Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 August 1943 — Page 21

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’t No war, these are security “Opportinity to grow sccordividual patterns, states Dr. Beverly, assistant professor lat at the University of Ols, in a report to the American blic ‘Health association, : Re . CRI “THE FIRST essential for mental health is security,” Dr. Beverly emphasizes. “This is the feeling which is given a.child from birth by parents who wanted a child and who accept him as he is, no alterations being. necessary.” In order to give children the second essential for mental health, their parents, teachers and others must recognize the innate potentialities for growth and development in the children, must learn the individual differences between children and what is normal for their

- FURLOUGH BAG

# if $i ~ Popular With Men in Service Can be folded and put in bar-

rack bag when not in use. ..... ana 33:90

E. J. GAUSEPOHL

51 Monument Circle = +

Just North of. Circle Theater

Fall Term Opening

Mug. 30 to Sept. 7...

This year in school will make ‘all your years richer, happier, «more satisfactory. Many who entered here a year® ago are _ ‘holding fine, promising, wella g positions. now. Further, * are gaining valuable ex- : nce, which, with their thor- . ough tra , will enable them to meet + -mormal, This is the

° requirements of a peacetime economy,

Indiana Business College of Indianapolis, The others are + at Marion, Muncie, Logansport, [ Anderson, Kokomo, Lafayette, Columbus, Richmond and Vineennes—Ora E. Butz, President. Call personally, if convenient. Otherwise, for Bulletin describing courses and quoting tuition fees, telephone or write the I. B. C. nearest you, or Fred W. Case, Principal.

[ Central Business College

Architect and Builders Bldg. Pennsylvania and Vermont Sts. Indianapolis

8487 \

6-14 yrs. T o—

Many school girls these days are making their own frocks! Here's a style to tackle with full confidence—you can see how easy it is to make and how effective -it will be to wear. Pattern 8487 is in. sizes 6, 8, 10, 12 and 14 years. Size 8 requires 2% yards 35 or 39-inch material. 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, Indianapolis 9, Ind. Imagine a preview of 102 new patterns, interesting news of colors, fashions and fabrics and the problems of wartime wardrobe planning thoroughly discussed all in one entertaining publication, That's what you'll find in the new fall issue of “Fashion,” out today. Price, 26

By. MRS. ANNE CABOT . Start to crochet it now to wear with fall skirts and slack outfits— later on, in very cold weather, it will be a perefct “hug-me-tight” to wear under your heavy coat. . Crochet it of bright blue wool—band it in white. Use black and red, Kelly green. and navy or any other good looking two-color combination. For complete crocheting instructions for the four-button vestee (Pattern 5423) sized for 14, 16 and 18, send 11 cents in coin, your name and address and the pattern number to Anne Cabot, The Indianapolis Times, 530 S. Wells st.,, Chicago 7, Ill. Find other new, . interesting patterns for needlework you'll enjoy doing in the new issue of Anne Cabot’s famous album! It is a 32-page booklet entirely devoted to new designs, new ideas for: your home and your wardrobe. - The price

‘cents.

is, 16 cents.

Fall Gar A Reserve Supply of Vitamin A

Homemaking—

den Greens Will Build

FILL UP ON GARDEN GREEN

Vitamin “A, plentiful in most! green vegetables, can be stoved in the body for later when A-foods may be scarce. To preserve all possible food

value, prepare green vegetables

pr rrr

2 Glass jars without vacuum pack can’t keep pre-ground coffee Fresh! Before you buy any coffee...

© See it in the

oe

REH

Demand

|

Qo

\ Q

& Kroger's HOT-DATED! © Store-Ground before your eyes!

The fresh, full strength. of Hot-Dated means rich enjoyment in every: cup—unmatched by. any pre-ground coffee not vacuum-packed.,

000608)

FRENCH BRAND

Rich, vigorous blend,

a 28 SPOTLIGHT

Mild and mellow, 2 lbs. dic

S while they last this fall and build

up your body’s reserves of vitamin A for the winter, That's the advice of home economists of the U. S. department of agriculture, Now, while gardens still are offering crisp green vegetables, help the family balance the daily vitamin A budget and lay up a surplus besides by serving these vegetables—raw, cooked and often.

quickly. If you must keep them], after picking or buying, pile them |i loosely to prevent crushing, and|§ cover lightly in a cool, damp placg. |

# ” #

Don't Soak Them

WASH BUT DON'T soak them because some vitamins “soak out” into the water. For the most in food value, serve green vegetables raw ‘as salad,

relish or sandwich filler, always keeping them cold and crisp. In cooking, save the nutritious goodness by quick cooking and little water. To boil vegetables, drop them in briskly boiling, lightly salted water, just enough to prevent sticking. to pan. Leafy greens like spinach or others from fall gardens need only the water that clings to the leaves.

Panned Vegetables

COVER THE PAN to hasten cooking and cook only until the greens are tender, . A quick, easy way to cook many green vegetables is panning: For each two quarts of vegetable prepared, melt two tablespoons of fat in a heavy flat pan, add vegetable and cover to hold in steam. Stir occasionally to prevent sticking or burning and cook until the vegetable is tender but not mushy. Favorites for panning are cabbage, shredded; kale, stripped from the tough midribs; spinach and sum-

‘mer squash, cut in small pieces;

okra pods sliced crosswise; tender

green beans, sliced thin,

For Flavor

DRIPPINGS FROM roast meat, fried sausage, salt pork or bacon give fine flavor to panned vegetables just before serving. Other ways to vary flavor: Add chopped onion or a bit of leftover meat. Or sift flour lightly over cooked vegetable and mix well, add milk and stir until thickened.

{Miss Pickering

‘afternoon frock with white acces-

Are Married Ceremony Is Read in - Thorntown Church

Times Special

Cpl. and Mrs. James Vernon Worley are on a short wedding trip follow-

Pickering, daughter of Clyde PickBliketing, granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Pickering with whom ‘she made her home here. Cpl. Worley, U.8,M.C., is the son of Mr. and Mrs. E. B. Worley, 331 N. Colorado ave. Indianapolis. He

in the Asiatic war zone. ; Double-Ring Rite -

The 'double-ring ceremony Was read by the Rev. William S. McLean, and bridal "airs were played by Miss Dorothy Kline, organist, of Thorntown and Chicago. The couple's attendants were Miss Mary Ellen Campbell, Thorntown, and Harold Tetry, Indianapolis. The bride wore a blue and white

sories and a corsage of tiny pink rosebuds and , Miss Campbell wore powder blue with navy accessories and a corsage of Talisman roses. Guests at Service The bride was given in marriage by her father. church and at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Steele Campbell, where a re‘ception was held following the ceremony, were of summer garden flowers. : After the wedding trip, . the couple will visit with Cpl. Worley’s parents before he reports to the East coast for duty. As her goingaway costume the bride wore a navy blue suit and white accessories. Out-of-town guests with the bridegroom’s parents were Mr. and Mrs. Pleasant Lewallen Jr. and their daughter, Bonnie June, and Mrs. Terry, Indianapolis; Mrs. J. M. Worley, Lebanon; Mr. and Mrs. Albert Docktor and their daughter, Alberta, Colfax, and Mr. and Mrs. Emmett Tull and their son, Walter E. II, Kokomo.

Woman's Viewpoint—

Good Voters Think for

Themselves

By MRS. WALTER FERGUSON Times Special Writer “TODAY I AM A MAN,” wrote Jimmy Christian, 18-year-old sophomore of Atlanta, Ga., when told the voting age had been lowered in his state. But Jimmy is mistaken about that unless he has resolved to use his manhood in the cause of good citizenship. The war has thrust premature adulthood upon millions of immature boys. Justice compels us to give them the vote, since people who

deserve a voice in its planning, And truth also forces us to admit that these 18-year-olds will probably vote more conscientiously than many of their elders. Just the same, suffrage granted to large groups never improves the political situation. We learned that in 1920 when the franchise was handed to women; we thought then that we should witness the burgeoning of a more perfect world—and look at the mess we've been in ever since, # ® » FOR IT HAS taken women 20 years to understand two simple facts about political equality: It’s no good unless we make use of it, and a vote cast in ignorance often had worse consequences than no vote at all. After a swing around the nation, Correspondent Cecil Brown reports that high-school groups are the best informed on world affairs, He feels they can better be trusted with shaping its future than the average middle-aged citizen—and perhaps Mr. Brown is right. At least, things being as they are, we hope sO. But age is beside the point. The good voter is the voter who thinks! for himself and is willing to give as much study to political issues as he does to his car mileage and golf score. Our young Jimmys will become real men only when, as voters, they shake off the traditions which kept their parents politically infantile: The notion that a boy should choose his party according to what his grandfather believed, or cast his ballot for the fellow who promises

the most “pie in the sky.”

¥ »

THORNTOWN, Ind, Aug. 19—(}

has served for the last 20 months |

Decorations at thei}

die for democracy |}-

quality, latest 1942 model, superhet chassis, automatic push-button

> GUSTOM BUILT

* PHILEO

¥ —

and Automatic

Record Changed

399.50

e Philco tunAmerican and American

8 t short wave, for both television and F.M. adapters,

THE CHANGER . . . Seeburg de luxe - automatic, plays twelve 10inch or ten 12-inch records automatically. Recognized as one of America’s best,

THE CABINET . . . of fine mahogany in rich handrubbed satin finish.

. 12-inch high

fidelity, of fine quality, with sepa- , rate bass and treble

tone control.

Custom built Available in

authentic Sheraton or Chippendale design (as pictured).

rtment, Fifth Floor

BLOCK'S—Radio Depa Also at Branch Store, 11th and Meridian Sts. Open evenings.

Warm When You Wake Up!

DIXIE HEATER 189.95

Extra Heavy Castings All Porcelain Outside

This is the new type magazine heater. Holds 100 lbs coal. It heats all day and all night without refueling, and regardless of the weather, it's warm every morning! Best of all, it burns any kind of coal, coke or briquettes . . . only fine -ash. Requires less af tention than most furnaces.

PORCELAIN

BLOCK’'S—Dependable Appli-

ances, Fifth Floor

Also at Our Branch Store, Open Evenings, at 11th and Meridi

3

- RECORD PLAYER ATTACHMENT

So you can have the music you

want

when you want it. It plays through your

own radio, 10 or 12-in. records. tractive walnut cabinet with lid. many of them.

29.95

AtNot

BLOCK’S—Radios, Fifth Floor

able,

STURDY SAMSON CARD TABLES

Choice of 4 Designs 2.50

Spilled cocktails or hot coffee won’t harm the simulated wood and ivory leather inlay top. A damp cloth removes soil * ‘or stain and all legs are double braced to avoid wobble. 3 other designs avail(Add 25c. for out-of-town orders.)

BLOCK'’S—Sleep Shop, Fifth Floor

Be Sure to See This

HIRSCHMAN HOTEL STYLE MATTRESS 7

It’s the victory stand-in for an innerspring that has gone to war. Made of 100% felt in layers, it’s soft, firm, comfortable. Has a striped ticking cover, handles for turning. Full or twin sizes. Comfortable Box Springs to- Match, 19.98

Both Available on Our Convenient

Budget Plan BLOCK’S—Sleep Shop, Fifth Floor

JUST RECEIVED!

25 MORE

AMERICAN REFRIGERATORS

75-Lb. Size 64. 50

Sturdy and well insulated, it keeps vegetables moistly fresh and crisp, other foods safely

cold.

Inside door to ice. compartment for

extra economy and efficiency. Buiit in accord with government requirements.

BLOCK'S—For Dependable Appliances, Fifth Floor. Also at Branch Store, 11th and Meridian.

NEW VICTORY GAS RANGES

52.45 delivered and connected

® All-steel construction ® Full porcelain finish ® Four efficient burners ® Fullsize oven and broiler

® Fully insulated

‘Available on Block's Convenient Terms

Also at Our Branch Store, 11th and Meridan. Open Evenings,

ADIRONDAK

CHAIRS

(UNFINISHED)

WHILE 30 LAST!

3.95

A well-made chair fashioned of clear, pine lumber, ready for you to paint in your favo-

rite color.

This is one of the best unfinished

chairs we have seen and we have only 30. Better get your order in early,

BLOCK’'S—House Furnishings, Fifth Floor

3-Pe. GLASS TOP CLOSURES

They fit all standard Mason jars, pints or quarts. Can be used on glass tops, metal screw band or rubber sealing ring tops. Have one ready for your Victory garden can-

BLOCK’S—House Furnishings, Fifth Floor.

RELIABLE MASON JARS

Reliable Mason jars, with glass ring, metal screw band. Qt. size, doz. ‘ Add 25c¢ doz. for out-of-town.

79¢

cap, rubber

GRIFFITH'S CANNING KIT

SPIGES 1.25,

Contains mustard seed, whole allspice, whole cloves, stick cinnamon, dill seed, mixed pickling spices, and ‘a flock of pickling recipes.

50-FT. GOODYEAR =

398

-

20 - GALLON UTILITY CAN

Leave it out4in all weathers, it's waterresistant. Lift it, it's light, tough, durable, verminproof. You can use it for anything from ashes fo garbage. Easy - to wash, too. Made of extra heavy impregnated fiber, |

rope handles,

5

with cover “end

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