Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 January 1948 — Page 21
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2014 Brookte hostess to the Gamma Tau Senight in her home
i. Omega Sorority 30 p. m. today in
men eption ..
University Women's ' a reception and. 'p. m. on Feb, 3 in versity Law School. ving line will be:
cer Will Be
- Hostess
pvis Spencer will [3
ncheon tomorrow in pom of the Claypool ollow & performance
cott at 11 Em mone
Series in the Eng:
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smeatballs,
“distance boy-chasing.
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BUDGET WISE—A stack of corn pancakes, topped with sausage gravy, is a
conservation-wise, taste-tempting main dish. Made from already-cooked left-overs
they'll provide an easy-to-prepare economical mainstay for almost any meal.
8» By JEAN TABBERT PANCAKES ARE an excellent way to whip that ever-present
headache to housewives — infla- |
tion-hiked food prices. ‘They're just as appealing served at supper as at breakfast and will even make a good basis for a “company” luncheon table, An ideal way to use left-overs, last night's vegetables or fruit, pancakes are simple and quick to prepare. : Corn pancakes and - sausage gravy is & fine combination as a conservation-wise, taste tempter, .A small bit- of -sausage left from breakfast and a lttle dab of corn’
“will combine to make Hourish-"
ing and satisfying main dish, Using a reliable ready-mix (for speed), simply combine two cups of the pancake ready-mix with two and a quarter cups of milk and stir lightly. Fold in one cup of whole kernel corn and the pancakes are ready for the griddle.
____ Pour one-fourth cup of the baf- | ter for each pancake onto a hot,
lightly greased griddle and bake until golden brown on one side. Then turn and bake on the other side.
Serve gravy.
To make the sausage gravy, | Milk to drink:
brown one-half pound of sausage meat in a frying pan. Cook slowly for about 10 minutes. Drain the off the meat. Remove the meat from the frying pan. E
|
*Cranberry coffee cake
Lettuce and watercress salad with French dressing Bread and butter Canned peaches
Dinner
Fried onions Hashed brown potatoes a Mustard pickles : Moided vegelable salad in tomato dspic .
topped with sausage Bread and butter
Whipped orange jello Four cups for each child; two cups for each adult, in addition to that used in the day’s menus.
Place three tablespoons of the Orange juice
- drippings in the frying | Blend in three tablespoons of
flour. Add two cups of milk, stir- |
ring constantly until thickened.
|
who office can keep their weight down up by melon, cereal, buttered toast and milk. The menus for next week follow: e's = v Stewed apricots * vs MONDAY _— yrs Stewed prunes = Se
{Bacon stri S Pe imchen Chopped lettuce and watercress Escalloped corn and cheese - cas-| Salad : serole 1000 island
Chocolate blanc mange with coconut sprinkled over the top ® =»
THURSDAY Breakfast
romatA jules oo]
Apple pancakes Butter and heated sirup Link sausages
Toasted peanut butter sandwiches Canned blackberries Remainder of oatmeal cookies Dinner
*Cheesy baked stuffed turnips Buttered carrots 3 Vegetable slaw Bread and butter
TUBSDAY Cup cakes with rum butter jeing rr = . Breakfast FRIDAY Hot buttered toast Breakfast
Scrambled eggs Luncheon ‘Minestrone
Add the browned sausage meat. Whole wheat bread and butter Heat. Serve hot over the corn |CArTOL raisin salad
pancakes.
Use a Casserole For Quick Snack
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Dinner Broiled haddock fillets
Creamed cubed potatoes |
Glazed onions Chopped spinach salad Bread and butter
A good shopping day supper can Toasted almond ice cream
be whipped up in a hurry in half| an hour. Before you go out, open| one or more cans of spaghetti and!
Arrange in .a baking casserole] alternate layers of spaghetti and! sliced meatballs. This may be left in the ice box until you return from| shopping. Then sprinkle with| cheese and bake. in a moderate oven | for half to three-quarters of an hour. . |
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Teen Topics—
~ Don't Be An ‘Eager Beaver’
By SALLY SEEMS WE have a little mat-
_. ter to clear up regarding letter-
Some time ago- we sug-
gested that social motes should
be answered promptly. Now an indignant reader reminds us of the exception to the rule. ° “®q girl with any pride,” says he, “will answer a boy's leiter immediately upon receiving it.” Yes, that's right. It's an old custom for ss lady 10 wait from three days to a week before replying to a letter
. from a, gentleman, Answering invitations is the ex- °
ception to the exception: It's often necessary to accept, or decline in a hurry, - IN GENERAL correspondence,
to. a-casual note constitutes longAnd that, We all agree, is poor policy
So, gals, be patient. Wait out the three ‘to seven-day ‘inter.
{Chopped dates in cooked cereal Fried eggs Whole wheat toast Butter *Orange marmalade ‘ Luncheon Watercress, bacon and mayonnaise | sandwiches | ide {Canned Queen Anne cherries
Dinner
|Veal baked in milk
Hot chicken “bouillon Raw cauliflower salad Buttered toast :
Baked potatoes .® ® ow Braised lettuce WEDNESDAY Bread and butter “ Breakfast Orange and onion salad {Fruit cup made. of orange and|Canned or How peaches rapefruit sections, and . = Spies. So SATURDAY *Bacon muffins oa Breakfast’ Fried\eggs Ld { Grapefruit juice ‘ - Luncheon | Cooked cereal. with sugar and
cream
* [Caramel pecan schnecken ty "- Luncheon 1
Banana -salad
" |Raisin bread toast
AN IMMEDIATE REPLY TO A CASUAL NOTE CONSTITUTES LONG-DISTINCE BOX CHASHG
val. And note this: Boys will normally answer your letters within two or three days. A longer delay is a sign of flagging interest. So be smart.
| Butter cookies ~~ Dinner:
*Fish timbales Pickle ‘ sauce | Prench fried potatoes Buttered mixed peas and corn
Lettuce and avocado salad with)
French dressing Bread and butter’
§
Canned cherry cobbler -
” n - SUNDAY
2 Dinner Roast beef *Yorkshire pudding Browned potatoes Buttered Brussel sprouts Jello salad
|
Butterscotch ice box cake co .
Supper Eggs a la goldenrod | Buttered toast ul {Cinnamon apple salad |{Sugared doughnuts
*Recipes for dishes marked with {asterisks will. appear tomorrow Nhrough Wednesday,
Bridge Lesson—
Remember the Bids Throughout
By WILLIAM E. McKENNEY
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th West North Jol Double Pass 24 Pass
3N.T. Pess Pass Opening—é 8 second spade trick, declarer knows that South has
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pead
Play of
Hand . kings, declarer should discard carefully on the last spade trick. He must throw away the queen of clubs, not the small club. - Then, regardless of what South does, declarer has control of the situation: If South leads a small heart, declarer lets it ride to ;dummy’s jack, cashes the jack of diamonds and leads the jack of clubs.
New York Fashions— , | -
Manufacturer
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THE INDIAN
By LOUISE NEW YORK, Jan; 22—Pop, worrying about his wom-
en folk’s clothes b These are men who make each. This season, in the face of
among
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Times Womin's Editor
will be glad to know he has had garments to sell at less than gas | chandise
fic on Park Ave. Taxi drivers promptly dubbed it “the mob
ers who are members of the New York Dress Institute.
Show Is ‘in Ballroom
Of Waldorf-Astoria '
The show, in the grand ballroom of the Waldorf-Astoria Hotal, was the high point of the first’ _popular-priced market week ever held here. It took an extra covey:
of cops to handle the flow of traf-
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H. P. WASSON anp
i WAIANAE ob tl a AS
“sissy”
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a . our suit by. Rothmoor with unerring, double-breasted lines
given a nice turn by, the handsome, narrow cofllar. From our new-series collection . . . 98.
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¢ \!
ps rer as id
acles” (pure silk; for instance); | cottons; ool. summer clothes for town or -vdcation; graduation fashions; (white satin for $25), and coc
bridal styles
Akad Shia ga
s Show Latest. Fashions In The Under-$25 Bracket
Truman, daughter
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Photo by Noble Bretzman
INTERPRETED FOR SPRING, 1948. . . cut friom the wonder fabric, Forstmann’s “Milateen
popular-priced dresses. There
is a member of the American Guild of Musical Artists, which is afilisted
Face Powder r WASHINGTON — Pifty shades of ~ [face powder are obtainable, while 48 ishades of rouge are being manufastured in the United States.
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of the president,
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