Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 November 1942 — Page 14
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Homemaking—
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There'll Be No- ; —Because They Just. Don't Save Meat
3
National Meatless Days:
THE HOME FRONT FORECAST: Don’t expect national meatless days to be plugged by the food requirements committee. Though Claude R. Wickard, head of the department of agriculture, okayed Mayor LaGuardia’s plan for New York’s meatless Tuesdays and the president himself said at a. press conference that meatless days might be necessary, world war I found meatless days J
ust didn’t pay. In fact meatless days
during the last war did not conserve meat—on the contrary, consumption was greater because of the doubled purchases of meat on the following day. The food requirements committee sticks to its orjginal idea—the share-the-meat program whereby all may receive the same amount of meat regardless of higher purchasing power in the growing higher income brackets.
I am a girl of 19. I went to college this year and made many friends, but the only ones who have with
remained friendly are boys, the exception of one girl.
One reason why I may have lost the friendship of the girls is my I have learned to check my temper when I am offended, but I see it does no good because the girls think I am lowering myself to them which only makes them feel more superior. The one girl I mentioned is my closest
quick temper.
friend.
I want your advice on how, I can secure a life-long friendship with this girl. ‘I always let her have her way, but I am at a loss to know how long we will remain
friends. Please answer. COLLEGE GIRL.
Answer--Most girls of your age
are more interested in attracting boys than other girls. Their difficulty with other girls, if any, usually is caused by rivalry for the attention of some boy. Your trouble with girls seems to center in the fact that you take offense too readily and lose your temper. ‘Why doesn’t
the same trait get you into difficulty
with the boys? : ;
It will be better for you if you shift your interest to the boys and I say this because your attitude toward girl friends is too tense and
stop worrying about the girls.
not casual enough. Actually it this particula life-long friend or not. of us are still on intimate terms
girl becomes your
with the friends we had in college.
You have placed too much impor-
tance upon something which isn't
important at all, and if you con-
tinue to do.so you will become an emotional burden to the other girl. Do you have any sisters, and have you had * difficulty in adjusting yourself to them? If you haven't, perhaps you just haven’t learned the trick of give and take between girls: You say that when you control your temper it makes them feel superior to you. This is not good reasoning. Self-control does not cause friends to feel superior to those who have it. The chances are that you demand too much from girls and they are impatient with you because you
wear a chip on your shoulder.
You need not have your way all the time nor should you always let a girl friend have her way. Don’t put so much importance on every little thing, and, above all, make
friends with more boys. JANE JORDAN.
Put your problems in a letter to Jane Jordan who will answer your questions ig co
n daily.
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American ingenuity has again asserted itself in the hosiery in--dustry and Wasson's, hosjery headquarters in In"dianapolis,is proud to present the new Gold Stripe rayon Futuray stockings. They are exclusive with Wasson's, knitted of an especial ly prepared yarn, a special construction based upon the foremost scientific advance-
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Segspt matter whether Very few
otham °
With the share-the-meat program, the setting will be ready for rationing of ‘meat when officially started in February. # 8
Wrong Address
IF YOU HAVE scrap to feed to hungry war machines — refrain from sending it to the president. The white house is deluged by gifts from over-zealous scrappers who would rather see the scrap in the president’s hands than their local salvage depots. The white house, however, is delighted to find that citizens are parting with copper, steel and aluminum and objects of sentimental value only—but still immensely valuable to scrap-shy war plants. Among gifts received is a vase molded from shells found during the battle of the Argonne, contributed by a woman who had received it from soldiers returning from France in world war I. She’s eager to see it back in the fray. 2 2 2
So you're -about to be married and
your heart is set on a platinum wedding ring, and you've read about the latest war production board release prohibiting the use of plati-
num in anything but essential war materials. ’ Don’t worry. There is a substitute and it is just as good. It is palladium, a by-product of platinum, with all platinum’s good points and not its bad one—the price. Palladium is half as expensive. What’s more—it is so plentiful it has almost become a drug on the market. So you don’t have to have a gold wedding ring if you don’t want it. 8
Painted Furniture
EXPECT a definite swing toward painted furniture as soon as existing stocks of furniture have been sold from the stores. Reason is that WPB has stopped furniture manufacturers from using beech, yellow birch and hard maple now used in great quantities. Manufacturers must hereafter use coarse grained and lower grade woods for all furniture, and these need plenty of paint if you want to use them in
os 2
niture is out for the duration—the wood is imported—but aspen and pecan woods are fine substitutes, and theyre native-grown. Among the less critical woods are chestnut, which: may be substituted for oak; magnolia, which will take the place of birch, soft maple and beech. Butternut and cherry can replace walnut. The trend, however, is definitely toward modern, simple furniture with the minimum of frills. And. these will be painted to harmonize with modern settings or quaint Pennsylvania Dutch interiors. Don’t expect to see many more advertisements for clothes made of nylon fleece. Nylon fleece is made of part nylon waste and part cot-
able nylon for nylon yarn so the new material is out for the duration. . 2” »
Good Meals for Good Morale
BREAKFAST: Grapefruit juice, cracked wheat cereal, buttered toast, jelly, coffee, milk. LUNCHEON: Peanut butter soup, salted crackers, raw carrot sticks, stewed pears, honey cup cakes, tea, milk, DINNER: Celery, ripe olives, fish chowder, pilot biscuit, raw vegetable salad, apricot upside-down cake, cream, coffee, milk. » ss Today's Recipe
FISH CHOWDER (Serves 4)
One quarter 1b. salt pork, 2 medium onions, minced, 1% lbs! inexpensive white fish (haddock, cod), 3 large potatoes, diced, % teaspoon salt, 4 teaspoon pepper, 2 cups fish stock (made from skin and bones), 2% cups scalded milk, 3 fabictpoons buttér or “other table at. Dice pork and fry until brown in kettle. Fry minced onions in fat until browned. Cut fish into small pieces and place in kettle. Add pork, potatoes, salt, pepper, and water. Cook until potatoes are tender. "Then add hot milk and ‘butter. Bring to boil. Serve very
parsley to each bowl.
Sorority to Meet
Willard Murray,
recently in River View grove.
Meet Tomorrow " Beta Zeta chapter of Beta Sigma
your living room. Mahogany fur-|
ton. The services need all the avail-|"
hot immediately. Add a little minced
Rho Gamma Chi sorority willl meet tomorrow in the home of Mrs.|& 1815 Roosevelt ave. The group gave a wiener roast
She walks on glass, for the
soles of her shoes ‘are crystal, an
invention still to be tested for durability, shown for the first time
at the recent Shoe Manufacturers’
By GERTRUDE BAILEY Times Special Writer NEW YORK, Nov. 10.—Tehere she goes walking on air. No, it’s glass. No, it’s paper. No, it’s wood. Or a piece of rug. Lacking leather and rubber, both of which go to the army first, it might be any of these. For shoes soled in these startling inventions were the footlights of the recent Shoe Manufacturers’ show at the Hotel New Yorker. Inventor Elliot E. Simpson, who made automobile tires out of scrap rubber under the new federal rubber program, has some thoughts for the pedestrian, too. He's not giving away all the secrets of the various processes, but he had shoe manufacturers crowding the aisles to handle the sole forms. Colorful soles, since shoe color restrictions apply to rubber, not plastics; made of layers of plastic impregnated material, subjected to 220-pound pressure and cemented not with rubber but with plastic, he explains; hard-
Jumper Dress
8243
42-20
This slender jumper does wonders for your figure! Put the jacket on, too, and you are toasty warm as well as smartly dressed! These pieces can be worn so-many different ways that they are practically an entire wardrobe in themselves. Match them or mix them in wool plaids, gabardine or corduroy. Pattern 8243 is in sizes 12, 14, 16, 18, 20. Size 14 jumper requires 2% yards of 39-inch material, long sleeve jacket, 17% yards. ' For this attractive pattern, send 16 cents in coins with your name, address, pattern number and size to The Indianapolis Times Pattern Service, 214 W. Maryland st. Every family which sews at home should have the fall fashion book, our complete catalog of latest pattern styles. The price is 16 cents per copy. Or the fashion book may be ordered with a 16-cent pattern for 26 cents. : :
To Entertain Sorority
Omega Phi Tau’s. Bea .chapter. will meet at 8 p. m. tomorrow in the home of Mrs. Fred Yeaman, 1316 N. Chester st.
Married
exhibit in New York.
ened, waterproofed and strengthened for wear. Mr. Simpson says the plastic and fabric soles have been tested by postmen for the last several months, sticks his foot out and predicts they will give better wear than presentday leather or rubber soles. Factories, he explained, are prepared to turn out 150,000 pairs: of the soles a day, though fitting the soles to particular lasts may slow deliveries. ” ” 8 BOTH the plastic-fabric soles and the corded soles were shown with rubber tips allowed by WPB and replaceable when they wear out. Soles that combined reclaimed scrap rubber and plastic were shown only for monotone colored shoes, again with WPB ruling. Heel, toe, here we go. . Wooden soles appeared in two types, one corrugated in Venetian blind effect, another the. thick clog sole on a series of hinges to make it flexible. Noisy but ready to roll. ’
Health—
Pack School
Nourishment
By JANE STAFFORD
Science Service Writer
WHAT WITH TRANSPORTA-
TION difficulties and women taking
war jobs, probably more children than ever will be eating lunch at school this winter instead of com-
ing home for the noon meal. . If the ‘child can purchase lunch at a school cafeteria, mother is saved the trouble of preparing a lunch, but she should give Johnny and Mary some pointers every day or so on the proper foods to select. Otherwise they may skip vegetables and load up on cake, candy. bars #nd other desserts. Sandwiches usually form the mainstay of the lunch that is carried. These should be made of whole wheat or enriched bread, thus giving a good start on the vitamin and mineral count. A little butter on the bread adds to the nourishment and the tastiness. Meat will probably not be used much as a sandwich filler this winter, but cheese is a good substitute, and of course mother will vary the kinds of cheese so the sandwiches do not become too monotonous. 2 2 2 PEANUT BUTTER is another excellent sandwich filler because of its high protein and vitamin content. The dryness can be overcome by spreading a bit of mayonnaise or other salad dressing over the peanut butter,
Jelly sandwiches are popular with children, but while they contribute calories, a lunch of jelly sandwiches alone does not add enough protein and vitamins and minerals to the child’s diet. One jelly sandwich as dessert, in place of cookies or cake, is a good idea, or the jelly may be spread lightly over cream cheese to dress up that kind of sandwich for a change. Carrot sticks, made by cleaning, scraping and slicing raw carrots, supply vitamin A in liberal amounts and their crisp crunchiness makes a good contrast to the soft -sandwiches. Carrots and other vegetables may be cut up and carried in a paper cup for a salad. If you add a salad dressing, choose one that will not spoib when: kept out of the refrigerator. A glass of milk should be part of every ‘school chiid’s lunch. If he
~|cannot purchase milk at school, he
may carry it with him in a thermos bottle. Hot milk or cream soup or hot cocoa carried in the thermos are good for cold days.
|Kindergarten Club
Holds Meeting
Food for the five-year-old was to be discussed by the Mothers’ club of Minkner kindergarten, Indianapolis Free Kindergarten society, at a 1:30 p. m. meeting today in the kindergarten. : } Officers elected at the October meeting were to preside. They are Mrs. John ‘Hampfling, president; Mrs. Arthur Everman, vice president; Mrs. Franklin Beck, secretary; Mrs. Otis Falconbury, treasurer; Mrs. Leslie Ranz, ways and means chairman, and Mrs, Kenneth Carney, program chairman,
Meet Tonight
Sigma Phi Gamma sorority is to meet this evening in the Hotel Lincoln at 8 o'clock, with Mrs. Phil-
Lunches With |
POLIS
Rug-fabric impregnated with plastic is one of the shoe inventions to replace leather soles. Postmen tested the rugged soles first. The inventor claims they wear better than rubber or leather soles. They are shown in high-style colors.
High style development already spoken for by a leading designer for spring is the lace sole, made of seven yards of cording in lacey texture, treated with vegetable, dyes for high-style colors, hardened, but not woven, and impregnated with plastic, all set to trip the light fantastic. -
THERE TO STEP ON were shoe soles of spun glass, identifled in the line as “crystal soles.” These the: inventor admits are still in the experimental stage.
Clubs—
Mrs. Lowell Bailey to Address The Ephamar Literary Club; Minerva Club Plans Meeting
3 Talks on Panama and the Panama canal will be program features| at one of the club meetings scheduled for tomorrow. The EPHAMAR LITERARY club will meet tomorrow in the Hotel Lincoln at 12:30 p. m. Hostesses will include Mesdames R. C. Miller, C. W. Caldwell and Warren Dawson. The guest speaker on the program will be Mrs. Lowell Bailey, who
will wear a native costume and talk on the people and customs of the Republic of Panama. Mrs. Mack Parker, the president of the club, will talk on “The Panama Canal,” and a description of the construction of the canal will be given by Mrs. Claude Nelson.
Mrs. Dale Sommers will be hostess for the WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON club meeting tomorrow. She will be assisted by Mrs; W. E. Hawkins. ] Bible study will be led by Mrs. Russell Lambert, and Mrs. Homer Trotter is to read a one-act play, “The Ladies Discover America,” by A. C. Martens.
“Our Armed Forces” will be the
subject of a talk by Mrs. K. V.}.
Ammerman at the meeting of the MINERVA club tomorrow. Mrs. E. S. Cummings, honorary president, will be hostess.
The CHEER - BROADCASTERS, INC., will meet Friday at the Co-
Jonial tearoom. Mrs. Wolf Suss-
man will speak on defense work. Hostesses will include Mesdames William C. Haugh, J. H. Prochaska, Harris P, Wetsell and Chauncey M. Buck.
Auxiliary Will Hear Reports Thursday
Reports of four chairmen for Osric Mills Watkins American Legion auxiliary will be heard following a 12:30 p. m. covered dish luncheon Thursday at the home of Mrs, Edward Harmening, 3542 Watson road. The chairmen are Mrs. William P. McGuire, membership; Mrs.
Clinton J. Ancker, war activities; Mrs. George Peterson, ways and means, and Mrs, Harry Nolen, Indianapolis Council of Women.
Mrs, William R. Bolen will pre-|
side at the business session and the hostess will be assisted by Mrs. Roul Cornelius and Mrs. O. D. Waldon. A bridge party will follow the meeting.
I. T.-S. C. Chapter To Hold Meeting
The Mandalay chapter, International Travel-Study club, will meet at 12:30 p. m. tomorrow with Mrs. E. F. Marburger, 817 E. 42d st. The. assisting hostesses will be Mesdames H. M. Stitle, R. D. Stober, E. D. Gamble and William Snyder.
On Dance Committee
Times Special
SOUTH BEND, Ind, Nov. 10.— Miss Mable Frances Myers, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. B. H. Myers, Crawfordsville, is assisting on the publicity committe for the annual senior ball at St. Mary's college, Holy Cross, Friday night.
Jo Relieve
Misery o> S
v.
Ready to roll—wooden clog soles on a series of hinges, invention of Elliot Simpson, who shews it to replace vital leather and rubber
materials in coming shoe styles.
“We don’t know yet how they will wear, but that is what they're made of.” He brought out a coil of crystal cord, clear as Cinderella’s glass slipper. For future reference Mr. Simpson wants it known that he is also working on soles of linseed oil, but he warned, “They're not in production yet.”
Election Is Booked By Churchwomen
An election of officers will be held by the Women’s guild of the Carrollton Avenue Evangelical and Reformed church Thursday following a 6:30 p. m. covered dish supper in the church. The evening’s program will include the annual thank offering service. and a’ talk on “The Leper” by Mrs. ‘K. V. Ammerman. Members of the Girls’ guild of the church will be special guests at the
Be Smartly Shod Without Leather
Of one thing he’s sure.
be stylishly shod.
Without touching vital products of rubber or leather, the girls will
Col, Drysdale To Be Speaker
Col. Walter 8. Drysdale, coms manding officer at Ft. Benjamin Harrison, will be the speaker at a meeting of Alpha chapter, Zeta Beta Chi sorority, at 7:46 p. m. today in the Hotel Lincoln. - He is to talk on “The Army and Your Part in It,” giving incidents | occurring while" he lived in China C :| where he became acquainted with Mme. Chiang Kai-shek. Mrs. Evelyn ~. King will introduce Col. Drysdale. © A business meeting will follow his talk. - : : 5 :
Alpha Tau Gammas |To Initiate Two | Candlelight initiation ceremonies - s| for pledges of Alpha Tau Gamma, - ‘[sorority will be held tomorrow eve ° {ning in the home of Mrs., John .|Gray, 2169 N. Temple ave. The new members will be Mrs. Lloyd Arnol and Mrs. James Craig. - i Committee members : arranging the initiation are Mesdames Gray; - Emerson Baker, Gordon Fruits -and : Roxie Anderson.. - rt Superfluous | . o 8 ~~ Hair | The great worry of your life? Does it give you an inferiority complex and cause you to hide from people when in public If so, see ittleton, Inc., whose method was originated by a phy-’ sician and which removes this unwel-. come rowth MANENTLY and PAINLE
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Phi will hold an executive meeting tomorrow evening -at 7:30 o’clock in the home of Miss Thelma Caldwell, 1003 E. Maple rd.
| |Mrs. Harm Hostess ‘Guests at a Thanksgiving dinner _ {today at the home of Mrs: Henry | Harm, 219 W. Hampton dr., were to
MOer’
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ip Elrod presiding: above can pass the Gold presiding
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: Holland photo. Before her marriage to Sergt. . James R. Estes Oct. 14, Mrs. Estes was Miss Mary June Keene, daughter of Mrs. Howard Keene. The bridegroom is stationed at
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