Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 May 1942 — Page 12
Homemaking— Use Leftover Bread for Patty Shells and in Fruit Puddings
BREAD DESSERTS are sustaining, satisfying and good for war-
time budget meals. They help to
use up leftover bread, so that only
fresh bread need be served at table and used in lunchbox sandwiches. Whole~wheat and enriched bread helps to insure your family’s daily
quota of B vitamins and iron.
DEAR JANE JORDAN—I am 20 years old and I have a son two years old. My husband was killed in the war about six months ago. Soon after I met a young man where I work and fell in love with him even though I knew he was married. He has two children. He lives in the same house with his wife but they seldom even speak to each other. He has convinced me that . he loves me but I can’t expect him to give up his children because I know he loves them. We have talked it all over time and time again but we can’t decide what to do. - His wife has said that she will see to it that he is drafted before she will divorce him. I love him very much and I am sure he loves me. Do you think I should give him up or would it be best to see him in the army? . N. L. Answer—No one is granted happiness as if it were a right which could be decided by a jury. This is a rather childish expectation which dates back to the time when “parents could give you what you wanted. You're older now and have met with serious misfortune, What > you do with your future is up to you for you will receive no grants from life. Your success will depend ‘upon - your ability to face things as they are, to observe certain social and ethical rules, and to make practical workable decisions. Wishes are not enough. A feeling that you deserve a break it not enough. You still have to give up unobtainable goals in favor of one you can reach. With your eyes wide open, and with a complete lack of self-disci-pline, you chose a man surrounded by obstacles. He has children whom he loves and a wife who is determined not to let him go. Love does not long endure under such difficult conditions. You are bound to be worn out in time by social ‘ opposition and frustration. The man can’t get a divorce. You can’t stand years of condemnation and opprobrium. It is bad for you and destructive to your child. Now you are still young and you pan arrange your life according to the rules. You can find a man who isn’t so hopelessly entangled in responsibilities which he is obliged to fulfill. Many a woman has given up such a man and lived to love ‘again more happily; so can you. I do not say that it is easy. The wrench of parting will be hard, the disappointment bitter. Probably you won’t take action at once, but gradually the hopelessness of your situation will push you to look elsewhere for peace and contentment. Remember you invited this defeat by accepting a tough problem. If it hurts enough you will step more warily the next time and refuse to become involved in circumstances which contain so many possibilities for pain. JANE JORDAN, Put your problems in a letter fo Jane
Jordan who will answer your questions in this column daily.
" New under-arm’
Cream Deodorant | safely
. Stops Perspiration
1. Does not rot dresses or men’s shirts. Does not irritate skin. 2. No waiting to dry. Can be used after sha
3. Instantly stops perspiration forito ] days. Removes odot from perspiration. 4. A pure, white, greaseless, stainless vanishing cream. 8. Arrid has been awarded the Approval Seal ofthe American Institute of Laundering for being ess to fabrics. Amid is the LARGEST SELLING DEODORANT. Try a jar today!
Atallstores 39g rie faloo on 10% an 9% farm
QUICK FRUIT PUDDING Allow one slice of enriched white
| bread for each serving. Spread
bread with butter and place slices in bottom of buttered shallow baking dish. Stuff half marshmallow
lin center of each halved canned
peach or pear and place cut side down, one on each bread slice. Pour milk over to nearly cover fruit, Sprinkle with sugar and nut-
meg (1 tablespoon and % teaspoon
nutmeg for each 3 servings). Top each fruit with a whole marshmallow (securing with - toothpick stuck through center). Bake in moderate oven (375 degrees F.) for about 15 minutes. Remove toothpicks and serve warm.
BREAD CRUMB PANCAKES
These bread pancakes with sirup can be served as dessert for luncheon. They make a wholesome Sunday supper treat, too. Eight slices enriched white bread, 1 cup scalded milk, 1 egg, beaten: 2 tablespoons butter, melted; 2 teaspoon baking powder, !%. teaspoon salt. If bread is dry, crumble it fine; if fresh, cut into very small cubes. Pour hot milk over bread and cool. Add beaten egg, butter, baking powder and salt. Beat thoroughly. Drop by spoonsful onto hot griddle and brown on both sides.
BREAD PATTY SHELLS
Bread patty shells can be filled with jam or stewed dried fruit as a dessert, or else filled with creamed chicken, ham, eggs, etc., for luncheon. Cut rounds from 3 slices of enriched white bread with a large cookie cutter. With smaller cutter, cut centers from 2 of the rounds, leaving rings. Place the rings on the large round and brush with mixture of 1 egg white and % cup milk. Brown in moderate oven (350 degrees F.). Fill,
Slacks, Weskit
8152
Now that slacks belong—you certainly want more than one pair in your summer wardrobe! Here's a slacks outfit which will serve you well—the smart weskit topper worn over a blouse or sweater completes a suit which you'll enjoy at the beach—on camping trips, for lounging or for work, if your job requires this type costume. Note the easy hang, obtained by starting with ample fulness at the top of the trousers! You'll like this pattern.
Pattern 8152 is in sizes 12 to 20. Size 14 weskit requires 13% yards 35inch material, slacks 25% yards. For this attractive pattern, send 15 cents in coin, your name, address, pattern number and size to
The Times Pattern Service, 214 W.
Maryland st.
Memory’s Picture . . .
” mvive HILL 8377 E. WASHINGTON In the artistry of a lovely setting . . . the accom paniment of harmonious music . .. capable super-
vision . . «+ the memorial
from Irving Hill Chapel
is made a picture of unforgettable memories.
SHIRLEY, BROTHERS
FUNERALS
Clubs—
Inter Alia Club Guest Day Is
Tomorrow
Three P. E. 0. Groups Schedule Meetings
Luncheons and guest day programs are highlights of club meetings scheduled for tomorrow. : Members of the MERIDIAN HEIGHTS INTER-SE club will be entertained at a luncheon at the Highland Golf and Country club tomorrow. The program committee will assist Mrs. George Lilly who will serve as “stunt” chairman for the day.
A guest day is planned for “tomorrow by the INTER ALIA club meeting at the home of Mss. Marshall Knox, 110 Hampton drive. Talks on “Orchids” and “My Cruise” will be given by Mrs. Joseph Merriam and Mrs. Knox. ;
Another guest day is planned by the LATE BOOK club. Mrs. Herbert Sawyer and Mrs. H. R. Davis will] be hostesses and Mrs. Russell J. Sanders will present a book review.
Mrs. Harry D. Hooley, 5819 N. New Jersey st., will entertain members of the ALPHA BETA LATREIAN club tomorrow. A business session is to be held. Mrs. John Sloan Smith will be the assistant hostess.
IRVINGTON chapter, EPSILON SIGMA OMICRON, will meet tomorrow at John Herron Art museum to hear a gallery lecture on the Indiana Artists’ exhibition being shown there. The program committee will act as hostesses.
“Quietly My Captain Waits” (Evelyn Eaton) will be reviewed to-
before the STUDENT group, EPSILON SIGMA OMICRON. Mrs. Herman Kortepeter will lead the discussion following. A “pitch in” dinner will be served.
The HOOSIER TOURIST CLUB will conclude its study of American personalities for the year tomorrow when it meets with Mrs. C. W. Roller, 2301 Garfield drive,
Talks will be given on Nelson Trusler ' Johnson, John Gunther and Alice Foote MacDougall by Mesdames J. N. Hardy, D. T. Brownlee and Salem Clark. The group’s annual party will be June 9.
A meeting tomorrow at the Conner house will close the club year
for the IRVINGTON TUESDAY club.
A report on the recent state convention of the P. E. O. SISTERHOOD by Mrs. H. W. Houser will be a program feature of CHAPTER Q's meeting tomorrow. Mrs. J. R. Kuebler, 304 Burgess Ave., will be hostess.
Mrs. H. E. Boggy, Cumberland, will entertain with a 1 p. m. luncheon tomorrow for CHAPTER U, P. E. O. SISTERHOOD. She will be assisted by Mrs. J. H. Westhay and Mrs. J. M. Smith. Convention reports will be presented by Mrs. A. W. Macy and Mrs. W. H. Boyd will give “Gleanings from the Record.”
CHAPTER W. P. E. O. SISTERHOOD, will be entertained tomorrow by Mrs. Clarence Jackson, 4202 Central ave. The program will feature state convention reports.
A review of “Kabloona” (Goutran de Poncius) by Mrs. Thomas M. Straver will be heard tomorrow by SOCIAL STUDY club members when they meet with Mrs. Josephine Sacre, 402 N. Meridian st.
The SPENCER club will meet tomorrow with Mrs. C. A. Cassady, 5936 University ave., to hear a book review by Mrs. H. L. McGinnis. Assistant hostesses will be Mrs. J. E. Joslin and Mrs. H. E. Joslin.
Officers will be installed tomorrow by the TO-KALON club at a meeting for which Mrs Leonard A. Murchison, Westfield parkway, will be hostess. Mrs. Earl Neill will be in charge of the program.
School 45 P.-T. A. Meets Wednesday
School 45 pupils will exhibit their work in English and demonstrate their physical education class work at the Parent-Teacher association meeting at 1:30 p. m. Wednesday. The program also will include music by the school orchestra, primary band and intermediate chorus.
morrow by Mrs. William F, Holmes|.
. lis, the fact is that a man needs to
A sports suit of white shetland@ wool with Kelly green stripes was designed for Claudette Colbert to wear in her latest film, “The Palm Beach Story.” The straight skirt has vertical stripes contrasting with the horizontal-striped jacket. The large looped pockets have side slit openings, With the suit is worn a Kelly green jersey.
|Ex-Wife
temporary [told him to fire
| Alimony Better Than Hiring
By RUTH MILLETT EVERY MAN who ‘has both a wife and a secretary should be interested in the divorce decision recently handed down by a Chicago judge. Interested—and alarmed. For when the husband told the judge he couldn't afford to pay his estranged wife $15 a week alimony, the judge
his wife, at $15 a week. Think how tough it is going to be on husbands if 2
If he adver- Ruth Millett
tised for the world’s worst secretary, a man probably couldn't find a much poorer one than he would by taking on an estranged wife, forced to work out her alimony. In the first place the average wife—like the one in the Chicago case—hasn’t had any secretarial experience. And no matter how expertly a woman handles the job of homemaking the experience doesn’t teach her anything about the business world. : o 2 ” AND AS BAD as that handicap
have his secretary think—or pretend to think—that he is a ‘great guy. No estranged wife, who has undoubtedly already told her husband just what kind of a heel she thinks he is, would be able to. qualify along that line. Then, too, a secretary is naturally a meek creature, saying “Yes, Sir” to all the boss's ideas, whether she thinks much of them or not— and being willing to take the blame for mistakes she knows are his. A wife, who for years has answered back, just couldn’t fall into that “Yes, Sir” pattern. And a woman who ‘has been used to the I-can-put-it-off-if-I-want-to atmosphere - of the home might
Club Will N ote
Anniversary
The 36th anniversary of the Independent Social club will be marked by a guest day tomorrow. Hostess for the 1 p. m, dessert luncheon will be Mrs. Edwin A. Tobey, 3824 Graceland ave. Guests of Mrs. James T. Cofer, Mrs. Esta Fox and Mrs. Ada Allen, will present a dialog and Mrs. Francis McClure Light, pianist, will play her own compositions. Mrs. John Cooper will sing, accompanied by Mrs. Cofer. Mrs. Asel Spellman Stitt and Mrs. Lester Wilhelm also will be guests at the meeting. Mrs. Julius Stahlhuth will have as her guest Mrs. William H. Schneider. Mrs. M. B. Spellman, the club president, will preside, Assistant hostesses will be Mrs, W. F. Kissel and Mrs. C. A. J. Schaefer.
A Double-Quick Meal For Busy Days
Home late from a Red Cross meeting? Don’t worry about dinner being late—here’s one you can whip up in a jiff. Cream of mushroom soup with chopped parsley, baked eggs and ham on toast, spinach, -broiled tomatoes, green salad, chilled blueberries, walnut cookies, coffee, tea or milk, To make the baked eggs, whip the whites until very stiff. Toast and butter bread, add a slice of boiled ham, heap egg whites over ham, drop egg yolk in center, season and bake until set. Looks as good as it tastes, too. .
‘Wood’ Curtains
If you are shopping for curtains, do look at the new colorful ones made of pressed wood cellulose fibers. The patterns are really lovely —gay and splashy, of beautifully co-ordinated colors and nicely bordered to give your windows a welldressed look. The curtains come in two-and-a-half-yard lengths, 58inch width to the pair, are said to be non-fading and not harmed by
rain.
LUX
¢ Additional Pounds, 9c Lb,
We jron ond
foted aha
‘The Aristocrat* LAUNDRY
* Built. on Quality and Sérvice*
Our outside drying river means FRESHNESS, STERILIZATION & BLEACHING by the SUN in our rough dry 3; finish service.
ROUGH DRY—34 Finished Service T Lbs,, 85c—ALL WEEK
Sltetin aa 530107 Winthrop in
Remove Rust Stains
Acids,
ood Hp
LM Lr
iin,
amin
use but little Electricity.
ae Care of Your
Defrost regula turer's instruc tion.
Wait until hot them in
To remove rust stains from por-
celain enamel bathroom or kitchen fixtures, try rubbing the spot with a cut lemon. Be sure, however, to wash the lemon juice off immediately and dry with a clean cloth. if allowed to remain on porcelain, are harmful to the glossy
arly according Pty
ge ectricity. ; Avoid oe crowding your circulation,’ erloading necessary air ron mechanism. foods and
our control Besure thecold i
is set to give proper 100 : compartment temper®
treat letters dictated at five o'clock in a too casual manner. A wife can always leave the dishes—but a good secretary ‘always gets the letters out before locking her desk for the night. So, think about it a while, men, before you tell a judge you can’t afford to pay your wife -alimonv. Maybe you'd rather hand it over
By MRS. ANNE CABOT
This is one of the most popular of all crochet patterns judging from the numbers of requests I _receive for “pineapple” designs. I saw a doily almost identical to this one in the Roosevelt Memorial Library in Hyde Park. It had been sent as a gift to the president. It is enclosed in a glass case and is greatly admired by visitors. Make it of size 30 thread to show the design to best advantage. Doily is 17 inches across. To obtain crocheting directions for the triple pineapple doily (pattern 5271) send 10 cents in coin, your name and address and the pat-
#2 | tern number to Anne Cabot, ,The Indianapolis Times, 211 W. Wacker
drive, Chicago. Enclose 1 cent postage for each pattern ordered. My new album, about which so many of you have inquired, is now ready. It is an’ attractive 32-page
r album of the lovely designs you §| have asked for and admired—
needlework designs of all types—for all the family—for the home and for gifts! The name of it is the “Anne Cabot Album.” Send 15 cents today for your copy!
Dance Tomorrow
The O-Del club will sponsor a dance and card party at 8:30 p. m. tomorrow at the Five-O Five-O clubroom, 211 N. Delaware st. Gilly Banta’s orchestra will play for dancing.
Crochet a Pineapple Doily,
s271
Variety in Kabobs
When broiling kabobs (cubes of veal, lamb or beef strung on metal skewers) over an open fire, alters nate the meat morsels with mushe rooms for flavor and variety. Onion slices, tomato halves or unpeeled
potato slices are also good alters natives.
Gretna, Louisiana. procure needed ICE!
2000 Northwestern 2302 W. Michigan St.
willingly than have your wife work it out.
Pe RAMI
1. Prevent Food Waste 2. Fewer Trips to Market 3. Safeguard Health
OMEN in the home have an important job in 3 helping to win this war and your Electric refrigerator should be playing an important role. By using storage space properly you get better food preservation and more usable space. Then you can buy your food in larger quantities and lower costs, save time and conserve tires. Keep your Electric refrigerator in good working order. It was built to last a long time and to
Refrigerator
. ot Will Lost Longer
to manufae-
drip water imme-
WAYS TO SAVE
a. Rope 2
tient
In 1863 eo o o One of the first ICE machines,
using the principle of ammonia absorption, was run through the Civil War blockade and set up at Great effort was expended to
TODAY oe o YOU can procure SPARKLING,
CRYSTAL CLEAR ICE . . . HARD FROZEN PURITY . . . simply by calling POLAR . . . TA.245l.
POLA
ICE AND FUEL CO.
Ave.
1902 S. East St.
| Milk and beverages go right beside freeser.
iger ator.
dishes cool before
ator.
2 Frozen Joods and desserts go in with ice cubes.
3 Meats and fish go right under the freeser. .
4 Custards and chilled puddings go in top middle.
§ Butter keeps best in the
‘top middle section.
% Foods prepared ahead and, left-overs in lower middle.
7 Vegetables and most fruits | 80 in humidifier drawer:
a eri
MN
INDIANAPOLIS [owen
Here Is How to Store Food Correctly
To safeguard the health of your family buy fresh-quality foods, rich in nutritio 1s proteins, vitamins, minerals, fats and carbohydrates. Then refrigerate these foods correctly to conserve their strength-giving qualities. All you have to do is put the food in the proper places indicated below.
es in. RRR rrr
