Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 September 1942 — Page 23
A
Bartlett pears, plums and grapes §
* is expected to decline.
.- scrambled eggs and bacon, hot muf-
The Market. Basket This Week Provides “More Abies for the School Lunch Box
VIDENCE APPARENTLY
is “looking out” for Hoosier ‘school
i they started back fo school this last week, increasing: quanapples—for their launch boxes—appeared on the market, -
ie arriving, according
to the agricultural extension service's
ory on the local fruit and vegetable market, are red and us, Jonathan, Grimes Golden and Macintosh.
commercial apple crop in the 6 this" year is estimated at
0-bushéls, 58 per cent: of the “bushel. Top harvested. last
slighty ommercial ‘apple pro¢h : is “slightly higher Jhan that of last year. In the large apple producing areas “of thie northwest and eastern states, there will be an increased volume of ‘apples used for drying and other commercial uses.
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Peaches Growing Scarce THE HARVEST of peaches in "Michigan is practically over except for a few late varieties. As a result, peaches now have advanced in
price here, precluding their use for home ‘canning. Light supplies of
are available this week. The supply of locally grown vegetables this week includes a plentiful quantity of green beans. The homemaker may choose either the rotund, stringless type or the large fF uky Wonder variety. Their market price makes their use for home canning desirable. . Tomatoés are still available in large quantities and there still is time for canning the vegetable or its - juice. As the season advances the supply will decrease and quality
- Other vegetables coming on the local market in large quantities this week are sweet corn, cucumbers, peppers, *squash and greens. Ap_pearing in moderate quantities are - egg plant, parsnips, Chinese cabbage, turnips and carrots.
Good Meals for Good Morale
“BREAKFAST —Orange juice,
fins, jam, coffee, milk. ~DINNER—Stewed chicken on hot Jbiscuits, brown rice, green beans, lettuce and tomato salad, peach pie, cheese, coffee, milk.
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to soup In cups, fresh vegetable anda ham salad, biscuits, relishes, fruit bowl, cup cakes, tea, milk. 8
a
| Today s Recipe
CORN RELISH (About ¢ pints) Eighteen to 20 ears sweet corn, or 7 cups corn eut from cob, 2 cups chopped cahbage, 2 green peppers, chopped, 2 sweet red ‘peppers, chopped. ‘1 ‘cup sugar, 1 cup water, 1 quart cider vinegar, 1 tablespoon celery seed, 1 tablespoon whole pickling spice, 2 tablespoons salt. Mix all ingredients fogether and cook 30 minutes. Pack into hot jars and process at simmer temperature for 20 minutes.
Boosters’ Club Plans Election A Boosters’ club election will be
season at the Riviera club. The election is scheduled for tonight and installation ceremonies will be held Sept. 25.
dance.
The outdoor swimming pool closed this week and the indoor pool in the
Sept. 21. Also to be held in the winter building will be shuffleboard and table tennis. Later on physical education classes will be organized for women. The club has announced that tennis and shuffleboard courts will be open to members only in the daytime. Reservations for play will not be accepted. The club also will hold an “all-member” dance each Saturday evening. :
Rho Deltas to Meet
Final plans for a national convention will be discussed at a meeting: of Beta chapter, Rho Delta sorority, to be held Tuesday at the home of Miss Doris Shannon, 22 E.
- .SUPPER—Chicken and rice toma-
Regent st.
det FN a
i
Te aA RAN ACEI REP ERR SIRI IC CERN ERNE E
SAE AEN
: ey. CAAA EATERNERE TENA
the first major activity of the fallil
Following the business ae is session this evening, members will | Bai
winter recreation building will open [BR
y large scallops $0 be done in button-
all sizes—all pointing: out to sea, * tant. job. all experiments for each of the too, all. inventions applicable to
; officer and several airmen.
size gun.
the “field flowers” were gitls doing an imporFor this'is a station’ unique of its kind: ‘Here army, navy and air. force—are carried out. Here,
are tested, including ammunition, from rifle bullets: to big shells. It is under the command of an’officer of the royal artillery, bu! his staff includes a naval
“The girls who work on this station are known as the “Brain Trust of/ the ATS" I watched a squad come in. from the ‘beach, wed with long-handled iron hooks or shovels, wearing thigh-high waders. They had ‘been out all ‘morning picking up shells which the. gunners had been firing. Further along, on a gunsite, three girls ‘were busy “laying the screen” for an out-
: Later on, I watched others busy at a window position<finder: - their job was to spot splashes out: POSE at. sea, x als saw them Tepisiering ORHAN ¢ of research: Worker. under a fan ne ls
figwers dotted about the foreshore, oe Bee, 1 skirts, white blouses and scarlet and’ navy. service SE08 of whith (hey, 828.50 proud Sul bden Shey + :
mie : es + tse depo 4s saline]. 1st copinand to.
. give girls ‘a. tryout at the station soon after he
and you realized kirk, when the
three services—
modern warfare scene. They got
shop ‘assistants;
need for trained -gunnery: officers
became more and ‘more necessary. He met: with ‘tremendous opposition but * finally got his ‘way. “I have never regretted it,” he said. There was something
altogether too much attention and
“the men: just waited to see: how they would weather their first Niger & there, among other things,
" A. T. 8. way:back in 39. 0 : : A T.'5. gis also act as “bat-women’ 10 the officers and" do clerical work and cooking. 3 They ‘are a mixed lot. There are ex-teachers, clerks, secretaries; one girl is the daughter of the. colonel in command of the station : _during the last war and another is the daughter | of a man who owns .a factory turning out shells ' Mula she 1a 10 infpesk. The Juttior Sommer in charge of the observation. post:
mg
By MRS, ANNE CABOT Poppies—the symbol of restful sleep and pleasant dreams—are gorgeously embroidered on this pair of pillowcases and top-sheet. Reds, pinks, pale .and dark greens. are harmoniously blended in. the -big cross-stitch poppies: and. the leaves.
shine-y yellow. ‘Pillowcases _have
hole ‘stitch. A charming set to embroider for our guest room, for a present to a new army bride, to complete and put away in your treasure chest of holiday gifts. : To obtain three transfer patterns for the poppy design for pillowcases and ‘sheet (Pattern 5435) "send 11 cents in coin, your name and address and the pattern number to Anne Cabot, The Indianapolis Times, 211 W. Wacker drive, Chicago.
the designs you have admired and asked - for—needlework "of all types —is now available.” Send for your copy ‘of the “Anne Cabot Album. » The price is 16 cents.
More Cheese ‘Eaten.
Though the average American eats ‘about twice as much cheese as 25 years ago, our per capita consumption is still below that of many other countries.
Here's a product of ‘wartime significance, a bet. . ter, more wholesome rice! Send ‘boxtop for wonderful recipes that'll Shell eager. appetites,
The tiny buds are done in sun-|
‘My popular alubum—32 pages of |.
Times Pattern Service
8257
Future = and - immediate needs
‘both are taken care of superbly by
today’s shapely two-piece suit with its own jaunty dickey. It ‘will be grand to wear through fall—then it will go under your coat for the winter. Pattern 8257 is designed for sizes 14, 16, 18, 20; 40, 42 and 44. Size 16 takes 4 yards 39-inch material, % yard contrast for dickey. For this attractive pattern, sind 16 cents in coin, your name, address, pattern number and size to The Indianapolis: Times Pattern Service, 214 W. Maryland st. A complete preview of fall styles for home dressmaking is offered in our illustrated fall fashion book, yours for 16 cents: It may be ordered with a 16-cent pattern for 26 cents.
Jane Rottger To Be Wed
Tomorrow aftérnoon, at 4:30 o'clock in McKee chapel of Tabernacle Presbyterian church, - Miss Jane Rottger will become the bride of Kenneth - Wilkinson, Allentown, Pa.
*
HL, formerly of Indianapolis. She is here visiting her grandmother, Mrs. Curtis H. Rottger, 3103 N. Meridian st. ‘Mr. Wilkinson is the
: |son of Mr. and Mrs. Paul ‘Witkin. : son, New Castle.
Miss Mary Jean ‘Ottinger will be Miss Rgttger’s only attendant, and the best man will be James Honan,
Hunter's lodge, Marott hotel.
Red: ross Chapter: To Begin Fall Work
‘Howard J. Baumgartel,
Miss Lewis will assume -sponsibilities as president of the
i Nashville, Tenn.
Miss Rottger is the daughter of | Mrs. Russell C. Rottger, Evanston,
Lafayette. Following the wedding| i |a reception will be held in the,
‘Prather _Temple-Victary chapter |’ : af the Hed Gras will opén the all |
were eight Indianapolis girls who will begin “their freshman year and
school’s freshman orientation week. The freshmen are the Misses): Myra Baker, Bernice Chamberlain, Marianne Daries, Margaret Frazier, Mary Ellen Leckie, Ann Winger, Adda Jeanne Winterfeldt and Nancy Ann Myers. Miss Adeline Lewis, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Montgomery S. Lewis of | Brendonwood; Miss Clara June Bosson, the Robert N. Bosson’s daughter, and Miss Betty Baumgartel, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. are the upperclassmen.’ : When the school opens Sept. 15, her re-
Western ¥. W. C. A. Miss Bosson, president of the senior class, is one of the 12 specially chosen senior counselors serving as advisers to
,| freshmen during the - orientation
period. . "Miss ‘Baumgartel is campus. i=
{dustrial chairman. She has spent
the summer as an assistant in the administration offices of the college.
Couple Leaves
: Lieut. and Mrs. William C. Jack-|’ son have gone to their home in Asbury Park, N. J. following their marriage - Wedaesday evening in McKee chapel of Tabernacle Presbyterian church, Mrs. Jackson was Miss Jeanette Gleichman. Dr. Roy Ewing Vale officiated,
and the bride was given in ‘marriage by her brother, John F. Gleichman.
The matron of honor was the bride’s sister, Mrs. Paul R. Pike. Another sister, Miss Margaret Gleichman, was bridesmaid. ‘ Samuel Dodd was best man ‘and ushers included: ‘Hatley Hornbeck and Mr. Pike. A reception at the home of the bride’s mother, Mrs. O. C. Gleich-
-man, 6338 College ave., followed the
ceremony. : Lieut. Jackson is the son of Mr. and Mrs. A. S. Jackson,
Tea at Kindergarten To Honor Mothers
A fea honoring mothers of new pupils. at the Tuxedo Park kindergarten will be given Wednesday at| the kindergarten by -the board of the Mothers] club. “What the| Kindérgarten
Your Child” will be the topic dur-| ing a short discussion period. Members of the board are Mrs. Arthur. Allison, president; Mrs.| Walter Biener, vice president; Mrs. Lee Patterson and Mrs. Robert] Gray, recording and corresponding secretaries;* Mrs. H. Major Moberly, treasurer, and Mrs. Florence Baker, teacher.
Ie
OXFORD, 0. Sept. 1 \Amiving at’ Western college’ here: yesterday|
three upperclassmen from Indian-|* |apolis, who are assisting ab the|
"want: to know what is wrong. They
For New Home|
Means to You and}
‘was put in charge. This was at the. time of Dun-
: ots moi | . the gunners when the girls first appeared on the
A British gir, member of the A. T. §. signals fo have velocity screens moved in ‘Tine with the gun before it Is fired for a velocity test. A serg eant-major stands under the barrel.
DEAR JANE JORDAN—I am a girl 15° years old. Most girls of my: age have boy troubles but I have girl trouble. I run around with two girls. This mikes an uneven numbér and when we go to a dance, skating or any other place, I am always the one who is left out. The other two dance together, skate together and I always the odd one. Sometimes 1 get disgusted and don’t go around them for a. while. Then they come to my house and
ask me to go. some place with them and when I. go they are. nice for a while. over again.
but she doesn’t like to do the things I do, s0-1 went back to these. two again. Their families are better off than mine and they have money to do things with, Naturally they are together -a. lot. but ‘still they come after me. When I don’t have the money they go away leaving me at home with nothing to do. I sit at home some nights and cry because I have no place to’ 80. and nothing todo. I
I started to g0 with another girl}:
Garden. Club Show Will Be Tomorrow : The Sunshine Garden club of ' | Beech ‘Grove is. to. sponsor a flower, | victory. garden and hobby show tomorrow from: 1:30 to 10:30 ‘'p. m. in
| the Beech: Grove gymnasium. Mrs. Oliver Kennedy will display
her ‘collection’ of dolls.
General chairman is Mrs. William Hert, Mrs. R. E. Wikoff is president of the "club. ‘Mrs. Charles Adams will be ‘in charge of victory gardens and Mrs. Taa Binninger is chairman of hobbies,
176 Meet Honday
Officers will be elected by Alphs chapter of Chi Phi Gamma: sorority at ‘a business meeting to be held Monday in the home of Miss Mar garet Martel, 2516 {Bredieds Pkwy.
Sorority M ng
Miss Dorothy Thompson, 1001 St, Peter st., will be hostess for a busie ness meeting of Epsilon chapter, Rho Delta sorority, to be held Mon ra di at fn m Fai
Then it’s the same thing £ it
am so lonely. What can I do?—| =
L.C.. : Rs AL Te ’ Answer—School: has started since you wrote this: letter and. this should
work should keep you too busy to go out during the week, and you can make new friends to occupy your week-ends. = The problem of uneven numbers will not .be with you long for girls of ‘your age soon will be going with
like dull sport to be. skating and dancing ‘with another girl. You'll
will end your: el trouble” with great speed.
as the other girls, why don’t. you are only 15 and will have to get a
permit to. ‘work from the school board.
There is 50 much work to be done : now. that-we are at war that. there! is’ no excuse for anyone to be idle,|
You are needed whether you think so .or not. You'll be happier: ‘when
who have more to spend than you have. .
home and cry. iGlet. up. and @b some: ‘thing: about: your problem. - :
call ‘your ex-husband on the phone and ‘make arrangements to collect the things which belong to you. This is: a simple business proposition: and should cause you no hesiiation.— JANE JORDAN, \ :
\ tne
your problems in a letter
t Firs “who ah answer your. Chentions aily.
give you an occupation. Your home| fd
boys. : Very shortly now it will seem | have a lot more fun with boys who! §l It you haven't as much money :
try to earn. some? You can get a A job on Saturdays even though you| §
you're busier, and the extra money| will solve your problem with friends| “Whatever you: do, don't. sit at]
“Note to Undecided—B: By all means
Jane )
