Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 December 1946 — Page 17
roducer t of Ten
BUNDSCHU t Correspondent Cc. 26.~Mrs. How= f the Hollywood the: New York st of best-dressed step ahead of the or. bi p from runner-up rs. Hawks ranked New York social lionairess, a feld an ex-congress-
t her jewelry but rise from fifth
> second in this on editors, stylists
ce 10th dortimer, one of ous Cushing sis te fashion editor, place after head ar, : ticut. representa- > Luce held her * 10 position, but dropped in ation ‘were Mrs, t, Mrs. George , Mrs. Harry Hope jussell and Mrs.
Dthers ‘ places on the 10to the following? the former THel-
aley, wife of Col ng system's presi [ Santa Barbara,
rs-up were Valen 't Adrian (Janet tish actress Leo=
Hostess
xiliary, Order of rs of America 103, al Christmas party ome of Mrs. Anna d. A covered dish gift exchange are
DUR
D CAMELIA [IGHBALL
00 DOZEN
DEC. 26
3
THE TEMPTING combination
Ear
Meta. Glven
of sweet potato, sausage and apple
.Bavors is a favorite among homemakers who strive for new and deli-
cious combinations for the table. Prepared in a casserole, these foods make a main dish for & post-Christmas meal that will please the family.
The recipe will appear tomorrow. » » t
» MONDAY Breakfast Sliced bananas on ready-to-eat cereal with sugar and cream Soft-cooked eggs Buttered toast , Luncheon Vegetable chowder Watercress or cabbage and bacon sandwiches on whole wheat bread Canned Queen Anne cherries
Dinner *Sweet potato, sausage and apple casserole Buttered broccoli Grapefruit nut aspic Rye bread and butter Remainder of Lady Baltimore cake Etewed apricots Milk to’ drink: Four c. for each child; 2 e. for each adult,
~ » » TUESDAY Wr Breakfast . Sliced oranges Cooked cereal with sugar and cream Raisin bread toast Luncheon '¥ichyssoise” soup and crisp crackers Pried beef and cream sandwiches Presh apples Dinner Whitefish baked in milk *Potatoes in caraway sauce Buttered spinach Beet and onion salad Rolls Rice pudding Milk to drinkKy Three ec. for each ¢hild} 1 e. for each adult, » ” »
cheese
WEDNESDAY Breakfast Tomato juice Jelly omelet Almond-filled coffee cake Dinner (New Year's day) French onion soup Roast beet with Yorkshire pudding *Caulifiower with pimiento cheese sauce Tossed vegetable salad Cloverleaf rolls Banbury tarts Supper Cream of mushroom soup Cucumber sandwiches Fresh pears and grapes ‘ Milk to drink: Three e. for each ¢hild; 1 e. for each adult, » » »
THURSDAY Breakfast
Grapefruit halves Cornmeal griddle eakes with butter and sirup : Luncheon ¢
with lettuce and mayonnaise
2.30
That ever wanted cotton
Seersucker—striped to
prettiness in a house dress! Styled with buttons from . neck to hem—to slip on in a jiffy, wear day-long! Tubbing won't fade red or blue stripes on white. Sizes 12 to 20, Other prints and plains, Sizes 14 to 44,
2.10 and 2.80
Wasson’s Pin Money - Dress Shop,
Xhird Floor
Celery sticks Potato chips Black walnut ice cream Dinner
Frankfurter pinwheels with parsley sauce '
Glazed carrots i Buttered Brussels sprouts Molded sunrise salad . “Vanilla pudding with crispy topping Milk to drink: Twg e. for each child, = =» FRIDAY Breakfast Stewed prunes Poached eggs on toast Luncheon Tuna fish salad sandwiches Sliced tomatoes and lettuce Sliced banana and orange fruit cup Dinner *Baked potatoes with salt pork gravy Buttered broccoli Waldorf salad Butterscotch pie Milk to drink: Three ec. for each
child; 1 c. for each adult, » » »
BATURDAY Breakfast Sliced bananas on ready-to-eat cereal Cinnamon toast Luncheon Egg cutlets with tomato sauce Whole wheat bread and butter Canned pears and butter cookies ° Dinner Braised veal steak with onions Mashed potatoes Fried apples *Wilted lettuce salad Fruit cake slices Milk to drink: Four c. for each child; 2 e. for each adult, SUNDAY Breakfast Stewed apricots Rolled oats with sugar and cream Sweet rolls Dinner Escalloped potatoes and ham Buttered whole-kernel corn *Spinach salad Bran muffins Orange cake Supper Cream of tomato soup Grilled cheese sandwiches Bread and butter pickles Butter cookies Milk to drink: child; 1 e. for each adult.
through next Wednesday,
peppermint
Host of set
Three c¢. for each
* Recipes for dishes marked with Cold sliced roast beef sandwiches asterisks will appear tomorrow
Remedies for
{Athlete’s Foot
By JANE STAFFORD Science Service Staff Writer
VICTIMS OF athlete's foot ‘can be given much better treatment now than formerly, A host of new, powerful and comparatively nonirritating chemicals that kill the fungus cause of the condition are now available to physicians, Dr. Louis Schwartz of the U, 8, public health service told druggists, chemists and doctors at the meeting of the ‘American Pharmaceutical Manufacturers’ association.
the ointment bases in which they are put up for medical use have been improved. Adding synthetic wetting agents to them makes it possible . for the fungus killers ;to attack more effectively, A » » = ONE STEREOTYPED form of remedy or treatment for all cases is no longer advised, Dr, Schwartz pointed out. The doctor will decide which chemical to use according to the needs and symptoms of the patient, The fungus-killing chemical remedy is not used, however, until after the inflamed skin has been relieved by soothing applications. A case of athlete's foot can be cleared up easily by “judicious use of wet dressing and these modern fungicides,” Dr, Schwartz declared.
” a» AFTER THAT it is up to the
avoid reinfection or recurrence. Preventive measures, advised also for people free of athlete's foot, are: Keep the feet dry, especially between the toes; remove by hand dead skin which is the breeding place of the fungi that cause the trouble; avoid walking barefoot in public bath houses. ' Of no value in preventing athlete’s foot are such formerly popular methods as foot baths in public showers, sprays of fungus killing chemicals and mats and flooring treated with such chemicals,
Woman Sports Scout
Irene Cullen is New England's only woman school sports publicity director. She knows sports as other women know fashions. Interested in future athletes, she “scouts” the lower grades and sees that promising talent is encouraged. In her “spare” time, she is an English teacher in a Rhode Island school.
WAVES Still on Job
Although nearly 80,000 WAVES have returned quietly to civilian clothes ‘and civilian ways of life, there is still a nucleus of some 5500 who have volunteered, at the navy's request, to remain at the specialized jobs for which they were particularly trained
necessary in peace as in war,
Besides the new fungus killers].
patient to take care of his feet to young girl. Tie a big saucy bow in
and which are as
ee
By SUE BURNETT
A snowy white vestee gives a party air to this exciting little dress. Short puffed sleeves and a full swinging skirt please every back. ; Pattern 8104 comes in sizes 3, 4, 5, 6, T and 8 years. Size 4 requires
for vestee, For this pattern, send 25 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. Send an additional 25 cents for the fall and winter issue of Fashion—52 pages of the smartest, most wearable patterns you'll see , , fashions by well known designers . « » Special beauty and homemaking sections . , . free printed pattern inside the book. # »
Snow H,
(i >] dette
By MRS, ANNE CABOT Simply knitted in a ribbed stitch
in a brightly colored wool and topped with separately crocheted wool flowers of gay hues, this hood will be your youngster's favorite head covering on blizzardy days! Older girls like it for skiing and skating jaunts. White, crimson, navy, Kelly green, brown, ecru are only a few of the colors you may choose. To obtain complete knitting instructions for the close-fitting snow hood (pattern 5074), send 16 cents in coin, your name, address and the pattern number to Anne Cabot, The Indianapolis Times, 530 8. Wells st., Chicago 7.
Back to Hobby
Mrs. Chester Nimitz, wife of the admiral, asked for a “war job that wasn’t glamorous and one that no one else wanted to do.” Through her efforts, countless sailors’ wives had their problems solved and received help. Now that she has more time to herself, she has resumed her favorite hobby of painting,
Lots of Rugs
Mrs. Clara Skipper, aged 83, Columbus, O,, has been weaving an average of three rugs a week for 30 years. She has used the same old
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES __ ~ Party Frock
1% yards of 36 or 39-inch; % yard|
. minute for today as earlier editions
New Edition Of Cook Book Is Issued
"THE BOSTON COOKING. SCHOOL COOK BOOK." By Fannie Merritt Farmer. Boston. Little, Brown & Co., $2.75.
By BARBARA BROEKING
One of America’s most famdus cook books has been revised for the seventh time and housewives nave sent the number of copies sold up to 2,531,000. Now the latest edition celebrates its golden jubilee year Fannie Merritt Farmer's “Boston Cooking-8School Cook Book” Is the “Bible” of American cookery—it has recipes for one-egg to 10-egg cakes and as soon as a beginner boils water she can understand the starred recipes marked “basic” in the new guide. There is new material in this latest edition on canning, jelly making and food preservation based on the results of governmental and private research during the last five years. There is a new chapter on freezing, including what to freeze and how to freeze like an expert. And for better understanding, Martha Powell Setchell has {llustrated the book with helpful diagrams and pictures. The recipes have been tested and retested. New ones have been added, old ones subtracted. There's a grand total of 3000. Fannie Farmer, the “mother of level measurements,” started her school of cookery in 1902 in Boston. For 10 years before her death she conducted a cooking, page in The Woman's Home Companion, at that time a record achievement, and lectured twice a week. During the last seven years of her life, she was confined to a wheel chair, yet she continued overseeing her school and even gave her weekly demonstration lectures until two weeks before her death on Jan. 15, 1915. The woman who established the] indispensable element of accuracy in cookery has passed on results of her work in the cook book. With its new edition it is as up-to-the-
were for years gone by.
RR
iron loom all that time,
CITY-WIDE CHT EH
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* 706 E. Sixty-Third Street % 3001 N. Illinois Street
LEER L ERLE)
[J Ossh
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H. P. WASSON & COMPANY, INDIANAPOLIS 9, INDIANA
Please send me .....e000 se. Seersucker Dresses
Ist Oolor Oholce. II) 2nd Color Choice. tana
NAME concecoscsncessensssrcessssnnns [00.0.D. Street SONA ERAARIRN ARs
[1] Charge OltW...oonnnvnniinnss Btate......io00e
PORN ANNI NNI INI E NII RNRNNS 7
* 1541 N. Illinois Street * 1533 Roosevelt Avenue * 1125 S. Meridian Street . % 2122 E. Tenth Street * 5501 E, Washington Street * 2506 E. Washington Street. % 500 E. Washington Street * 474 W. Washington Street * 2600 W. Michigan Street % 1233 Oliver Avenue
Branch Depositors are automatically served downtown at the Main Office
Fletcher Trust
\.
LW. Corner Pennsylvania and Market Sts, INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA
MEMBER {EDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
H
| As a
2
MEMBER FERERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORRORATION !
vgs
make a festive holiday sdlad.
NEW YEAR'S BELL—Pear, cream cheese and jelly combine to
FA
Good Speakers Win Honors
THE WOMAN who wins com=unity leadership, coveted club chairmanships or toastmaster hone ors from tongue-tied competitors because she can rise and speak effectively can go on from there— maybe to congress—if she will use expert techniques in improving her platform appeal. For her, good taste in dress, which eschews for one thing, large flowered prints that conflict with her personality, and for another, fur pieces, which can give a woman a wild, primitive outline from a distance, is one of her biggest assets. So says Jessie Haver Butler, active citizen, speech teacher and author of “Time to Speak Up,” a new book brimful of advice to both beginner and practiced performer. ” » . MRS. BUTLER advises wearing dresses of solid color for the platform, touched up with light trimming, colorful accessories or jewelry.
She warns against jewelry that rattles or dangles conspicuously, The ornamental fur piece, if needed, is best carried on an arm and not worn, she says, because of its annoying habit of slipping down and its tendency to mage nify a large woman's proportions.
” ”» # GLOVES CAN make a lady platformer's hands look like baseball
bats and for that reason should
come off at the rostrum, says Mrs. Butler. Hats can be meanies, too, and should be chosen carefully— never wacky ones—if worn at all, Many public speakers, including Mrs. Butlér, don't take a chance on hats slicing off the tops of their heads and creating bizarre effects from the back of the hall, Posture on the platform is important, and so are effective gestures. Gestures, so long as they are not distracting, can be made
with head, face, hands and in
fact, the whole body, says Mrs, Butler, to emphasize important points.
a 3
Tailored the casual, classic California way ... this Worsted stripe suit, with the rounded, eagle-spread shoulders, the waist-diminishing one button closing, the squared-off
pockets you'll find again and again in the coming Spring styles! In grey with red, blue or gold stripes.
¢
Sizes 10 to 20. Wasson’s Suit Shop, Second Floor
Red or green food coloring
% oc. currant jelly i 2 3-08, pkgs. cream cheese % 11% thsps. cream 4
Drain pear halves, Place % teaspoon red or green food color
blended. Put mixture in pastry” tube and make a decorative line over the space where the two pear halves meet, Top with a small dab of jelly, $ Makes six salads,
Miss Keller in Rome
Miss Helen Keller arrived in recently on her tour to the condition of Europe's -
capped persons.
a
There’s Nothing So Right
ROSENBLUM SUIT
399
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%
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