Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 July 1941 — Page 15
Rs
WEDNESDAY, JULY 23, 1941 _
——
Encourage Man of the House “To Have Party for His Cronies
Homemaking—
IT’S A WISE WIFE who encourages the man of the house to give She’s doubly wise if she leaves in the ice box plenty of cold cuts, relishes and an assortment of dessert cheeses —and keeps away from the party scene. possible to treat the gentlemen to Camembert, tawny Liederkranz cheese, mild Brie and Swiss, all with “made in America” labels.
a party for his favorite cronies.
The art: of making Camembert was developed in this country more than 25° years ago. Liederkranz cheese, thas special male favorite that’s a famous affinity for beer, is
© the only American-invented cheese
to achieve an international reputation. It.was named after a New
_. York singing society nearly half
a century ago. Swiss and Brie have all been made successfully in this country for some time. High-flavored Liederkranz cheese calls for rye bread or pumpernickel and combines happily with marinated onions, catsup or pickle relish. Camembert, another sure fire male
" preference, has a special affinity
for toasted rolls and highly polished red apples.
LIEDERKRANZ CHEESE AND ONION SPREAD
Spread slices of rye or pumpernickel with butter and then with Liederkranz cheese. Cover with sliced marinated Bermuda onion. To marinate onion, add salt, pepper and equal quantities of oil and vinegar to sliced onion and let stand 20 minutes. Garnish with stuffed olives.
SAVORY LIEDERKRANZ CHEESE SPREAD
1 package Liederkranz-cheese 12 cup butter . 1, teaspoon salt 1, teaspoon pepper . 3 teaspoon paprika 1; teaspoon prepared mustard 3; teaspoon Worcestershire sauce Few drops Tobasco sauce, if desired 3 tablespoons green pepper, finely chopped . 2 tablespoons onion or chives, finely chopped Cream together Liederkranz cheese and butter to form a smooth paste. Add seasonings and blend well, Add green pepper and onion. Serve as a spread on crackers, canapes, rye or pumpernickel bread.
TOMATOES STUFFED WITH LIEDERKRANZ
Cut the stem end from small to-
-
+ matoes and scoop out the pulp.
Sprinkle the inside of the tomato with salt and stuff with Liederkranz cheese. 2 2 2
Cold Cuts Are Tempting
From salami to cervelat, there are hundreds of cold cuts to choose from which paired with a simple salad or vegetable make light refreshments for men. Here are some tasty combinations: : 1. Liver sausage with mashed potato salad, raw carrot straws and watercress. 2. Bologna and liver cheese sausage with asparagus marinated in Prench dressing, celery curls and cheese crackers. 3. Salami with cream cheese filled dates and sliced pineapple in lettuce cups, sweet gherkins and rolls. 4. Thuringer with tossed salad greens, spiced beets, stuffed olives and cocktail crackers.
2 8 =»
The Question Box
Q—Please give a recipe for cocktail sauce to be used on shrimp, A—Combine % cup tomato catsup, 1% cup chili sauce, % cup lemon juice, 1 teaspoon chopped chives, % teaspoon minced parsley, 1% teaspoons grated horseradish and 6 drops of Tabasco sauce.
Q—What is the proper response
in Contract Bridge when a player’
opens the bidding with One No Trump and partner raises immediately to four in a major suit? A—The opening hand should always pass. /
Summer Desserts Are Solved Here
Hot? Sure! Any reason for you
to bog down on the dessert course? |”
’Course not! Take a leaf from Mary Washington’s cook book and rely on gingerbread—her gingerbread— for easy and yummy hot day desserts. Her own famous recipe comes all mixed but the liquid, for you to but add water and bake in a trice; and as if that weren't enough, you change it around every time like this: Add % cup washed huckleberries or blueberries to basic mix; bake in custard cups and serve warm with whipped cream. Put three or four maraschino cherry halves in bottom of greased custard cup; cdver with 1 tbsp. apricot puree, fill 33 full with basic gingerbread batter made from mix. Bake until gingerbread is done; turn out on dessert plates and serve with whipped cream flavored with grated orange rind. Your own private upside down cake! Mile-high gingerbread, first baked in deep cup cake or' muffin tins or custard cups, gets that way by cutting gingerbread “mound” into thin-as-thin layers, then building up with sliced bananas, pineapple slices, sliced oranges or what's in the pantry?” Topped with whipped cream, it's topping!
In spite of the war, it’s still
Catholic Camp Opens
Miss Winifred Galvin is the director of the two weeks camp which the Junior Catholic Daughters of America will attend to Aug. 5 at McCormick’s Creek State Park.
Mrs. John Griener is the commissar; Mrs. A. B. Gregor, clerk, and Miss Constance Sanborn, nurse. Instructors are Miss Dorothy Morris, handcraft; Miss Rosemary O’Hara, archery; Miss Peggy Joyce swimming; Miss Mary Shea, tennis, and Miss'Betty Greiner, badminton. Mrs. Larry Zapp is ‘the publicity director. Sixty-two girls are enrolled for the first week and 32 for the second.
Mrs. J. M. Salladay To Sail for Trinidad
Mr. and Mrs. William Salladay, 5059 Madison Road, entertained recently with a garden party for Mrs. James M. Salladay, who will sail tomorrow from New York for Port of Spain, Trinidad; British West Indies. She will: join her husband who is employed there. : Before her marriage May 24, Mrs. Sallady was Miss Betty Denny. She was also honor guest at a recent dinner given at the Canary Cottage.
Teaching Cleanliness
A social service organization in New York teaches little girls cleanliness by letting them “adopt” a doll. If- the doll is neat and clean after six weeks, the young foster mother has proved her appreciation for soap and water and is allowed to become the doll’'s permanent “mother.”
Basque Frock
Today’s pattern offers one of the most popular styles yet inspired by the sweeping new trend for the basque silhouette. It buttons straight down the front, has a square neckline, full bodice, short puffed. sleeves, tight waistband and full gathered skirt with a contrasting band at the hemline. Make this quaint, feminine frock of calico. Trim with braid or bands of contrasting color calico. a Other materials suitable are unbleached muslin, percale, gingham, cambric, lawn, .chintz. Pattern 8985 is in sizes 12 to 20. Size 14 takes 33% yards 36-inch fabric. For this attractive pattern, send 15¢ in coin, ‘your name, address, pattern number and size to The Indianapolis Times Today's Pattern Service, 214 W, Maryland St. The Summer Fashion Book has styles for all sizes from 1 to 52. Send for it, let it be your guide for Summer sewing! : ‘ Pattern, 15c; Pattern Book, 15c. One Pattern and Pattern Book
ordered together, 25c.
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| British Count “Their Coupons
Sel ot Ro EE SR OTe IE a
_ THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
“Coupon clipping” has a new mieaning in Great Britain today. .
The customer pictured above, at Selfridge’s, huge London department store, must have counted her’s carefully. That fashionable sports coat will cost her almost one-fifth of her year’s clothes coupons.
» 8
English
Woman
Must Spend
One-Fifth of Her Years - Allowance for Coat
By ROSETTE HARGROVE : E i Times Special Writer « | LONDON, July 23.—There’s a mighty lot of figuring going on throughout the length and breadth of the British Isles since clothes rationing was sprung on a totally unsuspecting public. “Sixty-six” is a number which has assumed unlimited importance in the minds of British men and women. This represents the exact numper of clothing coupons which will be. available per year and per head.
The official list of rationed clothes is a long one. There is one for men, one for women and one for children over four years old. Roughly speaking, men will need 26 coupons for a suit, 16 for an overtoat, eight for a shirt, dressing gown and pajamas, which hardly leaves anything over for accessories. Women fare a little better. Seven
coupons are needed for a silk ori
cotton dress, but 11 ‘for a woolen one. A coat will eat into either 11 or 14, according to the length, over or under 28 inches. A blouse, sports jacket or cardigan needs five and a skirt seven coupons. Shoes come dear with five coupons and stockings two coupons, while pajamas call for eight and night dresses six coupons. d Fair distribution is what the government is aiming at. Stocks are getting lower and lower, and valuable shipping space is needed for the transport of food and war material before anything else. Ward-robe-nlanning is going to assume the proportions of a major field operation for most people and woe betide the man or woman who just cannot think or plan ahead. People with large wardrobes of course will feel the pinch, but on the other hand they will have large reserves to fall back on. It's the less fortunate, so-called “white-col-lar class” (the typists, shop assistants, clerks) who are going to be hard put to it to preserve appearances on 66 coupons a year. “Shabbiness,” declared Captain Lyttleton over the wireless, after his decision had been made known to the general public, “will be as glorious as the battle-stained uniform of the warrior.”
Loopholes Will Be Stopped
Three women—a business girl, a housewife and .an experienced store buyer—and five men, all experts in trade administration, and of varying ‘ages and tastes, advised the Board of Trade. There will be some
{ amendments of the scheme, because
some aspects of the results of this rationing were overlooked. One ot the loopholes overlooked by the Board of Trade was soon spotted by smart women. All household goods——sheets, curtains, blankets, bed covers—were unrationed. Stores found themselves selling large quantities of these articles which women proposed to turn into summer frocks, sports. coats and
WHEN THE COST OF LIVING
dressing gowns. Another loophole— second-hand clothes—is being closed up by the autherities, because here, too, wangling would and could evade the “fair-to-all” rationing scheme.
Boom in Specialized Trade
Extravagant fashions, as well as white weddings, will suffer an eclipse until theé* end of the war. So far, though, lace and net are not included in the clothes rationing, nor
\
are hats. Already shops are going over their lace stocks—old and new —and this fabric is scheduled for an unprecedented vogue until stocks run out. : Working out the clothes coupon, it seems as though women will have to manage on one frock a year, while a coat will have to last two years and a suit three. This is the only way to make the rations coupons cover all the odds and ends which a woman needs—shoes, stockings, slippers, slacks, lingerie, blouses and sweaters. . It is obvious that, when possible, women will pay more for clothes bought under the rationing scheme, because quality means better value and longer wear for the money. A boom in cleaners’ and -dyers’ work ‘is forecast, and people who specialize in “turning” suits and overcoats are practically unable to undertake any more work for the time being, as they are literally snowed under. Stores are contemplating - “renovation departments” and the shoe-repairing industry is in for a profitable time,
Dispensation for War Workers
While inter-trading for gain will be considered a serious offense, a family may pool its coupons and doubtless will have to do so to meet emergencies. “Blitzed” people who have lost all or part of their clothing will be granted special replacement coupons. The wife of the artisan, on the other hand, will benefit because her husband’s “boiler suits” (or dungarees) are not rationed and presumably he needs fewer clothes than she does. This also applies to women munition workers, at y rate those who wear overalls, because aprons and pinafores are included on the rationed list. - : : In the eyes of most Britons, clothes rationing is the end of keeping up appearances.
I
JANE JORDAN
. ‘DEAR JANE JORDAN—What do you think of girls aged 14 and 16 .who ‘won't mind_their parents? They go out with boys in cars and sometimes stay as late as 3 a. m. and when Mother tries to cor‘reet them they say, “Shut up. It's our business and none of yours.” ' They never consult the mother about when they go or whom they © go with. o 2 The older one thought she was deeply in love with a boy of 21 and he was very attentive for about two years. Then he started running around with a fellow near his age who drank and smoked cigarets. He would make dates with this girl and stand her up to go out with this fellow and spend his time in taverns. . The girl was very unhappy and told him if he didn’t quit it she would go out with another fellow, wanich she did. Then he demanded his ring back but said he still loved her and would see her occasionally. The parents warned him not to see the girl at all-but he sees her over her parents’ warning. She tells her mother it is none of her business. ° Did the parents do wrong in writing to this fellow and warning him to leave the girl alone? Haven't'the parents the right to interfere? What can be done with a girl who thinks she is too old to be corrected and too old to go to school, yet isn’t old enough to get a job and is still dependent on the parents? NEIGHBOR. s 2 8 : 28 8 Answer—When you find parents and children set against each other in the manner which you describe, you can be fairly sure that the fault lies in the early training of the children. Parents who insist upon strict obedience without regard to the children’s wishes, who never let them learn anything by trial and error, may expect rebellion when the children are old enough to assert themselves. Over-indulgent parents, too, who bring up their children with the expectation of having every wish granted, may expect defiance if ever they do put a foot down. Perhaps worse than either of these _methods is a combination of the two in which the parents inconsistently indulge the child one day and are domineering the next. Many parents get along with their children fairly well until the children reach adolescence. As long as the children are little and independent and can be bossed around, all is well. But let them get old enough to oppose the parents and the fat is in the fire. Instead of treating them as young men and women, the parents still regard them as children who owe them unquestioning obedience and a situation such as you describe is apt to arise. Yes, I do think the parents did wrong to order the young man not to see their daughter. A better method would have been to sympathize with the girl and give friendly advice. If she didn't take it ‘they should have stood by and let her try her own methods with the conviction that she had her parents’ support no matter how many stupid mistakes she made. A girl whose parents do not rave at her and criticize her will confide in them and be guided by them. Even when she goes against their judgment she will not be out of sympathy with them and will discuss her failures with them. Young people do keep later hours than formerly. If the parents do not prevent them from staying out late when there is a dance or a party, usually they will compromise by coming in at midnight on other occasions. When they react to parents with the declaration, : “This is none of your business,” you may be sure that the parents have been dictatorial, unreasonable and often unjust, without the slightest ability to see things from a young person’s viewpoint. JANE JORDAN,
Put your problems in a letter to Jane Jordan who will answer your questions in this column daily.
Your Health
By JANE STAFFORD
Science Service Writer LATEST NEWS from the vitamin front brings a word of caution on the preparation of the popular “tossed” or “chef’s” salad.
It is apparently bad practice to chop the green leafy vegetables for salads too long before the time of serving, Elizabeth M. Hewston, assistant chemist of the U. S. Bureau of Home Economics, told members of the American Home Economics Association recently. The reason is that when the chopped greens are allowed to stand in the air, they may lose as much as half of their vitamin A. This vitamin, important for general health and specifically for protection against night blindness, is one of the benefits gained by eating green leafy vegetables, so of course it does not make sense to let half of it get lost before eating the vegetables.
” ” »
VITAMIN A is also found in other green vegetables such as peas, and in the yellow-colored vegetables, such as carrots and sweet potatoes, and in butter and fish liver oils. Peas and the yellow colored vegetables yield the same amount of vitamin A whether cooked or raw, Bureau of Home Economics tests showed. The vitamin A values in cooked kale and other green leafy vegetables, however, were regularly 50 per cent or more higher than the values for| the same leafy vegetables when uncooked. Kale and the other green leafy vegetables, it is believed, contains an enzyme capable of destroying carotene, the chemical parent of vitamin A, in the presence of oxygen from the air. In the tests for vitamin A content, the raw kale was chopped and mixed, just as for salad but without the addition of salad dressing. The chopping, it is suggested, Breaks down the cell walls of the vegetable, allowing the enzyme to attack the carotene in the presence of oxygen from the air ahd thus to destroy it. Kale that was cooked first and then cnopped did not lose vitamin A presumably because the cooking destroyed the
enzyme before it had a chance to destroy the carotene. :
GOES UP,
MILK
REMAINS
THE MOST
3
BCONOMICAL FOOD...
Alpha, Omicron Pi Bridge Is Tonight
Mrs. Robert W. Fessler, 154 Blue Ridge Road will entertain Beta Theta Alumnae of Alpha Omicron Pi Sorority at a bridge party to-
night.
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