Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 July 1941 — Page 14

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F i "PAGE 14

Homemaking—

It's Time to Make Fruit Butters To Store for Non-Fruit Season

FRUIT IS PLENTIFUL. So it's time to make fruit butters to store The following tested information comes from the Farmers’ Bulletin, No. 1800, of the Department of Agriculture.

away for non-fruit seasons.

For fruit butters, the pulped fruit is cooked with sugar until the mixture has a homogeneous thick spread easily when cold. The fruits most commonly used grapes, peaches, pears, plums and quinces. Apple butter made with cider has an especially good flavor. | Other combinations are apples and through the board into the joist grape juice, apples and plums, and beneath, countersinking the nailapples and quinces, to give desirable heads and filling the holes with blending of flavors and color. wax, the same color as the floor. Use only sound, ripe fruit or|you can locate the joists by tapfirm portions of windfalls or culls. ping on the floor with a hammer, Wash the fruit thoroughly andj and if the blow sounds solid instead prepare as follows: |of hollow, the joist is directly beApples — Pare and slice. Use neath the board. equal measures of fruit and cider, | : or 50-50 mixture of cider and water.| Q—Please give instructions for Apricots and Peaches—Scald; glazing carrots, parsnips and sweet remove skins and pits. Crush fruit potatoes. and cook in own juice. A—Partly cook the vegetables, cut Grapes—Remove from stems, lengthwise and place in a single crush and cook in own juice. layer in a baking dish. Pears — Quarter; remove stems Sirup by boiling equal parts of white but not cores and skins. Add half|Or brown sugar and water about 3 as much water as fruit. minutes. To this add 1 tablespoon Plums—Crush and cook in own Of butter for each cup of sugar and juice. | the seasoning. This sirup is poured

for butters are tart apples, apricots,

the squeak in fioor boards? A—Drive a few three-penny nails

consistency that is soft enough to

Make a

Quinces—Cut into small pieces and remove blossom ends but leave

cores and skins.

| tender.

over the vegetable, which is then baked in a moderate oven until Baste several times.

Boiled |

Stockings A

Add water, using from one-half cider or maple sugar may be used]

to equal fruit.

quantities of water to

ing constantly. collander, then through fine sieve to remove all fibrous material and | give smooth consistency. The quan-

a a

in preparing

the sirup.

Q@—How much space should be

A—Twenty-four to 30 inches.

crinkling when water is

taste, but the usual proportion is spilled on them?

half as much sugar as fruit pulp. Add one-fourth to one-half spoon of salt ter. Boil rapidly and stir constantly to prevent burning. As butter cooks down and becomes thicker requce heat to pre-

A—Put blotters on each side of | tea- the leaf, and iron first on one side to each gallon of but- and then the other.

Q—In a contract bridge

hand

containing both a five-card and a | six-card should be bid first?

biddable suit, which one]

A—Bid the six-card suit first and |

Q—How can I keep book pages | tity of sugar varies according to from

> ~ $3 fr 3 3 o 1r- - Cook until the fruit is soft, stir- alowed for each place at dinner Press through a party? |

|

We, the Women—

At 25, Don’t Waste Chances Ot Marriage

By RUTH MILLETT THE WOMAN who

wasting the next ten years.

getting into a job that offers more than a corner in which to mark time. If marriage is her aim she should size up her prospects as cooly as she sizes up those of other girls: Have I any real opportunities for meeting unmarried men in the town in which I live? Am I making the most of my Ruth Millett looks, so that :

me?

is 25, unmarried and without any plans for the future stands a good chance of

If she wants to get married she can’t afford to waste even one year. If she feels she will never marry she can’t afford to lose any time

® Calvaco halves with a tomato and 8

TUESDAY, JULY 29, 19417 *7

Vivid Spring Salad Of Red and Green

Tomatoes and Calavo pears, twinned in spring salads, add a vivid note to the dinner or luncheon table in an arrangement of large slices of crimson tomato topped with small green-rimmed rings of Calavo. Serve with French dressing seasoned with minced parsley and green onions. Or dress sliced tomatoes with pas-tel-green Calavonnaise—the sieved pear seasoned with dry mustard, salt, onion juice and tobasco or

Worcestershire sauce. Entree salads of the two may be made by filling tomato shells with {seasoned diced pears or by filling

[green onion or cucumber mixture, dressed with a tart combination of lemon juice and oil. An American verion of the Mexican Guacamole: Use a diced combination of Calvoa and jomato in a well-blended mixture with seasoning |of French dressing, minced sweet | pepper and onion and a bit of fresh,

To Picnic Sunday

Garfield Park Post 88 of the American Legion and its Auxiliary will hold its annual picni¢ Sunday at Camp Joy. Fred Kinnan, come mander, is in charge of transportae tion.

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the men I know are interested in|

If the answer to either question is | “No —the girl is wasting time.

The scarcity of silk stockings and the necessity of giving up valuable clothing coupons to buy them when they are available has brought a new kind of beauty salon into existence in England. these is the bare leg beauty bar in a South London store where women, in a South Seas setting, have

| their legs sprayed with a new type of sun tan lotion which is being used as a leg covering. These girls

are having their legs sprayed at 3 pence ner leg as others wait their turns.

The first of |

|

Daisy Motif Runner

Luncheon Features Vegetable Salad

A good salad dish for warm weather meals might be made of

The girl who has admitted to her- | self that she probably will never | marry ought to be just as hard- | headed in figuring out what she | wants and what her chances of]

| getting it are. * = @ | RIGHT NOW is the time for her | to take any risks and make any | | changes she feels are necessary. The | older she gets the more cautious she will become. So if getting ahead | means leaving a small town to start out in a city, or giving up a sure

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time to gamble. | So many women of 40 and 50 look | Then, too, ICE-kept {back on their youthful years and] | wish they had made more of them. And the only reason they didn't was

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Q—Is there a way to eliminate

Kitchen Helper

vent spattering. When butter is thick, test by pouring a small quanrim of liquid separates around edge of the butter on the plate. Stir In spices as desired, for ex-| Q—Should a wife introduce and | ground spices to the gallon of but- name or his surname? | ter. . ; ! A—Use the surname, as “Mr. Use only fresh spices and just Doe,” when introducing or menwithout obscuring the natural fruit to close friends, use his given | flavor. Or if a light-colored butter name. 1s desired, add whole spices tied ! the butter is cooking. weight hosiery for general wear? Pour the butter while boiling hot A—Four or five-thread is best for into sterilized containers and seal, general wear and three-thread for {and should be used only with eve- | ning dress. | Q Please tell me an unusual wav to serve prunes. A—Use these ingredients: One Your Health cups), a stick of cinnamon, 2 slices of lemon. 3 or 4 whole cloves, 2| tablespoons of sugar. Cook . prunes according to directions on; BY SPENDING, each of us, about the package but add the other n- five cents a year we could pretty gredients before cooking. Allow the nearly wipe out those twin disease fresh pineapple and serve in sher. ~ bet glasses {appears from figures on venereal | é i , : | Q—How can refrigerator ice trays disease prevalence coming from | be prevented from sticking? Selective Service records. These placing them in the refrigerator./of army training age there are oneFreezing of the moisture on the seventh the number with clinical outside causes them to stick. |syphilis and one-third the number 1817-1918. . | The United States Public Health Service has taken the Selective them down, state by state, and county by county, to determine just where venereal disease is most prev- = attack it with greater force. The : county figures are not vet all avail- : able, but the state figures have alThat is that where money is spent | in adequate amounts to teach people about how syphilis and gonorrhea | checked. and to provide facilities for | diagnosis and i{reatment, the syph- | ilis and gonorrhea rates are very | money for the fight is not available | or not being spent ® & & { {in Connecticut, 1.4 per 1000 among | {whites and 438 per 1000 among | Negroes. The highest rates were and 380.4 among Negroes. In gen- | eral, states with the low syphilis | |pravalence rates were the states! {fight against venereal disease since! 1917. A nation-wide fight, with fed- | {eral grants-in-aid, was started at {was discontinued after about three years, and not all of the states were able to carry on the fight on theiry Massachusetts was one of those | {that did continue its fight against venereal disease, and Selective Serv- | men called for army training from {that state, the syphilis rates were’ 13.7 per 1000 for whites, 50.1 for | venereal disease program has been {operating on a budget of about five cents per capita per year. On a into millions, of course, but for the ‘individual it is only a matter of a {few cents a year for fighting an

tity on a cold plate. Cook until no ample, 1 to 2 teaspoons of mixed mention her husband by his given enough to give a delicate flavor tioning him to acquaintances: but loosely in a cheesecloth bag while] Q—What is the most satisfactory dress. Two-thread is very sheer The Question Box small package of prunes (about 2 the | By JANE STAFFORD mixture to cool, then add slices of ti scourges, syphilis and gonorrhea, it A—Wipe them thoroughly before records show that among young men Iwith gonorrhea that there were in Service Board's figures and broken alent and which localities need to = ready revealed a significant fact. | spread and how they may be much lower than where adequate] THE LOWEST RATES were found found in Florida, 53.5 among whites that had been able to continue their | [that time, but the federal assistance | own. | ice figures show that among voung | Negroes. The Massachusetts anti-nation-wide basis this figure mounts {StCm and terrible plague.

Sorority to Meet | Beta Chapter of Phi Theta Delta Youll find an apron like this is Sorority will meet tonight at $ a valuable kitchen helper! So easy o'clock in the home of Mrs. Dale to slip on and adjust by the but-| Wainscott, 617 East Drive, Woodruff tons on the shoulder, and it covers Place. your frock completely. You can . make this pattern in a few hours, fintertains Sub Debs trim it with ric rac or bias fold, as| a . Here's ttern voull The Giggle-Ette Chapter of the you prefer. ere’s a pattern voul c I : use over and over again, in percale, | Sub-Deb Federation will meet at : ; ve. 17:30 Pp. m. tonight with Miss Mary calico, cambric, broadcloth, ging En Kalzenbe 3 ham—for all your kitchen needs |Blen Katzenberger, 41 Ferguson

Pattern No. 8088 is designed for road.

i ————————————————————————— sizes 34 to 48. Size 36 takes 27% i yards 32-inch material, 8 yards rie, Back From P etoskey rac or 5 yards of 1¢-inch bias sd Mis. G. W. Gordon and Mus. { Francis Rumple have returned from ‘a 10-day visit at Petoskey, Mich. land Mackinac Island.

ing. For this sttractive pattern, send 15¢ In coin, your name, address, © pattern number and size to The In-| dianapolis Times Today's Pattern

Service, 214 W. Maryland St. | , ~ Send for the Fashion Book. An, . futhoritative fashion review of our stains with

est current styles, all designed in| free from dark surface to sew patterns. uy ttern, 15c; Pattern 15¢.| Pattern |,

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pie, hot or iced tea, milk.

5191

By MRS. ANNE CABOT Fach Daisy is just three inches in diameter. ner as shown in the illustration. You can also use motifs to make a lovely small mat to use under a flower vase. Daisy | motifs can also be used in the corners of a tea cloth, luncheon cloth | r in the corners of white linen dresser scarves. {

For complete crocheting instructions for Daisy Motif Runner (Pat-| tern No. 5191) illustrations of all stitches used, crochet directions for

Make 24 for the run-

just four of

| joining motifs to form runner or mat, amounts of materials specified, |

send 10 cents in COIN, YOUR NAME and ADDRESS and the PAT-| TERN NUMBER to Anne Cabot, The Indianapolis Times, 106 Seventh | Ave, New York City.

JANE JORDAN

DEAR JANE JORDAN-—I am a young girl of the terrible teen age who, like others of my age, needs advice. I have been going with a crowd of girls for over a year who have made life worth living. I respect and love them very much but how can I make them feel that I am growing up? I would like to double with them on dates, and go with friends of their boy friends. I know they feel that I am too kiddish for them although they don’t just come out and say so; but I feel it in their actions. I admit that I am very sillv at times but I thought that was being the life of the party. Mavbe I'm wrong and make a fool of myself by being good-natured to others, or is that ancther one of my wrong ideas? Should I start acting sophisticated or what? DIANA. > # »

Answer—If vou assume a sophistication which you do not have I am afraid that vou will seem affected to your friends. The girl who is herself at all times and does not feel the necessity of putting on an act has the best chance to succeed. However, vou don't have to act kiddish in order to be the life of the party. Youll outgrow these ways in time by yourself and you'd be better off in a crowd of vounger girls so that you could develop naturally without hurrying vourself. Since you admire these girls so much and do not want to change your group of friends, I suppose the only thing you can do is to give up your kiddish ways and do what the crowd does. Get your own dates and do not depend on your friends to find boys for you. When they see that you know how to engage the interest of a bov in a dignified manner, they will be glad to double with you.

DEAR JANE JORDAN—I am a girl of 16 and the boy I am not sure about is 17. About three months ago he told me he loved me but in all the three months he hasnt written or telegraphed. I am almost sure he likes me but I would like to know a way to prove it and would appreciate your help in the matter. H. E. = = n Answer—Tt is not likely that a boy of 17 would remember whom he thought he loved three months ago. You mustn't take such little pleasantries so seriously. If you were thrown with him again his interest might revive, but custom forbids that you make the dates. Perhaps he has met some other girl or even two other girls who intrigue him. If you had made another boy friend in the interim ‘you wouldnt be thinking so much about what a boy said to you three months ago, either. Look around and replace him with some other likely lad and remember that young love affairs have pretty short lives. JANE JORDAN,

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