Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 November 1941 — Page 14
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family is really a national recipes are from “America’s
LIVER LOAF (Serves 4 to 6)
e pound beef liver, onion, few sprigs parsley, spoon salt, 1. egg, 1% '¢ orated milk and 2 ‘cups d wheat bread. i Wipe liver. -
Ios { 1 small 1 tea-| ‘evap ‘whole
Cut into slices and
put. through food choppe with |
onion. Add finely cut parsley and remaining ingredients. Pour into a buttered loaf pan. Bake (in a moderate oven (350 degr BP, 30 to 40 minutes.
| LAMB NECK SLICE { (Serves 4 to 6)
Three pounds neck slices, water, 3 large potatoes, 6
hour. Add onions, ‘carrots. Continue to simmer, lL
ing. CREOLE STYLE FLAN
BEEF STEAK (Serves. 4 to 6)
tomatoes, 2 bay ‘leaves, 1 onion; _chopped, salt-and pepper. |
cylinder as long as the flan ok Roll steak around sausage and tie with a string. Place steak in a baking pan, pour tomatoes gver it, add bay leaves and chopped onion. Cook in moderate oven, 350 degrees F., until steak’ is nder, about one and one-half |hours. Serve tomato sauce with the| steak.
KIDNEY STEW (Serves 4) One beef kidney, 2 cups water, 3, lemon, sliced, bay leaf, salt and pepper, 2 tablespoons but er, 2 tablespoons flour. Split the kidney, remove fat, and cut out [tough : . White center portion. Soak 1 hour
in fresh cold water and 40 minutes. Drain and cool. Cut into small pieces, add water, bay leaf and sliced lemon and simmer for 20 minutes. Remove bay leaf ‘and lemon, add butter and flour blended to a paste, season with salt and pepper, and .cook| until Shickened. Serve hot on buttered ast :
Mary Cain to Speak
E To A. A. U. W. Unit
The Evening Contemporary [Literature Group of the Indi i Branch, American Association of _ University Women, will meet tonight at the home of the Branch’s president, Mrs. Virginia Brackett - Green, 2650 Sutherland Ave.. i Mary Cain of the Central staff will speak on “‘Some . while Books.”
Sorority to Meet
Psi Chapter -of Delta Chi
Housewife Can Build Economy Meals Argund Low-Cost Meats
into tender and welcome dishes for
fense duty today. The following perfected rimer of Nutrition.” d costs without cutting your family’s nutrition. And they
‘They will cut your good.
Girls May Copy Ideas From {Uniforms
BY EMILY C. DAVIS Science Service Writer ~ WASHINGTON, Nov. -18.—American girls in defense factories and
-fon. farms. can’t. wear. soldier boy
uniforms, but it turns out that they
can wear “bits and pieces” of Army fashions. . Knitted caps for . cold weather and other style tricks worth borrowing for women from what the United States Army is wearing have
.| survey tour of the Quartermaster Corps’ clothes sample ‘room here by Miss Clarice Scott and Miss Margaret Smith. Department of Agriculture clothing designer team. Miss’ Scott ‘and Miss: Smith are creating a wide variety of work fashions and patterns: for women, with a view to making such clothes scientifically fit for active work and also—very important—becoming. Inspecting the line-up of clothing store. dummies * that model the Army’s ‘outfits, Misses Scott and . | Smith liked a ‘field jacket with an {oval bias piece set under the arm. The bias goods, they agreed, would stretch readily, allowing more freedom of action than a straight-cut piece of goods. This Army idea, they said, can be adapted to almost any garment, and has possibilities for women’s defense work uniforms.
New Type Pleat
Women may also borrow the Army style of bi-swing pleat, technical language for a pleat in the back of a coat. or shirt that allows free motion. Ordinary commercial garments have such pleats below a yoke. The Army is getting more freedom by running the pleat up to the shoulder seam. From the Army's new brown work suits, that replace old blue denim outfits, girl defense workers may borrow a pocket. It is a breast pocket set at an angle, so that the hand can be thrust in easily from above or from the side. Another Army pocket idea-is a flap sewed down at three sides ever the top of a pocket. But since this flap is wider than the pocket, fingers can be inserted easily enough, and yet the covering flap keeps contents from spilling.
Women’s League 2 Lists Committees
Miss Lois, Mathieson, president of the Butler University - Women’s League, has named committees to serve until the end of the school year in June. They include Miss Ruth Miles,
"| lockers; Miss Edelle Smith, mem-
bership; Miss Elizabeth May Smith and Miss Mary Louise Chappell, scrapbook; Misses Betty Krueger, Ann Strauss and Wilma Gray, attendance, and Misses Gray, Patty
‘| VanHorn and Katy Parrish, post-
—
| “T". formations and: single wing backs | are greek to us but we can show a girl how to break up - interference with a cute little hipper-dipper that will have the halfbacks doing full spinners for a week.
been “discovered -as the. result of a|.
turn « out ‘some very Christmas gifts. If ‘you: crochet: and in past seasons héve turned out doilies and towel edgings for your giftees, why
son?. You might make pot-holders
instance, Instructions for making coat hanger covers and pot-holders can be’ obtained in needlework departments. The college crowd is taking up something that women. handy with knitting needles might like to know about. Emblems of all kinds are increasingly popular, and Joe and Josephine College have taken to wearing them on sweaters, socks and hats. A suggestion for the artist at the sewing machine is a plaid-cov-ered picture frame. It’s really a. slip cover with a ruffle edge, and very smart too. ‘And the very stylish things you can do with maps! In themselves they're excellent giits and when they're pasted on trays, bookends, lamps or small tabletops, and lacquered, they are even more - special. They look expensive, but they needn't be. ” ® 8 FOR EXAMPLE, you can buy a wide variety of pictorial maps for $1. As a little conversational icebreaker it would be hard to beat a cocktail tray surfaced with a map of the New Yorker's idea of the United States. It's an amusing illustration of parochial jEngrance, with Long Island and Florida, to pick out one instance, of equal
ize The Bostonian’s idea of the country is just as funny and the map of it equally inexpensive.” Rand Mc-
handsome maps of the states and nation. There are old maps, particularly of foreign countries and English coun= ties, at Rand McNally for prices ranging from $1 to $25. They can be used with excellent effect on coffee tahles, waste baskets and lamps. - REGARDLESS of height or weight, you will appear better proportioned if you stand correctly. Stand before’a full length mirror and examine your figure now. Is there an exaggerated hollow in the center of your back? If so, your hips probably look broader than they are, and your stomach is not flat. 'Now stand with your back to a wall. Place the center of your back firmly against the flat surface— never mind about shoulders for the moment. As you press your spine backward, flattening it, pull the stomach up and in, and ‘elevate the chest. Now, very gradully, flattén all of your backbone against the wall, raise arms above head, and make shoulders touch the wall. Lower arms, and notice that your hips tilt’ forward now. Hold the
position a few seconds. Relax and repeat.
» ” #
AS SOON AS you become accustomed to this correct posture, you will be able to maintain it when .you stand and walk. After you ‘have practiced near the wall, go back to the mirror and get your body in the position it was in against the wall. . Now look at yourself again—your stomach flat; your backbone, almost straight; your shoulgers, beautifully high.
Meet at- Antlers
Theta Chapter of Delta Sigma Kappa Sorority will meet at 7:30 p. m, tomorrow in the Hotel Ant-
A
(HENRI
PUMPKIN PIE SUPREME
FLAKY PIECRUST
tail thoroughly.
3
“ 1% cups E-z-BAKE FLOUR 3% teaspoon sal
6 Tablespoons shortening 314 Tablespoons ice water
Sift pant a FLOUR and salt together. Cut shortening into
flour to consistency of very coarse
meal. Add ice water, a little
at a time, stirring lightly with fork and: tossing aside pieces of dough as soon as formed, use only enough water to make particles hold together; shape lightly into a ball, wrap in wax paper, and
thin, handling as little as possible.
Turn out on'a lightly floured board and roll -
®
PUMPKIN F ILLING
1 an Sighay beaten
ToD pu . % teaspoon ¢innamon
2 cups strained cooked
_ 3 teaspoon nuimeg ' - 14 teaspoon ginger 14 teaspoon cloves - 2 cups scalded milk ked pumpkin
‘pie plate with pastry and make fluted ‘standing rim. Combine eggs, sugar, salt, ; add milk. -gradually while stirring, then add pumpkin. Pour into pastry-lined pie plate na hot oven (450° F.) for ten minutes; then reduce heat to moderate temperature . twenty to twenty-five minutes longer, or until filling is firm. Cool. Neg; (One 9-
inch)
i pumpin pe 8erve topped with Whipped cream.
not vary your handicraft this sea-|
with & devil's face on them, for|
Nally has these maps, as well as;
5 Evelyn Lufiwig. S| Miss Bauer Hostess
Make knitted tov. Book Exhibits At Culver
CULVER, Ind, Nov. 18—Fifty Misonne photographs, outstanding examples of art with a camera, are on display in the art gallery of the new Music and Art Building at Culver Military Academy. The exhibit will remain’ until Dec. 16 and is the third in a series of twelve to be displayed during -the current school year, according to Capt. Paul M. Barada, chairman of the fine arts committee. Leonard Misonne, a Belgian photographer whose whereabouts is unknown, was able to send his famed collection to America at the outset of the war. The collection is in safe keeping at the American Photography - Publishing Co. in Boston, Mass., and is being lent to the fine arts committee for this exhib-
Following Christmas vacation twenty-five paintings by faculty members at the University of Illinois will be displayed for two weeks. During February, through thé Cleveland Museym of Art, 38 pictures in the group of water colors by Cleveland artists are scheduled to be displayed. , Also during February 124 graphic arts illustrations — including wood cuts, etchings, line engravings, etc., will be displayed through the courtesy of the U. S. National Museum. An‘ exhibit of 50 mounts showing the development of stage design has been scheduled for Mareh. Following a popular photography salon exhibit which closes May 15, a Hoosier Salon collection will be placed in the art gallery.
Personals
Mr. and Mrs. Owen E. Morrell, 3538 Washington Blvd., will leave tomorrow for Chicago, where they will spend Thanksgiving ‘and the week-end with Mr. and Mrs. Alfred O. Kauffman, formerly of Indianapolis. While there, they will be entertained by Mr. and Mrs. Nelson Brewer. Mrs. Brewer; before her marriage, was Miss Charlene Dilling of Indianapolis. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Reisser, 360 W. 62d St. will return this week after visiting friends in New York and Boston.
Mr. and Mrs. Willis E. Kuhn, 3840 E. 62d St., have returned from New York where they attended the National Horse Show.
Nurses Will Elect Officers Friday
Officers will be elected Friday by the Methodist Hospital Nurses’ Alumnae Association when it meets at 7:30 p. m. on the roof of the Nurses’ Home. A social hour will follow.
Holds Party Alpha Chapter of Zeta Chi Theta Sorority held its Thanksgiving party last night at the home of Miss Jean
Gamma Chapter of Tri Chi Sorority will have a business meet-
=|ing at the home of Miss Nora
ee __ THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES — ¢- These Christmas Gifts Can Be Made at Home
on your own Se
; Maps lacquered to lamps. and trays look smart, It's noi hard to run off these plaid picture frames Rand McNally will help you do it.
With your own two hands and. a) % little ‘budgeting of time you can § acceptable | ¢
wing machine,
DEAR JANE JORDAN:—I have been married almost four years. I have had a good job for six years but got out of work three months ago. My wife says I am lazy. When
| we got married I did not care any-
thing about her and still don’t. She married me because I made $35 a
— |week. Her friends have told me so.
She gets mad at me sometimes and tries to kill me. All of her family are like that. A year ago I started going with a girl who is just 18. I am 24. I know she loves me and I love her. She knows all about ‘me and says she will wait for me. Do you think I am doing the right thing? R. O. M. 2 » .
Answer:—You started out by cdoing the wrong thing six years sgo when you married a woman you didn’t care anything about and
have kept it up ever since. When you became convinced that she married you for your job instead of yourself, you contrived to lose your job and have managed to avoid another job for three months. Your wife says you're lazy but that is not the case. You couldn't have held a job for six years if you were lazy. Why don’t you admit that the reason you don’t work is that you don’t want to support a woman whom you don’t like?-A more direct and honest way to express your dislike is simply to leave. You can get another job. Make up your mind to pay for your mistake instead of evading it by remaining Uném. ployed. After you have put yourself on an earning basis again and regained your freedom, it is time enough to think’ about another woman. At present you haven't the slightest | right to involve an 18 years old girl in the dregs of your difficulties. Why run to a youngster for comfca when you should be man’ ‘eribtigh get out of your own entanglements? You can’t hope to settle the future until you get the present Sizaightened out. ;
Dear Jane Jordan: I am a girl of 16, in lové with a boy of 18. He is in love with mé but his father, who is a preacher, will not allow him to see me because I have a different religion. I think of him constantly and can’t sleep nights. I would like to know if I should forget him, which I know is impossible, or try to make him love me ‘more than religion? DESPERATE. 8 8 8
Answer: No matter what I say, the latter is what you will do. When a father puts, his foot down on a young love affair, all he does is to strengthen it. However, do brace yourself to meet disappointment in case you fail. Your problem isn’t so much that the boy is tied to religion as that he is fied to his father. It may be years before he has the courage to act on his own initiative or go against his father’s counsel. For all you know it may be never. It is not impossible to forget him. If he abides by his father’s decision long enough it will be impossible for you to remember him. JANE JORDAN.
Put yous. problems in a leiter to Jane Jordan who will answer your questions in this column daily.
Theta Sig Workshop Opens Tonight
The Indianapolis Alumnae of Theta Sigma Phi, national journalistic fraternity, will open its Writers’
- |Workshop program ‘this evening
with a talk by Miss Helen Ready, Ayres’ fashion copywriter. “Writing Fashion Copy” will be her topic. The group will meet in the large studio of WIRE. Miss Luana Lee,
Louise Bauer tonight. .
2. No waiting to dry. Can used tight after shaving.
8. Acrid has been awarded the _ Approval Seal of The Ameri.
president, will preside.
ik .a CREAM DRA.
which safely
1. Does | not tot dresses ot men’s shirts. Does not itritste skin.
be
~ 3. Instantly stops perspiration 1to 3 days. Removes odor from pesspiostion, keeps armpits dry. 4. A pure, white, greaseless,
EE
Burton Knight | when it meets with Mrs. Mis. E. R. Ruster will speak ak on, t The Boy in Blue.”
hour. in charge of Mrs, Gharies|
| | pattern number and size to The
Readers Club to
Luncheons, pi ules for this week. “The Life and Music of Victor
Assisting hostesses will be dames J. IE, Barcus, Gordon B: Mess and Pred N. Seaman,
The INDIANAPOLIS READERS CLUB will meet with Mrs. William T. I 1961 Ruckle 8t., tomorrow. George E. well will review padre of Aragon” and Mrs. W. E. Reynolds will speak on the author, Garrett Mattingly.
Miss Bernice Gigerich is the newly elected president of the AL PA TO CLUB, Other officers recently installed are Miss Joyce Ketchum, vice president; Miss: Shannon O'Mara, secretary; Miss Ruby Durbin, treasurer, and Mrs. Mary Alice Parks, press agent.
The guest of honor will be a representative from the Sigma Delta Zeta Sorority.
CHAPTER F OF THE P, BE. O. SISTERHOOD will haVe a luncheon ‘at the home of Mrs. Jessie E, Mar-
1p m. A talk on “Narcotics” will be given by Gene Ryan. Assisting the hostess will be Mesdames Gibson, Adams, E. D. Farmer and Chic Jackson.
The second in a series of entertainments for the Indianapolis Home for Aged Women was to be given this afternoon by the WELPARE CLUB. A musical program, under the direction of Mrs. Arthur Craven, was to be followed by a tea
Simplicity
}
805!
A style which is perfectly suited to younger girls because of its smart simplicity. Yet it has lovely features—the open sweetheart shaped neckline, the short puffed sleeves, the slenderizing skirt with its high waistline and neat side sashes which keep it smoothly fitted! The diagram shows you how very, very easy this frock is to make and the style is equally suitable for wools, novelty rayon crepes or washable cottons. Pattern No. 8051 is in sizes 6, 8, 10, 12 and 14 years. Size 8 with short sleeves requires 2% yards 35-inch material, 13% yards of 1%. inch bias fold finishes neck and sleeves. For this attractive pattern, send 15¢ in coin, your name, address,
Indianapolis Times Today's Pattern Service, 214 W. Maryland St. Other styles for school wear may be selected in our fall and winter Fashion Book, a complete review of patterns for the new season which you may order now. Pattern, 15¢; Pattern Book, 15¢. One Pattern and Pattern Book or-
New Century Club Will Hear Tulk ° On Victor Herbert;
programs, | book Jeviews an lectures are on club soled
t-as a. program. feature for the NEW CENTURY CLUB Lutes, 4320 Carrollton Ave., tomorrow,
calist; Miss Mariam Williams, pi-
The next meeting will be held at| the home of ‘Mrs. Parks on Dec. 2.|
tin, 510 W, 44th St.,' tomorrow at}
Hear Reiotw
Herbert” will be presented by Mrs,
Tennant. Appearing on the program were to be Mrs. Asel Spellman Stitt, vo-
anist, and .a trio, composed of Miss
Bradway, violin, and Miss Helen] Whitehead, cello. Assisting Mrs. Craven were bo
be Mesdames R. L. Rummel, J. R
Swift, Harry Watson, Carlton Klaus| and Robert Mack, A rummage and paper sale spon- | sored by the Welfare Club was given at the Mayer Chapel, 448 W. Norwood St., J. W. Dixon was in charge,
The IRVINGTON MOTHERS’ STUDY CLUB will have a business |§ meeting at the home of Mrs. C. E.
morrow at 2 p. m. Roll call re-|8 sponses will be on current. events. |} Mrs, Albert Holman will talk on “Pioneering Indiana.”
A Thanksgiving card party sponsored by the WAYNE CLUB will be held in the club rooms, 2829 Jackson St. this evening at 8:30|% Pp. m. ? On the committee in charge are Carl Rehtfus, Robert .King, Bright and Clyde Lee. :
TWO AND
DEBTS.
SICKNESS,
BER 22ND.
YOUR PURCHASE
dered together, 25c.
Eleen Hoover, piano; Miss Mary{®
Davidson, George I. Stalker, H, O.|
this morning. Mrs. |(} ¢
| Thomas, 738 N. Graham Ave. ,to- |B
Joe lis
TO ENCOURAGE Y AND GOOD CITIZENSHIP IN THE WELFARE OR OUR NATION — TH BEST NATION ON EARTH! |
MAROTT SHOE STORE
IT IS A GOOD. THING TO DO!
TO SAVE YOUR MONEY AND HELP YOUR GOVERNMENT BY oR PURCHASE OF UNITED STATES DEFENSE STAMPS. YOU NOT ONL MAKE A GOOD INVESTMENT AT | NINE-TENTHS PER CENT INTEREST—YOU NOT ONLY | AID YOUR NATION IN DEFENSE NECESSITY BUT YOU FOLLOW A SOUND AND SANE POLICY ‘THAT GIVES YOU SECURITY AND PR TECTION RATHER THAN PA “AND SORROW SO OFTEN CAUSED BY OVERBUYING AND EXTEND] D
THE MORE BONDS YOU BUY THE BETTER OFF YOU ARE—IT ALSO EVIDENCES YOUR SUPPORT AN CONFIDENCE. IN YOUR GOVERN-~ MENT. THESE BONDS MAY BE REDEEMED. SIXTY DAYS FROM DATE OF ISSUE—WHAT A SPLENDID INVESTMENT TO MEET ANY SUDDE REQUIREMENTS SUCH AS DEATH, R EMERGENCY NEEDS THAT MAY HAPPEN TO ANYONE IN THE COURSE OF TIME!
THE MAROTT SHOE STORE IN THIS GOOD CAUSE TO HELP YOU SAVI AND TO SUPPORT YOUR GOVER MENT IS PRESENTING TEN PE CENT ON EACH DOLLAR OF PURCHASE MADE AT THE STORE ID UNITED STATES DEFENSE STAMP UP TO AND INCLUDING NOVE
THIS PERCENTAGE GIFT MORE THAN ABSORBS OUR PROFIT O:
ND IS GIVE] R SAVINGS
I CAN DO THE DISHES EASIER, BECAUSE CLIMALENE DISSOLVES GREASE
The bane of dishwashing is grease, » clinging to dishes and pans. Try this. og
proved work-saving recipe:
1. Sprinkle 1 teaspoonful of Climalene in
the dishpan. It cuits grease,
2. Add only 13 usual amount of soap— bar, flake, or powder—then wash, ‘China, glassware, and silver shine: [i{ _, crystal-cleas. Greasy pots and pans | ~. are done mm a jiffy, without hard ; work. And that Soap PackARE, Tasty
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