Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 September 1942 — Page 12
EE —— : O | £
As Result of -
; emaking—
Coblbage to Be a Victory Food Spacial
Shortage of Kraut Tins
- HOUSEWIVES too often: overlook cabbage on their shopping lists. ‘And it is no food to overlook now that fresh cabbage has been desig‘nated by the agricultural marketing administration as a “victory food special” for Sept. 28 through Oct. 10.
The cook is likely to protest thal it “smells up” the kitchen. But! $
4 can be cooked so that it is a secret to the neighbors and a surprise
to the family. Dramatic. heights ‘can even be achieved with a stuffed whole cabbage. When cooked in very little water ‘over a low flame and with a tightly fitting cover, the cooking odor is reduced to a minimum, Ohe of the copper-clad stainless steel pans is ideal for this. ‘The principal kind of cabbage on most markets during the latter part of September and early October will be the domestic type. Ordinarily, large quantities of kind of cabbage are used in the manufacture of sauerkraut, for sale Josuly in tin cans. ieee } BECAUSE TIN is needed to beat the axis, none will be available this season for packing kraut for civilian use. While quantities will be put up in wooden containers for bulk. sale, the total amount packed in this manner is not expected to be great enough to make up for the supply that would otherwise be packed in tin cans.
domestic type cabbage cannot be stored au naturel for winter use, large quantities are expected to be available at reasonable prices for
The usual small-size heads will be difficult to obtain. Here’s a way . to use one of the big heads.
' WHOLE STUFFED CABBAGE
Take a good sized head of cabbage and scald it until the leaves ~ become soft enough to handle easily. Open the leaves, starting with the outer ones and working toward the center. Merely loosen the petals; leaving the head intact, so you can fill the spaces with this stuffing: To 1 cup of cooked rice, 2 cups of minced, cooked ham and 1 tea"spoon of finely chopped parsley, add enough meat stock or cabbage . water to make a filling. Beginning with the inside leaves, place tablespoonfuls of the mixture between . the leaves, folding them over the stuffing. When the head is full, bind it into shape or tie up with a cloth and place in boiling water. Cook for an hour; untie, drain and remove to a large, hot platter. Serve surrounded by well-seasoned
tomato sauce. J 8.
Good Meals for Good Morale
. BREAKFAST--Grapes, fried eggs and bacon, hominy muffins, coffee, milk. LUNCHEON — Cheeseburgers, mixed green salad, fruit bowl, cobkdes, tea, milk. DINNER-—Tomato juice, pan- . broiled chopped round steak, French fried potatoes, spinach, apple pie, coffee, milk, 8 - # Today's Recipe * HONEY BREAD PUDDING > (Serves 4 to 6)
Five cups stale bread cubes, 2 cups hot milk, % cup honey, ¥% cup raisins, 3 tablespoons butter, 2 eggs, well-beaten. Scald milk. Pour over bread cubes and mix until bread 'is thoroughly moistened. Add eggs. Press one half of the moistened bread in baking
GOTHAM'S MAKE FINE
COTTON HOSIERY
In addition te Futuray rayon stockings made by Gotham, smart women in fashionable gatherings all over the nation
dish. Pour one half of the honey and raisins over it and dot with butter. Add the remaining half of the moistened bread and the remaining honey, raisins and butter. Bake in moderate oven (275 degrees F.) for about 45 minutes. Serve with cream or top milk. 8 ® 2
The Question Box
“Brunch” is a coined word de-
bined. It is served usually between 10 a, m. and noon. The menu may be either that for a regular break-
of both.
sidered so nutritious? A—Like all nuts, the peanut is rich in fat, and like all legumes it is rich in protein. Peanuts are also a good source of phospherus, a fair source of iron and a good source of vitamin B. Q—Do vegetables cooked in their skins conserve vitamins better than if. they are first pared? A-Yes.
ID. A. R. Lists
Committees
Committee "chairmen who will serve the Caroline Scott Harrison| chapter, Daughters of the American Revolution, during the coming year have been announced, These include Mrs. Maurice E. Tennant, by-laws; Mrs. Olin B. Norman and Mrs. Henry G. Blume, fund for state dues of life members; Mrs. J. L, Gavin and Mrs. Russell Bosart, Florence A. Gavin endowment fund; Mrs: Herbert R. Hill and Mrs. Leroy H. Millikan, house and room; Mrs. John Downing Johnson and Mrs. Wilbur E. Smith, membership. * Also Mrs. O. Marvin Jones and Mrs, Maxey Hill Wall, music; Mrs Gavin, parliamentarian; Mrs. Millikan and Mrs. Jones, program; Miss Alta M. Roberts and Miss Nelly Colfax Smith, remembrance; Mrs. Edgar Y. Pattison and Mrs. Herman E. Rogge, telephone; Mrs. William R. Humphrey and Mrs. Ray T. Fatout, tellers; Mrs. Noble W. Hiatt and Miss Ethel M. Moore, transportation: Mrs. Hugh H Hanna and Mrs. Paul S. Ragan, war activities. Members of the board of management will form the advertising directory committee and the finance committee will include all committee chairmen and the board of management. The Golden Wheel committee will serve as pages and the reception committee" will include the executive board, past regents and committee chairmen.
Young Charmer
Q—What is the proper hour for 3 serving “brunch” and what kind of haha is served?
noting breakfast and lunch com-|#%
fast or luncheon or a ‘combination
Q—Just why is peanut butter con- 5 *
Indianapolis Council of Parent-
R. Shirley, president,
[nounced ‘the appointment of six
. With priorities making versatile wardrobes a necessity, jacket-and-
skirt outfits are becoming more and more important.
Here is a two-
piecer suitable for travel, town or classroom wear with its crisply tailored jacket of black and yellow wool and black, lighter pure wool skirt. The collarless, one-button jacket is well adapted to wearing over bright blouses and with different skirts. As shown, it is worn over a mustard-yellow jersey blouse, which, in accordance with WPB regulations, must be bought separately. :
Clubs—
on
Women's Faculty Club of Butler To Hold First Meeting of Year;
Expression Club
Plans Luncheon
Numerous women’s clubs have planned season-opening meetings
this week.
Two o'clock tomorrow afternoon is the time set for the first meeting of Butler university's WOMEN’S FACULTY club in the recreation
room of Jordan hall.
Mrs. Karl S. Means will be hostess and Dr. Merwyn G. Bridenstine
of the Business Administration college will speak on “The War and the Housewife.” : Newly elécted officers include Mrs. Ross™ J. Griffeth, president; Mrs. James Peeling, vice president;
| Mrs. Harold Baker, treasurer; Mrs.
Frederick Winter, corresponding
.| secretary; Mrs. Gino A. Ratti, pro-
gram chairman, and Mrs. Virginia Brunson, recording secretary.
Miss Kathryn Dale, 3706 Drexel ave., will entertain Thursday at the INDIANAPOLIS JUNIOR WOMAN’S club's first fall meeting. A wiener roast will start at 6:30 p. m. and installation of officers will be held at 8 o'clock. Plans for activities of the coming year will be formulated under the sponsorship of Miss Dale, publicity chairman, and Miss Lavon Riss) incoming president.
A president’s day luncheon in honor of Mrs. E. F. Madinger will mark the first meeting of the EXPRESSION club at 12:30 p. m. tomorrow at the ¥. W. C. A. “Brotherhood” will be the theme around which future meetings will be planned. Mrs. O. M. Richardson, social chairman, is in charge of arrangements, and Mrs. Herschel E. Burns is program chairman. A group of readings reminiscent of summer vacations will be given by Miss Mary B. Whiteman. Mrs. Ralph O. Stephens, ‘soprano, will sing.
Appointment of committee heads for the coming year will: be made by Mrs. Mary Wright Parsons,| president, at a meeting of the BUSINESS WOMEN'S club of the First Friends church, Sunday at 3 pm Mrs. Lyla Franklin will be hostess for the tea to be held at the Bertha Ballard home, 411 N. Delaware st. .
The monthly meeting of the CON AMIGO club was held last night at the home of Mrs. Helen Mosler, 4702 Young ave.
Hostesses for a meeting of ‘the TRI KAPPA club to be held tomorrow in the Colonial tearoom at 6:15 p. m. will be Mrs. Paul
Y| Brown and Miss Melbourne David-
son,
The IRVINGTON HOMEMAKERS club will meet at the home of Mrs. Rudolph .Johnson, 51 Ridgeview drive, at 1:30 p. m. tomorrow. Mrs. C. L. Belhyy, President, will assist.
The VALENCIAN chaps. JINTERNATIONAL TRAVEL-STUDY club, will hold ‘a meeting Thursday evening ‘at 8 o'clock in the home of Mrs. V. T. Calvin, 2017 Chester ave. Mrs. Grover Slider and Mrs. ln
recent books with sketches of the authors.
At its first meeting of the year Thursday, the MOTHERS’ club of he IRVINGTON KINDERGARTEN, Indianapolis Free Kindergarten society, will hear a talk by Miss Carolyn Ackmann, kindergarten director. Her subject will be “The Five-Year-Old Steps Out” The mothers will meets at 1:30 p. m. in the school, 9 N. Arlington ave. A musical program will be provided by Mrs. Francis Helkema, violinist, and Mrs. John Simpson, accordionist. -All. mothers are invited to attend and take their small children, who will "have supervised play in another room. Officers for the coming term, Mesdames Glen Pagett, Richard Orton, Russell McGinnis, Katherine McConahay and Thurman Ridge, will be hostesses at a tea following the business session.
The RIO DE JANEIRO chapter, INTERNATIONAL TRAVELSTUDY club, will meet at 10:30 8. m, tomorrow with Mrs. Kenneth Irwin as hostess, assisted by Mrs. Basil ‘Fisher and Mrs. John Copp. Mrs. John Thornburgh will be the speaker.
The NATIONAL WOMEN'S SERVICE LEAGUE, INC. was to hold a meeting at 2 p. m. today in the Y. W. C. A. Membership drive teams were to report.
I. A. C. Plans Activities Plans for the year's athletic ac-
anapolis Athletic club and : their children will be made at a meeting held tomorrow noon by the club’s athletic committee. The committee, headed by Dr. John W. Geller, includes C. O. Mueller, swimming chairman; Smiley N. Chambers, gymnasium activity; A. H. Fiske, badminton; W. J. Hanlon, handball; Ed Elliott, squash racquets, and Robert D. McCord, volleyball. Physical Director Ned Teany and Swimming Director Earl Montgomery will present tentative plans for the season. Mrs. Bernadine McAree, president of ‘the women's swimming group, has announced Sept. 30 as the opening date for the Dolphins’ monthly luncheons.!
new board members. ‘They are Mrs. John Ferree, mothe
mittee; Lawrence Stafford, prinSpal member of the Mvisory coms=
its sessions this year at 2 o’clock tomorrow afternoon. Mrs. Edith Shirley, principal, will present the ‘theme for the year, “Conservation of Human Values.” A tea in honor of new mothers of the school will
be held following the meeting.
“Good Parent-Teacher Relation-
Carl J. Manthei at the meeting of the SCHOOL 77 P.-T. A. tomorrow at 2 p. m. Music will be provided by Mrs. Francis Helkema and Mrs. John Simpson. Following the meeting, a garden party will be held for new mothers.
A reception for new mothers at SCHOOL 80 has been set by the P-T. A. for 3:15 p. m. tomorrow. The sixth annual exhibit of the Spade and Trowel club will be. on display. Arrangements have been made for the care of preschool age children. New officers of the sponsoring group are Mrs. J. C. Weizel, president; Mrs. L. R. Clark, vice president; Mrs. John W. Judy, secretary, and Mrs. Guy Dixon, treasurer. Ni
DEAR JANE JORDAN—Since we have been in Indiana my husband's folks have. been here only once, and when they did come they brought trouble with them concerning his property. He has two homes out of town and they tell him fo get rid of them. He has put all he saved before we were married into these homes and doesn’t want to sell them and lose money on them. He sold another home because his people kept after him and lost $600 on it. My folks like my husband and come to see us abdut twice a month. When they come they always bring a car full of food. After they leave my husband feels hurt because his folks won't come. I have "asked them because I will} know how much it means wo “him but they won't. We are very happy and never argue except when he gets a letter from his mother telling him to get rid of his houses. Is there anything I can say or do about these homes? What can I say to his folks so that they will come to see us and make him feel that he is still loved by his folks? MRS. D. 2 8 8
Answer—1I have had many letters asking me how to keep the in-laws away but this is the first one I ever had asking how to make them come
nothing. If a man’s family tries to main-
married, the sooner he becomes weaned away from them the bet-
tivities for members of th -| ter. e Indl) =o at your husband does with his}
property is his own business. Why|
worry about the advice he gets from his family when it is so easy to let it gd in one ear and out the other? Encourage him to act on his own initiative and not to listen to
advice from others.
When his mother writes her in-
head of the family as well as the to make his own decisions.” His
feel the opposite. J! JANE JORDAN.
Put your problems in in 8 letter to Jane who answer your questions in this column a
Teacher associations, Mrs. William 0 k
er member of the advisory com-|
SCHOOL 1 P.-T. A. will resume|®
ship” will be the subject of Mrs.
visiting when they bring only trouble|& in their wake. The answer is do|&
tain its rule over Bim after he lsime
structions, all you have to do is to} § assure your husband that he is the :
owner of the property and is freé| mother makes him feel inadequate] §
and infantile by her constant ine|§ struction. See that you make him|§
‘In opening fall activities for el
is now available. Send for your copy of the “Anne Cabot Album.” The peice 18°16 sents. :
Is in 1 Service’ Lo
By RUTH MILLETT
| problems go today, but it looks big | to an 18 or 20-year-old girl . . . the
Indiana State Nurses’ association.
three-point program. First will be the listing of subsidiary (practical) nurses and their placement in private home cases which do not demand the services of trained graduate nurses. The listings will bé compiled at the Nursing Service bureau, 824 Chamber of Commerce building. The second point of the program is a plan of group nursing in hospitals, so that one private-duty nurse may be assigned to several private patients and spread her work in a way that will not deprive any one patient of needed attention. Staff physicians of the hospitals will determine who may have group nursing.
To Recruit Graduates
The third phase will be the recruiting of staff hospital nurses from graduate nurses now engaged exclusively in private practice. In conjunction with this program the
central district officers will intensify previous efforts to encourage|® graduate nurses who have retired because of marriage or other reasons to re-enter active service on a full or part-time basis. J.-B. H. Martin, president of the Indianapolis Hospital council, announced that the hospitals have agreed to set a standard rate of remuneration for private nurses who respond to the appeal for service as temporary staff nurses. The council also will co-operate in all phases of the Tecruiling program, he said. Mrs. G. D. French, president of the central district, said that “all members of our profession, both in active service and retired, must be made to realize that a nursing emergency exists. « . . The military services of necessity have made dangerous inroads into the civilian nursing service. It is highly im-
R=
Rationing of Nursing Service In County Is Aim of Drive openins| Begun by Nurses’ Association
An intensive drive to procure and ration all available nursing service in Marion county was begun yesterday by the central district of the
Acting at the request of the Indianapolis hospital council, a board organized recently by administrators and nursing superintendents of local hospifals, the central district directors prepared plans for a
‘anapolis. About 400 of the mem-
mothers of the Seventh grade with
ton, state president of the Ameri=
portant that we maintain the health of our civilians, especially those engaged directly and indirectly (in work that is essential to the war effort.” ‘The central district, Mrs. French said, has 1371 members, of which approximately 1000 are in Indi-
bers are engaged in private practice. Mrs. French will. be assisted in the program by Miss Lillian Adams, secretary of the central district; Miss Janet Davis of the Nursing Service bureau, and by the directors of the nursing schools at Indianapolis hospitals.
Tea Is to Honor Pupils’ Mothers
Mothers of new pupils in St. Joan of Arc school will be honored by the St. Joan of Arc Women’s club at its meeting and tea tomorrow, at 1:30 p. m. in the school hall. The Rev. Fr: Clement Bosler, pastor of St. Joan of Arc church,
and Sister Irma Agnes, superior of]
the grade school, will extend greetings to new and old members. Miss Loretta Martin, music instructor, and the traffic patrol boys will describe their respective activities. The tea will be served by the
Mrs. William J. Mooney as chairman.
Attends Conference
‘Mrs. R. W. Holmstedt, Blooming-
can Association of University Women, was in Columbus, O., yesterday to attend a regional conference called by the war department's bureau of public relations for the women’s interests section of the de-
out by the Uni- |
| versity Women's @
club to go ahead |
~ Ruth Millett end in your room moaning for Jeff, who is probably sleeping soundly and peacefully at a far-away camp.” ; That is pretty ood advice for mbst girls. For this war may last a long, long time. And if a girl voluntarily passes up dating until 3% Is over. she Will have & pretty dreary girlhood.
let her young man in, the army down in any way. She doesn’t need to keep quiet about him. in order to have dates for movies and
dances. . 2 ® 8
probably be doing her young man a favor. For then he can have dates, too, without. feeling guilty. And ‘when he does come back home he'll find her a more attractive girl, if she has been having fun once in a while, than if she had spent her time away from him just sitting around moping. So “go ahead and date,” is pretty « sound advice to waiting girls. There is only one catch to it. -In many towns and cities where most of the home-town boys have left, - and there is no army camp or defense plant to bring in new prospects, the girl whose young man is in the service: doesn’t have ny chances to go out. ‘In such towns many a bored, lonesome girl wishes she were faced by the problem of whether or not to accept dates. :
Fall Reception. Held By Religion College The College of Religion at Butler university held its annual informal fall reception last night. Dr. Frederick D. Kershner, the college dean, and faculty members opened the
program by greeting religion stu= dents ‘and their friends. Following a program of organ music "in the Sweeney chapel guests heard a group of talks on school
partment.
activities given by faculty members
"in the assembly room.
pesesty PN Ey, 8 held
7
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try that
TTS NOT A' BIG PROBLEM, as »
That doesn’t mean she needs. to 7
¢ IN FACT, by dating, she will
)
9
