Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 October 1943 — Page 25

10 a. m. with an iittee meeting, » board meetings at p. m. and a dinner be followed by an 8. te Speakers

session of the insti. , Wednesday, will be bert F. Shank. Mrs. tend greetings. The will appear in the n are (Dr. Cecelia

"loyd - R. Eastwood, and Mrs. O. H. Um-

dnesday "afternoon

-

i (Baked Potatoes, Long in-Favor, Fa Must Bow to the Boiled Variety

A A on

} ia

Jl #2

1 Se ge * { ke

s much vitamin C and three times as much thiamine (vitamin B-1)|

s baked potatoes, In wartime even small savings in hese two vitamins may be imporint to family health because the »dy cannot store them and needs regular daily supply. This fall's

8 cord potato crop, used in quantity

ication Programs in .

participants will be ockema, Dr. Lillian ement T. Malan and Murray. nest J. Yorger will ening session.

another forum dis- |

rsday morning “with Schenk, Dr. A. A. Ruth E. Strickland The topic, will be Needs,”

THIRD FLOOR

S BY

ong “and od looks. comfort.

B

:nd cooked properly, may help offset shortages of other foods supply ing these vitamins, = = » »

Richer in Vitamins NEW POTATOES ARE richer in vitamin C than potatoes that have been stored for months. So the crop just coming to market now has mbre

to offer in vitamins than the same potatoes will have next spring. Further secrets of saving vitamin C in potatoes recently were reported by the Montana state experiment

-

Vig { $ : After all the years that mothers have faithfully baked potatoes or their children in the belief that baking conserves the most food| alue, research at the U. S. bureau of human nutrition and home conomics now shows that potatoes boiled in their jackets hold twice!

| (ordinary kettle,- according to the | Montana resegrch. . | | Apparently, the faster the cook-) ing, the more vitamin C {is saved. ~ » “ Wartime Meals BREAKFAST: . Stewed prunes with orange juice, fried left-over oatmeal, molasses, enriched toast, butter or fortified margarine. LUNCHEON: Toasted peanut butter sandwiches, vegetable salad, cottage cheese, baked apple, tea, cocoa. J DINNER: Tomato juice, kidney |/} and beef meat balls with sour cream, rice and eggplant casserole, enriched bread, butter or fortified margarine, raw carrot sticks, comepote of stewed fruit, lemon sponge cake, coffee, milk : = os »

Today's Recipe

station. Research there showed that the common custom of preparing] potatoes early in the day and keep-~ | ing them soaking in water for hours before cooking means a loss of vitamin C, #" ”

Soak in Salt Water |

+ SOAKING IN SALT water, how- |

» i |

pver, helps save C. The report said! that potatoes soaked in salt water fose some of their crispness, but after cooking are exceptionally good in both flavor and texture. | Any homemaker owning one of | the new pressure saucepans may be! interested to know that potatoes | cooked in a pressure pan lose less |

|

vitamin C than those boiled in an!

RICE AND EGGPLANT A LA NEWARK (Sérves 4 to 6)

8525

1-19

"

Via

Three-quarters cup rice, '{ cup chopped pimientos, .'s cup chopped| Scallops on the jumper, plus a green peppers. 12 cup finely chopped | Soft blouse with a drawstring neckonions, 1 eggplant, 2 apples, cored line make this the kind of outfit and sliced; 4 tomatoes, peeled and You put on when you want to look quartered; '; teaspoon celery salt,! especially feminine, ‘pretty and

{sliver of garlic, dash of thyme, 1 bay | charming! | Pattern 8525 is designed for sizes 11, 13, 15, 17 and 19. Size 13 jumper ‘requires 3 yards 39-inch material,

leaf. { Steam rice. Chop eggplant and saute lightly in a little fat, Combine rice with chopped eggplant, pimientos, pepper, onion and toma- | toes, garlic. Add seasoning. Place in well-greased casserole. Garnish with sliced apples. Bake in moderately slow dven (300 degrees F.) for about 45 minutes.

| blouse 13; yards.

The Indianapolis Times

|anapolis 9, Ind.

ON THE THIRD FLOOR

A BRILLIANT VARIETY OF

“HIT? FASHIONS IN

New DRESSES

Glitter Dresses!

: ‘Classic Dresses!

- a

What a wonderful variety of youn, becoming, sparkling new dresses—just arrived in

Rayon Crepes!

Rayon Flannels! Rayon Gabardines!

our value-famous- Pin‘ Money “Shop! Styles for business, afternoon, date time and 3 general wearl, Sizes 9.40 15,1240 20, 18/3 to 24!/5. All at one attractively low price!

4 ¥

2 Wasson's Third Floor Pin Money Shop

L = i 5 2 or . ¥ . } Xo . Sk pelos AT 3 Y 2 NJ | 72m

For this attractive’ pattern, send) 16 cents in coins, with your name, | address, pattern number and size to { Pattern | | Service, 214 W. Maryland st., Indi-|

.| deeper than you know and are hid-

Some ie

oo

Study Courses | Planned for |

Social Workers.

v wt

© Classes Will Be Held During Conference

| | |

Thirteen - study courses for social | workers have been scheduled in con‘nection with the Indiana state con-| ference on social work to be held here Monday ®hrough Wednesday. | Miss Marian Emery, supervisor for lthe Famjly Welfare Society of In-! | dianapolls, is chairman of the study |

' course committee. The courses will

be held in the Lincoln and Claypool |

hotels. The classes, designed to provide

{more opportunity for intensive | |study, are open to all interested 1 i | persons,

| Some of the subjects to be dis- | {cussed are the psychiatric concepts | lof case work; working mothers and | | care of ¢hildren; case work with un- | married mothers; children in insti[tutions; emotional aspects of the | handicapped: supervision; commu- | { nity organization, group work and] | social insurance, This is the ninth year that the | “refresher” courses have been of-| fered in connection with the state | convention. i | The local members of the study course committee are Mrs. Malvina | Bloom, Misses Lucille Batson, Mary ‘Jean Clark, Geneva Feamon, Ruby Little, Margaret C. Miller and Edith Stander, Robert P_. Hahn, Willis]

Johnson, Parker P. Jordan and Arthur W. Potts,

| |

DEAR JANE JORDAN — I am| {writing about a girl 14 vears old | who was convicted of killing her | 35-year-old husband about a year| ago and given 20 years for the crime in a vocational training school. She only had a second grade education and lived in the Tennessee mountains all her life. I intend to employ an attorney and try for her release. I am past 40 vears old myself and lonesome. I will marry her in four or five vears if she wishes. I can give her a good home and more education. She was given one of the most drastic punishments ever imposed on & minor and if I can help her I will have accomplished something in life. Even if I don't get tp marry her I will always be willing to help She killed her husband in selfdefense. He told her that he would shoot her and she believed him; so she shot him instead., She was tried by a jury of illiterate mountaineers and was not given a fair trial. She surely would not have done it if she had been in the right environment or hdd the proper op‘portunities. ’ The training she gets in ‘this vocational training school will serve its purpose for the time being, but to confine a 14-year-old girl too long will only make it harder for her to adjust herself to the outside world when she is released. Now what do you think about my wanting to marry a girl of this type? I suppose you will say that I am not all here mentally. 1 WANT TO KNOW. » » =n Answer—Evidently you question your own motives in wanting to marry an illiterate 14-year-old child who shot her husband, or you would not have written, Since I know nothing about you .I cannot throw much light on these motives except to say that I believe they go much

den from your recognition by your desire to help. Even if the girl were normal, which she is not, the difference, in your ages constitutes a gap which a sensible man would not try to bridge. One wonders if you desire a daughter instead of a wife, The fact that you want a wayward daughter brings up other considerations. Was there some other woman in-your life who took a beating whom you were powerless to help? Your mother? A sister? I do not believe you can help this girl by marrying her. It is not only that she is too yqung to be content in such a situation but the girl is a primitive creature harboring violent and hostile impulses which she cannot control and you cannot curb. She may be the victim of her early environment, her-lack of education and training. We may with some justice blame these factors for her inability to deal with her own primitive impulses, but we cannot undo 14 years of warping in three or four years of training, nor can we release such a girl, hoping that kind treatment alone will equip her to live’in a reality which she doesn’t understand. ; It is particularly futile to assume that it would help her one particle to marry her to a man more than twice her age. Your plan is neither practical nor sound. In choosing a girl with such poor possibilities, are you motivated by the wish to play God, or by the conviction that you don’t deserve a more adequate partner? JANE JORDAN.

Put your in a letter to Jame Jordan, whe will Anywer your questions in this column daily.

Whitaker Book to BeSubject of Review Rabbi Maurice Goldblatt will give his first in a series of five book reviews at 10:30 a. m. Tuesday in the A Hebrew Congregation | temple, 10th and Delaware sts. The | reviews are being sponsored by the The first review will be “We Cannot Escape History” (Whitaker).

~b 3

rE

J A to the - UNITED WAR FUND =

; Open your heart and your purse strings

wide! Give—so that our fighting

forces will have cheer and comfort.

’ x a

~~ So that otf loyal allies will have

* hope renewed. So that our dependents

at home will have care and necessities.

* >

tr ; : 2 2 | v ‘ = . - Give—generously. We must not fail