Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 July 1947 — Page 15

9, 1947.

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TUESDAY, JULY 29, 1947

A Child Learns the

: HOW BEST can a sturdy runabout learn about the food he eats

© than - actually to participate in

gardening activities? This ipterest should. 0. cultivated because ‘it opens flelds of knowledge for

the tykes,

To be sure’ there will be a

volume of questions to answer, such as—why do some vegetables:

grow underground while others are

above, what makes the pretty colors, the names of racing insects, trees and birds. Allow the child to develop his own little garden near the family plot. Give him sturdy tools that he can handle and that will accomplish the job. ber that his attention span is short -and that persistent driving for him to tend his plot may take out all the joy of this new-found pleasure, = The plo}. should bé his own to do ‘as he wishes and at his own

- speed. He'll enjoy digging in the

soil, scattering seeds and watering his pet square. These experiences not only permit him to enjoy sunshine and the outdoors but also expand his knowledge of the world about him, He'll not have the patience of the adult to wait until the product is full grown, He just has no resistance—he must pull up the plant to see what makes it grow long before the flower appears. ~ Nevertheless, this activity keeps him busy

. = =» VEGETABLES and flowers that are interesting and fast growing should be used by this young tiller of the soil. From 10 to 14 days the bright glory of golden nasturtiums, vari-colored . zinnias and blazing yellow marigolds will pop up to surprise the youngster. Carrots and radishes are good, too. The busy

“Tittle “gardener will ‘enjoy digging

for them, washing them and eating them without further preparation. Parents sharing this activity with a child will find it really worthwhile in developing a deep friendship. In the end, there may be fewer beans, peas and flowers in the family plot but that Is minor compared to the great value derived from such experiences,

HOW DOES YOUR GARDEN GROW ?—Quizzical, this little

lad is carious about the secrets

. good weather for a child to start his own little “play” garden.

Every gardener realizes the special care that is necessary in encouraging plant life. This fact only emphasizes _ the need. for careful planning and exacting care in the nurture of a human life.

» » » v TO GROW, our children should have proper food. From infancy they must have the best of milk, orange and tomato juice and vitamin D sources. Later, the doctor orders a more complete diet rounded out with strained vegetables and fruits, cereals and soups to provide

Calico Cat

Big bright eyes, red mouth and

snappy whiskers are embroidered i

- on a loveable kitten. . . , A 12inch armful of fun “for any youngster. Make in calico, gingham or percale, line legs and ears with edntrasting colored material or scraps of felt for durability. To obtain complete cutting pattern, color chart for embroider-

ing face, finishing directions for

calico cat (pattern 5368) send 16 cents in coin, your name, address and the pattern number to Anne Cabot, The. Indianapolis Times, 530 S., Wells st, Chicago 7. >

| 4

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SISPEM | 10:46P.M. | FEE 538% GURY * 1884

rst ai Ww aint

I” LEAVES | ARRIVES

[foods of ¢HOpPEd And ~sauced veg [[0F-baby.are an unbreakable. mug Awith big handles, special bowls and |

{Baby Travels With Parents

In Comfort

Food May Be Kept Conveniently, Now “DO COME and bring the baby. We're all set for him.” “Whoever Heard of a baby staying home in 1947? When the family locks the door and leaves a note for the milkman, baby sails right along—whether it's travel by air, train or car, Off for a holiday they go with light hearts and light equipment for baby, well knowing that his regular variety menu will ‘be served in the air—or at jour-| ney's end. In the not-so-old days, going over the river and through the woods to dmother's house méant tak-| ing a basket lunch for baby, For grandmother was almost certain to have rich-gravied roast and spicy, ‘| lattice-topped pies that would have thrown the entire high chair crowd | out of kilter.

» » » NOW relatives and friends who have juniors on the visiting list prepare their welcome in advance by setting up an emergency shelf for baby, well-stocked with his favorite foods. It's fairly simple for baby to get adjusted to a strange bed and unfamiliar surroundings if he doesn't have to get used to new Hoods. So in anticipation of her small but oh-so-important guest, grandma reserves a section of the pantry shelf and lines it with paper bordered with bright animals. Ready

of nature. There is still plenty of

extra vitamins and minerals babies’ growing bodies need. Then the active toddlers enjoy their own specially -adapted junior

etables, soups, and fruit desse with added nutritive values washable bibs which grandma Throughout childhood * years, [makes by sewing tapes on turkish children's food should be the best, wash cloths, the most nutritious that agriculture, | science and industry can yield. Thus, will be created strong bones, firm flesh, gleaming teeth, glossy hair, steady nerves, keen eyes and alert minds.

ON EACH Ory trip, Grand: ma has been adding extra foods for this emergency shelf, so that her pride and joy will find it well stocked.

‘Mom’ Can Help Her Daughter Win Friends

By ALICIA HART NEA ‘Staff Writer YOU WANT your little daughter to have friends, but do you hep her to win them? A well-known pediatrician tells. the mother how to help her child. | One way, he says, is to roll up,

your sleeves and aid your child;

|in her friendship campaign. invite ? | desirable

little children * to your home. Or better still, encourage

your daughter to invite friends in }

to play.

hostess, she will learn early what { will prove invaluable to her as she ‘grows up-—the gracious art of en-" tertaining. Does your child have friends of

4 | IF A CHILD is allowed to play |

whom you disapprove? Better than!

putting - your foot down against them, according to the expert is to steer her into more desirable friendships. . v 8 un _» IF YOUR child shies away from

| friends, a powerful aid in building §

'up her self-confidence and making . her feel more secure in the presence of other youngsters is to cul- | tivate her talents. Lessons that will develop any aptitude—in “music, art, language or physical sports—will help to | bolster a child's self-confidence | and overcome an anti-social atti- | tude.

TEEN TOGS—Off to school with her wardrobe carefully packed is ‘Patty Nackenhorst. For traveling in this late summer heat Patty has chosen a yellow Sacony (rayon jersey) dress and topped it with a. Dobbs hat. Spettators take care of the footwdar. Patty is a member of the Joey and M. N. K. S. clubs and was Ais ated from Shortridge high

school in June. (Strauss ).

TA IE SK

Insurance

utual Agency, Inc. 1740 North Meridian $0. WAbash 2456

+5 and 6 years. Size 3, 1% yards of

‘{ your home.

“For instance, baby is especially fond of barley cereal, and alongside the box of this pre-cooked favorite are baby arrowroot cookies, graham crackers and crisp zwieback — a crunching trio for those brand-new teeth. If the visitor is a toddler, there

Drawstring

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Whys' in His Own Garden |

remove seeds with their clinging | fibers,

lets Eat

Meta oe

IN BUYING cantaloupe the shopper wants only normally developed, vine-ripened melons. A vine-ripened melon separates from its vine of its own accord or ‘at the touch of a finger and leaves a_scar from % to ig-inch deep. Look for this scar and smell for fragrance. Don't chill before serving.

J » » OCANTALOUPE COCKTAIL (For Thursday dinner) 1 medium cantaloupe 3 peaches, chilled 1 c. sliced strawberries or whole raspberries, chilled 1 tbsp. honey 1% ¢. chilled cider or gingerale Choose well-ripened, fine-flavored fruits. Cut melon into halves,

Cut into half-inch lengthwise pieces. Peel and cut into dice, letting them drop into glass, ‘bowl. © Add the peeled, - diced i peaches and’ berries, Drizzle the honey over the top and toss very gently to distribute the fruit evenly. Turn into cold cocktail glasses. Add the cider or gingerale and serve immediately. Serves six to eight. » » ”n APRICOT BAVARIAN (For Friday dinner) 2 tsps. plain gelatin

1% ¢. cold water ~

3% c..apricot puree - % c¢. confectioners sugar 1 c. whipping cream or evaporated milk (or 1 ¢. coffee cream plus 1 tsp. granulated gelatin) 2 tsps. lemon juice " Soften gelatin in cold water. Heat RprieUs puree to bolting {Make apricot puree by combining % pound dried apricots with two cups cold water after washing and soaking apricots for two or three hours in three cups water... Simmer until Just tender. Stir in % to 4 cup sugar.) Add confectioners sugar to puree and softened gelatin and stir thoroughly until dissolved. Cool until mixture becomes thick and sirupy. Whip whipping cream or

stiff, add lemon juice and éontinue beating until well blended. Fold into apricot puree, turn into mold and chill until firm. Unmold onto chilled serving plate.

are chopped or junior foods in the convenient, standard size that bridges the critical gap between strained foods and the family ‘table.

Within the Sma

mer about 10 degrees. This is the usual air conditioned small house of today. Most all good furnaces now have these "blower fan attachments that will circulate the hot and cool air. Air conditioning as thought of in connection with the modern small house really consists of heating, cooling and humidifying the air in a warm air furnace. The apparatus cleans and circulates the air, delivering warm air in winter and cool basement air in summer time. | » "'*e THERE ARE other systems more elaborate and technical that may be used in connection with other heating systems.’ Really to air condition a house would require not only a circu- - lating fan, but also equipment

By SUE BURNETT

Just one pattern piece to make this dainty party dress for. little girls! Wee drawstrings at the waistline and neck front make it so easy to adjust to her tiny figure—she'll beg to wear it other times, too. Pattern 8173 is for sizes 2, 3,4,

Beauties’ Hints— Trim Figure Needs Support

THE TEEN-AGER who prizes a trim figure will seek the undercover aid of a lightweight pantie girdle. Yielding ‘to the control of girdle pays off in double beauty benefits. First, sheer clothes fit more smoothly on a figure which hews | to the sleek lines molded by a foundation garment. Second, the knowledge that you're looking] your trimmest builds up a self-| FINICKY appetites, like the| confidence whiche sloppier dress weather, are always with us. The| habits can undermine, problem may be an adult on a . #8. special diet, or your precious tod-| WHAT'S more, your summer dler suddenly a problem child at streamlining problems can be solved mealtime. in cool comfort. New nylon How about cutting jellied strained | Pantie girdles cater to the healthy vegetables or fruits into fancy| Young figure which, expert stylists shapes as a decorative touch for the menu? Works better when the .jellied foods are prepared in thin layers, and it works, too, in hospitals and other institutions where

lagging appetites aust be coaxed. » »

HERE'S HOW: Soak dne tea- | spoon plain, unflavored gelatin in| two tablespoons cold water. After Rug Care five minutes, combine with one can

strained fruit or vegetable which! has been heated. Stir well until| {fom 8 rug when washing it, and if

dissolved Pour into molds or chil | ‘he surface is napped, give it a good

shaking, For drying, place ‘on ere ing yor 2 Was fancy cut. parallel clothes lines so the circulat-

A ————————————————————— ing air can speed the process. Decorating Note BE ie There is an effective and inexpen- Indianapolis Water Co.

sive way to simulate wainscotting in DIVIDEND NOTICE

Wallpaper dados are available in various colors, and may Preferred. Stock

be used under other wallpapers— scenics, wood paneling, ete regu AU = doting and genty.five ‘cents ($1.25) a

re has red by the Board of 2 hi Arectors on the 5% Cumulative Preferred ; ay

Boek, Beries A’, -payable October 1, ‘Sold Exclusively in Marion Co. at

to holders of record Beptember 13’

35 or 39-inch. ‘For this pattern, send 25 cents in coins, your name, address, size desired and the pattern number to The Indianapolis, Times Pattern service, 214 W. Maryland st, Indianapolis 9. Ready now—the new summer Fashion. Fifty-two pages of style, color, fashion news for every woman who sews. Send 25 cents for your copy today. today.

Fancy ancy ‘Molds Enhance Food

smooth out bulges, featherweights weigh as little as four ounces—or as much as a few handkerchiefs. Yet they give a figure firm support without restricting- freedom of action on the tennis courts or dance floor,

Common Stock, Class “A” share Share has heen Shen red by, the Board of eek y ama 3, a1, 5 holdip Baysble sep August 11, 1947. |

ELMER C, SCHWIER,

say, needs only gentle coaxing to| These . pastel |

Squeeze out the excess moisture

lar warts , dividend of one

A dividend of twenty cents (20¢) a

Note:. The rHhipping or coffee cream may be increased fo % cup if a less concentrated apricot flavor is | preferred.

How to Build Your House: No, 22 An Attic Fan Is Effective In Lowering Temperature

Il House

coffee cream-gelatin mixture. When |Y'

By PAUL T. HAAGEN, Noted Architect WE HEAR SO MANY PEOPLE say today that their houses are air conditioned. What they really mean is that the new type furnaces installed before the war have a blower fan in connection with the heating system. This does circulate the air throughout the house and possibly may reduce the temperature of the house in sum-

ATTIC FAN: Howe color,

which would cool the air which the fan then circulates to the various rooms.: This is expensive and is not included in most small houses. 13 wae ANOTHER system of alr conditioning and cooling the house~ one that is becoming quite popular—is to place in the attic .a large, slow-moving attic fan which draws the hot air up through the house, circulating the cool base ment air. The fan forces the hot air out through an attic opening. These fans are very useful in warm climates and offer an efiiclient and economical method of reducing the temperature in a house. :

Cooking Tip

{ If you have over-salted vegetables in cooking, a piece of raw potato | popped into the water will absorb | the salt and prevent wasting the vegetable,

we dig it up:

ONE YEAR OLD—Mrs. Paul

a year-old rose bush that was started from a six-inch wy Not only

the *op growth, but the root healthy state.

Gardening

It Takes Little Money or Time

To Start a Rose

With Six-Inch Cuttings

By MARGUERITE SMITH

HERE'S ONE way to be a we Paul Dunbars, 928 Rochester ave,

ly they took along 25 young rosebushes, set them out for their hosts,

and left instructions for after care. For the Dunbars make a hobby

“Anybody can have all the roses he wants—it doesn’t take money,

it just takes a six-inch slip from a rose you admire in a friend's ard,” says Mrs. Dunbar. (This ability to “start a slip” is ond of the most worthwhile a beginning gardener can learn. You experienced “green thumbers” who do it as a matter of course, can't you remember the time when it seemed a miracle to you?) Here's the Dunbars’ method for roses, ” » ” “WE STRIP off a slip at least six inches long (12 inches is better), taking as much heart wood, or second year wood, with it as we can get. The more heart wood the better we feel about its chances of rooting. Then we take off all but

the top two or three sets of leaves. |puts two slips under each jar to

Each slip then goes into vitamin Bl solution until we're ready to put it in the cutting bed.:

jar about a month later. They'd started a tiny root right in the

teas root that easily. “To prepare the cutting bed, which is in shade, we wet the ground

| {thoroughly. In a really dry summer

we'll soak it for three nights before Then just before spading we sprinkle a handfull of chemical fertilizer to a space large enough for two dozen slips, about 15 square feet. “We insert the slips so an inch or two of top is left out, place a glass Jar firmly over each one. After all slips are placed we wet the ground again. Once the jars are set we never move them until we're ready to uncover the cuttings. For once a moist atmosphere has developed inside; opening the jar means a sudyn change that's no good for the slp. “In the fall, we pull dirt half way up arpund each jar, You could save thi® work by burying the jars deeper ‘when you put them on, 1 suppose. Or you could give them winter protection by piling straw around the jars.” The slips are uncovered in spring, after frost, at first for only a few hours in mid-day, August is the

Frozen Fish

More and more housewives prefer fish in frozen form because it assures freshness and will keep indefinitely under proper conditions. Freezing of oll fish has not yet been perfected, but the Atlantic Coast Fisheries Co, is perfecting methods to add to its cod and haddock line frozen salmon and mackerel, Fish first put in cold storage is frozen at 30-degrees below, then stored from

0 to 5-degrees below.

|

two-door refrigerators . . .

them on hand NOW. See

oretary. 3

100-LB. SIZE VITALAIRES

Now in Steck!

At long last—we can supply these big, beautiful VI. 1 TALAIRE Ice Re. | frigerators in amJ ple 100 LB, SIZE! These are the super economical opening food compartment

does not expose ice to room heat. We have several of

them in our showrooms-—or

phone TAlbot 2451 for informatian.

POLA

2000 NORT HWE S1EsN. AVENUE

ICE AND FUEL C0.

Or Lipsticks

Lots of Caviar Ter Jot No ut No Vegetables)

BARBARA fa YORK, go ’ . ‘women of Leningrad wear worn clothes and hand-me-downs, few of them own hats or lipsticks, “but you - can't take the feeling for fashion out of women’s hearts.” That's the report brought back k by fur designer Esther Dorothy from the first post-war Russian tur aug~ tions. “You should have seen them pore ing over my American fashion mage azines,” ‘Miss Dorothy said of the + {young women assistants at the auc

Dunbar, 928 Rochester ave., holds

developmént as well, shows ifs

Garden

lcome week-end guest. When the visited out-of-town friends recent-

of starting roses from cuttings.

best month to start roses, the Dunbars think, “In August the ground is till warm, you get hothouse conditions under that jar, Then by September good cool growing weather begins,” Mrs. Dunbar concluded. » » ~ F. M. GOODWIN, 105 8. Webster ave., who estimates that in some 45 years of slipping roses he's probably started thousands, also emphasizes the importance of a good “heel” on his cuttings, (I find that point stressed over and over again by!" green thumb rose growers.) His cuttings “just rough It" he says, He strips them off in late June, uses half sand, hhlf soil, isn't particular about sun or shade, and

tion,

haven't anything to hold in.” : acu Nise Borsithy- sald -the--ansager res

They (asked her opinjon of Russian-manufactured fur coats, she said. First she made sure they 1 not be offended, then she told them, “Your coats will keep you warm, but our coats will not only keep you warm, they'll make you beauti« ful.” Miss Dorothy said Russia's appare ently very scarce stocks of women's clothes were five to 10 years behind Amedican styles. Most of the women she saw wore “jersey tubes” or “old cotton dresses,” she said.

Meager Stocks Come Special Order

B Yt you saw a woman in a tailored suit, it looked as if it had been sent her from some other country,” she said. Shoes, she sald, were the Russian woman's most evident need. Girdles on sale in their shops, she said, had button closings, “but most Russian women don't need girdles, they

stocks of clothes in the shops had to be ordered specially, with delivery anywhere from a month to six weeks after order. Only the upper class and the artist class women wore hats, Miss Dorothy ‘said, Even they had so little lipstick that they use quly a little bit around the edges of the lips. The only evening dress Mis Dorothy saw was on an entertainer in her, hotel, presumably required for professional reasons. The importance of clothes to the Russian woman was illustrated by prices in one shop, Miss Dorothy said. A small fox shoulder cape was on sale for $300; a piece of priceless antique bronze could be had for $25. “There's lots of caviar,” Miss Dorothy said, “but very Tew green vegetables.”

Pianos Turn Backs Away From Walls

Pianos, which long have had thelr

save room. One additional point—our grand-

mothers used vinegar on cutting “One time I forgot a couple of|beds. Today's experts say that slips of ramblers that I'd set back|slips root better in acid soil. Some |! behind some shrubbery. I found the gardeners use hormone prepara-

tions to provide ideal conditions,

Most failures are probably due to solution. But I've never had hybrid air pockets around slips and lack of

soil acidity. Beginners, try your luck!

tion rights restricted,”

It’s so easy that many of the newer roses are patented—that means “propaga-

backs to the wall, can come out into the“middle of the room row and home owners can plan on more ts,

Celery Curls + Celery can be thinly sliced and put in a containér in the refrige erator with a slice of raw potato to

curlicues.

“Telephone

Rlley 7411

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make the celery oun into delicate