Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 November 1945 — Page 23
crotch ts for edium
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Liverwurst sandwiches Buttered parsnips Bread and butter pickles Marmalade pinwheel cookies
Dinner
*Potato sausage souffle Brussels sprouts with almond slivers Head lettuce with 1000 island dressing Canned Royal Anne cherries Milk to drink: Four ¢. for each ehild; 2 c. for each adult.
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. TUESDAY" envelope with your request . Breakfast to— Orange juice. Meta Given Bo otvuen) with honey and milk: The Indianapolis Times Bacon. 214 W. Maryland Street : Luncheon Indianapolis 9 Toasted cheese and tomato sandwiches. . : Paw Ships. SATURDAY Cup cakes. Breakfast — Sued neat cereal Hom ae ihn , | Cinnamon toast Lettuce and deviled egg salad. Luncheon
*Cranberry muffins.
Pumpkin pie. Luncheon meat sandwichéds Milk to drink! Three c. for each Carrot sticks child; 1 c. for each adult. *Popcorn balls «a 8 = Dinner WEDNESDAY Country fried steaks Parsley potatoes Grapefruit halves Sliced tomato salad Ready-to-eat cereal Biscuits Waffles and sirup Cranberry-apple milk sherbet , Luncheon Rr rah geisg) -Four -¢. for each Cream of corn soup ® On Sus. ul Luncheon salad SUND English muffins AY Tokay grapes Breakfast * Dinner Grapefruit halves broiled with Pan-broiled liver honey. Co *Pea and potato casserole Apple pancakes. Buttered caulifiower Canadian bacon. Whole wheat rolls Dinner
Lettuce wedge salads Prune turnovels Milk to drink? Three ¢. for each ¢hild; 1 c. for each adult, ss wu =»
Milk to drink: Four. ¢. for each ehild; 2 ¢. for each ‘adult.
A good line is an asset to every girl. So weer a
Panty girdles f you want fo look figure-happy
Carrollton ave. will be hostess.
. Roll-Onl Light-weight girdles smooth under dresses.
Cream of celery soup
Veal rump roast with potatoes and carrots. Pickled beet salad. Clover leaf rolls. Pig pudding with orange sauce. Supper *Cottage cheese fruit salad. Bhoe string potatoes. Hot clover leaf rolls.
Dinner Meeting Set By B, P. W. Club service honoring 46
club will be held tonight at a dinner meeting of the organization. Following the 8 o'clock dinner in the Woman's Department club, a program will be given including a skit by new members and a “radio show” under the direction of Mrs. Charles Munger and her music committee. :
Pledging Sel \ Pledge services for Mrs. Charles Kirkbride and Mrs. John Kinney will be held at 8 p. m. today by [the Phi chapter, Delta Chi Sigma | sorority. Miss Eloise Crowe, 3641
2 Whe aller of succulent tlubeko.sios Mal gives mali dist aatisie= Hen whit % *uddy sauce, made of conderised ream of Yumaty Soup,
# uaded 18 sae seTving, » *
Meat Substitutes
Still Continite
As Menu ‘Pets’ If They | Have Heft and Filling Value
THOUGH WE GREET the returned meat with huzzahs, there are
a few substitutes that will continue
to make our menus now and then.
Some of these dishes had genuine main-course merit, They were well built protein-wise, had heft and filling value, and their flavors were so hearty they became real menu pets.
Such a dish is cheese-rice loaf It's the sauce that gives dinnerdish appeal. A racy sauce, made of condensed cream of tomato soup with a few “fixin’s” added for high-style, . & CHEESE-1iC LOAP
% c. uncooked rice % lb. American cheddar cheese, grated 2 eggs, slightly beaten 1 tbsp. milk 13 tsp. salt % tsp. pepper Cook rice in salted boiling water until tender. Drain and rinse with cold water. Add grated cheese, eggs, milk and ‘seasonings, Mix well, Place in well-greased loaf pan, lined with waxed paper. Bake in nfoderate oven (350 degrees FP.) for-one-hour. —Unmold and. serve with medium tomato sauce. Serves six. -
ss & 8 MEDIUM TOMATO SAUCE
3 tbsps, chopped onion 2 tbsps. butter or margarine 1 tbsp. flour 1 11-0z. can condensed cream of tomato soup, undiluted 2 tsps. cider vinegar 14 tsp. Worcestershire sauce Saute onion in butter. Add flour and blend well. Gradually add soup. Add remaining ingredients. Gradually bring to boll, stirring constantly. Yield: Approximately % cup.
Auxiliary To Hold Dinner A Christmas musical program will be given at 2 p.m, Tuesday by the Indianapolis Women’s auxiliary-to the Railway Mail association in the Woman's Department club. The program will be given by Mesdames James Ferguson, Edward McCance, George Newton Jr., Helen Olson, Wilson Patterson, James
Kingsbury, Francis Helkema and Harry Ware. Mrs. Albert Gray will preside at the business meeting after the program. There will be a dinner-dance
[at 6.p.m. for members and their | families.
The dimer committee tnchides Mrs. Louis Ball and Mrs, 8, K. ee J.
smothered in a tart tomato sauce.
Christmas Party A Christmas story will be given by Mrs. Martin Rehfuss Sunday at the Christmas party of the Daughters of
the British Empire. Mrs. William R. Williamson, 5338 Boulevard pl. will be hostess. She will be assisted by Mrs. R. W. Johnson and Mrs. C. P. Clark.
| NEW Yugoslav ehil clad winter
1a Style Show
By BARBARA BUNDSCHU +
United Press § YORK, Nov. _ 30. Sue in American corduro: because Gypsy Rose kept her clothes on at a cocktail party..
be warmly uroy this Lee
show in only an
in their behalf. an oversize hat,
She doffed a fur piece
land a pair of gloves—remaining
slickly clad in a black satin suit. + The Yugoslavs wouldn't have found most of the show's fashions as practical as did the socialite and theatrical audience at the Ambassador hotel.
Flags for Patches Only Elizabeth Hawes, of the women who modeled their favorite costumes, would have felt at home with them. The noted designer and author of “Fashion Is Spinach” wore a pair of blue jean overalls, fanny-patched with axis flags. It was she who designed the neat corduroy coverall, complete with ear-muffier cap, shoes, mittens and Jersey which, for $10, will keep a Balkan youngster from freezing. Margie Hart Models For the “This Is My “Favorite” show, introduced by Miss Lee with appropriate chit-chat, Paula Laurence decked herself for a harem. Vera Zorina drifted in a gray chiffon negligee by Valentina. Choo Choo Johnson floated in a black nightie and sheer robe. Pinup girl Candy Jones wore a printed pique two-piece bathing suit. Margie Hart, described by Gypsy as a classmate at Minsky's, had a pass at a strip. Entering in a conventional fur coat, with a long skirt hanging out beneath, Margie
exit in fireman-red tights.
Make her Christmas memorable . . . with one of Wasson’s beautifully styled and infinitely - wearable Natural Silver Muskrat Furs! She'll love the soft, gleaming pelts . . , the deep tuxedos . . . ascot ties or wing collars . . . of Wasson’s new collection. Above all . . . she'll appreciate the magnificent grace .. . the | wonderful wardrobe-adaptability of these favorite new season furs!
Gypsy ‘wag conducting a fashion
whipped them off in a flourish, to.
By MRS. ANNE-CABOT
The vestee illustrated at top is easy to knit, easy to get into, easy to
By SUE BURNETT look at! Sizes 14 to 20.
Pretty way fo starly the day—a | The peasant embroidered vestee crisp button front house dress with in lower illustration is the prettiest gay over-shoulder ruffles, comfort- | one ever crocheted! Do it in blue Wie 2 “in belt and ample sized wool—edge it in white—embroider Pattern 8955 comes In sizes 14,/the “hearts and flowers” in scarlet, 16, 18, 20; 40, 42, 44 and 46. Size 16 {blue and green. Sizes 14 to 18. requires 3% ‘yards of 35-inch| To obtain complete instructions material. ‘For this pattern, send 20 cents and for the crocheted peasant vesin coins, your name, address, size | eo (pattern 5604) send 16 cents in
y [Holds Me 3 ing. iy This Morning
for the knitted vestee (pattern 5041);
"Mrs. A. Brown Ransdell and Mrs. Max Foster were guest speakers this morning at a meeting of the international relations
committee of the Indianapolis P.-T. A. council in the War Memorial building. s subject was “The
of Europe and the Far East, A, 3 for the people of the u 8.” Ransdell said. Mrs, Ransdell, League of Women Voters international relations chairman, pointed out we should remember that democratic processes will be slow to take hold in countries ravaged by hunger. Other Speaker Mrs. Foster's talk on “Some Observations of the League of Nations” was based on her experiences as a member of thé American committee in Geneva, Switzerland, in {1939. The committee was sponsored by the Carnegie endowment for in. ternational peace. Mrs. Foster told commiting meme bers that although the Lsague of . Nations failed as a political instrument, progress has been made in social and economic flelds as evidenced by its health organization and also the international labor organization, . “The foundation on ‘which we can build further international co. operation has been laid,” she said. - “We of the United States have - a rendezvous with destiny in thas ; international co-opération to bring - about a durable peace depends on our leadership, Mrs. Foster conclude . . ed.
desired, and the pattern number to|coin for each pattern, your name, Sue Burnett, The Indianapolis|address and the pattern number to Times, 214 W. Maryland st, Indian- | Anne Cabot, The Indianapolis| apolis 9. | Times, 530 8. Wells st., Chicago 17.
5 -
Pisenssion periods followed each : talk. Mrs. Leland Crawford is the uis.iiational relations committee - chairman for the P.-T. A. council,
