Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 October 1946 — Page 17
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MONDAY, OCT. 14, 1946 .
Lets, Eat
Meta Civen
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Breakfast ‘Shouldn't Be
THE ONLY WAY to make tea sandwiches that should be sepved
these days is open-faced—taking| AS THE SEASON of dark, chilly| | mornings begins, many persons find or the daintiest of sandwiches, it harder than ever to get up in to eat a good breakfast before|
3d ] are]
By halt the quantity of bread.
buy unsliced bread and cut it yourself, or buy. especially thin‘ cut bread. The crust can be sliced off and saved for other use.
white or egg yolk or the diced
u ” n TUNA SPREAD (For Tuesday/luncheon) 2 small cans tuna % tsp. freshly grated onion #5 c. dill pickle, chopped very fine % c. mayonnaise . Drain oil from tuna. Turn into a bowl, flake fish and add remaining | ingredients. Mix well one cup tightly packed. tea sandwiches. " o » SPANISH VEGETABLES (For Wednesday dinner) ! Cook ': pound green beans (cut | Into 1-inch lengths) in a small amount of water until barely tender | (15 to 25 minutes), Saute two slices | bacon, cut into bits, and add 2 tablespoons chopped onion and cook five or six minutes Blend one tablespoon flour into bacon fat in pan. Add the bean
Serve on|
liquid (there should be only about ing if the cereal or bread is whole Mrs. J cup _of water left) and blend. grain, since then more body-build-!
A @: 3 to 4 tomatoes that have been |ing material and more B vitamins| p,etrv of Today.” A :
led and sliced (2 cups), 2 ears | corn, cut from cob (2 cups), tablespoons chopped green pepper, 1 teaspoon sugar, % teaspoon salt and a dash of pepper and stir thor- | oughly. Simmer for 7 to 8 min"utes until corn is tender. Stir occasionally. Serves four. f
|
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with this amazing
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Cut the | trimmed slices into fingers or smal likely to have an “all-gone” feeling| squares, triangles and _ diagonals; 8nd to slow down at work or study! Garnish with pimento, green pepper, Péfore the morning is over. Going or tiny cut-outs of either sliced egg| Without breakfast, morgover, means e whites or yolks of hard cooked eggs. | 9a must be quite large in order to
LB
| Grand Pre, 1. T-S. C.
{| Grolier Fine Arts.
| Monterey chap., I. T.-S. C. 12:30 p
| Tuesday Quest
| Woman's Rotary. 6:15 p. m. Tues.
Wy-Mo-Dau, Tues. Mrs. Emory W.
Chap. AM, P. E. O.
Skipped
By JANE STAFFORD Science Service Staff Writer
[time
| starting to work or school. Break{ast-skippers, however,
{that the remaining meals of
{make up the deficit in nourishment.
Those who are in the habit of going without breakfast may not
feel hungry on arising, even though it.is 12 or 14 hours since their last meal. The thought of food may induce distaste or even slight -hausea
” IF YOU ‘ARE ,in this class, you
Makes about can acquire a good breakfast habif
by gradual steps. Each morning eat a little -more until you are eating a bréakfast that provides one-third of the calories you need for the day's activities. The lightest breakfast menu that
I have seen approved by nutrition | authorities consists of fruit, cereal |
or bread and a beverage. This is considered satisfactory for a desk worker who eats @#n early lunch,
v
#n = un
IT CAN BE made more nourish-
will be included in the meal.
body-building breakfast milk to B vitamin called riboflavin.
protein. A
Without milk, it is hard to get]
enough of these nourishing items .n breakfast or, for that matter, in the entire day's food. |
EVENTS CLUBS Expression. 2 p. m. ‘Tues. Mrs Doolittle, 1421 W, 35th, hostess. | “Music of the Nineteenth Cen- | tury,” Mrs. Herbert McNeeley; | “Novelist,” Mrs. Lloyd Litten. Fortnightly Literary. 2:30 p. m. Tues. Propylaeum “Down to| the Sea in Ships,” Mrs. Henry E. Gibson; “Stranger Than Fiction,” Mrs. Lois Wishard Insley. Garfield Garden. 1:30 p. m. Tues.
Mrs. W. P. Moran, 1034 Villa, hostess. Frank Schubert, speaker,
Tues. Mrs. James A. Moore, 808! N. Ritter, hostess. Mrs. John w.! Thornburgh, speaker. 12:30 p. m. Tues. ! Mrs. A. L. Duncan, 5836 Indian- | ola, hostess. Ray Cloyd Downs, speaker. Hoosier Tourist. 12:30 p. m. Tues.! Mrs. C. W. Graves, 1418 W. 34th, ! hostess. Program, Mesdames John | V. Faasen, Dwight’ Murphy and! J. N. Hardy.
Egyptian chap, I. T-S. C. 1p. m. Tues. Mrs. Harry Hann, 415 N. Drexel, hostess. Dessert luncheon. Mrs. John Thornburgh, speaker, Evangeline chap, I. T.-S. C. 6:30 p. m. Today. Mrs. F. E. Henzie, 5747 Norwaldo, hostess. “Seeking and Finding the Levarit,” Mrs. John Thornburgh,
m. Tues. Mrs. Roger Lawton, 1719 N. Kessler blvd, hostess. Mrs H. B. McCalin, speaker.
Rosemary Cruzan -Parliamentary Law. 8 p. m. Tues. Mrs. N. D. Spencer, 1427 Lorretta, hostess.
Discussion of “Duties of Officers.” Tues. Mrs. Harper Ransburg, 5437 N. Meridian, hostess. Frank Wallace, speaker,
Woman's Department club. Mrs. Rosamond Risser Jones, speaker.
Cowley, 3267 Ruckle, hostess. Program, Mrs. Thad R. Clark, Mrs. Fred C. Wilson and music committee, SORORITY
8 p. m. Tues. Mrs. John Jefferson, 3146 N. Illinois, hostess.
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"THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Rosalie Jordan FRENCH ADOPT Becomes Bride GONSTIT UTION
In Church De Gaulle Becomes Potential
In a ceremony at 2:30 p. mi; ves- hu |terday, Miss Rosalie Mary Jortian, Political Factor.
3729 N. Chester st. , became - the bride of William E. McLean. The
For Snow-Time
v. Chester ‘Wharton jag the nad a constitution today jssrvice In the ‘North Met ise} first time nce the liberation. | church,
| The bride's mother ‘is Mrs, Sylvia | B. Jordan of Westfield,” and Mr ] | McLean's parents \are Mr. and Mrs despite his. failure to prevent adop{Cleo E. McLean of Rucker rd. | Miss Jordan wore a gown with a referendum, |satin bodice and a net skirt and
| seed pear] tiara, and she carried an |loting marked by all-time record aborchid on a prayer book. | stentions from the polls of 31.2 per Mrs. C. Frederick McLean Jr, cent of the registered voters. was matron of honor ahd wore a| Unofficial returns from metropink marquiset dress. Pastel green |Politan France, North Africa and taffeta frocks were worn by Miss almost all of Corsica showed 9,Barbara Jordan and Miss ' Pauline! 143,310 for the constitution and 8,« | Steinhilber, bridesmaids. | 084,067 against. These totals includ- - A wooly scarf and mittens | Edwin McLean was his brother's ed official figures of 9,100,217 for, will keep Dollie Githens cozily best man, and ushers were Mr. Mc. 8.046.651 against in metropolitan warm. this winter between home |Lean Jr. Luther Benton, Cyrus Jor- France.
+
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and Warren Central where dan and Robert J. Smith, Warned Anarchy she's a ‘senior. The head scarf ; Ale 2 Fovepholl a ihe Mclean) Political observers attributed the | is hand-leomed and . 100 per ome, the couple le n €dding | strong opposition vote. and absten-
trip. They will. be at home on|tjons largely to Gen. De Gaulle's
cent wool and the white mit- Rucker rd.
| tens are colorfully embroidered. | Dollie belongs to the W. R. E. N.S. club. (Ayres.’)
campaign against the constitution. He had warned it would lead to anarchy .and then dictatorship. All three major parties in Pfime | Minister Georges Bidault's government — Socialists, Communists and Popular Republicans—supported the document : Gen, De Gaulle's role in the fourth republic may be clarified in the Nov. 10 general elections. Many political obsérvers, including strong | left-wing supporfers, believed many | persons who abstained from voting yesterday may give positive support to Gen, De Gaulle then.
: Meatless Meals—
Poets’ Corner to Meet Serve Cheese In Athenaeum ~ : The Poets’ Cofner will meet at 2 And Egos m. Saturday in the Athenaeum sits ames M. Dawson will speak | What better substitutes for meatand Magazine |less ‘menus are there than cheese Other speakers and eggs? Today we have a recipe will be Miss Olive Inez Downing (for a cheese and. egg croquet— | something the family will ask for | again.
on “Newspaper
ara a eT wil hi Gen, De Gaulle won a handsome zed \ Mrs. John vy 4.» ; > . : uccess in principle, many observers H. Newlin. Mr. Newlin is national CHEESE AND EGG CROQUETTE prin y : | | said, even though he failed to de president of the McGuffey club, and [6 hard-cooked eggs
: | | feat the constitution. Mrs. Newlin wrote the playlet. {3 tbsps. bread crumbs Under ‘ the constitution, France — [134 tbsps. chopped celery
will have a two-house parliament, Department Club 1'z thsps. chopped parsley with most of the authority vested in \ ; > 1% thsps. grated cheese the lower house, and a president Meets Today 3 C. cooked salad dressing with limited powers. Gen. De Gaulle The Municipal Gardens Women's Tracker crumbs Department club met for a covered- |
favored a strong presidency. Separate yolks from whites. Minte -
dish luncheon at the clubhouse to- 88 Whites; add mashed yolks, RUSS-IRAN MILITARY day. Mrs. Roscoe Barnes presided, | Crumbs. celery, parsley and cheese; ALLIANCE IS HINTED
and Mrs. J. C. Starr was hostess. |Plend thoroughly with salad dressMrs. Francis ‘E. Artist was in|iD8 | LONDON, Oct. 14 (U. P.).—The charge of the program, and Miss] Form into balls and roll in cracker | London Daily Telegraph quoted dipMildred Crump gave a talk and|Crumbs. Fry in hot deep fat (375 |omatic circles in Tehran today as demonstration on flower arrange- degrees F.) until browned. Serves reporting that Russia had proposéd Ix. a military alliance with Iran.
ments. § The dispatch said Russia report-
I. T.-S. C. Plans Tea Newcomers Club edly had backed the proposal with ~ an offer to supply arms, including For Founder's Day To Have Tea
300 airplanes and Soviet army “inFounder's day tea will be held by| The Newcomers Club of Indian-
Istructions.” The proposal was said the New Harmony chapter of the | apolis will hold its monthly tea at to. have been delivered to Premier I. T-8. C. Sunday at the home of
{ Ahmed Ghavam by the head of the re 2 (1 p. m. Friday at the Y. W. C. A. Soviet foreign office's Middle East Mrs. Marie Finney, 2828 N. Delaware | Mrs. Ernest Hertling will be hostess. department The first of a series of book re-| r :
| Ex-Red Declares Russ Seek
PARIS, Oct. 14 (U.P). France! Louis F. Budenz, former éditor of see him. but they follow his orders for theithe Communist. Daily Worker.
Gen. Charles de Gaulle was established as a potential political factor
tion of the document’ in Sunday's)
The constitution was adopted by| |train. A fingertip veil fell from a!8pproximately 1,000,000 votes in bal-
7:30 p. m.|*
Honor guests will be Mrs Donald Stroud, president of the federation; and Mesdames Llovd Pottenger,
views will be presented by the club next Monday at 1:30 p. m. in Block's auditorium. Miss Ann Obenchain
In return, according to the dis-| patch, Russia expects Iran to .free| herself from “the anti-Russian” pact |
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PAGEIT'"
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ACCIDENTS KILL TEN IN STATE
"Hoosier Highway Travel Hits 1946 Peak.
EN * By UNITED PRESS 2 At least 10 persons died in traffic accidents in Indiana during the week-end. The ~ fatal accidents and many non-fatal wrecks occurred as Hoos= lers thronged highways to view the annual autumn show of foliage. The temperature was moderate and traffic was reported at a 1946 peak. State police reported 14,000 persons pald admission to Browm county state park, geographical center of the foliage show, during Sunday. It was a record for the year, The dead in traffic: ¢ Mrs. Marguerite Ramstrum, 32, Chicago, killed. when two cars collided on U. 8 20 in Gary last night. ‘
To Destroy U. S.“in. 3d W. lo Destroy U. >.%In. ar DETROIT, Oct. 14° (U, ‘P.).—| ties Ifthe United States” « _ Soviet Russia wants a third world|, He described this man as a forwar in the hope of destroying thie mer head of the Communist InterUnited States and Great Britain| nationale and “still the boss.
and establishing a “world proleta- | This man never shows his face," | riat dictatorship,” « according to he added. “Communist leaders never
or suggestions implicitly, The aver- | Mr. Budenz, a.party member who |age American Communist never rencounced communism, said in.an|heard of him." address over radio station WJR last| Mr; Budenz said he would disclose night that “the American Com-|this man's name to “any official munists are as much a fifth column agencies” but would prefer to do so jfor Russia as the Quislings were for “when I can testify under oath.” | Nazi Germany.” | Mr; Budenz said he renounced the They take their orders from a Communist party in April, 1945, man “who is an agent of the Krem- after the appearance of an article [lin,” he asserted, by. Jacques Duclos, French: ComWar of Nerves munist leader, who advocated a reMr. Budens, now an instructor in turn to Marxism and Leninism the economics departments of the| Which called for rule by the proUniversity of Notre Dame and |letariat through world revolution. Fordham university, said Russia's He added that all Améfican Comprogram calls first for a “war of munists understood the program nerves” and then, “when Russia «pnd {t was adopted by the Kremlin. 'teels itself able,” a third world war. This program calls for a “wdr of “The destruction of the United | nerves’ then a world war when States is the goal of Soviet Russia,” Russia is ready. ne declared. | " : Mr. Budenz said. he joined the | Policy Confirmed by Stalin Communist party 10 years ago in| Marshal Stalin confirmed this the hope that communism would policy last spring when he blamed bring about some desired changes|the U. 8. and Britain for inter{in American democracy but that he national misunderstandings, Mr. | was “disillusioned” after world war |Budenz said. Willlam K. Stratton, 31, South : | Mr. Budenz' speech, which origi-| Bend, died in a Mishawaka hos‘I learned, at first very reluctant- uated in Pittsburgh, followed a year| pita] after an automobile overly, that Soviet Russia intends to of silence imposed upon him “y the|iurned near South Bend. destroy Britain and the United Catholic church Oct. 10, 1945, after]. Richard Hamilton, 23, Hobart, States,” he said rescinding his excommunication of | killed when his newspaper delivery He charged that there is a man, 30 years previous truck was struck by a train at a who is an agent of the Kremlin; He was excommunicated for Hobart crossing v who direct® all Communist activi- marrying a divorcee in 1915 Two Cars Collide
Miss Virginia Lanning, 18, Portland, injured fatally when two automobiles collided on a Jay coun-
LOCAL BRIEFS i]
| Indianapolis ‘ division 25, Ladies’; Ladies’ auxiliary of the Indian-| Pail R Sou}, 34, of Myliville Jus auxiliary of the Baltimore & Ohio apolis Liederkranz will sponsor. a Killed two an
{ y , ‘of Millville Saturday night when meet | card party at the Food: Craft SHOD) oe Ca¥ overturned: and..he Was
crushed heneath the vehicle. Richard Allen Riffel, 3-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Riffel of Rochester, died when an automobile struck him as he ran across a road in front of his home. The jcar was driven by B. F. McCuen, | Warsaw, Struck by Automobile
Members of the telephone com-| mittee of Sahara Grotto auxiliary! Vernon J. Ferguson, 5§, Evanstomorrow ville, killed when struck by an auto-
Car Overturns Mrs. Ruth Baird Frederick, 30, Newport, killed when an sutomobile overturned in a ditch along Ind. 63 near Newport, Saturday night. :
|
Veterans association, will Monday at 8 p. m. in the B. & O./ beginning at 1:30 p. m. tomorrow. building. Entertainment and re- Mrs. C. H Westerfield is chairman freshments will follow a business ii meeting. Mrs. Harry Bell is presi-| An educational film will be shown! dent and Mrs. N. A. Stewart, pro- at the Emmaus Lutheran school gram chairman. : P.-T. A. meeting, Wednesday at 1
; "” p m. A short business session will Hospitality committee of Sahara follow.
Grotto auxiliary will hold a luncheon at 12:30 p. m. Friday in the home of Mrs. Lillian Henkel, 3031 E. 38th st. ‘will lunch at 12:30 p. m
; oS curiliEry vs in the home of Mrs. Helen Hester, mobile in Evansville. J 0am reli SuisY MIL Bet IES E. Washington st. | Mrs. Fanny Shank, 83, Farmland, Washington st. | - | killed when she walked into the . sm; | Mrs. Robert Shank, state presi- path of a railroad locomotive at Maj. Robert Anderson, Woman's dent, P.-T. A, will speak at 1 p. m. Farmland. Relief Corps, will meet tomorrow at tomorrow over Radio Station WISH.| Ned Slater, 21, Huntington, died
1 p. m. in Grand Army hall, 512 N. She. will disquss “State Membership| instantly when his car crashed into {Illinois st. Officers’ practice will be Week.” Another discussion of mem- a concrete abutment at a culvert {at 11 a. m. Francis Buis will pre- bership will be held at 3:30 p. m. just half a mile from his home "lover Radio Station WFBM.
| side. ore {around midnight Sunday.
ce
entered into in 1937 by Iran, Tur- | key, Iraq and Afghanistan.
Marriage Announced! wuELD For SMUGGLING Miss Betty Jean Coy became the! SHANGHAI, Oct. 14 (U, P)— bride of Richard Daupert Aug. 11| Police today arrested a Russian acin the Calvary Tabernacle. Parents cused of heading a smuggling ring of the couple are Mr. and Mrs.| Which sent $400,000 worth of cul-
John W. Thornburgh and Elmer
will review “Miracle of the Bells.” Schaub.
N. A. W. Plans Party
Alpha chapter of the National Association of Women, Inc. will have a Halloween party at 7:30 p. m. Oct. 22 in the Bamboo room of the : Hotel Washington. Miss Ruby A. Mr. and Mrs. Owen Daupert, State| by way of Manila. The suspect's Thomas is in charge of arrange- Road 52. The couple is at home arrest followed seizure of a Pear]
wy
Claude Coy, 1710 Lockwood st., and) tured pearis into the United States |
b
ments at the Lockwood st. address. cargo at Manila. 4 £ (HRS C ip iY Daily Store Hburs: Monday thru Saturday 9:45 A. M. to 5:15 P. M. é / a - Easy to Clean . : 1.25 Each Black if by day! This little dress of Crepe Renown by Duval hag all the superlatives for a dawn-to-after-dusk existence . . . easy tailoring . . . How.to keep your table-cloth clean—just spread a hostess trans- ; -t iy parent cover over it. It saves time, work and meney—will wash _ important draped pockets, deep roomy’ sleeves . , . gold buttons - in a Jiffy with a damp cloth. Comes in size 54x72. And it really and a bowed neck for sweet prettiness’ sake! Sizes 12 fo 20, 14.93 enhances your table-cloth. ! a y . . y ; i §! ". .- : Wasson's Misses’ Shop, Second Floor .. ‘ i Wasson's Notions, iy : on ei vy Monument Store : - & ) z 4 : ¢ { v 5 ? .
