Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 July 1946 — Page 21

LY 18, 1946 aged -

P. H. Ho photo

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ically no point in yaist, if a woman waistband to add parent size.

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. THURSDAY, JULY 1, 198

. INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

By JANE STAFFORD » Seclence Service Writer # TYPHOID FEVER has been one of the vanishing diseases in this country, thanks chiefly to efficient public health organizations which ! protect food and water supplies and keep track of typhoid carriers. to make sure they do not get a chance to spread the disease by working as| ‘cooks or in any food handling capacity. . This disease, however, may again “become a health menace, four navy medical scientists (Lt. Jerome T, Sy~ verton, Cmdr. Richard E. Ching, Lt. ,.Cmdr, F. 8. Cheever and Lt. (J. g.) Ancil B. Smith) point out in a report to the Journal of the American Medical Association. : ” o u THE DANGER is that some returning servicemen may have had | typhoid fever without its being reci ognized and that on their return to} this country they may unknowingly

be carrying and spreading the germs.

Chicken Miramar—a tempting taste of Cuba ...

Imagine a Trip to Havana—Eat Real Cuban Dish

Sports Writer

.

Teen Talk—

Wants to Take Journalism

#

Frank Wilson Also Is Singer By BOBBIE SCHAEFFER

A potential John Kiernan or Joe Willlams—that may be Frank (wilson ‘who was graduated from

writer.

at Cathedral, for two years; of the Memo, a weekly, for a year and a half, and of the annual, “Cathedran,” for two years. He has his fingers in the sports

lent for The Times. The newspaper | game is close to his heart and for | two years he has been close to the game as a copy boy in The Times advertising department.

Typhoid fever, as you may know, By BARBARA SCHAEFFER |

His journalistic’ ambitions were

is acquired by swallowing typhoid] DUE SOUTH OF THE PfSrida | fever germs. The germs leave the| Keys, a slender island arches itself = patient's body via kidneys and bow-| on the Caribbean. This is Cuba, els. Flies and fingers may spread home of the titillating rhumba— the germs to food and water or milk, and 4,200,000 Cubans. and water may get germs if sewage| Vivacious and sociable, loving | is not properly disposed of. | swift-paced games like jai alal, cock] All our fighting men were given | fights, fiestas, the Cubans also are| “shots” to protect them against ty- no strangers to. work. From their |

Meta Given

| not limited entirely to sports, howlever, for he started a literary |column in the school paper which | was carried on for three years, | Upon the recommendation of the] faculty advisor at Cathedral, Frank | | was elected to membership of the!

| Quill and Scroll honorary organiza-

| tion for his work.

phoid fever. As a result, very few rich strip of earth they coax sugar,| of them got the disease. But three| tobacco and coffee. They are great | MONDAY cases of typhoid and ‘21 cases "of | coffee drinkers, these Cubans. Breakfast

illness, | nN | PERHAPS you'd like to be visiting Cuba, tasting their life and their foods. Because they are among the nearest of our neighbors, we share a lot of their customs. Their | | favorite dishes are easily prepared in any American Kitchen because] {they are based on meats, fruits and vegetables familiar in the! United States. So it's easy to pretend you're in| Cuba, treating the family to a new dish—with all the atmosphere of a Havana night club. » ”

paratyphoid A, a related occurred in men ‘who had been on Okinawa. None of them died but the diagnosis was almost missed | and the navy scientists suggest that in other cases the diagnosis may have been completely missed. =

Orange and grapefruit juice Ready-to-eat cereal Wheat toast "Luncheon Eggs lyonnaise Buttered corn and green peppers Fresh red raspberries Sugar cookies Difinér Pan fried liver Sauted onion rings Escalloped potatoes Sliced cucumber salad with cream dill dressing *Bing cherry charlotte or cream

THE REASON “these patients—got typhoid or paratyphoid was that in 1 spite of warning against eating food at mess or approved eating places,| they ate raw vegetables picked up A off the ground in combat areas in Okinawa. There, as in many other parts of the world, human excreta, |

called night soil, is used as ferm-| CHICKEN MIRAMAR : 2 lizer. The anti-typhoid shots give 1 frying chicken, disjointed TUESDYY protection against most conditions| *s ¢. fat or salad oil Breakfast of exposure to the disease, but pot| 2 C. water | Prepared cereal with fresh raspberagainst an overwhelming dose of 1 ¢. button mushrooms ries, sughr and cream the germs. 4 c:vdiced” pimiento | Ham omelet Travelers going out of this coun-| 3 ¢. cooked rice | Cinnamon toast. . .. try should remember that the| 2 C. cooked peas

Brown chicken on all sides in hot | Luncheon

fat or salad oil. Add water, simmer | Escalloped corn one hour, or until tender. Saute| Green pepper sticks tinue to be. careful about the food, Mushrooms and pimiento in a little Whole wheat bread milk and water they take, to make Putter or margarine until mush- Butter cookies sure they do not get too big a dose|F00ms are golden brown. Dinner of germs for their “shots” to handle. | Place chicken on rice in platter. *Shrimp and green bean curry Surround with mixture of peas, Pan fried tomatoes . » {mushrooms and pimiento. Make Cole slaw St. Rita Guild | gravy from stock in which chicken! Bread and butter The St. Rita guild has discontin-| Was cooked. Serves four. Cherry chéese dessert

“shots” they had before departure give relative but not necessarily absolute protection. They should con-|

sour

[ Luncheon

Peanut butter and bacon wiches { *Melonade Dinner

Beef Strog¥noft Boiled rice Buttered wax beans

Cream pufls

2 » »

THURSDAY ' . Breakfast

| Rye toast | Pan-fried bacon Luncheon *Mushroom and bacon spread | Carrot sticks Watermelon . Dinner { Lathb chops | American fried potatoes | Summer squash

| Tomato and green pepper salad

Raspberry cream pie » u o FRIDAY

Breakfast | Blueberries and cream | Scrambled eggs | Whole wheat toast

|

Luncheon

Lettuce and watercress salad

Sliced peaches on prepared «

sand-

al

1000

sandwich | Cathedral

ued meetings for the months of] ROE REE { $8 =u July adn August. Plans have been (008s Town Club WEDNESDAY Fresh cream of tomato soup made for the September meeting to! : o . 1 Liver sausage sandwiches be held at the convent, 813 N. West| Mrs. John Humes, 1125 Fairfield Breakiast Vanilla rennet custard st. Miss Catherine O'Gara is presi- ave. Will be hostess to the Friday Orange juice dent and Mrs. David Connor, vice Evening Cross Town club at 8 p.m. Pecan schnecken Dinner president. Friday. Coddled vggs | “Macaroni custard with tomato slice Canadian bacon Chopped spinach salad with island dressing : { Black raspberry sherbet & o’ ~~ / c | a 8 = SATURDAY Breakfast

Coolness Comes hy-the-Yard

EYELET EMBROIDERY

; Frosty White and Pastels

2.98 to 7.98 yard

Simplicity 1616

EY

RNR

DREAM- -DRESSES will materialize from this fabric ov fOr it's as crispy, dainty as paper doilies. You'll look so utterly feminine in it . . . you'll feel so exquisitely cool. A“wonderful fabric to wear for Sunday-go-to-meetings, garden parties, or just plain afternoon’ wear. We've a gorgeous collection for your selection.

© Wasson's Fabrics, Fourth Floor

{ Fresh apricots | Soft cooked eggs | Whole wheat toast

| Y Luncheon

*French green onion soup

! Lettuce and cucumber sandwiches | Lime jello with soft custard sauce

Dinner

| Chicken a la king in patty shells

| Shoestring potatoes | Savory green beans | Mixed melon salad | Fresh pineapple salad

# "

SUNDAY

Breakfast | Tomato juice | Jelly coffee cake Sausages

Dinner

Rolled stuffed breast of Jamb

Parsley potatoes Buttered beets

| *Caulifiower and green pepper salad}

| Parker house rolls Apple dumplings

Supper

Mixed fruit salad Toasted carmel roll Lemon custardp ice cream

*Recipes for dishes marked with asterisks will appear tomorrow

1

through Wednesday.

¥ 8

BUT IT SEEMS that Frank Is | talented along other lines, too, for | {he is well known among the teen-

voice, although untrained, has pro{vided him a very extensive hobby. | At the June meeting of the Sub- { Deb Federation Frank sang “or | Man River” and “The Bells of St. | Mary"—and he has entertained the! | sub- debs before. Twice Frank sang | on Catholic Youth Organization | radio programs. | But he says he sings for enjoyment . . . at one time he thought] lof studying voice but has decided | Ito pursue a journalistic career in-| {stead. He was vocalist with the] dance band while in

school.

FRANK, WHO stands about 5 (feet 10 inches and has brown hair and—yes, they're green eyes—re- | ceived a scholarship to Butler university where he will start this fall. | oy hopes to keep on working as a|

| | | |

| copy boy, too.

{large club—the Book-of-the- Month | club. A joke, son. A clown, no less, {but he has his serious moments. | Reading occupies a few of those | serious moments and A. J. Cronin tops his list of authors. Modern biography is one of his favorite | types of reading material. Frank is the son of Leo T. Wilson, 1130 Wade st. He saw the Speedway race this year for the first time, although he has lived in Indianapolis 17 years. He's 17 years old, incidentally. This year he ran photographic plates for a Times photographer | at the race.

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| old story, | Prank says he belongs to one very known to western civilization were “bed linens"

If you visit Hollywood studio, located at Hol- |

is! the largest and finest)

Why is all this true?|

2

Cathedral high school in May and | Si has aspirations to be a sports|}

And a. good start he* has—for 3

Frank was sports editor of the 8% Megaphone, a monthly publication 3

world and was a school correspond-|

Here's a "no fade" cotton that's sure te be _a new fad Pat Kelly wears this one-piece Judy 'n Jill dress with a mandarin neckline, long sleeves, a wide self belt pnd a dirnd| I skirt, Pat is a St. Mary's academy student and belongs to the K. C. B. club.

(Block's.)

Homemaking—

age circles as a singer. His baritone |

: A Little

In _Peridng Up! an Apartment

Imagination Goes Far

THE CAREER GIRL LIKES A HOME, TOO-and she likes ‘changes

in her abode as well as ‘anyone a ceiling to her pocketbook, there's

can do to her apartment with a little imagination.

For instance, she can perk up

of a side chair and then making a place mat to match (maybe extras

| for entertaining, too). It will make | solitary dining something exciting. If the chaif seat is removable, {smooth the material tawfit firmly and tack it neatly on the under

side. Otherwise bind the edges] with a matching bias binding, leaving six-inch tapes at each

end so that the cover can be tied

firmly around the legs of the chair.

‘Linens’

‘Bed

else. Fortunately, -though there's no ceiling to the smart things she -

the premises by covering the seat

made in Europe-—and, you guessed it, they really were linen! According to rumor, the exact home was the famous city of Vienna. But no matter where the name originated, bed linens are still the designation for quality sheets and pillow cases everyWhere.

the ‘pancake makeup, girls; junk the powder and paint. You, t08,

can be beautiful by trompe ing around in a tet

pair of oxfords,

the complexion and do wonders for that school-girl look, according

holds. backless shoes show in your face when you wear them, the experts Say. Such shoes throw the foot off balance, strain the muscles, play havoc with’ the back, torture the feet—all of which affects your face, Doctors furthermore agree that the girls cannot be graceful in anklee straps and Yelefs shoes,

FOOT BEAUTICIANS agree, hows ever, that women are a little more sensible today than they were five years ago. They are not only buying shoes a size and a half larger, bus they have adopted the loafer, the name of which brings tears of Joy

shoes allow for the natural develops ment of the feet,” one of the foo# doctors says, Specifications have been drawn up for the ideal shoe. It has a heel just one-and-a-half {inches high. It's an oxford, with rounded tips allowing plenty of room ‘or the toes. From big toe to the end of the shoe, space allowance is threee quarters of an inch. It may be something of a novelty for Ameri= can women to be able to wiggle thelr big toes, but the good doctors heartily approve the sensible styles,

Midget Washer

A midget electric washer for washing fine things separately from the regular wash is on the market, It fits on the kitchen sink or a stool, hold 4% gallons of water, and is 17 inches high by 12 inches ACIOSS,

Refurbished Jumper

Take last year's jumper, add five

machine stitching around sleéve or front panel and you'll have a fresh tailored background om which to display lovely costume jewelry.

| pertly

And it would seem rightly so—| | for quality sheets today are so ex-! woven, so firm in texture |

Tunics for Bathers A thigh-length tunic as a covere

MANY WOMEN ask why sheets that they have a smooth, fine fin- ing for a bathing suit is making its

are called bed linens. but .

It's an old, ish and a lasting loveliness through | appearance this summer, . The first sheets many launderings—and so the term grand garment for covering up on

persists,

Its &

the way to and from the beach.

favorite.

1 -_. s

“Automatic”

RADIO

giving eight-tube performance.

record player , .

H

A splendid buy! great tone performance . , . this new combination. six-tube radio and single ‘

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it's a real companion -for the home.

Round-toed; flat shoer improve

to experts here who compare tos | High French heels and |

to the eyes of chiropodists. "Thess

rows of contrasting or matching