Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 September 1939 — Page 29
By MRS. GAYNOR MADDOX
HICKEN PIE runs right through, American history. Here's one authentic recipe of the kind “Grandma used to make”:
old Hundred Chicken Pie | (Seérves 6)
. One large fowl, hot water, % pound salt pork, salt, 2 tablespoons butter, 2 tablespoons \lour, 1% cups chicken stock, biscuit dough. Clean fowl, cover with hot water, add one-quarter pound salt pork and simmer until nearly er. Add salt and cook until done. Cool. Remove skin, discard bones and-cut meat in rather large pieces. In the meantime, simmer the broth until it is strong and reduced one-half. Melt butter, add flour and cook until crumbly. Add one and one-half cups chicken broth, cook until thick and season to taste. If more gravy is needed, increase butter, flour and broth. Roll light biscuit dough one-half inch ' thick, cut around to fit your baking dish. Bake biscuit top in separate pan. Place covered with gravy in baking dish, heat, and when biscuit ked, place on top. Cooked separately the crust is always crisp perfect. Now. you tell us about the way your grandmotiier do it. "| That recipe comes from Nellie 1 | Brown's new book of New England recipes called “Recipes From Old Hundred.” Here's another sample of the book’s truly American fare.
Baked Chicken and Corn Casserole {Serves 6)
<
. Two cups cooked chicken, 214 cups corn, 1 onion, 2 stems "celery, ¥% green pepper, 2 tablespoons pimiento, ¥% cup milk, 1 egg, salt and pepper to taste. | Chop celery, onion, green pepper and pimiento. Cut chicken in dice, beat egg lightly, combine all ingredients and season to taste. Pour in a’ well-greased baking dish and cover generously with bread-crumbs. Dot with butter and bake in a moderate oven, ‘350 degrees F., for 40 minutes.
JANE JORDAN
EAR JANE JORDAN—I will soon be 17 and I am in love with a boy 20 years old. I will never love anyone else as much as I love hin. He doesn’t know how I feel. Te tried to forget him but can’ I've found myself crying at night besaise my love for him is so eat. I don’t know whether to let him know that I love him or not. : I should tell him, what shall I say? I haven't seen him for about a week, but if I didn’t see him for a century I would still love him. I know he has dates with other girls, but I haven't been out with another boy since I met him. [I can’t have any fun unless I am with him. Please give me your adyice on what to do. I need help
“| Answer—Try to detach fer from your problem for a moment and look at yourself as if you were somebody else. To make it still more impersonal, take a look at girls in general. At 16 a girl is . beset with new emotions. Her old devotions to the family fail to satisfy and she is stirred by vague but urgent yearning for something else.
Her new feelings search for an object to attach themselves to. At this point almost apy attractive boy would serve as a center for - her'emotions. She falls, as she thinks, head over heels in love. But is she really in love? Probably not, The chances are that she is in love with the state of being in love! rather than the boy himself.
\- Now I don't believe that you are so different from all other girls. Perhaps you are a little more intense than the average. If so, this is all the more reason why you should bring your head to bear on this problem. Now is the time to learn not to put all your eggs in one basket, not to invest too. much in any one boy. Cultivate some of these other boys whom you think you do not enjoy. Youll fimd many of them very nice chaps ald they will serve to divert your concentration on one. You don’t want to do this, of curse. You want “him or nobody.” But believe me this is a very bad attitude to assume. It will net you nothing to tell this boy of your feelings. You'll only scare him away. Take my advice and divide your interest among several. You have plenty of time to find your “one and only.” #“ 2 ” ” EAR JANE JORDAN—Never have I felt so much like saying “bravo” to you as when I read your answer to J. C. Her statement that “all intelligent women do not envy men” is in itself such -as to disqualify J C. from the ranks of intelligent women. Iam a graduate of a good Indiana college and received my Master’s degree from Columbia, and thus have had contact with many intelligent women but never have I heard one speak with so little reason or balance when speaking lof me. Thanks again for having the courage and fortitude to so [correctly analyse J. C.s case. I hope that on behalf of all good, decent and intelligent women, that you also will publish this rebuttal. A. B. and M. A. 8
Answer—I always am glad i print letters of comment from readers. JANE JORDAN.
Put your problems in a letter to Jane Tran, who will answer your auestions in this column daily.
3 Card Parties, Wiener Roast -And a National Convention Are On Deck for Local Sororities
Activities on deck for local sbrorities tonight and the week-end in|:
cldue a national convention, three card parties and a wiener roast. ALPHA CHAPTER OF PHI THETA DELTA [SORORITY will send three official delegates and a group of its members to the national convention this week-end in Cleveland. Mrs. Luther McCoy, Miss ‘Margaret Berrie and Mrs. Robert Fitzgibbon will represent) the chapter officially. Members who will attend include Mrs. Clayborn Blue, retiring grand secretary; Mrs. Leslie King, Lansing, Mich.;, Mesdames John Bumgardener and Charles Applegate and the Misses Eleanor Earnhart, Alice ‘Kelly, Betty . Kelly, Virginia Byrd, Emily Palmer and Anna Lou Roult. Newly elected officers of the sorority are Miss Betty Kelly, president; Miss Roult, vi _ president; Miss Earnhart, secretary; Mrs. Applegate, treasurer; Miss Palmer, chaplain; Miss Jerry Loos, historian, | and Mrs. McCoy, pledge captain, Mrs. Lloyd Howard will entertain members of GAMMA: CHA SIGMA PHI SORORITY, with a bridge party at 2:30 p. m. Sunday at her home, 2615 E. St. Clair| St. Sorority members will be guests
Monday evening at the home of give a bridge party this evening in Miss Faith De Lon, who will enter-(the Hoosier Athletic Club. Miss tain for her mother, Mrs. William F.| Helen Wallin and Miss Edna InSmiley, San Francisco, Cal. | quire are in| charge.
Clan?
PATTERN 907 SPRIGHTLY STYLE FOR LARGER WOMEN
If you're smart, there're all sorts of ways and means of slimming a matronly figure. Dark tolors, neat designs, good proportions, trimming . —all are important features. And all are included in‘ this attractive frock for larger women, Pattern 907. A grand shirtwaister style to
Members ho guests of BETA CHAPTER, BETA CHI THETA SORORITY, | will hold a wiener roast and hayride tomorrow evening at New Augusta. The sorority will meet at 7:30 p. m. Monday with Miss Virginia Smith, 1126 N. Jefferson Ave.
The VERAE SORORES :' CHAPTER OF VERUS CORDIS SORORITY will sponsor a card party at 8 pclock tonight in the auditorium of the Indianapolis Power and Light Co. Miss Mary Ann Perry is. in ,|charge of arrangements, assisted by Miss Helen | Setterquist and! Mrs. Marjorie Woodard.
Pledges of EPSILON. CHAPTER, RHO DELTA. SORORITY, will
{ | { I
dark. ' Isn't that.notch in theifront buttoning. an ingenious, eye-catch-ing device? It's effect can be heightened by stunning novelty buttons. Other slenderizing and decorative features are the ‘yokes, softly gathered below, and the optional pockets with their sporty button-trimmed flaps. Sew on a smartly ‘easual collar in self-fabric or in striking contrast, with pocket flaps to match, The inverted pleat of the long-sleeved style give trim wrist fit-and generous elbow-room —so ‘important for plump arms, ‘Pattern 907 is cut ‘in women’s _ sizes 36; 38, 40, 42, 44, 46 and 48. Size 36:Tequitesi3%. yards Bt inch abric.
Send FIFTEEN CENTS (15¢) in . coins for this pattern. : Write “CLEARLY BIZE, NAME, ADDRESS vi AND STYLE NUMBER.
Send orders to Pattern Depart-
An untrimmed, fitted and flared coat in golden brown triple twill is shown with a soft muff of the new ruby fox. /
By MARIAN YOUNG.
No chic woman buys a winter coat on the spur of the moment. She
the most important item in her wardrobe for two, and perhaps three winters, and she chooses it with this fact firmly in mind. If she selects brown, she selects it because brown is becoming to her and because it will be nice
‘over all wearable left-overs as
well as over new dresses and suits.
If she can not afford to pay for a coat trimmed with really beautiful fur, she gets an untrimmed model and plans to buy a separate fur scarf later on this year or possibly next fall. She is wary of high fashion models which may go out of style all too quickly. That is, unless she can have a new winter coat every year.
2 8 ”
SHE LIKES MUFFS—The big news in accessories for cold weather. Lapel gadgets strike her fancy, too. She buys accessories— particularly hats—after, not before, she has chosen her coat. This year, there is a wide variety of silhouettes from which to pick and choose. The fitted and flared dressmaker coat with double swing skirt. is a headliner. There are draped and shirred types that look more like afternoon dresses than topcoats. New versions of straight, unfitted box coats are available. And Sp are pencil-slim reefers and, for
NEW YORK, Sept. 28 (NEA).—
knows that it will be just about
Coats Are as Colorful as
Shining examples of the new softness in dressmaker coats are these
two smartly designed modols, created by Heitner.
The coat at left,
(All fabrics from FPorstmann New York) Sleek leopard ig used to trim
- this fitted coat of black needle-
point woolen. The hat is of matching leopard.
of fine diagonal-ribbed wool in winter beige, shows the new silhouette —small-waisted and high-bosomed with rounded hipline. It’s lavishly trimmed with marten-dyed filch. The other coat (right) is of soft black wool with black Persian lamb collar, buttons and pocket bands.
The pockets are set into the top of the shirred panels.
more casual wear, amply cut swaggers. 1 The corseted look through the middle appears in coats as well as dresses. Fur is used more imaginatively and more lavishly than ever before. There is a wider range of colors. While black holds first place, various tones of brown and green are important. Artichoke green has a grayish misty cast. Moss green’ is a warm but sophisticated shade. Mystery green has a faint bluish cast.
Golden oak is new. beige is a golden cream, light but warm looking. Blues, from grayish stone tones through lighter-than-Royal to real navy are shown in the majority of collections. There are some dark red and wine shades, too, and occasionally a heather mixture.
Wa
IN OTHER WORDS, this year’s -
winter coat doesn’t have to be
Winter
black. Shop around a little and make a list of everything you expect to buy during the next five months before you decide that “plack is the only thing I won't tire of easily.” The new _woolens admirably combine the four main requisites of a coat fabric—simplicity, character, drape and warmth. One of the highlights of the season is
. tfiple twill, a new kind of worsted
material. This is warm but not bulky and is highly recommended for mature figures. A new version of that old favorite, the wool with texture resembling needlepoint, has a faint vertical rib
. which creates an effect not much
unlike pile velvet. It does not crush and: it won't show spots. Paris talks a great deal about Duvetynes.: Many. an American designer - uses town tweeds for coats as well as suits.
Charity Work Lecture Topic
Miss Marion LeRoy Griffin of the local Catholic Charities Bureau will speak Sunday afternoon at the third quarterly gathering of the Indianapolis district, National Council of Catholic Women, in the auditorium of the Catholic Charities Bureau. She will talk on “What Service Can the Volunteer Worker Render Her Catholic Social Agencies.” The session opens at 2 p. m. Miss Griffin recently was appointed to the chairmanship of the family division of the National Catholic Conference on Social Work at a convention in Denver. .She also serves as chairman of the family division of the Indiana State Conference on Social Work. The Rev. Fr. August R. Fussen-
talk. Mrs. Charles L. Barry, Diocesan president, will report on the national convention held recently in San Francisco, Cal.. Mrs. P. M. Cruzan will speak on parliamentary law. Officers will he nominated and elected and reports of the parish activities will be made by representatives. Mrs. J. Albert Smith, district president, will preside. Members of the board ‘of directors meet at 1 p. m. Sunday afternoon
preceding the general session.
wear for any occasion from dawn to
SALE PRICED—.
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ment, Jnaishapolis Times, 34 Ww.
Soa
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Sra Caring Charge edit n
egger, spiritual director of the Diocesan Council, N. C. C. W., also will |
the, meeting of the 1 [To Hold Open thos pm. Somorton. Bi A Mrs. George Barker, presi dent of | tea be held at the ne the Indianapolis is Chapter T. Hightower, 501 Bucking of Pi Pi Lambda Theta, national edu- Drive. -
26 and 28 E. Washington St.
YOU'LL CHEER THESE
COAT VALUES
'UNTRIMMED FASHION FAVORITES FOR SPORT AND BREE WEAR
s14- 98
Here's TOP VALUES in COATS you need right now. In 5 Boucles, Colorful Tweeds and Mixtures, Plaids . . . Fitted, Swing, Boxy, Reefer and Casual Types. §
Sizes 12 to 20—38 to 44 SOLD ON EXTENDED PAYMENTS
pein eT
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