Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 November 1939 — Page 19
FHURSDAY, NOV. 2, 1939 THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES _ :
Time Will Make Christmas Gift for Baby Modern Trend
En
SEVERAL READERS ask about soy beans, “We read so much about them in the newspapers. Are they really important as food?” The Foods and Nutrition Division of the Bureau of Home Economics has this to say about them. “Soy beans as compared with our common table beans rank higher in food value, They are richer in Aon and fat and their protein can be used to better advantage by the body than that of other beans. On the average, dry soy beans contain about 112 times as much protein and 12 times as much fat as other kinds of dry beans. Even as the green shelled vegetable, soy beans are richer in these two food factors than other green beans, either shelled or in the pod. Soy beans, whether fresh or dry, can be relied on as a good source of the nutritionally important mineral % elements—calcium, phosphorous, and iron
" “Soy bean flours or meals made from whole soy beans are similar to the dry soy beans in food value Flours or meals prepared from ~ the soy bean press cake left when the oil is extracted are much lower (» in fat content, however, and higher in protein and carbohydrate”
Soy Bean Flour Muffins
1 cup sifted soy bean flour 1 cup white or wholewheat flour 1 teaspoon salt 2 tablespoons sugar 5 Sift the dry ingredients together. Mix the milk and beaten egg, { add the melted fat, pour into the dry ingredients, and stir until they
¢ are just moistened. Pour into greased muffin pans and bake in a hot J . oven (425 degres F.) for 20 to 25 minutes.
Chile Can Carne With Soy Beans
2 cups cooked soy beans 14 pound salt pork, diced fresh) : ~~ 3% cup chopped onions 1 tablespoon chile powder | ~ 3 pound lean beef, ground ; | Fry the salt pork until crisp. Remove the pork and brown the § + onions. Add the beef, stir, and cook slowly for five minutes. Then First Row—K 1, k 2 tog., k 1, O, k add the crisped pork and remaining ingredients and heat to boiling. 1,* 0 k1 sl 1 k 1, psso., k 2 3 x tog, k 1, O, k 1, Repeat from * 11 more times O, k 1, sl 1, k 3,
psso., (k 1, p 1) 7 times—center|front border.
Stitch i By MRS. GAYNOR MADDOX l ttc mm : By NEA Service Ei em There’s no njcer present for as baby: than a hand-made bathrobe | : . Add to this a matching bottle: cover : : : and the present. becomes something § = EE 3 Club S u b ] ect extra de luxe. ; AAAS : ol : ? be, The bathrobe shown erg really a |is quite simple to make. And there's: : Week-end meetings of local womime. Enolgh «to: Anish 3% for. en’s clubs will include several lunchMaterials required for infant. size eons, discussions of modern phil. are: 7 balls of baby wool (1 ounce: osophy arid co-operatives, travelogs balls) in any color; 1 pair knitting on Mexico and Peru and a book repins No. 2 (2% mm. size); 1 yard ei :
satin ribbon, 1 inch wide. : 2 : Gauge—3 patterns make:2 inches; Mrs. Frank Chiles will be chair10 rows make 1 inch. ; man of the program on “Modern| Daum, 5702 Lowell Ave. hostess, Back—sStarting at bottom, cast on Thought and Philosophy” at the|J. I. F. F., Shortridge High School. 212 sts. : 2 meeting of the CULTURE CLUB| Fri. eve. Miss Sallie Vaught, 2025 tomorrow at the home of Mrs, J. B.| N:- Alabama, hostess. P ost-Hals
ci WR : ; ; - aaa To Be Cultur C [1:P., Shortridge High School. : 7 p.-m. Pri. Miss Gene Fulton, © 3909 Kenwood Ave. hostess. Lo Sin Loy. 8 p. m, today. Miss Bets ty Stevens, hostess. | Ladies’ Auxiliary, indianapolis Fire« man’s Association. 7-p. m. today: Hotel Lincoln. Card party at 8:30 p.m ty RG RS S. I. 8. Chapter, Sub-Deb. - To« night. Miss Mary Jane Campbell, 4009 Central Ave. hostess. Chil¥
dinner. : Laeta, Fri. eve. Miss Mary Lou
ay 2 8 : >
i
First Row—K 1, k 2 tog., k10, . k1,*0,k1,s11,k 1, psso0, k-2 tog, & ; McCoy, 974 West Drive, Woodruff loween party, ; Place. SORORITIES }
k 1, O, k 1. Repeat from: * across, ending with O, k 1, sl 1, K 1,-p.s&.0, kL Gamma Chapter, Phi Gamma Sigs ma. 8 p. m. today. Mrs. George
Kraeszig, 1820 8, Madison Ave, hostess. CE Alpha Chapter, Delta Phi Beta, Mon. eve. Mrs. Marten A. Blunck,
Second Row — P across. Repeat & these 2 rows alternately for 6 inches. Then dec. 1 st at both ends of next & row and every 3d row thereafter until 116 sts remain. Work straight until piece measures 21 inches. . To Shape Armholes—Bind off 2 sts at beginning next 2 rows. Then dec. 1 st at end of each row until
94 sts remain. Work 1% inches Perfect Christmas presents for some nice baby would be this soft, cozy bathrobe and a matching. straight. Work across 1st 36 sts, bind ' pottle cover. Roth are simple to make. ; < : : : off 22 sts (back of neck), work over : :
remaining 36 sts. Work over these last 36 sts, binding off 2 sts at neck edge every other row until 28 sts re.|main. Work straight until armhole measures 4% inches. Bind off, knitting 2 sts together across. Work op posite side to correspond. : : Right Front—Cast on 106. sts.
2 teaspoons baking powder 3; cup milk 1 egg, beaten 1 tabléspoon melted
Miss Martha Cunningham will discuss “Co-operative Principles and Organization” at the meeting of the IRVINGTON FORTNIGHTLY CLUB tomorrow at the home of Mrs. Arthur R. Robinson, 5933 E. Washington St. Mrs. C. U. Watson wy Dearborn, hostess. . Guest also will speak on “Indiana Farm 4 ; Re Bureau’ Co-operative.” Mrs. Robin-| CARD PARTY ih son's assistant will be Mrs. Martha |; o op. gat. eve. Hall, Cottage
Williams. and Olive. Public invited. SUPPER Men's Booster Class, Crooked Creel§ Baptist. Church. 5:30-8 p. m. Friy
Church, Road 29 and Kessler Blvd. Oyster supper.
fat
far back for 512 inches. Bind off 3 sts at beginning of each row until 56 sts remain. Bind off. Sew up shoulder seams. Neck Band—Transfer 14 sts of] right front safety pin onto neadle; with right side toward you, pick up 68 sts along neck edge; transfer with right front. 14 sts of left front safety pin onto - Sleeves—Starting at wrist, cast on|needle (96 sts). Work 3; inch in 54 sts and work 1 inch in ribbing|ribbing of k 1, p 1. Bind off tightly. of k 1, p 1, increasing 32 sts on last{Sew up underarm and sleeve seams. row (86 sts). Work in pattern as|Sew in sleeves. Trim with ribbon.
Dayton Art Institute Director
To Address W.D.C. Department At 2 Monday on ‘Stained Glass’
Siegried R. Weng, director of the Dayton Art Institute, will discuss “The Art of Stained Glass” at a meeting of the Art Department of the Woman’s Department Club at 2 p. m. Monday in the clubhouse. Mrs. Paul T. Rochford, chairman, will preside. Mr. Weng’s lecture will be illustrated with color slides taken from the collection of Robert Metcalf, director of the decorative arts department
of the Dayton Institute. Mr. MetClub to Hear
Second Row—P across. Repeat these 2: rows alternately for six inches. : On next row and every 3d row: thereafter, dec., 1 st at underarm edge until 58 sts remain. Work straight “until piece measures 21 inches. “i: : . To Shape Armholes—Bind off 2 sts at underarm edge once; then dec. 1 st at armhole edge every other row until 47 sts remain. Work straight until armhole measures 2%: inches. Slip center front border sts
onto a safety pin (thus starting neck: shaping). Dec. 1 st at neck edge every other row until 28 sts remain. Work straight until armhole measures 44% inches, Bind off; knitting 2 sts together across. | Left Front—Work to correspon
Mrs. Lewis Genung will speak on 2 cups tomatoes (canned or “Peru” before members of the LINCOLNIAN CHAPTER OF THE INTERNATIONAL TRAVELSTUDY CLUB tomorrow at their meeting at the heme of Mrs. F. B. Neff, 4152 College Ave. A luncheon at 12:30 p. m. will precede the program. Mrs. Gertrude Martin and Mrs. G. E. Dinehart will be assistant hostesses, : .
v
Picks Thanksgiving For Wedding Day,
Mrs, Earl Byrket will review| Mr. and Mrs. Francis J. Uehlein: “Green Laurels” at the meeting of have announced the engagement the BROOKSIDE GARDEN CLUB] any ‘approaching marriage of their following a covered dish luncheon|gaughter, Helen, to Harry A. Minke / tomorrow. Mrs. Edward J. Katzen- ner, son of Mr. and Mrs. Martin D,
" JANE JORDAN =.
’ EAR JANE JORDAN—I have had the misfortune to fall irl love 1 b¥<'with a girl who has turned out to be a flirt. She is 21, very good looking, and has no trouble in attracting men. She led me on -pn from the very first. . I have been extremely nice to her, lavished her with gifts. She never appreciated anything I did for her and has even gone out of Her way to hurt me. She won't give me any more dates, but instead of flatly refusing, she strings me along and tries to provoke me. I find that she never. has gone with any one boy very long. I know several fellows she goes with and they are out for nothing but necking. -I know that the best thing for me to do is to forget her, but what I want to know more than anything else is this: » How is a girl like this going to turn out later on? Will she ever look back and regret that she was so inconsiderate to fellows who thought something of her and respected her? Ww. D. » ® ® Answer—I do not know how the girl will turn out. From your account the prognosis for the future is not favorable. The flirt who
Arrange Joint. ~ Legion Dance
Evangelicans To See Drama
A prayer service and a dramatization are among: church organization activities for tomorrow and this month, E,
berger will be hostess at her home, his. - The wedding will be 1335 N. LaSalle St. ; anksgiving Day in the Holy Cross!
Mrs. Demarchus C. Brown will Catholic Church. speak to members of the MAGAZINE CLUB and their guests at a meeting Saturday afternoon in Ban-ner-Whitehill auditorium. Mrs. R. T. Rogers will be in charge of music. Hostesses for the meeting will include Mesdames F. W. Danner, J. A. Johnson, H. K. Fatout and James Fenner.
Members of the Osric Mills Watkins Post and Auxiliary of the American Legion will entertain friends at a dinner dance at 6:30 p. m. tomorrow at the Riviera Club. Music will be provided by the John-son-Snyder Orchestra.
Mrs. Howard Paddock of the Auxiliary and R. D. McDaniels, Post social chairman, are co-chairmen of arrangements. Assisting them are
_. A Complete Optical Servic a Headaches : Nervousness Dizziness
May Be Caused’ By Eyestrain
DR. JOS. E. KERNEL
OPTOMETRIST
‘Mrs. Harold Seaman will direct a dramatization of “Women :and the Way” at a meeting of tke WOMEN'S FEDERATION OF THE FIRST EVANGELICAL CHURCH fomorrow at the home of Mrs. Charles Hartman, 5040 Pleasant Run Parkway.
calf’s collection includes about 13,000 slides. The slides are a part of a two-year program sponsored by an art patron for recording the glass of
‘Miss ‘Lula Hoss will speak on “Traveling Through Mexico on a Shoestring” before members of the VIOLET DEMREE TRAVEL CLUB
loses interest in a man as soon as the conquest is made impresses one as a woman who harbors considerable hostility toward men and who: wishes to make them dependent upon her for the pleasure of
» turning them down.
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conquers.
So insatiable is her desire for revenge against her original love object and the man who worsted her that one conquest is .insufficient but must be repeated ad infinitum. In other words the desire is to pass on to others the humiliation she suffered in childhood. . It would be instructive to know whether or not this girl has any well-developed interest in life other than the winning of men. If her achievements in other fields are not completely subjugated to her desire to prove her feminine power by a succession of discarded masculine scalps, I should think there would be more hope for her. As a rule a woman who is in constant need of new males to conquer is as incapable of tying herself down to any one task as to any one man.
The feminine Don Juan oftentimes is a girl who has come off second best in competition for the love of some man in childhood. , Her father or brother may have preferred some other woman in the family to her, a disappointment for which she continually «% atones by proving that she can be first with each man whom she
Mrs. Clinton J. Ancker, Auxiliary president; Mrs. Erwin McComb, Orville Bray, post commander, and Joe A. B. Smith, 3
Winners in Bridge Forum Announced
Winners of the Bridge Forum held recently in Block’s auditorium have been announced by Mrs. Dorothy Ellis, diséctor. ; Winners are: Section 1, north and south, Mrs. Keith Johns and Mrs. M. L. Ent, first and Miss Marie Koontz and Mrs. Marie €hurchill, second; east and =west, Mrs. John Kelly and Mrs. Wayne Warrick, first, and Mrs. J. T. Cracraft and
the Old World in colored photography in the event of watime destuctin of the originals. glass of France, Switzerland, Germany and England was photographed.’ : Mrs. John Bern$ and Mrs. C. H. Maston will have charge of a tea following the lecture. Their assistants will include Mesdames Charlton N. Carter, M. E. Elstun, W. E. Fraser, Warren S. Gibson, Thomas L. Green, Tilden F, Greer, Elizabeth A. Hall, J. C. Hardesty, Lee Ingling, Ernest R. Keller, Stanfield Keeney, Robert Lambert, Charles M. Maley, Royal A. Nicholas, Boyd W. Templeton, Ralph I. Thompson, J. M. Thistlewaite and Omer S. Whiteman and Miss Pearl F. Kiefer and Miss Mary
Stained
Health Official
Dr. Howard B. Mettel, director of maternal and child health of the State Board of Health, will address members of the Cheer Broadcasters, Inc., following a luncheon at 12:30 p. m. Friday, Nov. 10. Mrs. E. W. Padgett, 4925 E. 10th St., will be hostess. : : Mrs. Everett L. Hayes is chairman of the luncheon assisted by
Mrs. Cecil Tucker Vestal and Mrs. J. ‘Lee McDermed. (Mrs. J. H.
Prochaska is program jc irman.
Mrs. John Coulter will lead the devotions. Hostesses will ‘include Mesdames Orville Berry, Andrew Shalley and Frank Norkus.
Members of all units in the MARJON COUNTY WOMEN'S‘ CHRISTIAN TEMPERANCE UNION. will hold a two-hour prayer service at 10 a. m. tomorrow at the Wheeler City Rescue Mission. Mrs. Harold O'Brien, chairman .of the county evangelistic department, will be. leader. 3
Sub-Debs to Meet The Much Ado Chapter of the Sub-Deb Club will meet at 7:30 p. m. tonight at the home of Miss
Saturday afternoon. Miss Anna Schaefer will entertain the club at her home, 2035 N. Meridian St.
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: Si ¥ : * |Betty Greiner, 1316 N. Linwood Ave. Auxiliary to-Meet ———— The Ladies’ Auxiliary to Town- Chairman Chosen . send Club 14 will meet at 2 o’clock| Mrs. O. F. Heslar is chairman for tomorrow afternoon at the home of |the Officers’ Wives Club luncheon at Mrs. Esther Christie, 1237 Roosevelt|1 p. m. Monday in the Armory, 711 Ave. . : : N. Pennsylvania St.
It is/not at all surprising that the girl has gone out of her way to hurt you and strings you along in the hope of hurting you again. To win, dominate and discard men over and over again, is to turn love into a means of murder, emotionally speaking. One would expect cruelty to be manifest in such a situation, and it is to your credit that you refuse to subject yourself to further atfack. = JANE JORDAN.
Ppt your problems in a letter to Jane Jordan who will answer your questions in this column: daily.
Beatrice Whiteman.
Mrs. Leota W. Loop, Nashville, Ind., is displaying 10 .oil" paintings in the Mary Quick Burnet exhibit room. - : : :
Chaillaux to Address Railway Mail Society
Homer Chaillaux will discuss “Good Citizenship” before the Women’s Auxiliary of the Railway Mail Association at its meeting at
2:30 p. m. Tuesday at the Woman's Department. Club. Members’ husbands will be guests. Dinner will be served at 6:15 p. m. The boys’ quartet of Technical High School will sing. Mrs. Urban K. Wilde .is chairman of the program. Mrs. Raymond A. Goldsmith is dinner chairman, assisted by Mesdames “Paul 'G. Vickery, Charles Campbell, Ralph H. Cradick, Orville DeMott, Frank IL. Smith, Adam Honderich, Charles Kyger, F. W. Tarplee, George Burnham, Charles E. Cole, Roy E. Blind, William T. Coutz, Howard N. Day, Paul Duckwall, T. J.- Tuttle, Louis H. Reynolds, John C. Allen, K. W. Avery, Harry Burton and Edwin Nelson. :
STORES
5539 E. Wash. St. -
Mrs. C. L. Arvin, second.
Section 2, north and south, Mrs. K. P. Pettijohn and Richard Mills, first, and Mrs. A. J. Hendricks and Byron Nutter, second; east, and west, Mrs. Dennis Dalton and Mrs. Thomas Elrod, first, and Mrs. E. D. Fouts and Mrs. A. W. Funkhauser, second.
Section 3, north and south, Mrs. Arthur Kincaid and Mrs. Bertha Montford, first, and Mrs.R. F. Pasho and Mrs. J. T. Rhodes, second; east and west, Mrs. L. H. Kornafel and
Dictators Profiting by Our Speech F r eedom, Br yan Says Miss Jessie Jolly, first, and Mrs. Jerry Polson and Mrs. Carl Bauer,
’ second. | /® ¥imes Special BLOOMINGTON, Ind., Nov. 2—"The dictators say that democracy is a proved failure and have persuaded many of their own people to relapse under the ancient government of force,” Dr. William Lowe Byran, § President -emeritus of Indiana University, declared today. He addressed women attending the third annual Indiana Federation of Clubs 3 Institute at the university. “By every device of open and seeret propaganda, the dictators are taking advantage of our freedom of speech to destroy freedom of speech evel®ywhere,” Dr. Bryan told the assembly. “They are under- _ mining the faith of people in democratic freedom.”
: Dr. Roy V. Peel, director of the Yvidiana University experimental re-
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Service Star Legion Chapter Will Sew
Members of the Hamilton Berry Chapter of the Service Star: Legion will sew on garments for the Needlework ' Guild of America at their meeting at 2 p. m. Tuesday with Mrs. O. E, Green, 2225 Broadway. * Mrs. Charles K. McDowell will
report on the organization's natignal convention held recently in Evans-
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v munity in a non-partisan political organization with a program of both practical and progressive local government.
“In this way, the good work already begun will continue to develop and defend democracy first;at home in the towns and townships,
then In the states and last in they * An Armistice Day program is
“sgearch program, spoke this morning.| Other university faculty members Pp lanned. » Th hy iscussion of political or-|who were speakers today included 4 ganizations, Dr. Peel said: . |Dr. A. B. Hollingshead, sociology; * “We cannot expect the newer Prof. Samuel E. Braden, economics; forms of political action to become |Prof. C. Leonard Lundin, history; # established over-night. Possibly one| Prof. John V. Muller and Prof. of the major parties might accept|Frank L. Sweetser, sociology, and the challenge to provide both plat-| Prof. Edward H. Buehrig, govern-form-and performance to serve the ment. ;
cause of good governmeri in na- EE Se Clique Club Meets
tion, state and city.” : Dr. Peel advoc, ted The CliquesClub will meet tonight with Miss Betty Thurston,
forward-looking respon: :
and women unite in € PATTERN 931
AFTERNOON DRESS HAS DOUBLE PANEL
"Tis the season for shapliness and ‘femininity! And if ever a dress enhanced your figure — this is it! Claire Tilden’s Pattern 931 has soft, subtle flattery in every line. The yokes give a nice broad-shouldered look and extend in one easy piece to form double panels all down the front. Gathering at the sides— under each yoke and above the waistline — softens your bustline contours. Let a boldly contrasting sash come from under the panels to cross in back and tie in front, “sheathing your waist slimly. Then put fancy buttons and buttonholes at the graceful neck for a dress-up touch. Want a more everyday style? Use a narrow belt tied neatly in back, knot a scarf at your throat, and make the sleeves short. This style will take: beautifully to a sheer wool or a richly colored crepe. - : Pattern 931 is cut in misses’ and women’s sizes 14, 16, 18, 20, 32, 34,| 36, 38, 40 and 42. Size 16 requires 415 yards 39-inch fabric. and 1% yards contrast.
Send fifteen cents (15c¢) in coins for this pattern. Write clearly size, name, address and style number. Send orders to Pattern Department, Indianapolis Times, 214° W.
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