Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 May 1941 — Page 21
PAGE 20
——
Homemaking—
Give Mother a Real Present— Do the Cooking on Sunday
OBSERVANCE OF MOTHER'S DAY has become an annual custom in nearly all American homes. Sons and daughters—in fact, all members of the family—pay their respects to the mothers of the land on the md Sunday in May. Why not give mother a really unusual present? Let some other ;emove from the roaster to a clean members of the family take over the «hallow pan, skin and score, and cooking duties for the day! Here | oarnish with halved maraschino are several tried-and-true recipes cherries if desired. Spread with that should make mother—and her syrup. Return to a hot oven (450 to offspring—enjoy some dainty mor-i.us gp) gor 15 to 20 minutes or until sels not only on “Her Day” but be-| _. . fore and after as well. ‘To start surface of ham is golden brown. Mother's Davy with a smile gi Pree ham in warming oven while round. tv t et sauce is being prepared. around, try these delicious waffles] Pour Aribpings f in which served with honey or sirup, or your! OME | Hippie irom pan in ° favorite jam. ham was glazed into a saucepan. : . Skin fat off, if necessary. Add 1 DATE YEAST WAFFLES tablespoon flour and stir until mix(About 12 to 15 waffles) ture is smooth. Add 1 cup canned % package fast granul on! unsweetened pineapple juice. Bring pat wooded yeast to a boil, add 1 cup seeded raisins LeASDOOR SURAT and simmer for 10 minutes. Add 2 LeasSpoon sugar
Sec
cups milk tablespoons butter quart flour (sifted) teaspoon salt eggs ounces chopped dates Pour the granular yeast into the 14 cup lukewarm water and add the teaspoon sugar, and allow to cool. Rub the butter the sifted flour and add salt, he milk which and
has been he softened veast inutes
Beat for until smooth, Cover
set to rise in warm place until
Beat egg whites and yolks separately, Add yolks to the batter, ing well. Then stir in the n egg whites and beat vigorSet to rise again until you ready for breakfast. Just becooking, mix in the finely dates, slightly floured. Serve with honey, sirup or jam. HAM WITH HONEY-PINEAPPLE GLAZE Bake your ham according to the nufacturer’s directions, but finoff the Hawaiian way with & glaze made from canned unsweetened pineapple juice, honey and mustard I'o prepare the glaze combine cup canned unsweetened pineapple juice, 3% cup strained honey, and 2 teaspoon dry mustard, bring to a boil and continue boiling until syrup is thick and drops from spoon in thick drops After
are f 10re
chopped
Classics!
Scald the milk!
cooled,
tablespoons brandy or non-alcoholic brandy flavoring just before serving. FRESH STRAWBERRY ICEBOX CAKE (Serves 8-10) envelopes plain unflavored gelatine, ¢ cup cold water, 2 cups strawberries, sliced fine before measuring, cup sugar, cup hot water, teaspoons lemon juice, teaspoon salt, egg whites, 12 cup sugar, cup cream, whipped. Mix berries and 1 cup sugar to[gether and let stand five to ten
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By ALICIA HART Times Special Writer NEW YORK, May 8.-—Beauty and fashion experts know that when a woman is perfectly groomed, with hair and clothes that are style-right for the moment, she’s sure to feel and therefore look years younger than she is. When she’s wearing what is “in fashion,” she feels right and gay and young and self-con-fident.
| Put any woman in a hat which
is definitely outmoded or let her
minutes, stirring several times, to continue to wear her hair in a draw out juice. Soften gelatine in|way that looks 1931 instead of 1941
cold water and dissolve in hot
water,
lemon juice and salt to berries and |
|stir well. Cool, and when mixture begins to thicken, fold in stiffly beaten egg whites to which remaining one-half cup sugar has been added, and whipped cream. Line sides of glass baking dish or large mold with halved lady fingers. Pour m half the filling, cover with laver of halved lady fingers. Pour in remaining filling and top with lady fingers. Chill in refrigerator or cold place until set. When firm. unmold onto platter and | garnish with whipped cream and fresh strawberries. | Pieces of stale cake may be used
{and she'll feel the opposite of gay {and young and self-confident. Add dissolved gelatine, |
This business of keeping up with | current hair styles is more important to the morale than a great (many of our older women seem to (realize. If you are still wearing | your hair straight down all the way around, try having it lifted upward at least at the front. Wear it that way for two weeks, whether you like it or not, and see whether it makes a difference in the way you feel about yourself.
) = ” =”
AS AN EXAMPLE of the “in fashion” theory, consider earrings. Five years ago half the people you know considered earrings to be “very aging, my dear.” Now those same people and a great many others as
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES On Mother's Day You'll Feel as Young as
Coiffure
Marian Dreiss a
pre-nuptiel news,
Church, Miss Patricia Ann Healy will b Ann Griffey will be bridesmaid. A
Mr. Stewart's attendants will be his brother, John Stanley Stewart, best man; Walter Gipp, Kokomo, and Richard A. French, a cousin of the bridegroom-to-be, ushers. A reception at the home of the bride's mother, Mrs. Bernice H. Culley, 2361 N. Delaware St, will follow the ceremony. Mr, Stewart is the son of Mr, and Mrs, Frank Stewart. Among parties planned for the bride-to-be is a miscellaneous shower which Mrs. G. G. Lyons will give Saturday night at her home, 540 Luett St. Approximately 50 guests will attend.
» ” Miss' Marian Dreiss and her fiance, Thomas L. Riddick, will be
2
Honor Guests at Bridal Supper; Miss Culley Names Attendants
Selection of attendants for a May 31 wedding highlights today’s
Miss Elizabeth Ann Culley and Robert A. Stewart have chosen attendants for their wedding at 8:30 p. m,, May 31, in the Third Christian
Frances Lyons, will be junior bridesmaid.
to be given tomorrow evening by Mrs.
nd Fiance to Be
e maid of honor and Miss Gloria cousin of the bride-to-be, Harriett
Shower Will Honor Ruth Miller |
Honor guest at a personal shower |
Edward C. Aldrich and Miss Mar- | gie O'Grady will be Miss Ruth Jus- |
| tine Miller, sister of Mrs. Aldrich. | Approximately 25 guests will attend. . The party will be given at the home of the bride-to-be's parents, Mr. and Mrs. George A. Miller, 774 N. Emerson Ave. Miss Miller's marriage to Walter J. Linne, son of Mrs. Elizabeth Linne, 2149 Adams St., will be at 9 a. m. May 17 in
THURSDAY, MAY 8, 1941
Bride-to-Be
Miss Mary Catherine Codarmas is engaged to Alfons Mauser, son of Mr. and Mrs. Martin Mauser, The bride-to-be is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Angelo Codar~
guests at a bridal buffet supper given tomorrow night by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Tib Dreiss, 4619 N. Pennsylvania St. They are to be married at 10:30 a. m. Saturday in a ceremony at the Indianapolis Athletic Club. Other guests will be the prospective bridegroom’s parents, Mr. | and Mrs. Thomas M. Riddick; Mrs. | Nelle Cohn, grandmother of Miss | Dreiss: Mrs. Stell Henderson, Green- | ville, Miss.,, Mr. Riddick's grandmother; Miss Mary Louise Dreiss, sister of the bride-to-be and maid of honor; Mrs. Wallace L. Hislop, Lexington, Ky. matron of honor, and Mr. Hislop; Miss Marjorie Straub, Cincinnati, and Miss Patricia Graves, Cedar Rapids, Iowa, bridesmaids; the Rt. Rev. Msgr. Henry F. Dugan, Mr. and Mrs. Robert F. Cline, Wilbur and Alvin Fernandes and Edward Turner. n ” ” Miss Athalene Martin, 5258 Carrollton Ave, will entertain tonight with a miscellaneous shower for Miss Edna Wier whose marriage to | Michael J. Grannan will be May |17 in SS. Peter and Paul Cathedral. Miss Wier is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. Wier, 6500 | Pendleton Pike, and Mr. Grannan |is the son of Mrs. George Grannan, 221 E. 21st St, Guests will be Mesdames Wier, | Grannan, Denny Lee, Tessie Carter, Paul Milier, Karl Marks, Fred | Hofert, Kennéth Bogart, Forest | McIlroy, Robert Harwick, Charles | Haley and A. K. Cox, Misses Eva
Pretty and practical is the softly upswept evening coiffure, upper right, finished with an attractive cluster of tiny roses and a sprig or two of mimosa. For the same woman, a famous hairdresser designed the sleeker, more sophisticated coiffure, lower right. For the sweetfaced, motherly looking woman at upper left, the expert designed and sketched the chic hair-do at lower left. Its upward, “in fashion” lines are sure to make the wearer feel and therefore look younger. These are excellent examples of smart, up-to-date coiffures that, while chic,
St. Francis de Sales Church.
maz, The wedding will be May 29.
In the interest of better health iwe are fulfilling our obligation to the families of Indiana by “enriching” E-Z-Bake Flour
4 i El pr
the ham has been baked. 'in place of lady fingers if desired.
well will say that “earrings are such [fun to wear, and they make a face | seem younger, don't you think?”
enhance the dignity and poise which is so much a part of the older woman's charm.
{Grace Hale, Ella Buis, Marjorie | Johnson, Hazel Childs and Lela
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"BUY SHOES AT A SHOE STORE"
Unless you are the sophisticated, )
| leader-of-fashion type, taking up a about what to do with the knot of | for shorter hair this spring, but not | ‘new fashion immediately it appears | hair she's been wearing on the back shingle lines and straight-hanging| | probably will make you feel pretty of her head for thirty years.
silly and thus undermine your self-| confidence. But waiting too long] to try it is at least equslly bad] management of your personal ap-| pearance. | Right now, a short time before] Mother's Day, is the perfect moment for the mature woman to decide to try a little modernization. She might consult her hairdresser
| Stokes.
n Gamma Chapter of Phi Gamma Ses a el 3 ole sides ‘e. of Sou te. Wal | Sigma Sorority will entertain toened out, moved upward to the| ere are, of course, more ways| . re crown of the head and posed behind [than one to accomplish moderniza- Big, Hieh Shove: - honor of some variation of the pompadour,|tion of a coiffure. There even are| ISS FATCEOR COANSAR BF © 0 onje that same knot can be made to look “mail order” coiffures on the mar- Of Miss Alberta Barnhorst, 6 1941 instead of early 1912. |ket. The potential customer sends Eastern Ave. oil iach 4 The semi-shingle with straight-|a photograph of herself to a New| Miss Johnson wil ve married to hanging side sections which made York expert. He designs a coiffure John Keane, May 15. mother feel young and daring in| for her, sends a sketch of it to her | 4 ¥ 4 1925 gives her anything but a lift local beauty shop, and the hair-| . ati y ’ ; ’ | AW pd | Mrs. Frank W. Clay, 1226 Cruft these days. There's a definite vogue | dresser there carries out the plan. | will entertain Monday evening
Ld un
Pi Phis Postpone Supper Meeting
The monthly meeting Saturday of the Indianapolis Alumnae Club | of Pi Beta Phi has been postponed | to Tuesday evening. Supper will be served at the Butler University chapter house, 831 W. Hampton Drive.
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You can make runabout dresses, untrimmed, and zipped to the waistline (see small sketch) with this pattern, as well as braid-trimmed house dresses. Very comfortable to work in, because the side-belted waistline is so unhampering. | That front panel, narrowed at the midriff, is very flattering. Pattern No. 8896 is designed in leven sizes 12 to 20; 40 to 48. Sige /16, 42-3 yards of 39-inch material without nap, 5! yards braid. | For this attractive pattern, send
WASH. ST
| 15 cents in coin, your name, address, pattern number and size to The Indianapolis Times Today's Pattern Service, 314 W. Maryland St, Indianapolis. Brand new! Summer Fashion Book showing every important summer style in easy-to-make patterns. Pattern, 15 cents; Pattern Book,
(with a miscellaneous shower for JANE JORDAN
| Miss Edythe Hall, whose marriage to Aaron Sellers of Lebanon will take place May 30. Miss Hall is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Homer L. | Hall, 1506 LeGrande Ave. DEAR JANE JORDAN-—If somebody had ever told me I'd ever Guests at the shower will include find myself in the position I'm in I'd have laughed at them. I've been married for 10 years. Twice my husband has thought he was |Miss Esther Becker and members of in love with other women and both times we separated. I have a |Rho Gamma Chi Sorority, to which 4-year-old daughter whom I love very dearly and now after all these |both Miss Hall and Mrs. Clay bevears I have fallen in love with a young man about six months older |long.
|
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than I am. I can't sleep or eat anymore and I'm very nervous and
upset. He loves me, too, and wants me to leave my husband and marry him. I suspect that my husband is chasing after another woman again. What in the world can I do? I'm afraid of losing my child if I leave my husband. He wouldn't want her but if he found out I was in love with another man, he'd try his best to take her away from me. Please help me or I don’t know what to do. PERPLEXED.
” ” » Answer—When in doubt, do nothing. It's a good rule to follow. A woman who has been disappointed in her husband twice and is on the verge of another disappointment is too upset emotionally to make any major decision. It looks as if you beat your husband to it this time. In spite of your fears you are prepared to say to him proudly, “It is not you who are in love with another, but I. Now Jou are in the position that I have been in the past. How do you like it?” The element of retaliation in infidelity is uhmistakable. consciously you recognize this fact and feel guilty about it. Your fears arise from your cwn guilt. Because you feel hostile toward your husband you are sure that he will react toward you with com=parable hostility, even taking your child whom he does not actually want, to spite you. Now if you are certain that your husband is so unstable that you cannot live with him without martyring yourself, why feel guilty about it? Why not wait quietly until his new affair comes to light, thereby providing you with grounds for divorce and the unquestioned custody of your child? After all divorce is one of our social mechanisms instituted for the rescue of people caught in matrimonial prisons and it no longer carries a stigma. After you are free, you have a legal right to marry again without fear of your former husband. If the young man has proved to be reliable and you are still in love, what is there to prevent your marriage? At least you will be able to regard him as a person instead of a weapon for hurting the man who hurt you. It will take some time to sort out your emotions and gain insight into your own motives. Whatever you do, don't rush. JANE JORDAN.
YOUR HEALTH
¢
Un-
8 When the task seems -
long...pause and
By JANE STAFFORD
THE DRAMATIC TRANSFORMATION within a “few short years” of a young girl high school graduate, proud and ambitious but handicapped and embittered by deafness and poverty, into a “self-supporting and highly productive citizen” able also to give financial assistance to her aged parents was recently reported to the American Society of the Hard of Hearing. The fairy godmother responsible for the transformation of this young girl and for the gift of a rich, full life was the Vocational Rehabilitation Service of the U. S. Office of
many thousands with permanent and serious loss of hearing are hopeful cases for rehabilitation, according to F. Richard Stilwell, supervisor of the Vocation Rehabilitation Service for the District of Columbia.
Modern hearing aids, agency services and a better understanding of hearing problems make it possible to help these people train themselves for jobs, find the jobs, and become useful, happy members of the community.
Education. This same federal agency, which is known to comparatively few people, has done many a similar fairy godmother job for other persons handicapped by being hard of hearing or having other disabilities which handicap them in their efforts to find jobs. Nation-wide surveys indicate that there are some 15,600,000 persons in the United States with some hearing deficiency. This includes, of course, some with only a mild loss of hearing. But the large majority of the
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