Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 September 1942 — Page 21
The Market Basket This Week-End Forecasts the Approach of Fall
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BY TAKING ADVANTAGE of the victory food specials designated
* |py the agricultural marketing administration, homemakers cannot only
| help the war food program, but also save strain on their budgets. |“ Ab the present time, an abundant crop of apples is being harvested and apples have been designated as a victory special through Sept. 29. | They are the best buy in fresh fruits this week, the agricultural exten- :
fruit and vegetable news. No fruit lends itself to more uses than the apple—raw, baked, in applesauce, pie, betty, jelly, butter— and in cider. Apple juice is a relatively new apple product that takes its place on the grocery shelf by the side of other fruit juices the year ‘round. Another delicious fruit on the .lo- : cal market this week is grapes, Fine EAR quality Concord grapes are coming hex n Jane o£ Dan I oma from Michigan. There also are light a boy a next door to me and Supplies Ne Sah and [oh pears. very supply we went steady for six months. the market this Then he moved away. We wrote for Sains 8 was on wie a while until I heard he was going steady with a girl who lived close to him and I did not write any more. . THE VEGETABLE ARRAY reThen I began’ to go steady With pings that fall is almost here. A a boy of my age. He Faye he ves tew pumpkins have made their apwil and Soest v He 1 op | pEBTANCE, heralding pumpkin pie. € at 1 know about. He Is ON iThe supply and quality of tomatoes my ming Siu; all the time and I ,ave dropped off fairly rapidly this But on . months ago the to Tomatoes still may: be puiz= : chased for home canning, but the me. have had two or dhree dates re mes 30° deity tomato camming fits wife no ela, a with him, but soon found that he any longer. y : wasn't the same as before. He does! There still is a liberal supply of SYetyshing De San o Sus sp reen beans at prises low Sanh )| for home canning. ey concause me to quit going with the tinue on the market in fairly large gris boy I oat wan jo me supplies i # jing frost. : =| Other .{Ires! ome-grown vyegefg Tih 56 resent and say 3. Sah tables available this week-end are e Doy at a time. cabbage, carrots, eggplant, ns, _ My sister-in-law says I should go Ins parsnips, Sep ans En with other fellows, too, but» I don’t! gng turnips. Ripe red pimiento fare mum stout Sone Pa 1 3h, peppers are available for home canning. Et sus. . is : Locally-grown sweet potatoes are do as my sister-in-law peing harvested and a few are comVejen ih Shay I do as my jng on the market. Sweet corn,
UNDECIDED. # ” o Answer—In the matter of friends it is better to do what you want to do yourself. Listen to what your parents and your sister-in-law have to say and then make up your own mind. Your sister-in-law has some good sense on her side when she advises + you to make many friends instead ‘of just one, but if you do not agree with her, you have a right to try “going steady.” ° = a | The trouble with “going steady” at 17 is that it cuts you out of so ‘many good times that you could {have otherwise. It also deprives ‘you of much valuable experience in | adjusting to new people and situations. ~ / : Every girl needs a certain amount of social practice to help her feel
Early Pumpkin Pies
beginning of the season, has made up for this by being available for a long season. There still is a good supply of medium quality sweet corn on the market.
at ease when meeting people. Then, too, when your present love affair passes, you may have a hard time getting back into the swim. However, the only way you can learn these facts is to go ahead in your own way until they dawn upon you through the results of your own experience. Try not to take your present attachment too seriously for love affairs between 17-year-old couples are not apt to prove permanent. JANE JORDAN.
Put your problems in a letter to Jane Jordan, who will answer your quesfions in this -~olumn daily. :
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Grand Coats in Fitted and Boxy Models in all sizes
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Use Brooks Extended Payment Plan and Pay Out of Income.
sion service reports in its weekly |
which got off to a poor start at the
freshman, was graduated in June
Western, English
se held at Gregg farms will open
tion, will benefit the Indiana State
handy ranch horse class, ladies’ western horse and equipment, pony class for children, western jumping class, unusual western class (men only), western pair class, dude ranch and western stable owners, musical chair (women) and musical chair (men). - : Awards of $100 will be made in the handy ranch and dude ranch classes. The ‘Western pair class, sponsored by Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Crane, 1s a $50 class. Other sponsors are Ralph R. Reeder and Sons, children’s pony class; Kelsch’s dude ranch, Western colt class, and Sundown Saddle club, musical chair class for men. Sunday's program—English day— , Opening at 10 a. m. will feature an event for saddle bred colts (1942 { foal) sponsored by A. Hastings Fiske, a five-gaited pleasure horse class, boys’ and girls’ horsemanship and the plantation walking horse class, sponsored by Hoosier Pete Petroleum Co.
Futurity Class Slated
The Indiana Saddle Horse Breeders’ Futurity, a state fair attraction, is to have two divisions: the first for 2-year-olds -shown under harness, and the second for yearlings shown in hand. The amateur jumping class, sponsored by Mr. and Mts. Fred Abernathy, also is scheduled for the forenoon program. Afternoon classes and sponsors will be the “Life Begins After Forty,” Algonquin Riding club; ladies’ hunter, Mary Ellen Willis; three-gaited pleasure, Ralph R. Reeder and Sons; fine harness, Indiana Fur Co.; English pair, Mr.
Hiser, and pair class jumpers, George Sadlier. . Also, three $100 stake classes; the three-gaited open, sponsored by Wallace O. Lee, Dudley Williston and Bon O. Aspy: five-gaited open by E. M.- Morris of South Bend, and the open jumping class, sponsored by Miss Mary Catherine Lyday and a friend. =" Devotional and patriotic services will open each day’s activities. Tomorrow the Rev. George Arthur
terian church, will conduct devotional services and the Boy Scouts will officiate at flag-raising. ceremonies. These duties will be performed by the Rev. Harry E. Campbell and the Camp Fire Girls Sunday.
‘Arrange Parades
A grand parade has been scheduled for 1 p. m. each day. The Indiana state guard will march in
formation at the head of the parade followed by the color guard of the I. 8. H. A. Tomorrow rep-
association will lead as color guard and on Sunday, members of the English color guard will lead. Governor Henry F. Schricker is sponsoring a trophy to be presented to the saddle club making the most
© BLACK SUEDE | ‘© KONA RED © PINE GREEN
attractive display in the parade. He and Lieut. Gov. Charles M. Dawson will review the parade in a special box. Trophies for tomorrow have been donated by Mary Sue Fisher, R. H. Hartman, T. W. Kercheval, Fred T. Green, Tom Joyce, Argus Yaver, Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Rosencrans and the Lafayette, Frankfort and Riding clubs.
Additional Donors .
X
hE 2 in A IE 0s ee Sh IT
. Among winners in the state scholarship
and Mrs. Crane; hackney, Walter
Frantz, pastor of the First Presby-|"
resentatives of the Western Riders|:
gosto) vais year at Indiana State Teachers college, Terre Haute, are Miss jorie Belle Weber (left) and Miss Julia Rodenbeck, both of Indianapolis. Miss Rodenbeck was awarded a renewal scholarship for her junior year on the basis of her high academic record at the school. She was graduated from Technical high school in 1940. Miss Weber, a
from Howe high school.
Two-Day Round-Up Sponsored by LS. H.A. Will Start Tomorrow;
Events Planned
The two-day program of events for. the 10th annual round-up to
at 9:30 o'clock tomorrow morning.
This year the round-up, sponsored by the Indiana Saddle Horse associa-
guard.
Events tomorrow, which has been designated as Western day, will include the western colt class, boys’ and girls’ horsemanship class,
Service League To Sponsor Book Review
The National Women’s Service league, an organization of wives and mothers of service men of all branches, will sponsor a book review and organ recital next Thursday for the benefit of its canteen in the Federal building. Mrs. Clayton Ridge will review “Bright to the Wanderer,” by Bruce Lancaster, in Block’s auditorium at 2 p. m. Organist will be Mrs. Susan Shedd Hemingway. . The committee in charge includes Mrs. Roscoe R. Mills, chairman, assisted by Mrs. Harold C. Curtis and Mrs. Ruth Ferren. Mrs. George E. Bradshaw is president of the Indianapolis chapter of the orgamization.
|Fall Meetings | {Tomorrow
Tri Delts Open
Alpha Chi Alumnae Dinner Is Tonight
Opening meetings of the season,
sororities this week." INDIANAPOLIS ALLIANCE,
: . IDELTA DELTA DELTA, will open
its fall and winter schedule of meetings with a luncheon at 1 p. m. tomorrow in the Indidnapolis Athletic club. ? Mrs. Robert G. Renick, president, will preside and give a report on happenings at the 21st biennial convention held in Chicago in June. Miss Narcie Pollitt will give a report on the alliance’s war project and its progress through the summer. Mrs. L. E. Kincannon and Mrs. Foster Montgomery will announce the programs for: the afternoon and evening sessions of the organization, . Mrs. Robert R. Fohl Jr. temporary chairman of the newly’ organized Junior alliance, will explain its purpose and activities. Miss Ruth Hale is chairman for the luncheon, assisted by Mesdames Lucille Fennell, William T. Smith Jr., Frank W. Howard and Miss Florence Bowers.
New members of ALPHA CHI ALUMNAE, ALPHA CHI OMEGA, will be entertained at a dinner in the Hawthorne room tonight at 8 o'clock, when there will be an election of officers and the calendar for the coming year will be discussed.
clude .the Misses Betty Jane Graham, Sue Janet Guthridge, Jane Howe, Jean Benham, Mary Ann Niman, Nita Vawter, Martha Baker, Doris Fricke, Mary Lawson, Harriet Bishop and Virginia Pletcher.
A luncheon tomorrow at 1 o'clock in the Riley hotel will be the first meeting of the season for ALPHA chapter, ZETA BETA CHI, national business and professional women’s sorority. Arrangements are under the su-
chairman, and her committee, the Misses Mary Simons, Elsie Froelich, Bertha Weindel, Helen Walker and Mabel Jones. The invocation will be given by Mrs. Jennie Buchanan and Miss Mary Ellen McDaniel will be in charge of music. 4
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“Load ‘em full ” That's the battle cry in the coal fields. Bigger loads save cars for additional war work.
Coal is one of America’s most powerful weapons—the Nation’s greatest single source
of energy.
It turns the wheels of war’s industries.
It is power and heat
Coal makes ‘steam. It runs trains to haul more coal. Coal is transportation. Coal provides warmth for our home comfort, heats our- buildings and factories.
It is among the most abundant of the Nation’s
Also, the Western Riders’ association, Mademoiselle shop, Florsheim’s Shoe Shop, Leonard Cleaners, Farm and Home Supply Co.. David Klor, Don McLean, Thomas Guilt Co.,'
‘Fred A. Beck Co., Buck O'Donnell,
The Dells, Peter Pan stables, Petri, jeweler, and Lyman Bros. : Sunday's trophy donors includ A. C. Demaree, Mr. and Mrs. Max Graves, Herman Strashun, Samuels, Maxwell C, Lang, Pleasant Run and Paddock Saddle clubs, Kahn Tailoring Co., Strawmeyer Bros., Ben Herr, Columbia club, Carter Haberdashery, Hudgins-Car-
pi =¢ - ir : 9 7A rT Eng, vy y ——— . "Pay * an ale 32 bs "
and light.
a rush party and plans for the com-| ing year are on the programs of
New members attending will in-|
pervision of Mrs. Lucille Heizer,|§
pats
Blechman photo. Ann Delafield RIDING a bicycle or skipping a rope doesn’t remove excess weight. It only builds muscle on top of fat. That's’ one of the several physical fitness fallacies which Miss Ann Delafield punctured as she arrived at Ayres’ yesterday. Ce She is the director of the Richard Hudnut DuBarry - Success - school and is here to direct five physical fitness programs to be presented in Ayres’ auditorium next week. The events will be at 5:45 p. m.
With Porcelains
In cooking in porcelain enameled utensils, start out with a low flame
so that the heat does not the utensil too suddenly. This will pre-
|serve the life of the utensil, and
protect its sanitary finish. on both Tuesday and Wednesday. The well-known physical education teacher is conducting a state survey of success course students. Her corrective work, she says, is keyed to “American Exercises for
| American Women.”
She will stress war-time fitness among civilians and war: plant workers, teaching them to sit without fatigue, work without strain ahd to acquire a straight spine. » 8 2 APPEARING in the “Fit and Fair” performances will be an Indianapolis success course student,
Miss Lois C. Lisby, 28-year-old RCA employee. She was chosen yesterday as “Miss Indiana” from a number of state DuBarry students. Here with Miss Delafield for the program at Ayres’ are Miss Peggy Ann Howells, New Jersey watersafety and first aid Red Cross worker who is a DuBarry graduate; the 20-year-old Ryan twins of New York—Marijlyn, who. is a living “before” and Margaret a living “after” example of the eourse—and Miss Gertrude Fisher, exercise instructor from the school.
Monday and at 12:15 and 2:30 p. m.
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Here's the graham cracker that pleases both Mother and youngsters. Make it a pantry staple. You'll find the same tempting qualities in every biscuit carrying the red Nabisco seal that you enjoy in Honey Maid Grahams.
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Flattering tailored jacket and °
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More than a hundred thousand Pennsylvania Railroad freight cars have no other duty in this war than to haul this fighting power — coal and its by-product, coke—to the industrial fronts, day and night.
In never-ending streams, The Pennsylvania delivers it to the power plants, moves mountains of it to feed the coke ovens and, in turn,
wr
**+ ANOTHER "FIGHTING FORCE’ TO KEEP ROLLING!
natural Tesources and in the earth of this country is enough to last 3,000 years.
Coal Becomes gas for the open hearth, power
/ for the rolling mill. Without it there would
be no steel.
Coal’s by-products become explosives, industrial chemicals, medicines and fertilizer that produces agricultural abundance.
Coal saw us through the last war—and coal
will see us through this one.
"To help move coal to the industrial front is one of Pennsylvania Railroad’s most impor-
the blast furnaces. : tant jobs in war and peace. SN Re B alice ~llis ; a8 “ » t ZY. Pe -\ 5 CN = > oF a a SERN SE = = =Rft Ca y i413” Sir i % » TE LE BH — = > es i a y = TE -& = L AT = ZI33 3-359 : E Ss | 1. Hy pM mR BE Ba 57 I ) sal! 2 $n he i < = ——- = re wk) v5 : Ey
