Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 January 1945 — Page 19

19, 1985 [.D.C. hedule

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to Address artment

service director, schools, will ade the American Voman's Departe . m. Wednesday, be in the clubidian st. y Ak on “In Green ll Waters.” Mrs. will be in charge rs. W. C, Bar~ de. *Bachelder and yhart will pour 1g the meeting. kes is ‘the tea Lucille B. Pohl. ;

i

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ed by Mesdames | ert 8. Gadd, L, | Greenlee, Henry I'Ty Jung, Harris L. Wilson and

» ld group of the department, W, 1:30 p. m. Mone . se. Miss Carrie dramatéc recital

15 1 3

ler will preside ill be Mesdames Everett E. Lets gomery, »

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thardt will show | northern Africa | meeting of the i W. D. C. The i f

will be in the

\llah” (Hichens) y Mrs. BQ Frank J, Uhl

and Mrs. J, M, n charge of the Mrs. Ralph L . John M., Wile

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social hour will . Batsel, Albert | 3. Hedges, Roy | herman, W, H, Sleeper, C. RE, H. Wallick, Miss d Miss Mary B,

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c Care ar belief, washay be wrung or land or through — Tests made on that wringing he garment has uch as lace or ould handle it | remove é€xcess ft in a Turkish | inging or twist {

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Benefit Dance

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FRIDAY, JAN. 19, 1945 _

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Wartime Eating

Meta Given

Dignified Air

A SPLENDID WAY TO HANDLE less than two cups of leftover By using either soft or stale bread crumbs, eggs, stock and seasoning,like marjoram or sage, one can make

chicken 1s to make. chicken loaf.

a loaf that will taste like the bes

Chicken naturally possesses the -most delicate and most deliclous

of all meat flavors. ~ ” » SUNDAY MENUS

Breakfast Hot spiced applesauce.

French toast with hot concentrated peach sirup (left-over peach liquid). Dinner

Roast chicken. Mashed sweet potatoes. Peas and celery. ; Cranberry and apple salad. Parkerlouse rolls. Chocolate pudding with marshmal

t of chicken and stuffing.

s n » « Chocolate pudding mallow sauce,

milk, 1 egg yolk, 1 thsp, margarine 15 tsp. vanilla.

Marshmallow sauce: One-third ¢

dash of salt.

small amount of the milk, about %

low sauce (sée recipe). * c. and stir well until smooth. Add Supper egg yolk and beat well. Add: t of th ilk and cook Spinach sandwich with cheese| Add -the rest of the m

sauce,

Sliced fresh pears with top milk, Vanilla wafers.

Milk to drink: Four ¢. for each Today's points—2 red for cheese, 1 red for

child, 2 c. for each adult.

luncheon meat (to be used in th sandwiches). : 8 8S

MONDAY MENUS

Breakfast Orange juice: Soft cooked eggs. Whole wheat toast.

Luncheon

Tomato rice soup. Pea and cheese salad. Crisp crackers. Fudge squares.

Dinner Chicken loaf (see recipe). Creamed potatoes. Baked eggplant and tomatoes. Lettuce with French dressing. Bread. Lemon pudding. Milk to drink: Three.c. for each child; 1 c. for each adult. Points for today—3 red for cheese: 10 blue for tomatoes.

Christ Episcopal

Scene Tonight of Vows Uniting Dr. E. R. Billings, Mary Whitaker

Miss Mary Helen Whitaker will become the bride of Dr. Elmer R. Christ Episcopal church. The Rev. E. Ainger Powell, rector, will officiate. . The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Tracy Whitaker, 5406 “Broadway, and Dr. Billings’ mother is Mrs. Edna E. Billings, Washington. Mr. Whitaker will give his daughter in marriage. She will be in a haze blue wool suit and a mink hat

Billings at 6:30 o'clock tonight in

Beauties’ Hints— Keep Figure Trim by Housework

By ALICIA HART NEA Staff Writer

over boiling water, stirring constantly until thickened, about 15 mins. Add margarine and vanilla and stir te blend and pour into 4 sherbert glasses. Top with marshmallow sauce and place in refrigerator until ready to serve. For marshmallow sauce: Mix marshmallow cream and beaten egg white thoroughly, until smooth and creamy. Add anise extract and salt. Note: If oil of anise is used, it must. be added in-very minute amounts as it is much stronger than the extract. Add a little at a time and taste for - the proper amount. : » ” » Chicken loaf: One tbsp. minced onion, 2 thbsps. butter, 3% ec. soft bread crumbs, 14 tsp. salt, % tsp. marjoram, dash of pepper, 1 egg, beaten; 12 c. boned, diced cooked chicken; % c stock or milk, 3% ec. sour cream, 1 tsp. flour. Saute onion lightly in butter. Combine bread crumbs with onion; add seasonings. Add egg, chicken and % c. of the stock. Shape into loaf and turn into greased baking dish. Pour remaining stock around the loaf. Continue to cook for 10 or 15 mins. Serves 4.

Church to Be

and will carry a white orchid and

mink muff. . Bride's * Attendant Miss Joan Murray, Logansport, her only attendant, has chosen a russet wool suit and brown accessories. She will carry a colonial bouquet of yellow jonquils, pompons and Talisman roses.

WORK AT FULL steam if you want household tasks not only to! teep your home tidy, but give you exercise that will keep your figure rim. Good trick for working up to tapacity speed is to plan a timeimit for each routine, then try to beat your own record. This will not only bring more muscles into play and burn up more talories, but make shorter shrift of lasks and give you more time for tomething else, » » # WORKING IN unrestricting exertise shorts and a sweater, I'm told by many maidless women who want 0 extract figure benefits from their shores, also serves as a reminder to keep a spine straight when bending, lo run up and down stairs with a tpringler gait,

The annual infantile paralysis oenefit dance of the Women’s Countil, P. R. Mallory & Co., will be at 8:30 p. m., Jan. 29, in the Y. W. C. A. Charlie Spoon’s orchestra’. will play and Stout field's special serv-

Ice section is assisting with the krrangements.

Foéar See

Housewives . , . Start Your Fire This Easy Way!

If you have trouble starting your fire quickly, get some famous Firebrand Kindling Wood from Polar today! You'll need only one match to light this clean, turpentine-saturated kindling. made from fat Georgia Pine. Comes neatly * packaged at only 20 cents a sack! .

POLA)

2000 NORTHWESTERN ATW. Neth. 190

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best man and the ushers will be Dr. Robert S. Kimbrough, Logansport, and Dr. Bruce Barnes, Evansville. Mrs. Whitaker will be in a fuchsia crepe dress accented with beaded embroidery and ‘a wild rose feather hat. Her accessories will be black and she Will wear a corsage of Johanna Hill roses. The bridegroom’s mother will be gowned in a black crepe dress and her flowers will be Talisman roses.

Wedding Trip

A reception will be held in the Whitaker home after which the cou-

ple will leave for a wedding trip, =< The bride attended Indiana university and is a student at the I. U. school of nursing. She is a member of Delta Delta Delta sorority. Dr. Billings is a graduate of the I. U School of Medicine and is serving his interneship at City hospital. He is a Theta Kappa Psi medical fraternity member.

Psi Iota Xi Session

Members of the Delta chapter, Psi Iota Xi sorority, will meet Monday in the home of Mrs. B. J. Carmack, 2202 Broadway. Mrs. Garland . Retherford will assist. The sorority’s new pledges are Mrs Lloyd Davis and Mrs. Edwin Steers, { .

- ICE AND A FUEL CO.

AVENUE 7, 25 Eost S1.

with marshOne and one-half squares unsweetened chocolate, 3; ec. sugar % c. flour, *% tsp. salt, 14 e¢.

marshmallow creme, 1 egg white, beaten stiff, few drops anise extract,

Melt chocolate in top of double boiler over hot water, not boiling. Measure sugar, flour and salt in

small bowl and mix well, - Add to melted chocolate and stir to mix well. Remove from heat. Add a

Johanna Hill roses attached to a

Dr. Harvey E. Lovett will serve as)

| to teach her the importance of eat-

ust once in a while.

| | cated types are also shown, such as

751 34.48 By SUE BURNETT

For a dignified, well-groomed air, this graceful afternoon frock is especially nice for the mature womian. It is lovely in .plain sheer fabrics or figured crepes. Pattern No. 8751 is designed for sizes 34, 36, 38, 40, 42, 44, 46 and 48. Size 36, short sleeves, requires 3% yards of 39-inch fabric. For this pattern, send 20 cents, in coins, your name, address, size desired, and the pattern number to Sue Burnett, The Indianapolis Times Pattern service, 214 W, Maryland st., Indianapolis 9.

Diet Important In Regaining

Full Health

By JANE STAFFORD Science Service Staff Writer DIET PLAYS a more important part than most people realize in helping a person get back to full health after an illness, The patient may have been in a poorly nourished state before he got sick. The illness itself is a further drain on his nutrition. If, when the acute stage of the-illness is over, he does not get plenty of the right kind of food, he is likely to get sick again with one of the hidden hunger diseases such as pellagra, scurvy, beriberi or a combination of vitamin deficiency diseases. Forestalling this is partly up to

>

{| T.-Arbaugh will be presented by Mes-

-+Finley Wright, Miss Georgia Marie

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Phi Betas Book Pledge Service

' The annual pledge service of Phi Beta sorority will be held at 8 p. m. Wednesday in the home of Mrs. Frank J. Billeter, 5869 Washington blvd. Mrs. Frank Boles will be in charge of the ceremony, assisted by Mrs. Glenn 8. Kingham. . A ‘program arranged by Mrs. O

dames William Edwards, B. J. Richards, Arbaugh, C. V. Kinsey, Kenneth J. Glass and Richard Golbach, Misses Mary Frances Newhouse, Leora Mae Crumrine, Joan Henning and Doris Linville. The assistant hostesses will be Mesdames Lyman B. Eaton, Thomas Bunch, Marshall Harvey and Ww.

Neargarder and ‘Miss Hazel Silky Hill, : New Era Club Session

Mrs. George B. Loveless, 414 N. Bradley st., will be hostess Mon-

%'y » -

» a“

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

_Bride-to-Be.

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8. Mr. and Mrs. Michael Hovanec of Paoli, Pa., have announced the. engagement of their daughter, Bettye, to Lt. E. J. Kriel, son of Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin B~Kriel of

Indianapolis. The weddihg will be in the spring.

day for a meeting of the New Era club; Mrs; Elmer Wasson will speak

ings,” and Mrs. C. R. Miles will assist the hostess.

on “John Muir's Life and. Writ-

the doctor and partly up to the patient, The doctor is the one to give diet directions, how much and which foods and so on. The patient, however, and the person nursing him, must see that the diet is followed and the food really eaten, not just picked at. — Bn = HOW MUCH havoc can be done when nutrition is not watched during recovery from illness is described by Dr. Tom D. Spies, Dr. R. W. Vilter and Dr. Gilbert Douglas Jr, of Birmingham, Ala, in a

report to the Southern Medical Journal. One patient they tell about. was brought to the hospital “crazy headed,” with a rough, grayish bronze and" peeling rash on her face, lower legs and ankles, painful mouth with cracked corners, severe pain in her'legs and a burning feeling in her feet. Although she had had a “breaking out” on her legs as a girl, she got over that when her mother put her to bed for a week and “stuffed” her. She stayed, well for several years, married and had four children. An attack of typhoid fever left her underweight, weak and with a distaste for food. , 2 td n

THEN HER husband got sick and she did what so many women do when worried over illness of husband or chiidregn. She fed the children well but ate only toast, milk, tea and fruit herself. When her husband recovered, he sent her to her mother for a visit. Again she was put to bed and stuffed with food and recovered. But when, later, the whole family came down with ‘flu’ and she lost her appetite and felt “too tired to eat,” she got so" very sick and irritable with firrational fears about the children that her husband had to stay home from work to look after the family. Fear that the children would!’ “catch” her disease made her consent to see a doctor and go to the hospital. Once again good diet plus, this time, some extra doses of vitamins, restored her to health, But it took a lot of misery and suffering

ing the right food all the time, not

Resort Fashions J

Feature Linen

Soft feminine pastels in beautiful Irish linen play an important part in the new resort showings of high style houses. in New York. These ‘resort lines, which forecast the fashions for next summer, feature pretty pastels such as yellow, pink, turquoise blue and green— all of which are so flattering. : For example, yellow linen, a fayorite sun shade, is used in a sunback dress ‘made with a V trap neckline and worn with a brief cover-up bolero. While classic sport dresses predominate, more sophisti-

a navy ef “linen town

frock with # saw-t: Solar,

hy 2

by Claire Tiffany

Will Meet

' (for unit 7.

IChurch Circles

The eight circles of the Central Avenue Methodist church will hold meetings Tuesday. Circles having luncheons at 12:30 tp. m, will be, 1, in the church; 2, in {the home of Mrs, Clifford Plummer, [2314 Broadway, 3, in the home of Mrs. W. R. Klingholz, 3121 College ave, and 4 ard 6, in theschurch. Group 5 will have a tea at 1 p. m. with Mrs. T. D. Campbell, 3690 Central ave. ‘as the Hostess, and {Mrs. Verle Campbell, 5123° N. New |Jersey st. will be the hostess at a; {dessert luncheon at the same time Group 8 will have a {supper at 6:30 p. m. in the home of Mrs. Ora Cudworth, 3764 N. Emerson ave.

Alumnae to Meet

The Gamma alumnae of Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority will meet at 6:30 p. m. today in the, Butler university. chapter house. Mrs. Willis B. Connor Jr, will be the progratn chairman and the hostesses. will include -Mesdames James ilson, James Kingsbury, John Kin#@ury ‘and Charles Lee.

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MISCELLANEOUS

Business and Professional Women's circle, Irvington Methodist church. 8 p. m.,, Wed. In the church: “The Green Years” (Cronin), Mrs. Russell J. Sanders. Clara Barton: chap. National Society Daughters .of the Union

1861-65. 7:30 p. m. Mon. Hotel + Lincoln. “Biography of Clara Barton,” Mrs. Fern Norris. Dr. Charles Arnold, Mrs. Carolyn

Ayres Turner, music.

Ladies’ guxiliary, Burns-West-Strie-

beck post 2999, V.-F. W. 8:30 p. m. Sat. Post hall, E. Washing ton and Denny. Public card party.

P.-T. A.

Glenns Valley. In the school. “How to Become Interested in Girl Scouting,” Mrs. J. FP. McBride. Fathers’ night.

University Heights. 7:30 p. m., In the school. Wed. Music. Allison choir. Fun night. SORORITIES

‘Alpha Omicron “Alpha. 12736 p.m:

Tues. ° Hotel Lincoln. Annual

union luncheon. Bridge. Mrs. H. H. Cavender, Mrs. L. H. Noble, chairmen.

_ EVENTS

7:30 p. m. Jan. 26.

* - . i, Beta Phi chap., Beta Sigma Phi 1 p. m. Tues. ‘Security Trust bldg. Alpha Chap., Chi Phi Gamma, 8 pom. Tues. Mrs. James A, Pare tain, 2330 Adams, hostess. Alpha Lambda chap., Epsilon Sigma Alpha. 7 p. m. today. Rauh bldg. Miss Mary Lois Wright presiding. “The Mind” Miss Edna Cunningham, : Chap P, P. E. O. Mon. Mrs, Carl Seet, 5139 Park, hostess. “Guatemala and British Honduras, Lands -of Color and Enchantment,” su ject. . ’

Graduation Party Booked at School 27

A graduation party will be held at 3:30 p. m. Wednesday by ‘the 8A class of school 27 in the school. Special guests will be the principal of the school, teachers whom the

-1class has had and Miss Laura E.

Hanna, former principal. . a “The committee irr charge of party ~~ arrangements includes Robert Mun- £ ger, Ruby French, Walter Boykin, David Powell, Paul Sprague, Jack 1Schroyer and Herbert Thompson: