Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 October 1940 — Page 23

THURSDAY, OCT, 17,

1940

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

PAGE 23

Homemaking—

How Livin

to Plan Menus for Family | g on Moderate-Cost Diet

A MODERATE-COST DIET should provide all the nutriments in

sufficient quantities for a reasonab Planned it should keep adults and

contain the sam iti fruit e quantities of milk

le amount of money.

By careful selection the home- | i

faker can make these meals as ate as those ibre planned on a lib of moderately priced fruits and vegetables that harmonize in flavor and care in cooking will offset the elimination of expensive relishes, Whipped cream and similar luxuries. Families of $2000 to $4000 a year income should live on the moderatepriced diet. At $2000 a year, about 31 per cent should be spent for food. Those with incomes as high as $4000 Wish to have a moderate-cost diet although they can afford a liberal one. Here is the weekly plan for a

moderate-cost adequate diet that]

will cost $6.40 a week for a family of two; $12.25 a week for four and $21 a week for seven. It was pre-

Attention to the selection |

[same as boiled,

|birch, or hard maple, are used in | the unseen parts of the frame. They are sufficiently strong to support the weight and also increase durability

in other ways, because they hold in place the tacks and screws used

construction. The softer woods, used in poor quality furniture, may give way under strain, and the | tacks or nails holding the spring | supports may pull out and allow the springs to sag. Q — How may smoked, boned | shoulders be served? | A—Cook and served sliced the | smoked tongue. Thin slices may be baked with potato and cheese, or boiled shoulder

pared by the U. S. Bureau of Home Economics:

FOODS

ilk: Fluid milk or corresponding quantities of

canned or drie i Vegetables and fries. OF cheese

Potatoes and sweet potatoes

Ornatoes (fresh or canned) and citrus

Leafy. oreen and vellow vegetable Dried beans and LO Jesiabie bt and amts C0 Dried fruits J

Eo oer vegetables and fruit

Lean meat. poultr Flour and cereals: Flour. corn meal.

rice. spaghetti,

: crack Fats: ers Butter. margarines. lard. oil,

shorteni Suge ie ing, salt pork, and bac

Sugar, aR asa les, jams, honey, sirups. and

Accessories: Coffee.

Menus for a Moderate-Cost! Diet

I. Breakfast: Sliced bananas, ready-to-eat cereal, muffins, jam, milk (children), coffee (adults). Lunch or supper: Split-pea soup, buttered toast, apple salad on lettuce, hot tea (adults) and milk (children). Dinner: Meat scallop, baked | sweet potatoes, cole slaw, prune pie, | bread and butter and milk for all. II. Breakfast: Cereal (children), apples fried in bacon drippings, whole wheat toast, milk (children) and cofiee. Lunch or supper: Bacon (adults), poached eggs (children), fried sweet potatoes, bread and butter, sliced oranges and milk for all. Dinner: Braised beef liver, creamed potatoes and hominy, buttered spiced carrots, hard rolls, creamy tapioca pudding, milk (children) and coffee. III. Breakfast, cereal (children), soft-cooked eggs, toast, milk (children) and coffee. Lunch: Potato and celery salad, whole-wheat bread and butter and leftover creamy tapioca with canned or stewed fruit. Dinner: Roast stuffed spareribs (adults), scrambled eggs (children), baked yellow sauash. whole-wheat muffins, butter, marmalade and milk for all. IV. Oranges, not cereal, buckwheat cakes, maple sirup, milk (children) and coffee (adults).| Lunch: Corned beef hash or kidney stew, relish, rye bread and butter, cocoa for all. Dinner: Macaroni and cheese, baked onions in tomato sauce, bread and butter, spiced ap-| ples, milk (children) and coffee or| tea.

Snagged Dress

EVER CATCH the fabric of a brand new dress on a splintery desk or chair—not enough to tear “he material but just enough to cause unsightly pulled threads? Then you'll be interested in the tailor’s method of making the material look “smooth as new.” He pulls a needleful of basting thread into a noose over the snagged spot "and jerks it through to the wrong side of the fabric, leaving the “topside” as smooth as when it left the loom. Today's Recipe 10-MINUTE CRANBERRY SAUCE One and one-half cups sugar, 2 cups water, 1 pound (4 cups) cranberries. Boil sugar and water together for 5 minutes. Add cranberries and boil without stirring until all the skins pop open. (Five minutes is usually sufficient.) Remove from fire and allow sauce to remain in cooking dish until cool. One pound of cranberries makes 21; pounds of sauce. For a thinner sauce, just bring sugar and water to a boil, then add cranberries and cook until they start popping.

The Question Box

Q—How can alcoholic beverage stains be removed from table linen? A—The stains are usually caused bv dissolving the varnish or finish of the tablé, leaving a stain on the cloth. Frequently they may be removed by rubbing them first with alcohol to dissolve the varnish or shellac and then bleaching any remaining color by soaking the spot in heavy suds to which peroxide of hydrogen has been added in the proportion of 1 tablespoonful to 1 gallon of suds. A second method is to bleach the stain with Javelle _water. This can be done on white cotton and linen only.

Q—What is the best wood to use for the covered parts of upholstered furniture? A—Hard woods,

EP ——

Ww. C. T. U. President Speaks at Conclave

Times Special EVANSVILLE, Ind. Oct. 17.—“Food stores, milk drinkers and a healthy hungry consumer—not the liquor traffic—are the real allies of the Indiana farmer,” Mrs. Ida B. Wise Smith, president of the National Women’s Christian . Temperance Union, said last night at a banquet of the Indiana W. C. T. U. here. She said the brewing division uses only nine-tenths of one per cent of the total acreage of farm products. The convention opened Tuesday and will continue through tomorrow. «The shrewd farmer knows,” said Mrs. Smith, “that if a family spends 75 cents for meat, milk or other farm products, he is getting a good share of that money back. He also knows that >» cents spent for beer a couple or fractional part of a mill to income.” / > form J. Wynn, special agent of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, In-

such as ash,

peanut butter

macaroni. assorted breakfast cereals: corresnonding quantities of white and wholegrain breads, other bakery goods and

I tea. cocoa, baking powder, soda, vinegar, salt, spices, tC. .......so...... 60c

of highballs means}-

may be sliced, browned and served with eggs.

FAMILY FAMILY FAMILY FOUR TWO SEVEN 21 at. 7 at. 0 lb. 52 1b.

42 at. 17 Ib. 4 lb, 4 1b.

3 . 1% 1b. 9 lb. 5 2 23 doz. V2 doz. 413 1b. 1 1h.

2 1b. 4 1b, 2 3 1b.

7 Ib. 18 Ib.

2 1b. 5 lb.

8 1b. 2 1b. 5 lb.

40c 85¢

Theta Alumnae Supper Set

Plans for the year will be discussed at sorority meetings tomorrow. The GAMMA ALUMNAE CLUB OF KAPPA ALPHA THETA wil hold its first regular meeting tomorrow at the new chapter house, 825 Hampton Drive. A covered-dish supper will be served at 6:15 p. m. Miss Betty DeGrief, president, will be in charge of the meeting to discuss plans for ihe coming year.

PHI DELTA BETA SORORITY will meet at the home of Mrs. R. L. Maurer, 126 E. 9th St., Apt. 7, at 8 p. m. tomorrow. Plans to be discussed include arrangements for a formal initiation to be held soon.

The Misses Kathryn and Pauline Bovard will entertain members of BETA CHAPTER OF SIGMA DELTA SIGMA SORORITY Monday at Catherine's Restaurant, 1435 N. Meridian St.

ALPHA CHAPTER OF GAMMA PHI ALPHA SORORITY will meet tonight at the home of Mrs. Dorothy Johantgen. Plans will be made for a card party.

GAMMA CHAPTER OF PHI GAMMA SIGMA will be entertained at 8 p. m. tonight at the home of Mrs. George Kraeszig.

Stamp Club to Meet

The Indiana Stamp Club will meet tomorrow evening at 8 o'clock in the Hotel Antlers,

"A Dollar spent in time will save you nine."

We can help you to make repairs N O W while the cost is less.

Call upon us for details.

NV IT PE. FEDERAL SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSN 21 Virgina

INDIANAPOLIS, INDIARNG

es

If properly | i children in good health. It should |} as the liberal diet. less of vegetables, |; S, €ggs and lean meats but more of cereals and fats. ;

for fastening the webbing and other ||

{new and retiring presidents of the | Mesdames J. V. Garringer, L. D.

Recent Bride [School to Have

Sweater Hop

The Warrenette Club of Warren .| Central High School will sponsor a Sweater Hop tomorrow night in the school gymnasium Irom 8:30 to 11:30 p. m. Chuck Smith and his orchestra will play for dancing, and games will be played. - : : 7 8 8 Mrs. Myrtle Rodden, sponsor, and Answer—I have so much respect for a good job that I cannot Janet Talkington, president of the| gdyise a girl to pick up and leave one in order to escape from a (club, have announced the following| problem. Too often the problem simply remains an unwelcome trav- § [student chairmen: Miss Annabell ging companion, refusing to stay at home or take flight. To be | Eakins, tickets; Miss Marjorie} gure 5 change of scene is extremely diverting, but even where one (Campbell, publicity; Miss Thelma pag the means to travel extensively, sooner or later spare time (Dugan, orchestra; Miss Shirley ,ccymuylates and hangs heavily on one’s hands. | Vansickle, active games; Miss Anna Travel does the most good when it is done at vacation time as a | Rosemeyer, Inactive games; MiSs| c,niast to a steady job. It is the change that makes travel a’ s [Vorge Bur on, decorations; Mis curative measure, but wandering can get just as monotonous as work. foi oa rears! re oi I should think your best bet would be to wait for your vacation. Re Huntington, floor and Take it earlier than usual and ask for an extension of time, but general arrangements : have something stable to come back to if you want to enjoy your Teachefs in charge are: Mrs. Isa- Jasation, [hers is nothing like work to make a disappointed person ; « Mi eel useful. bell aoe Se DY In __ Of course the very best cure for a disappointment in love is a Mrs. Robert Magill was Miss |8€r, Vaughn Wood, Miss Mary bigger and better man. It wouldn’t surprise me if your desire j |Schaid and Miss Lois Long, active| © travel isn’t based on your desire to meet someone new and excitMary Isabel Hall, daughter of Mr. | otc. ‘Mrs Cora Hack and Mrs,| ing. Possibly you would find new contacts, but romances encountered and Mrs. C. Edgar Hall, before | Jean Miers, inactive games; Mrs.| On a trip have a way of fizzling out when the trip is over. In spite her marriage Oct. 5. Mr. and Mrs. {Maude Siebert, decorations; Miss| Of the fact that absence has been highly recommended as a means Magill will be at home in Chicago. | Marjorie Forsyth, flowers; Mrs.| Of making the heart grow fonder, proximity does more than anything | Vivienne Carter and Mrs. Helen eles to bring a romance to full flower. : : . . : | Helms, refreshments, and Fred Your disappointment will not be as hard to forget as you imagine Leg ion Units to Fete Rodebeck, floor and general ar-| at 19. You aren't the only one who has gone through such an rangements, experience and lived to tell the tale. As a matter of fact few escape New Officers Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Eash head the| -it. Try not to hang on to your disillusionment. When a girl i ; on | general reception committee, com-| stubbornly-clings to a past love affair we only can assume that she Bruce P. Robinson Unit 133 Of posed " of the following parents of| does so in order to avoid the risk of another. There are plenty of the American Legion will honor the club members: Messrs. and| new experiences to be found at home if you get out and look for them. Broaden your interests. Increase your circle of friends. Wounded love is not a fatal malady as you will discover.

DEAR JANE JORDAN-—I have been going with Jim for four months. I like him but not the way he cares for me. Last month I met Bill and am really in love with him. I don't want to go steady with either boy. Every time Bill comes over Jim is here and I have

JANE JORDAN

DEAR JANE JORDAN—I am a girl 19 years of age. I am badly disappointed in love. Somehow I feel that I would like to travel to forget it. I know that I must forget because it never can be the same again. I have a good job, working six days a week. I make a good salary and have clothes and sll that a girl can ask for, but that does not make me happy. Please give me your advice. SUE.

Porter Photo.

Auxiliary and the junior group at Gleason, R. C. Mahrling, Paul a President’s Day luncheon Satur- Smith, Jesse Akers, Arthur Eickday at Catherine's Tearoom. Mrs. hoff, Webb Arnold. Charles TalkChic Jackson will speak. |ington, Paul Huntington, William Mrs. Homer Asher is succeeding Thompson, Errol Elliott, Forrest Mrs. Clarence U. Knipp as president | Plymate, Harry Walter, Leo Eakins, of the Auxiliary and Miss Mabel | Edward Peil, Hugo Gale. Frank| been letting Bill leave, much to my sorrow. How should I make my Risdon follows Miss Olivine Buena- | Hope, Ivan Foley, Everett Claghorn,| choice? Which one would you take? PENNY. man Ba president of the junior A. G. Matzke, Homer Lewis, R. S. 2 » = organization. | Higgins, Robert Hamilton, Harold : Si : Arrangements for the luncheon | White, G. E. Middleton, Clarence Answer—Take the one you prefer. After all, isn't it up to Bill have been made by the Past Presi- | Peters, Fred Hickman and William| - to make a date ahead of time and not walk in Snexpesiey on dents’ Parley. Mrs. Fred M. Wolf, | Polk and Dr. and Mrs. S. J. Burich.| Jim's time? JANE JO . chairman, has been assisted by : Mesdames John Paul Ragsdale, Will H. Long, Willard S. Boyle, William

Put your problems in a letter to Jane Jordan “who will answer : your questions im this column daily.

Musicale Is Postponed

Reception Planned

For Anniversary

Mrs. George C. Kolb, 5339 College Ave., will hold open house from | 3 to 5 and from 7 to 9 p. m. Sunday in honor of the 50th wedding anniversary of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Walter B. Jones, 1429 Bellefontaine St. Mr. and Mrs. Jones were married in Wooster, O., and have lived here since their marriage. Four sisters of Mrs. Jones will be guests with their families: Mr. and Mrs. Charles Emston and daughter Frances and Mr. and Mrs. Lafay-| ette Shively, Cleveland; Dr. and Mrs. Lincoln Yocum, Wooster, and Mr. and Mrs. Frank L. Thomas, Amesville, O.

Shower Planned

Miss . Mary Jane Land, Sturm Ave, is entertaining this afternoon with a handkerchief shower and surprise party for Mrs. Ralph Pollard of Cleveland, O.

Box Supper Tonight

The Sahara Grotto Post 264 of

|the American Legion will give a

public box supper and Halloween party at 8 p. m. tonight in the post’ headquarters, 13th St. and Park Ave, Dancing will follow the supper. Clarence L. Scott, post commander, is in charge of arrangements. .

Inspection Scheduled Mrs. Nelle S. Johnson, Perrysville, Ind., worthy grand matron of the Indiana Grand Chapter. Order of the Eastern Star, will make her official visit to the Nettie Ransford Chapter 464, Oct. 23. Dinner will be at 6:15 p. m. in Prater Masonic Temple. Reservations should be made with Mrs. Chattie Carlton by Oct. 21. Mrs. Esther Ferree and D.

|Ray Higgins are worthy matron and 1512 patron.

P.-T. A. to Give Party The Lawrence Parent-Teachers Association will present a play to-

Guests were to be members of the

Birthday Club, to which Mrs. Pol-]

lard belonged before moving to Cleveland.

morrow evening at 8 o'clock in the {Lawrence High School auditorium. {The presentation, a comedy farce, |will be “No Bride for the Groom.”

GLASSES

The Student’s Friend!

speeded—with good eyesigh

pendable eye examination.

EASY PAYMENT PLAN

PROGRESS in school can be

Telephone RI-8421 for de-

ONE DAY SERVICE

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‘THE WM. H.

Dr. WELDON, Dr. CONNER, Dr. KLEIN

Registered Optometrists

BLOCK CO.

S. Mayer, Richard Thomas, P. J.

The guest musicale planned by

night in the church building. The

Sertell, C. K. McDowell, Paul Beam, |the Con Moto Club for tomorrow

Antique Show Tonig ht exhibit will include antique pieces

Optical Department, North Mezzanine

James J. Jordan, Fred C. Hasselbring, Donald H. Smith and Frank Collman.

afterncon at the Banner-Whitehill auditorium has been canceled and will be given later.

The Union Congregational|donated by persons throughout the Church, 17th and Rembrandt Sts. |state. Mrs. Gus Nees is chairman is sponsoring an antique show to-|of arrangements for the show.

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