Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 January 1941 — Page 12

|. Pritchett Jr. Ralph L. Swingley,

PAGE 12

Homemaking—

Here

Various Sizes of Canned Goods

Is Handy Table for Buying

CANNERS PUT up their produ

to their product and the need of the housewife. The net weight of each must; by law, appear on the can of food. The following table lists several

different sizes with the number of

from a consumer handbook ‘written by Margaret Turner Ganible and

Margaret Chandler Porter.

Can

Small family size, in which many vegetables and fruits and most canned soups are * packed.

In which specialties - like pork and beans, tomato’ juice, spaghetti are patked.

In which most fruits and vegetables are packed, in widest use.

In which. products like fruits, tomatoes, sauerkraut, pumpkin are packed.

So-called institution or restaurant size in which most fruits and vegetables are packed, large family or “company” size.

No. 1 (picnic)

n 2 ”

Keep Cookie Dough

IF CONTAINERS are airtight, cookie doughs and batters may be kept for some time without loss © of flavor at zero temperatures.

To Keep Ham

TO PREVENT mold forming on the cut side of raw ham, spread it over with a thin layer of lard. This can be scraped off just before cook-

cts in the cans that are heit suited

servings in each. This table come

Capacity in Ounces

Capacity Number in of

Cups Birvings

9% to 13 oz.

0z. 114 cups

13 oz. to 1 1b. 2 oz.

'1% cups

1 1b. 2 oz. 212 cups

to 1 1b. 8 oz.

1 1b, 10 oz. to 3% cups 2 lbs. 3 oz.

6 lbs. to 8 lbs.

13 cups

” ” s

‘| Something New for Spinach

GIVE SPINACH an air of elegance and piquancy of favor by § serving it with a huge gob of Hol- | landaise sauce. And don’; forget | the garnish of hard-boiled gig slices. |

‘| Aluminum Satisfactory

ALUMINUM, though it is affected by acids and alkalis, is easily eleaned with. fine steel wool, |1i heats quickly, holds the heat, wears well,

ing the ham.

Junior Chamber

Will Sponsor Hockey Game

Mark S. Matthews, New York, president of the United Junior Chamber of Commerce, end Mrs. hockey game between the New Haven Eagles and the Capitals tomorrow night at the Coliseum. They will be the guests of Mr. and Mrs. T. Ice. Mr. Ice is a national vice president of Jaycee.

The local Junior Chamber of Commerce is sponsoring ‘Herbie Lewis Night” tomorrow. Twelve hundred and fifty boys and girls will see their first hockey game as the guests of the Capitals, the Coliseum Corp. and the Junior Chamber of Commerce.

Among the boxholders for the game are Messrs. and Mesdames Arch Grossman, Henry Hohlt, A. W. Herrington, Omer S. Hunt, Tom Joyce, George Freyn, Bruce McConnell, George N. Ross, R. F, Buck, William Barrere, Alex Thompson, G. L. Brinkworth, Leon C. Brooks, James C. Curtiss, G. L. Canfield, Peter P. Woods, James S. Marlowe, Leroy Sanders, B. R. Mull, Mrs. Carrie Rink, Miss Blanche Ocker- . man and Miss Wenonah Moreland and Mr. Scott Clifford. Misses Judy Robinette, Mary Elizabeth Scott and Jean Grumme and Messrs. Norman Eldridge and John Sutton have planned a party. Junior Chamber of Commeice members and their wives who will attend are Messrs. and Mesdames Royer K. Brown, John A. Bruhn, Burford Danner, Berkley W. Duck Jr, R. Michael Fox, Edward E. Green, John Hair, Dudley S. Horth, .C. Hollis Hull, Lyman G. Hunter, Ralph’ W. Husted, Robert E. Jackson, Donald B. Keller, D. J. King, Robert E. Kirby, John 8. Kittle Jr., Donald A. Morrison, J. Leslie Muesing, H. Burch Nunley, Jess C.

Norman E. Titus, Urban K. Wilde, “Edward W:=Wohlgemuth and Doyle Zaring. Other reservations have been made 'by George W. Bockstahler, Edwin M. Craft Jr, John H. Elam, _ Maynard R. Hokanson, Mayburn F.

Landgraf, James H. McClure, Wal-|.

ter J. McKinsey, Eli Messenger, Robert F. termeyer, Galen IL. Parks, Frank L. Reissner Jr. C. Irwin Sutton and Evan B. Walker, and Messrs. and Mesdames John Cappel, Dwight Pearce, J. Edward

is light and not too expens ve.

of Commerce

States |

Matthews will atténd the

Harry In this

Wysong, Cliff Jones and Thomas Hanika. Special guests will be Giovernorelect Henry FP. Schrickel,i Mayor Reginald - Sullivan, Superintendent of Schools DeWitt S. Morgan, Secretary of State James M|| Tucker, Lieut.~Governor-elect Charles Dawson and Virgil Martin, Clfhmunity Fund manager.

ed front and slight train. sian embreidery «in coral pearls accentuates the light of the frock.

“White House bl gown, Mrs. [Franklin D. Roos€] will receive guests at the rei} tion, following the third-term|i auguration lof her husband, || President, ¢n Jan. 20. This gi ple belted ctepe frock has a pl} ]

League to Fete Executive

Miss Ruth McClelland of ‘Washington, national president of the

_| Women’s Overseas Seryice ‘League,

‘er - eed dlue

Foods Breathe Too!

Foods, too, need tha protection of ICE |. . . the protection of moisture and the circulation of Cleanwashed, odor-free air. Dry, stale air robs foods cf nutritive value, dries them up, hastans detsrioration.

Science recognizes that pure ICE and Modern ICE Refrignration is the best protection for foods. Jse ICE for Safety!

ry Somint py /7

‘Ransel, Merrill Waltman, Reese

Drink milk regularly if you would have beautiful nails. Split ting finger nails are an indication of calcium deficient y. Nature

provides the best

ALSO RICH

IN PROTECTIVE VITAMINS A, B AND @

source of assimiable calcium in

Voth

will ‘be guest of hondr tonight at a meeting of the Indianapolis Unit of the. organization, The hostess, Mrs. William Doeppers, 5911 Central Ave. will be assisted by Miss Tulie Roberson. The honor guest is ‘in Indianapolis en route $0 Washington after a tour of the Midwestern units of the Jeague. She served overseas in the World War wiin the Y. M. C. A,, attached to the 80th Division of the U, S. Army.

Mrs. Edwards to Preside

Mrs. J. R. Edwards will preside at a meeting of the Bridgeport ParentTeacher Association tonight at 8 o'clock in the school building., The program will be given by pupils in Mrs. Elsie Ball's speech classes at

"|Ben Davis High School and‘ by

NEW YORK, Jan. 8 (It P.).— Four leading f emerged from the Hotel Astor at dawn this morning, red eyed an weary after a 12-hour rehearsal of the style show that is to be the opening gun of an- international race for fashion supremacy. Dorothy Shaver, vice present o of a Fifth Avenue department store Edna Woolman Chase of ‘Vogue magazine, Eleanor Lemaire, the in-¢

the Tobe-Coburn Fashion School, had, witls their assistants, finally whipped their $50,000 baby into pin perfect shape. This evening will tel] the tale, Pe HD, before an audience of 2.00 fashion foliowers from all over the country, the spring styles for 1941 will be revealed. The show, entitled ‘Fashion Futures,” is an all American presentation. It includes some 400 dresses, shoes, hats, corsets, furs and jewels, created by over 200 manufactures and paraded by 150 models. - At four, ® yesterday afternoon,

room of the Hotel Astor was a madhouse. Half dressed models burst out of the dressing rooms wailing

of photograph dered disconsolately about.

terior decorator, and Tobe; head offrooms.

ashion = experts| for

At five were well under way. More $75,000 worth of jewels had been lodged in the hotel safe, truckload after truckload of ,| clothing had arrived. The private dining rooms, next to the ballroom, had been turned into . dressing

Just what these clothes look like wil! remain 6 a jealously guarded secret until their unveiling tonight. Strict censorship was imposed on the press by the style dictators on ali matters of fashion revealed at; the dress rehearsal, with all present put on their poner not to disclose a single stitc At eight tk time out was. called for coffee and sandwiches. The five models impersonating the; five best dressed women, so-called, were implored not to spoil their outfits. These ensembles included the

when the rehearsal began, the ball-| spring

Hectic Preparations Precede Faustian Futures’

ballroom were five dummies, as yet unclothed, representing - another

| group of “best dressed.”

By midnight, 10 of the 20 scenes

~ '|of the show had been run through.

Miss Shaver, who earlier had muttered: “This is a shambles!” now began to beam. In the sound booth, high on the rear balcony : Arthur, the sound man, struggled with the whistle of a commuter’s train. Juanita - Juarez, Brazilian dancer, |obliged a group .of photographers with a rhumba. The three infants were sous asleep. By four a. m, everything had been checked. The models were ordered to sleep late to gut back their “sparkle.” One young model declared loudly: “1 may, be Lady Mendl, bt I. feel lousy.”

Leonard Worland Married - Mr. and Mrs. Chester | Worland, 416 Spencer: Ave. ' announce the marriage of their son, Leonard, to Ruth Burke. The wedding was Jan. 4 in Honolulu. The couple is at

{home in Honolulu and will return

to “the States” in the summer.

Sew for Riley Cheer. 1 Guild Thursday, 3

The Women's Association of the Meridian Heights Presbyterian Church will meet tomorrow at the church, 47th St. and Central Ave, for an all-day meeting. During the morning, members will sew for the Riley Hospital Cheer Guild. At 1:30 p. m. the afternoon program will begin with devotions by Mrs. George Stout and continrue with a review of “Dangerie Opportunity” by Mrs. Philander

Dr. Nagle to Speak Dr. Harry H. Nagle will spéak on “Americanism—Topic of Interest Today” at a meeting—eof_the Nora Parent-Teacher Association Friday at 7:30 p. m. in the school auditorium.

SHOP | AT BALDWIN’S

VALUES A De No UPRIGHT A fine selec or or Special mstruments

at AeiseLion prices ga terms. Baldwin Piano Salesroom Open eves. MA-1431.

44 8. Penn,

Chuck Reimer’s Swingsters.

tat they “didn’t have a thing to

once 18

A

*

; SX There are now 100,000 telephones served through Indianapolis central offices . . . the greatest number in this city’s history. Such growth | is impor-

tant to every subscriber, for with more telephones in use your service is

more valuable than ever before . . . you can talk with more people, more

people can talk

with you.

Indianapolis and the telephone have grown up NA Both have come

a long way since the first telephone exchange was opened here in 1878

,.

-

Through the Years

1877 —2 Telephones 1885— 1,000 .1900— 4,600 1910-21,500 1920 —-64.600 1930-—-88,700

1933—67.200 (DEPRESSION LOW)

ODAY — 100,000

thriving, progressive community.

search for better ways of doing things.

with only a few dozen subscribers. Through the years our facilities have. been expanded to meet the increased demand for telephone service in a

However, not only has the number of telephones increased, but the quality of service also has improved remarkably—the result of constant I

In the future, as Indianapolis grows, our unchanging policy shall continue to be: the best possible service, and the most, at the least possible cost,

INDIANA BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY