Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 September 1947 — Page 26
PAGE 26 9
land Weeding s Recreation |! ‘or Mr. Taka | Garden He Cares for Boasts Variety : By MARGUERITE SMITH FROM THE time of crocusses until icy winds | slacken the last chrysanthemum, the garden of the
“athedral apartment at
‘530 Central ave. gives pleasure o all who live there.
Especially to Chosan ‘Taka, vhose work it is. “Just for a iobby” he has created a world-‘Athin-a-world, seemingly far off rom the traffic of the busy city | treet, just over the brick wall and high gate. He began gardening in his boy« | hood days near Tokyo, There he | Alsed chrysanthemums and morning glories, “Not like the morning glories here,” he ex~ | lained, “The Japanese don't have nuch room
but they're artisue nd patient. So we train plants,
ten dwarf them.”
eV
Perhaps that patience accounts r his stepping stone walk It *ads from the perennial-bordered AWN to the cutting and vegetable arden. “It took me three months | ——— : 0 lay {tI couldn't work at it | care of apartments, plays tennis = scribes his down-on-knees hand
RAISED FROM SEED-—Chasan Taka, 1539 Cent
grew these double petunias
ave,,
( from seed,
ery long at a time,” for he waits | and golf as well as gardens; | Weeding, table at the. University club, takes “That's my recreation” he de | . ..8 . I'M SURE it's patience that exTian, Gro, plains his “luck” with raising double petunias from seed. Started in his cold frame, they're now ¥ blossoming their heads off in
Serve Drinks
flower pots--ready to take indoors if he chooses, STUHR RAYE Thoasts varieLy, too. When Miss Ruby Wolfe, one of the apartment dwellers, entertained some friends last July they made a guessing’ game of Mr, Taka's garden—naming the flowers I then in bloom. Mrs. Cora Rentsch- | Ter 5451 E..10th st., came out best, | She recognized 37 kinds. He has ideas on cooking, also. | Of soy beans he says, “They're important food in Japan. We cook them with soy sauce and just a little sugar with vegetables. we eat the beans with rice: cooked plain.” (The soys, rich In fat, season the rice.) Boy heans make a tasty soup when they're cooked the way we do dried pea beans. Green onions sliced into the thick soup add flavor. Or cook soy beans with any vegetable that's in sea-son-“-they add minerals and fat. Mr. Taka attracts all kinds of birds to his city garden. “So many cardinals come they'll -eat five pounds of sunflower seed a week,” he laughed .
With Clear, Sparkling ‘POLAR ICE
There's romance in a tasty beverage chilled with tink. ling ice that glistens and sparkles in tall glaises. BUT . —it takes. real POLAR ICE to turn the trick. So taste. free it adds only enjoyment to the bouquet of fine in. gredients . . . so clear it leaves no embarrassing sedi- * ment so often found in home-made cubes, “It costs so
lite—NEVER BE WITHOUT IT! ICE AND
POLAR ©»
2000 NORTHWESTERN AVENUE (7: ~ 37 W. 16th St. 1902 S. East St. A
G29 SMART 2» ee YAH
NMuFeN Mf
SO EASY WITH EKE-Z-BAKE!
Broiled Grapefruit
with honey, sprinkle with coconut
i] 3 atience Builds a Garden in the City The Doctor Says—.
Then |
Ready to broil grapefruit? Trickle
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES .. | Shaded Pansies Help Needed Cit H ; For Difficulty. In Hearing Handicapped Child . . - Requires Praise | By WILLIAM A. O'BRIEN, M. D. | THE HAPPINESS of the hard-of- § hearing child at home depends on {how well his parents understand {his handicap and help him to over[come it. CR | Laila Larson, of the University of ‘Minnesota speech clinic, warns parents to praise their. child's efforts ito speak, even though they may not ¥2 understand him too well. She also h urges them to get his attention by clapping their hands or tapping itheir foot before speaking to him,
Speak in a natural voice, as this ®
Right: All wool jacket in plain colors of red; navy, green or brown, Sizes 10 to 16. 13.98
Plaid knife pleated skirt, sizes 10 to 16,
— —- Ka a gn -
* Daily Store Hours, Monday Through : :
Saturday, 9:30 A. M.'til 5 P.M. = ° ) ~~ ga /
gives him the best opportunity to 8.98, ii 1 read your lips. Face the light Lem: : BR when you speak, and never point i {to anything while you are talking, Plain BA a knife == for this distracts the child and Pleated 24. 558 ; causes his eyes to wander, Learn \ i th words which are easiest for \ : 'him to understand and use them in Plaid all. wool shirts | {preference to ones requiring more _ to be worn in or out. \ % \complicated lip movements. a Sizes ! to 14. 17.98 ( | Hard -of - hearing children are 95 6 8" j ™, \ A - under great strain, and should be By MRS. ANNE CABOT 4) 1,» 2% given a chance to rest often. Hold A dainty chair set with surpris- ¥ “ { gy 4 th the child on your lap and sing to {ingly life-like crocheted pansies is 4 ‘ him, provide’ him with musical equally attractive if used as a 2 . —— cm. Eg toys, urge him -to listen to the dresser set. Crochet the pansies om rT ie re vy radio, tell him storfes in which {5 shaded lavender cotton, using : by sound effects are used so he may the same colors for the center ° ’ ° ’* .- learn to interpret vibrations. “buds” and making the rest of the ’ yy » pieces in white or cream color, Girls Plaids I Plains “ BE FIRM in your discipline, but To obtain complete crocheting give the child the benefit of the {instructions and stitch illustradoubt, as he may not have under- tions for shaded pansies set, (pate ©
stood. Have great patience in dealing with him, Make him feel that he has nothing to fear, that you love him as you do your other children. Treat him as a norma], member of the family and help him to be self-reliant,
YYY, "a8 “3oon as the Nearing 10s is discovered, -school and home cooperate in a program which will (teach the child efficiently, he wii {make a satisfactory adjustment and {be happy. | Many young children wear hearing aids today and, if properly fitted, they help them to hear. They should be taught lip reading and kept in school with normal children whenever possible.
tern 5568), send 16 cents in coin, your name, address and the pat tern number to Anne Cabot, The Indianapolis Times, 530 8, Wells st., Chicago 7.
We, the Women... = Our Culture
akes' Adults Too Early
By RUTH MILLETT
NEA Staff Writer JAMES F. O'NEIL, newly elected
national commander of the American Legion, says that juvenile de-
QUESTION. are N AJections o). linquency is America’s Public Eneways advised : for women going my No. 5, through the menopause?’ His statement ANSWER: No. In the majority! WM Was made imme. of cases the change is not disturb- diately following
ing. In a few women, injections of sex hormones are necessary to ease. the patient over the change. | |
Presidents Day Set By D. A. R. Chapter
t wo particularly horrifying examples of the juvenile delinquent at work.
gE Item: One 4-. year-old boy, to
The Cornelia Cole Fairbanks prove himself not chapter. of the D. A. R. will have a sissy, deliberits presidents day luncheon Thurs- Ruth Millett ately setting out
day at 1 p. m. in the Propylaeum. { Mrs. F. G. Balz will speak on "Women Around the World” after the luncheon. The hostesses are
on a plan to kill another youth, Item: A wild gang fight on the streets of New York, in which many of the participants walked Mesdames Douglas T. Reid, Logan away with black eyes and other Hall, Charles R. Weiss, Mansur marks of damage. This would not Oakes and Miss Marjorie Dice. pe unusual, except all the brawlers
i TT TT . ere girls, participating in a street Forget Birthdays fight. to
{fight to determine which of two : : acti av aim ‘For Long Lifetime factions should have prior clai NEW YORK: — Inheritance and
over a group of boys as dates. sensible living_are the two greatest factors in longevity. All of which {may be wrapped up in the philoso{phy of Mrs. Anna M. Jerome who [recently observed her 103d birth{day anniversary, “Remain active; forget vour birthdays, and just live from day to day”
is her formula for long life : y 7 have run .away fron home and Dress Up Por k Loaf joined a circus, or Ye of | Make canned pork loaf surpris- that kind. But it wouldn't have ingly tasty by studding it with occurred to him to kill. cloves and then covering it with a A decade ago, a group of girls, to (sauce made of one tablespoon of sstablish their dating claims, would {apple jelly, one tablespoon of mo- have primped a bit more, or dressed {lasses and one tablespoon of orange more carefully, But they wouldn't |Juice, Place a little water in the have slugged it out. {bottom of the baking pan and baste. The No. 1 Public Enemy, Comfrequently with the sauce that mander, is the civilization which {forms during the baking. creates an adult too young.
” ” n THE ONLY trouble with Cmdr. O'Neill's statement is that there is no such thing as a “juvenile” delinquent any more. Juvenile in vears, possibly. Juvenile in stature, perhaps. But there is no. more juvenile mind. A decade ago, a 14-year-old boy, to establish his masculinity, would
H. P. WASSON & COMPANY
Styled to the Gayest of School Clothes!
E
Every school-going girl is wild about a bright plaid, coupled with plas cofors{ And look what's in store for her , .. plaid shirts buttoned with silver . . . skirts with knife-edge pleats . . . sport jackets. They're really something to write up in your diary! ;
Wasson’s Girls’ Store, Fifth Floor
Felephone Riley 3 |
Str iped Flannels! News in Student
SUITS 938
Wow! Is the student’s word for these snappy new British Lounge suits! They're onebutton, roll-lapel style with wide shoulders and tapered waist. Rich wool flannel in brown, gray or blue with white stripe. Sizes 34 to 40,
Glen Plaid Suits .39.78
Springfoot Sox .39¢ to 55e¢
FRIDAY, SEPT. 26, 194%
RR os Rr EMO SANT sc init
»
pinched—t niture, fo cord to th 5. Conn outlets, N cause the electricity 6. Plug at conve rather thi prevent d terminal.
Don't C To Ligh 7. Gras when disc
This prev
from the 1 8. After the cord: that is pe: appliance the applia tachable c and laid | shelf. Or wooden pe prevent a
Here's
Fire 1
An effec be found kitchen: soda. If catches fir water on the flame. Just spr soda on { smothers bonie acl envelops ! supply of Use H For S: Make he parts of | butter) ¢ (equal pax cheese anc and sprea various kis To mak fourth cuj half cup © ing mixtu of honey,
Clean When y new slipco sure to va thoroughl; ners and
’ 4
-— 1 --amea.a-a.es
&, BASIC E-Z-BAKE MUFFIN RECIPE | 2 cups sifted E-Z-BAKE Enriched Flour ! 1 egg 3 LV ! 3 teaspoons baking powder | | 1 cup milk - | 1 teaspoon salt ' 2 tablespoons melted shortening | Plump, fluffy muffine—high on ev ery | 2 tablespoons sugar i t tamily § Qooa pating st Are no ! Bift together flour, baking powder salt and ' trick. at all when you follow this | sugar, Beat egg and add milk and shortening | i t Add egg mixture to flour mixture, stirririg only tried-ana-testeq bas recipe , 4 ’ until flour is moistened. Fill greased muffin . |! and when you use dependable, pans half full. Bake iA hot oven 425° F.,) 20 i 7 { R | mutes. Yield: 12 2-1, inch muffins thrice-enriched E.L-BAKE flour, Re. | : . ! member: Cool weather's coming VARIATIONS | oo I When extra ingredients are added to a basic soon, so make sure there's plenty of : muffin recipe, there may be danger’ of over-~ | all-purpose E-Z.BAKE in the pantry stirring when they are folded into the patter. l | alin’ ’ ( To avoid this possibility, dry ingredients such fo bake a te delicious dishes you as chopped ruts, raisins or grated cheese may | have been doing without all sume I be folded into the flour mixture before the \ mer. Put E-Z-BAKE on your shop { liquid is added, Wet ingredients. sucn as i ‘ ; ; crushed pineapple or honey, may be added I ping list-now, +} to the liquid before combining the liquid and | { the flour mixture, \ | Apple Muffins.” To Basic Muffin Recipe, add 1 '-teaspoon cinnamon, 2 tablespoons shorter - y | ing, and 1 cup finely chopped apples, ! - } Cheese Muffins. To Basic Muffin Recipe, add i = %-cup grated sharp cheese, ',-cup milk, and ! % ! 1 tablespoon shortening. | ST : Nut” Muffins. To Basic Muffin Recipe. add | PHELAN ’ } %ecup chopped nuts. Put nut meat on top ‘of jo 1 each muffin before baking. ' : ' Pineapple Muffins. To Basic Muffin Recipe, use t 1 cup crushed pineapple, with juice instead 8 BAKING Made Easy With E-2-BAKE got 1.cup milk. : ko ~the Original All Purpose Flour iii mmmee ed eee . ail v ! |
eo | a = 4 a wad te 4
fet i x Ai
¢ Growing Girls’ Side Tie shoe. Sizes 315 to 9. 6.45
Side buckle loafer in red, brown and black suede. Sizes ae : 814 to 10, 6.45 tens
Buster Brown seees
Mean FIT for Young Feet!
6.45 to 9.00
If the youngsters need school shoes right in! Let us fit them from our huge stock of Buster Brown shoes! Kids like their comfort-fit , . . . Smart styles . . wearing ways! They're all fitted under the X-ray!
Listen to “Smilin’ Ed” McConnell and His Buster Brown Gang -= A. M. each Saturday on Station WIRE
Wasson’s Shoe Center,
Wasson’s Student Store, Fifth Floor
bring them
. Mothers approve their long-
11:80 i BENT
sin toe ghillie. Sizes 3 to 8 8.00 Tai Flow Sizes 614 to'9, 9.00
Sil Ad hon ks eis Mh ee
+ Growing Boys’ Brown Moces
