Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 December 1944 — Page 26

ih

A RR ORS he +

LS AN pete

4

: 4 Meta Given

I HAVE HEARD SOME FOLKS SAY that they just can't make, good meat loaves or hamburger .with this war-time meat because- it has no fat. Fat can be added easily to ground meat. Some also complain about dryness and lack of flavor, but there is plenty of help for this at every corner grocery where you can find meat extract flavor in-liquid, paste and powder form. When some of this extract is blended with the added liquid—| milk, water or tomato juice — the flavor is pointed up to where the| cooked meat tastes like prime quality, i Meat extract paste or a bouillon| cube is used in today's recipe for| | meat loaf with prunes. ’

EE

Col. Drysdale Will Speak Thursday

” u ” Col. Walter Drysdale, former MONDAY MENUS { commanding officer at Ft. Harrison, | Breakfast

will address the members of the| Paul Coble post, American Legion Grapefruit halves. auxiliary; next Thursday when they|Hot cooked cereal. meet in the Columbia club. - The Toast and jam, meeting will be a dinner-bridge at| 6:30pm. Col. Drysdale, who recently re- Vegetable salad filling sandwiches turned from China where he was, (grated carrot, grated cabbage, assistant chief of staff to Gen, chopped green pepper, few drops Joseph Stillwell, will discuss “Ex- lemon juice, salad dressing, mixed periences in the Burma, India and; With 2 thsps, peanut butter), China Theater of War.” Stewed tomatoes. | The dinners arrangements com- Applesauce mittee includes Mesdames Harry Kerr, Ralph Lochry, Frank OAs- peer loaf with prunes (see recipe).’ tinau, Bert Ellis and J. Kent gayeq potatoes. Leasure. Savory green beans The group's monthly meeting will, ;),jons and celery). be next Friday in. Mrs, Gastineau's pattuce salad. home, 5344 N. Pennsylvania st. An pread | 11:30 a. m. board meeting will pré- grange cream pie with gingersnap {cede the business session. The! rq assisting hostesses will be Mesdames| wilk to Drink:- Three ¢. for each Edgar T. Haynes, Kerr and James chiid: 2 ¢. for each adult. No ra-| 8. McBride. {tion points needed today. . » ~

TTT ION Miss Smith Speaker Meat Loaf With Prunes: One|

Miss Cora Smith, former science |p. ground beef, 1 egg, % tsp. salt, teacher at School 76, will be the , tsp. meat extract paste or 1 bouil- | speaker at 10 o'clock tomorrow i ik 6 crackers. 1 morning at the Children’s museum. “ ec. milk, 6 crackers, 1 Her subject will be “Let's Make an | tbsp. grated omion, '% 1b. (2 med.) Indiana Rock Collection.” {grated carrots, 12 prunes pitted, 1] of Pp. m., Mrs, Eiyupeth Miidner|thsp, margarine or hutter. the museum staff will give a . ) ) slide-illustrated talk: on “Egypt! Mix beef with egg and salt. Dis Land of Tombs and Mummies.” The solve meat extract paste in milk

afternoon program is planned for *nd add crackers; let stand while children in grades 5 apd 6. {preparing the remaining ingredi-

————— tL tents, Add grated onion to meat Art Students’ Dinner

and then the milk-cracker mixture Mix well. i Miss Martha Miller and her| Place half mixture in loaf pan mother, Mrs, Arthur Miller, 5116 7x2% inches, pat down firmly. Place E. 9th st, will entertain members carrots over meat and then the| of the John Herron Art.school's|prunes to provide three for each sophomore class st a-dinuer tonight serving. Top with- remainder of | in their home. They will be assisted |meat and dot with butter. Bake at | by Miss Alice May Moss, Richmond, | 325 degrees F. for 45 mins, until | and Miss Rose Wright. done.

Luncheon

Dinner

(cooked with!

{lon cube,

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Taking the -Gift Problem in Hand

Rima Ra. NL

B. Flared White Bunny Fur Mitts with. white leather palm. 5.00 pr.* Brown Mouton Fur Mitt with leather palm. 6.50 pr.*

C. All Bunny Fur Mitt or Bunny Fur with white or red palms. Or Brown Mouton Lamb Fur Mitts with special finish, leather palm. 3.98 pr.*

Pigtex palm. 2.50 pr.

@

~white

2.98 pr.*

0D. Women's 100% Wool 4 Gloves with cork orf natural Toasty warm,

1. A perfect handbag for town (and for a gift) . ‘capacious but not bulky. A Josef design of softly shirred brown Suedera, it's easy to carry with the smooth double loops of self fabric. The frame is of mock tortoise. (Wasson's.)

2. Called the “Treasure Chest” by Designer Koret, this handbag will make a treasured Christmas gift. With its broad base and mirror-lined top opening on a facile hinge, it is both spacious

and gracefully proportioned. It comes in black Koretolope. (Ayres’.)

3. The Chinese motif appears in |

another Koret bag shaped like a mandarin’s hat. Triple rings of mock tortoise shell form: the dec-: orative clesure. Of black Koretolepe, it's one of a series of the new, smaller, boxy dress-up bags. (Block's)

J. All Bunny Fur Mitts or natural,

wf

. Ruth Hoover to Be On Y. W. Program Miss Ruth Hoover will be the | (reader at the Christmas pageant, | |The Nativity in Song,” to be hel | Dec. 10 in the ¥. W. C.-A. Sor,

greens” ceremony.

Fur Mitts with red, blys: Hite leather palms. Al

Wasson's stock of warm gloves and mittens is at its They're practical and pert and will please the fli fancy. Only a few are sketched but there are others women and girls will love and want for the or gifts. With fingertip warmth at hand , . . Wasson's

|ot the pageant. A. choir of mems-| “lbers of Y. W. clubs is under the | direction of Miss Mabel Kempf. Assisting with the decorating cere{monies will be students from the 4 John Herron Art school and mem- Grace Hutchings and Miss Margaret |bers of the Y. W. Quest club, Girl|Medsker, both of Indianapolis, gave Reserves, Monday Nighters’ club and |a recital this morning for a student the 50th annual “hanging of the y,qustrinl clubs. Girls from the|convocation at Franklin college Blue Triangle residence will be in|here. Miss Hutchings also gave a Miss Lucy Schulte is: in chargejcharge of refreshments. x ji

ak!

ght

assures you you'll never have to sit on your hands.

» aL ir.

LFErYY »

E. Greta Plattry Hand-\ . Je

Gloves. = All red, yellow, black,” green, chartreuse, fuchsia, purple, blue * or.

brown and combination colors. of. black and yellow, - « brown ‘and’ yellow, fichsis’ and black, chartreuse and brown, or light, blue and a brown. 5.00 pr. .

r

rs Ea ET Cpe

ay a ow CY

>

F. Unusual Grotd Plattry HandKnit Gloves. White, black or blue with colored flowers em- Tf Wl broidered down one side of LEN hand. © Or chartreuse, \

Food Outloak

Report Covers December

NEW YORK, Dec. 1 (U. P)~— Butter, beef and poultry will stay on the civilian shopper's list of critipally short food supplies in December, although turkeys will be rhore plentiful than at Thanksgiving, the Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Co,

reported today.e No improvement in the butter situation can be expected until after the first of the year, “if then,” the company re on the basis of a survey from ¢ than 140 of its fleld buying offices. 2 Egg supplies will improve as the trade enters the scason of heavy production, but the poultry shortage has been aggravated, the report continued, by trade reports of a possible government freeze order on chickens * along the East. Coast. Larger turkey supplies, however, will still fall far short of civilian demands. f . ” n THE SHORTAGE of grade A beef will cut into marketings of lower grades because the government is utilizing grads A to make canned

meats for the armed forces and,

military.”

lend-lease. i Hog marketings will rise 10 per cent in December, it was sald, “hut {little of the increase will find its {way into civilian channels because | |of the continued heavy needs of the!

|

| }

8 » » |

FRESH FRUITS and vegétables, however, will be in better supply as heavy production of early va- | rieties has started in both the South and the West, but tomatoes will re- | main scarce because of damage inflicted by the Florida hurricane. Frozen fish ‘holdings, including cod and redfish:fillets, mackerel and whiting, are heavier than normal, and Canadian imports are at a high figure, the report said. Heavy coffee shipments from Brazil are expected to swell domestic stocks which are now equal to three to four months’ supply,. the report | stated.

Recital Held

Times Special { FRANKLIN, Ind, Dec. 1--Miss

W. B. C. 8. Capitol -Avenue Meth-

W. 8. C. 8, St. Paul Methodist. To~

Irvington Woman's.

Monday Affernorn Reading. Mon,

Saturday Afternoon Literary.

CHURCHES

odist. © 5:30 p. m. today. Fellowship hall. Christmas season dinner. . 7:30 p. m. Church auditorilum. “The Criminal,” play.

In thé church. Bazaar and] supper. Mrs. J. D. Cooper, gen-| eral chairman. Mrs. Joseph Ehrensperger, Mrs, D. D. Miller, assisting.

day.

CLUBS

Mon. Mrs. Francis H. Insley, 558 N. Audubon, hostess. Mrs. Victor R. Jose, program.

Mrs. J. R. Townsend, 3234 Washington blyd., hostess. “Housekeeping, Grandmother's Way and Mine” Mrs. Emmet Ireland.

Nature Study. 3 p. m. Sun, Woollens

Gardens. Annual Christmas party. | Mrs Rachel Scott, program. Mrs. Harry H. Coburn; Miss Clara |

FRIDAY, DEC. 1, 1044

EVENTS

Fhi. 8 p. m. today. Room 309,

, Security Trust bldg. Kappa Sigma Chi. Tonight. ¥. W.

C. A. Meeting. Mrs.- Randelph Rodkey, hostess. Chap. AJ, P. E. O. "‘8Sat. Y. W. C. A. Party. Chap. G. P. E. O. Mon. Miss Nell Heathco, 36 N. Irvington, hostess. “Transportation,” Miss "Anna E. Carpenter. Mrs. Mark Roovins, assistant hostess. ‘ . Phi Delta Beta. 8 p. m.. Tues, Hotel Lincoln Mrs, Ross Bennett, hostess. Indianapolis associate chap. Tri" Kappa. 1p. m. Mon. Mrs. H. L. Harshman, ‘6040 N. Michigan rd., hostess. Mesdames John Walker, Ralph’ Minnick and Harry Case, assisting.

Herman-Freed

Alma Moore, Miss Dorothy White, Rite to Be Read

tea chairmen, :

Mrs. Ada O. Lamkin, Mrs. Harold Shellhouse, assisting. Sat. D. A. R. chapter house. ' “Current Books About the Countries of Our Allies Overseas,” Mrs. George C. Kolb. “The Ansecs and Life in Australia and New Zealand,” Mrs. Hiram J. Raflensperfer. Miss Edith Schowe, Mrs. T. J. Cornwell, hostesses. .

P.-T. A. GROUPS

Beech Grove. 7:30 p: m. today in the school. Variety show. - William Herold, chaliman. Garden City study group. 6:15 p. m. Mon. Mrs. William Wise, hostess. Covered dish supper. Mrs. George Bauder, co-hostess. Mrs. Clarence Connor, study chairman, Glenns Valley study group. 11 a. m, Tues. Mrs. Robert Bidlack, host ess. Covered dish luncheon. Lawrence. 1:30 p. m. Tues. Mothers’ tea. Mrs. Emery Wallsmith, chairman.

and Teachers. Block’s auditorium.

ton H. Ridge. Warren Central. Tues. In the school School of instruction. Mrs George Moyer, chairman. Mrs

E. C. Trueblood, assisting. SORORITIES Alpha chap. Alpha Delta Omega Tues. Hotel Washington.

Immortal Wife” (Stone), Russell Sanders.

Mrs

lecture.

Rae . a 1

Marion County Council of .Parents| 1:30 p. m. Dec. 8. “Green Dolphin Street” (Goudge), Mrs. omy.

New Era. Mon. Mrs. E. E. Padgett, 3 R fF C 3648 N. Delaware, hostess. “China,” | y CV. or yY

Miss Katherine Roberta - Freed |and Stanley W. Herman will be {married at 7:30 o'clock tonight in

|the Centenary Christian church. .

| The Rev. Abram E. Cory will read |the double-ring ceremony.

The bride is the daughter of Ms, .

jand Mrs. Claude N. Freed, 215 N. | Arsenal ave, and Mr. Herman's mother is Mrs. Ella Herman, 1326 Parker ave. | Miss Freed will be in am ivory (satin dress worn by the bridegroom's mother at her wedding. She will wear a fingertip veil of illusion

{carry a bouquet of white roses, Mis. Ray Kealing will { sisler’s only attendant. She will be {gowned in a rose dress with g satin’ {basque and full net skirt. Her | lowers will be Johanna Hill roses. Charles Herman, brother of the

bridegroom, will serve as best man .

and the ushers will be Roscoe Robbins and Armen Roberts, Immediately following: the ceremony, the couple will leave for a wedding trip. They will’ be at home at 1326 Parker ave. :

Clark School Club Sets

Tea on Wednesday

A tea will be held at 1:30 p. m. Wednesday by the Kindergarten .| Mothers’ club of the Gebdrge Rogers

“The Clark school in the kindergarten.

.|The program will include slides on Indiana state parks and Christmas

Gamma Omega chap, Beta Sigma|music by Mrs. Laurel Wallace.

. i 100% Wool

Lined, pliable capeskin gloves, Wondertul for

driving. Black or brown. 5.00 pr.

He

attached to a crown of: | imported lace and seed pearls and

be her

G. & H. Greta Plattry Hand-Knit Mitts that are. pretty and warm far beyond their price. Purple, * chartreuse, red, yellow and fuchsia - with yarn fringe around cuff or

3.98 pr.

ki He

LEX

gir

aL | SOLI BOND

Eagernes Indic: Hi

An increas have been of the coun tee asking tors will ca Trimble, co today. Describing mounting i loan drive, that solicitc are endeav as quickly. ¢ He recon persons whe been overl the commit ing so the made.

WS mort exceeded t Mr. Trimble national De st., oversub $27,625 by accomplishe spite the fa are enrolled purchasing Employee