Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 September 1945 — Page 21
EPT. 20, 1945 Planned =| dinavians QM. ll be held for all at 8 p. m, Saturday b. chapter house, 824
mes E. W. Lundeen, . Brie Johnson, A. M. urm, Walter S. Jenicheron Aamot,
ks Luncheon
s day luncheon will \y by the Late Book ome of Mrs. Martin . Arlington ave, Mrs. 1ain will review “The (Ullman).
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THURSDAY, SEPT. 20,
1945 :
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THE TOMATO SEASON WILL CEASE when Jack Frost sees fit, but * ghey are still abundant on the market and in the gardens, and we should take advantage of them. You have, no doubt, found innumerable uses for them; for nothing is more versatile than the tomato. i With tomatoes right from our own victory gardens, it’s a good idea to collect as many ways to use them as you can. The cabbage and onions
for today’s recipe will probably come from your garden, too. » » » SATURDAY MENUS Breakfast Sliced peaches on ready-to-eat cereal. _ Toast with orange marmalade. Luncheon Peppers stuffed with cooked corn and cheese sauce. Bologna sandwiches. Almond custards. ~
Dinner
Smoked fish. Creamed potatoes, : Cabbage with tomatoes (see recipe). Avocado and orange salad. Bran muffins. Chocolate cake. Milk to drink: Three c. for h child; 1 c¢. for each adulf, ree ration points used today. = » » Cabbage and tomatoes: Onefourth chopped onion, 2 thsps. margarine, small head cabbage (% 1b.), 14 ¢. boiling water, % tsp. sugar, 1 tsp. salt, dash of pepper, small bit of bay leaf, if" desired, 2 or 3 large tomatoes (1% Ibs. each). | Saute onion in heated margarine. Coarsely shred the cabbage, add water and seasonings and arrange peeled and sliced tomatoes over the top. Cover and simmer for 8 to 10 mins. Thicken the liquid if desired. Serve immediately. Fcur servings.
Tea'ls Held
A meeting of the Riverside Kindergarten Mothers’ club was held today in the kindergarten, There was a tea honoring mothers of new
pupils. 1 a
#8 » SUNDAY MENUS : Breakfast Cantaloupe wedges, Corn meal pancakes and sirup. Bacon strips. Dinner Baked chicken. Browned potatoes, Baked squash. Lettuce and tomato salad with 1000 Island dressing. Parker house rolls, Vanilla ice cream and grape sauce. Supper Tomato scramble with toast points (see recipe). Carrot and celery sticks. Chocolate cake. Milk to drink: Three c. for each child; 1 c¢. for each adult, Four ration points used today.
" 8.8 n Tomato Scramble: Melt 1 thsp,
_|shortening in a saucepan, add 2
tbsps. chopped onion and saute for 5 mins. Blend in 1 tbsp. flour and then add 2 or 3 tomatoes that have been peeled and sliced. Carefully blend the tomatoes with the flour mixture, then cover and cook for 5 to 10 mins. until tomatoes are cooked, but not mushy. Add two whole eggs stirring slightly as they cook (over low heat). Serves four. 5 a ® Popular Desserts FREE-If you would like to have some new ideas on hand for those easy and popular molded” desserts, you will find them in Meta Given’s “Desserts That Show Good Form.” It is free for a limited time only. Just send a large, self-addressed, 3cent stamped envelope with your request to Meta Given, The Indianapolis Times, 214 W, Maryland st, In-
dianapolis 9.
"INDIANA'S
| FASHION CENTER
~ Hiomisens
20 WEST WASHINGTON ST.
LEY
Nothing could be finer than a June Bentley shirt 'n'
skirt . . . 50 here's her newest , ,
See ‘em in Seventeen
. in smooth wool
and rayon flannel. 1t's her famous shirt , , , her news. worthy trouser pleated and pocketed skirt, with the ...-deep center pleat, , , and it buttons onto the shirt across the front. In Navy, Brown or Green.
4 broom, ready to tackle the job of
‘Woman's Job Is to Create”
More Life’
By MRS. WALTER FERGUSON Scripps-Howard Staff Writer WELL, WOMEN are right back where they started from—headed for the kitchen. Public opinion says we must get home and stay there. = Even the majority of those serv ing in the WAC are reported as favoring a return to domesticity, In short, war is not woman's business after all, * All this has a familiar ring. That's the way it's always been and that's the way it probably will always be. A masterly cartoon, called The Aftermath, tells the story, It shows a wrecked room, windows broken, wallpaper torn and floors littered with smashed dishes and furniture. On a rickety couch lies a battered and bandaged male figure, representing the world.
P. H. Ho photo, Miss Mary Mouron and Kenneth A. Lloyd exchanged vows June 23
in the Centenary Christian church. The couple's parents are Mr. and Mrs. 8S. M. Mouron and Mrs. Alice Lloyd.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES _ Marriages Are Announced
-
Miss Mabel Schnarr and T. 8gt.. |In the 1039 check, 62 per cent of married [the men and 44 per cent of the July 14 in St. Matthew’s Lutheran |women
Arthur Goller were
church.
of Shoals.
Parents of the couple {hemoglobin values in their winter are Mr. and Mrs, Frank Schnarr |and spring checks; in the 1940 and Mr. and Mrg. Henry Goller |study, 30 per cent of the men and
Study Shows Diets Improve At College
By JANE STAFFORD Science Service Staff Writer ONE OF THE things likely to worry mothers, and maybe fathers, too, when son or-daughter goes off to college for the first time is} whether or not that young person will grow thin and undernourished Ywhen away from mother’s watchful eyes and good cooking. This particular worry can.be discarded in the light of a three-year study of college freshmen made at West Virginia university by experiment station nutritionists. : Marked improvement in blood cours and hemoglobin was found.
showed improvement in
50 per cent of the women showed |
Children with empty bowls. held
peace—with scrub brush, mop and
clearing up the mess,
Afterward it's always up to us to
work, ” o » OF COURSE, if the clearing up process were simple as going into a wrecked house after - a-- drunken carousal what would there be to complain about? Women can’t escape some of the responsibility for the present” state of the world. But they have much less to answer for than men because their economic and political power was practically nil in the aggressor nations. 1 think the principal business of | woman is to occupy herself with the creation of life. Yet what a discouraging effort it is, so long as man makes war, We stand on the threshold of a new era. Behind us is destruction immeasurable. Ahead—what? Nobody knows. But I, for one, believe men must make it a part of their business to build for life and to live for home before women can do much to improve the world.
Nurses Aids To Be Trained
Two night classes for training as nurses’ aids will open Monday and Oct. 1. The classes are sponsored by the Indianapolis thapter, American Red Cross. The class beginning Monday will be at the Methodist hospital, and the other group will meet at St. Vincent's hospital. Meetings will be held five nights a week from 6 to 9 o’clock. After a two-week period of class work, there will be 45 hours of ward training under the supervision of trained personnel. Upon completion of the course, cextificates are awarded by the Red Cross and the volunteers are assigned as nurses’ aids in the hospitals where they received their training.
Food Course to Be Given at Butler
A new course, “Meal Planning and Serving,” will open tonight at Butler university. Classes will be held at 7p. m. on Thursdays and two hours credit will be allowed. The class, which deals with management of time and money in planning and serving meals, fis open to adults. Prof. Grace Whitesell of the university faculty will be the instructor,
Wedding Anniversary
Mr, and Mrs. Jack Thurston, 2015 Nowland ave, will celebrate their 25th wedding anniversary with an open house Sunday from 3 to 6 p.m. There are no invitations.
Wool Purse
t are in the d . crying f . (tu SE Music Study Group room stands a harassed woman-— Will Hear Recital
George Newton will give a lecture-
recital on “English Music” Monday The whole history of womankind|at a meeting of the Irvington Music is portrayed there. For thousands Study club. The session will be in of ages men have warred, making|the home of Mrs. Harry Ware, 949 life unendurable for the innocents.|N. Arlington ave.
New officers of the group are Mrs,
help clear up the debris. Men be-|Ware, president; Mrs. Wilson Patlieve feminfhe destiny lies in such|terson, vice president; Mrs. James - Perguson, secretary, and Mrs. Helen
Olsen, treasurer.
Uses for Starch .
Thick starch should be used for fabrics like chintz, Men's shirts, nurses’ uniforms, net curtains, slip covers and drapes call for medium starch. : Thin starch should be used for cotton or linen blouses, children’s clothes, house dresses, aprons, col=lars and cuffs.
Miss Rolfsen Is Married
Mr. and Mrs. George A. Rolfsen,|that the students improved their 940 Tulip dr, announce the wed-|eating habits at college. They ding of their daughter, Mary, to|tended to forget food prejudices Carl R. Gough, fire controlman 3-c, | when eating in groups, so had betU. 8* C. G. The rite was Aug. 7 in|ter-balanced diets, St. Joseph's Catholic church, Berke-
ley, Cal.
Gough, 1395 Hoefgen st,
Miss Beatrice Mertz, Oakland,|cent “ate everything.” Cal, was the bride’s only attend-
similar improvement. ” n n THIS DOES not necessarily mean that meals at college were better
nutritionists think it more probable
‘ni
than those at home, however. The| §mall.Medium-/]
By SUE BURNETT You'll like this jaunty accessory
use| Of Fire
The food histories taken of each|set to pep up your wardrobe. student showed that 40 to 60 per|a bright plaid or checked fabric, or The vows were read by the Rev.|cent of the men had no marked make it of plain material and accent Pr. Frederick A. Young. Mr. Gough |food dislikes and “ate everything.” |the weskit with glowing buttons. is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Orville| Food prejudices were commoner| Pattern 8922 is designed for sizes spread the fire, If the fire is among women; only 30 to 40 per|small (14-16); medium (18-20) and|small that you can approach | Medium size, weskit, | closely, you may be able to smotl e Of the iron-rich foods, liver was|requires 1% yards of 35 or 39-inchiit with a rug, sand or a pan. ant, and the best man was Eugene |the most unpopular, with oné-fourth|fabric or % yard 54-inch; cap and
large (40-42).
ee TAME Makeup Tric Aid in Shapir Pretty, Lips
By ALICIA HART NEA Staff Writer A MOUTH as small as a o berry “with dark fuzz on its uj lip, which reduces its appa size, has a perfect right ample in this day when more m adds to a girl's attractiveness, First thing the experts tell you to do—if, like one of our readers, you needed help—wc be to bleach the fuzz. You can do that yourself prepared bleaching aid or you ¢ ask your beauty-shop operator give you a foamy white mustache peroxide and ammonia to while you're getting other thi done,
» ” » NEXT COMES the make-up & for scaling a mouth into bet! proportions with a face. This accomplished by carrying lipsti beyond the lip lines. This cheating a hit to make mouth ampler is such a commo place artifice today that nobod) is going to mind if you use it, But you tan exercise mare and finesse ti the next girl & using a lip brush to draw on a m artistic mouth.
Prevent Spread
‘Never use water on a bum liquid; it will probably splash
It's safer and more effec
Strack, <shipfitter 3-c¢, U. 8. C. G.[of the students expressing a dislike |gloves, % yard 35 or 39-inch mate-|however, to use a suitable chem
Thomas Young, seaman 1-c, U, C. G., served as the usher.
8.|for it. Eggs generally were liked by |rial, or % yard 54-inch fabric, For this pattern, send 20 cents in [laboratories label on the front After a reception in the Lake{13 per cent of the women. Less|coins, your name, address, size dé |your extinguisher carries the yor Merreitt hotel, the couple left for|than 10 per cent of the students ex-|sired, and the pattern number to|“classification B” that means yo
the men but were refused by 6 to
a wedding trip to Russian river.|pressed a dislike for spinach or|Sue
They are at home in Berkeley:
prunes.
extinguisher. If the Underwrite
Indianapolis{can use it safely on a burnin Times, 214 W. Maryland st.
liquid.
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Rayon crepe, lace frilled
