Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 January 1948 — Page 12
Eat
mental and dramatic.
SOUFFLES HAVE EARNED the reputation of being tempera But like other tricky creations, they can be
controlled to perform satisfactorily. - thik ah ™ i The first requirement is for a smooth, t white sauce. e | “baking should continue only until the- “top; sides—and bottom are a more than it did last
* golden Brown ahd the inside is dried out enough to be appetizing. | spring.
“CHEESE *soUFFLE (For Tuesday dinner) 1% eo. butter ’ i e. flour ie 13 tsps, salt > Péc-milk ‘3% 1b. sharp Ameriean cheese cut in %-inch cubes % b eggs, separated Dash cayenne, if desired Melt the butter in the top of a double boiler over boiling water, Add flour and salt and blend until smooth, Gradually add the milk and continue cooking until the mixture thickens. Stir continually to keep smooth. Add cheese, over and stir occasionally until the cheése is melted and well blended. Beat the .egg yolks thoroughly and gradually stir .in the hot cheése sauce. Add the cayenne. Cool partially, then lightly put thoroughly fold in the stiffly oeaten egg whites. Pour into an ungreased six-cup casserole. Run the tip of a spoon in a eircie around the dish about one and a
half inches from the edge, to form the control line where the STack will form during baking. Place in a slow oven (300 vo 125 i degrees F.) and bake for one hour or until puffed high and a tich golden brown. Serve immediately. Serves five.
CHOP SUEY (For Wednesday dinner)
| 2 tbsps. margarine or shortening | } 1c. (%
1b.) lean: pork, cut in slender strips 3 thsps. soy sauce: 1 c. onions, cut fine "14 c. hot water 2 c. celery, cut fine 1-16 tsp. pepper 2 tbsps. cornstarch 2 thsps. cold water 1 tsp. bead molasses (sometimes " called thick brown soy sauce) 1 can drained bean sprouts Heat ‘the fat in’ a skillet, wid meat and soy sauce, Stir snd sear quickly without scorching. Add the onions, cook for five .ninutes, stirring gently. Add the next three ingredients, cover and cook for five minutes. Blend the next three ingredienis to a smooth paste. Add, stir dghtly, cook about a minute: Add ‘ne drained’ sprouts, toss JPY, heat to balling. Serve at once with. fluffy ge: Garnish with parsley, sliced green onions or -hard cooked egg. i! beef or veal is substituted for pork, use three tablespoons of fat. Never overcook or overmix the chop suey. Serves four generously.
Teen Talk—
Smoking Manners Come in for Some Sharp Criticism From-Teen-Agers
By SALLY MAIN. SMOKING "AMONG HIGH SCHOOL juniors and seniors is. a highly controversial topic in almost every home. This week three members of Block's High School Fashion Board “sound off” with their
ideas on the subject.
x
They all agree that there is a difference between men and women smokers and their unanimous “pet peeve” } Isa gal whe- -walks-
the street with a lighted cigaret. Patty Joy, a Shortridge senior, doesn't smoke, but she has no obJection to other persons—men or women — smok- _ ing. “There's a time and place for it, though,™ Patty says, “even for men. . I like to see most men smoke
dividual,” Nancy says. Nancy wants to study at William Woods College in Fulton, Mp., for a career in fashion designing. She is president of
“Block's Fashion Board.
piano, “hopes to continue “her “education in a conservatory .in the East. She likes both popular and clag-
reer as a pianist. Patty says def. | __nitely she doesn’t. want to teach
She is a member of the FIFI- |
NELLA, DART and 7-UP Clubs, ' and is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ardo Wayne - Joy, 3040 N. Sherman Drive.
. . A SENIOR at Pike Townslip High School, Nancy Schnitzius approves of smoking for men— especially pipe smoking. She “very definitely disdpproves_.of women smoking ont he street; ~~ but thinks that it's” OK otherwise. “I do think that, after a ~girl or boy isin college; smoking. is ‘a personal Nancy Sehnitstus |
matter and | entirely up to he i
| l sical music and would like a ca- |
| Miss Mohlenkamp
i |
| i i
The daughter of Mr. and Mrs. H. J. Schnitzius, New Augusta, Nancy is a member of the ATOMICS and DTO Clubs. . ®
ANOTHER DTC Club member, ‘Mary Lou M 3a senjor at Ladywood. -8he also belongs to the | CHI Club, “Smoking is “400 “expensive; esnecially now-: adays” Mary. ‘Lou states. “I
>-who blow smoke iin your-face. Women who smoke on the street are another | of my aversions.”
Mary Lou is planning on study- |
ing ‘art and fashion designing at
{ 8t.Mary-of-the-Woods, Terre
Haute.
——8he is the daughter of Mr. and } Mrs.-L.W. Mohlenkamp, 8620 N, 1 Pennsylvania 8st.
Ww ar Brides
SIDNEY, Australia—According to Arthur E. Calwell, Australian .nin-| {ister of immigration, at least 30 ner {cent of the 10,000 Australian war: Lbrides in America want. to return.to,.. {their nomeland with their husbands
ons families.
Teen Topics—
Be Polite—Give Your Name
I'm Susie
My youve grown Smith
Tip HER OFF AS TO your IDENTITY
Beauty— Flabby Arm... Age Symptom
By ALICIA HART “ NEA Staff Writer ARMS CAN BE as age-revealing as hands. ‘As we grow older, upper arms have a tendency to become soft and flabby. This. hammock of flesh “that. appears from elbow to/shouli der’is usually a sign that muscles have weakened - from insufficient use. A sudden loss. of weight may also cause flesh to sag In this area.
flesh, strengthening Juscies, - ~ FOR THE first, stand upright with arms outstretched at the sides, fists tightly clenched. Now, stiffen arms and holding them taut wave them up and down as energetically as you can.
Por the second exercise, stand
with arms down at sides. Now gol
| into a brisk routine. of swinging arms over head and clasping hands
Ay Do 10 times 1 is.
1 |
J-your. right name! Speak. up.
Ri let. arms drop like hits to io shoulder: joval, bend | shoulder with |
ry
By SALLY DON'T BE AFRAID to give
mean and tell folks who you are.
Especially if you see them floun- |
dering for your moniker. ” When you're introduced; instance. ducer’s mind goes blank. forgets his best friends. - If that happens, don't let the poor guy suffer. Just murmur your name as you shake the other party's hand. Everybody'll feel much more comfortable.
He
» » AND another thing. You growing girls “and boys change so rapidly that older folks can't keep up with you If you meet a friend of the family or the parent of a friend, tip her off as to your identity. . It's simple to say, “How-do-you-do, Mrs. Jones. I'm Susie.” And “you'll rate double:A for politeness and smoothness. “The technique works, too, with
fellow" téen- -Agers. Maybe you're face to face with someone you've
met only once. "you suspect he has forgotten you, Don't b# bashful about speaking. But DO mention your name. And add, “We met at Betty's dance.” Something “Uke that, see?
Ww omen May Vote BUENOS "AIRES, Women in Argentina now have the
! aright to vote for the first time. in... To. combat fiabbiness, here are history. = Bs
two exercises aimed at firming ward of 3 millon will take ad- |:
It “is estimated that up-
vantage of this privilege.
detest. watching |
and I hate those |
I
rh —— eee : i J
for..| Sometimes’ the intro- |
Argentina! :
| By 8 BURTON HEATH’ ’ NEA Staff Writer
NEW.YORK, Jan. 5—It's |
going to cost the American male almost 10 per cent more for his clothes this | spring than it does now— and almost 15 per cent
It he insists on trying to get |" pre-war quality in his wardrobe, | the blow. tp his pocketbook will | be even nore painful. A chap who is reconciled ta
and will be a $60 suit this spring —can get a new outfit for the 1948 Easter Parade for around $126.15. That means taking lowe er middle qualities on everything, wearing the old belt another season and going garterless. The same items cost $16.30 less |
fall The upward trek was sohed-
and continue. as seasonal merchandise’ appears on store shelves and racks. It hits everything ex-
socks.
like Botany, Kuppenheimer, Society’ Brand or Hart, Shaflner & Marx will go up from $5 to $10 “above present levels, which already are $5 above last spring's. ~ » - BOME of the lower ~ priced big national chains, will rise only $1.25 to $2.50. The more expensive name brands will be raised more. Low-priced rayons that were bringing $30 will cost $33.75; rayon blends will rise from $32.50 to $35.75; tropical worsteds that were $35 or $40 will cost $40 or
and-rayons, and all-celanése sum-
dollar. Palm Beach, now $24.75, is expected to be increased $1.50 to $1.75. A $35 spring topcoat wili cost about $40. and a $24 sport coat will cost about $26. The shiry industry still wants,
and further from that goal. Truval, which makes what
a number at $2.65.
$2.50,
raise on its $2.95 shirt. Essley's
and Manhattan $3.95 shirts to $4.00. These are the lowest-priced items in each line. You can, if . you choose, pay as much as $10.95 for a Manhattan shirt. | Those $1 shorts will cost. you $1.25. The shorts you have heard
that some store had “for 50 cents"
them—69 ‘cents,
should find $1 wool socks for 79 {30 cents. —There-will-be’more hats in thé $5 to $7.50 range, and they “willbe better. — If the tie you wanted goes up, there still will be plenty at. you’ Pics: eh "
Va
going up from 5 to 10 cents a pair, and so are fancy rayon hose. The cost of a pair. of shoes-.is
“after New Year's.
mer suits will be boosted about a
f | BUT ribbed cotton hose are | |
getting by ot what was a $50 sult | “last spfing=—arnd is u $55 suit riow "|
last spring, and $11.30 less last |
uled to begin with thie New: Year |
cept hats, neckties and woolen |
The average name brand suit
brands, made to compete with the. |
$45. Seersuckers, cords, cotton- |
| |
badly, to make tne. $2.95 shirt - standard; but-it-ls-getting further
trade | calls “basement” shirts, will have = It is what | you have been buying, maybe, for | .
Piedmont - has announced no | $295 shirt. has gone up to $3.26. |
» Arrow and Van Heusen $3.25 shirts are “being raised to $3.50,
lL
1
1
will cost you--if you ‘ever do find’ | By Keepitig your eyes open’ you |
-_., cents, and 50-cent wool socks. for’
|
‘Veterans on the Daily News- |
Record and Men's Wear, who have
been living with” the men's cloth- |
ing market, for years, say that these raises reflect the same jn- | flationary forces that are boosting most- other costs of living. American Woolen Co. boosted
|
Jumping from 50 cents to co soon;
the price of all worsteds 25 cents | A yard of orders received after
ant Nov. 30. Textile workers are | asking a raise of 20 cents an
hour; if they get 15 cents, the /
cost of woolen material may _w another 15 cents a yard. .
By SUE BURNETT | Scallops edging the slanted clos- ! ing and pocket/ highlight this neat
SOCIAL SITUATIONS
, SITUATION: Your are given a box of candy by, a visitor. . 1 WRONG WAY: Thank the person who gives it to you, and lay it aside; unopened. RIGHT WAY: Open the candy and offer some to every 4 one present. !
daytime dress. A. narrow belt . ties softly at the side—longer | sleeves are included in the pattern, if you wish." : Pattern "8152 is designed for sizes 12, 14, 16, 18. 20; 40 and 42 Size 14, ‘cap sleeves, 3% yards of 35 or 39-inch. For this pattern, send 25 cents
desired and the pattern number
| Times Pattern Service, 24 WwW,
- Maryland St, Indianapolis 9.
4 ‘ i. Hg
>in coin, your name, address; size
to Sue Burnett, The Indianapolis |
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES —
Hold on 0 Your Hats; Gentlemen
The Price Tags on
SHOES— ® $10.95
Today's ¥ Men's Clothes Head Up for Spring &
SHOES— $11.65
—Figh Frew _| Bring Boom { In Sewing
“high-cost of Teady-to-wear clothing
ol the high price of retail dresses and | mode thetr
| ing tists. Demand for new sewing;
“NEW YORK, Jan, 5 (NEA)—The
has touched off a skyrocketing boom in home sewing. ;
{the “new look” fashions which out are uw» sewing skills to become their,
| Piece goods and pattern sales ‘have .soared to an all-time high, [Crowded sewing classes have wait-
‘machines exceeds supply. \ The nation's pattern-makers esti- /. {mate 1047 sales will be 40 per cent |over 1946 sales of 120,000,000 units. | p | This is compared with a pre-war |yearly average of 60,000,000 units, Executives of the pattern company | which serves NEA's newspaper sub'scribers report & 70 per cent in- | crease in-sdles over pre-war years ‘and a ‘10 per cent increase Sines, 19486: Piece goods sales in aepmoty, stores are up 101. per cent of the 1940 figure. © One leading manu-, facturer of higher-priced quali woolens reports a 300 per cent crease in piece good sales since 1940.
'A Silk Dress at $79.50 ‘May Be Made for $18’ The. buyer of pi goods, and] patterns in one of New York's largest department stores estimates individual sales are 25 to 30 per
cent Be last year's, eee ln Here's: of the reasons: “A lcreased from three yards to three
To obtain complete Knitting instructions, sizes 12, 14 and 16 included, stitch illustrations and full directions for pattern 5678, send 16 cents in coin, your: names address and the pattern number to Anne Cabot. The Indianapolis Times, 530 S. Wells St., Chicago 7.
Jakes 3'; yards for a fairly good suit. By the time the manufacturer's and the fabricators and the retailer's markups go on, it is easy to see where raises come from.
ON TOP of that, men's clothing workers got their third post-war
‘raise averaging about I per cent,
effective Dec. 15. That will be reflected in clothing costs. Shirtmakers pay 50 cents now,
psoas:
with few “soft spots,” for the broadcloth that during the past few months cost from 37 to 43 cents. The cost of calf skin and” kid skin for shoes will go up Af | the slaughter of cattle for beef falls some 4,000,000 head” next; year, as expected. J _ These are a few D - -drawer “reasons why spring's” wardrobe 18 going to cost even more than the: one you couldn't afiord last spring or fall,”
/
/
/
printed rayon crepe dress selling and. a half yards. - store for $1995 can be| Top- -flight designers for the reduplicated at home for' $9.25” tail market have been induced by ys the buyer. $79.50 - can be home-sewn with talents to pattern-making. similar fine fabric for $18.” ‘makes it possible for the home To conform to current fashions, needle-woman to have high-styled {women - get plenty of help from clothes at a fraction of the retail |pattern-makers. Basic dress pat- cost, '. terns, a standby of home seam- | The price of yard goods has. |stresses, have been restyled. “Pat gone “up along with everything:
_ MONDAY, JAN. 5 1948 :
|The Doctor Says— [Growing Pains
Are Usually -
Not Serious
By EDWIN P. JORDAN, M.D, ARE “GROWING PAINS" a serious condition or are they something to be ignored? The answer is simple. Medical opine fon differs, somewhat; but today
the majority seem to feel that, in ses, these vague aches or are not. important,
wrong which needs medical at. tention. The condition seems usually to be caused by such rapid growth that the bones and muscles are under some strain. In such cases
treatment — is hardly necessary, z r » . ‘IN SEVERE cases, more. serious abnormalities may be present, The help of an orthopedic surgeon in" deciding whether - braces or other-special measures are neces sary is then worthwhile. A few children with growing pains seem
{ to have something wrong with
one or more internal glands, When present, this also requires correction. Sometimes the pains may be caused by diseased tonsils, ade. noids or sinuses, and this is probe ably distantly related to the muse cular rheumatism which older people get. There is also a debate
“A silk’ dress at the pattern companies to turn:their | This’
|tern’ skirts have dropped from two else. A yard of firié quality woolen
to four inches. to sew the average pattern has in- [goes today ‘for $6.16. -
rs
7 t
Pabrit - required suiting that sold for “I in 1944.
among medical men as to whether growing pains may be a mild form of rheumatic fever, which comes on suddenly with swollen and painful joints and other characteristic symptoms, As a rule, children who have severe growing pains, which do not disappear rapidly, should be examined by a physician to be sure that a serious condition {is not. present. Because the major ity of “such pains, however, ars mild ‘and not serious, parents de not need to worry about them une
duly except in the occasional case,
|
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