and Mrs. William Kassenberg are dance chairmen. assisted by Messrs. and Mesdames E. J. Ruddle, R. C. Cashon, Richard Shellhorn, H. E. Champer and F. K. Klepfer. Mr. |and Mrs. C. J. Corbin are in charge |of the card party. | The new winter recreation buildling will be opened Oct. 28 for a | Halloween dance in the gym-| nasium. The building is about half completed.

‘Methodists Hold Mission Meeting

The Indianapolis District Methodist Foreign Missionary Societies was to hold its fall meeting today in the Irvington Methodist Church. Mrs. C. H. Sedam was to preside and Mrs. J. N. Greene was to have charge of music.

morning. Mrs. W. C. Hartinger was to extend greetings to the group and district officers were to make their reports. The Rev. Ezra I.. Hutchens, pastor of the host church, was to open the meeting with a worship service. Mrs. S. C. Young was to present a memorial service and Mrs. R. E. Higgs was to sing. Auxiliary presidents were to make their pledges for the coming year at a service to be presided over by Mrs. Sedam and Mrs. C. E. Asbury. Miss Ada Nelson was to be the luncheon speaker. Mrs. George Dalrymple was to lead an old-fashioned song service following luncheon. Miss Anna Carson, Philippine Islands, and Miss Ruth Thomas, Gikuki, Africa, will talk this afternoon. A group of women, under the direction of Dr. Rebecca Parrish, will present a Filipina Chorus of Senori-

tas. Dr. W. C. Hartinger will install officers at the concluding | event.

best.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Officers were to be elected this| oy

All Sizes

9 to 17 12 to 20 38 to 44

PAGE 23

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Evard, Harry Borst, J. B. Mentzer and William Weber | Table prizes, Mrs. Frederic Wager, chairman, Mesdames Cradick, C. R. Swain, Windsor J. Weaver, T. C. Williams, J. B. Roger and C. F. Ziegler; candy prizes, Mrs. W. R. Beck, chairman, Misses Margaret Murray, Helen Rippberger, Stella Heinrich, Mesdames George Newton, Frank C. Bird, C. W. Fraim and Mary Clingenpeel; candy, Mrs. Harry Herrell, chairman, Miss Marie Rochford, Mesdames Otis Carmichael, Claude Geisendorf, C. T. Ralphy, W. B. Sequartz, J. J. McGovern and Clifford J. Richter. | Decorations, Mrs. W. J. Overmire, | chairman, Mesdames C. F. Maley, | David Jolly, T. E. Hannika and Al-| bert J. Hueber; cards and tallies, Mrs. B. M. Howell, chairman, Mes-| dames Lynn Adams, W. B. Peake,! Mary E. Williamson, Harry McHale, | Billy Grimes and Miss Alice Mur-)

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1040 N. Meridian St., Cor. 11th St. Indianapolis, Indiana

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