Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 April 1948 — Page 22
Five Judges |Home-Sewing Study Entries
In. Contest
They Will Choose 16| Sewing Winners By ART WRIGHT ; Judges in The Times $1460 B National Bewing Contest hope to, complete before Monday their selection of the eight first place] winners and the eight second place entrants. : The board of fashion and sew-| ing experts who today continued; | their study of the some $10,000) worth of garments submitted, is comprised of: | Miss Florence Murphy, fashion, ¥ co-ordinator, Wm. H. Block Co. Mrs. Helen Haverstick, fashion co-ordinator, H. P. Wasson & Co. Miss Louise Braxton, supervisor of Home Economics for the Indianapolis public schools. Miss Janice Berlin, home demonstration agent for Marion! County. ' : Miss Pearl Prather, sewing teacher supervisor, Singer Sewing Center. The best garment in each of the eight judging classifications will be sent to New York for consideration in the National Sewing Contest. In the Indianapolis contest, first prize in each division is $50 and second prize is $20. In the New York finals, the first prize will be $200. In addition to the cash prize, a Hoosier entrant winning a first prize in New York may go to New York for three days with all expenses paid by The Times. All garments entered in the contest will be on display next Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday in the Central Library Auditorium from 9 a. m, until 9 p. m. The public will be admitted without charge to see the display.
Music Program To Be Given By Choruses
The last meetings of the “Know Your Public Schools” lecture series will be held at 7:30 p. m. on Monday in Schools 58, 30, 35 and 60. The speakers will be Mrs, Louis Bruck, C. R. Farrington, Emil Schaad and H. Nathan Swaim, The series is sponsored by the Indianapolis: PTA Council and the ‘Extended School Services Department of the School Offices. » 8 . I The PTA of School 50 will meet at 7:30 p. m. Wednesday in the school. Henry F. Schricker will talk at this Fathers Night meeting. ’
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NS SEWING JUDGES AT WORK—Four of the five judges working today fo choose winners in: The Times $1460 National Sewing Contest are (left to right] Miss Janice Berlin, Marion County home demonstration a'g ent; Miss Florence Murphy, Block's fashion co-ordinator; Mrs. Helen Haverstick, Wasson's fashion co-ordinator, and Miss Louise Braxton, home economics supervisor for the public schools.
et's Eat Meta
We have only 500 of these fine pens _. so make your selection early!
nent’s suit stopped. Generally'if you have over 13 points you have a better bid, » Ed » IN. response to your nartner, suit bid of one, in order to go (, two no trump you should have, count of 13 to 15. To jump to three no trump you should hay, a count of 16 to 17. For ex. ample, if your partner bids op club and the next hand bids heart and you have a count of 13 to 15 you can bid two ng trump. But you also shoul have the opponent's suit stopped As 1 said last week, a com bined count of 26 in the hands should produce. three trump, a combined count of 3 to 34 a small slam, a combi count of 37 to 38 a grand slam Following are a couple of & amples demonstrating the com bined count: ‘Spades AK152 Hearts A 64 Diamonds K 6 2 Clubs* JT
You open one spade, the n hand passes, and your pa
Given
ers split, dill pickle and mustard added, then one-half strip of bacon rolled around each frank and broiled) Buns Cole s'aw Pecan cookies Dinner Thuringer sausage *Mellow spicy sauerkraut Mashed potatoes Stuffed green pepper with cream cheese salad rings y
Bread and bufter Snow pudding with »
n SATURDAY Breakfast Fresh sliced sugared pineapple Creamed chipped beef on toast Additional hot’ buttered toast
v \ n Cream of mushroom’ soup { Lettuce, sliced tomato, avocado and hard-cooked egg salad Rye bread toast Brownies’ Dinner
*Baked pork chop dinner (pork chops, rice, tomatoes -and green pepper) . . Buttered asparagus Tossed apple, cabbage and nut sa.
Bread and butter Rum-raisin ice cream # 8 ” SUNDAY \ Breakfast. Apricot juice Jelly omelet Filled almond coffee cake Dinner
Roast lein..of pork Browned potatoes Applesauce » Baked glazed carrots
"©. COCKTAIL PARTY CENTERPIECE —To center the table where cocktail fare is d, the hostess can use a colorful cabbage rose—made by soaking a small green head of cabbage in cold water until the leaves curl.
the top half with pancake Whitefish Roe Caviar, Cream turners. You will need an as- butter and egg yolks together, sistant to keep the fish from then add the other ingredients. breaking. Pop the filled cases into the Bone the lower half and re- oven and serve hot. place the top half. Slide the s = = fish onto a large flat platter. SHRIMP Stuffed Eggs are Let it cool, then place in the made the same as deviled eggs, refrigerator, covered with oiled adding minced boiled shrimp to paper, until ready to serve the the usual stuffing. next day, : © .. : : {Tiny hot biscuits filled with Garnish the serving platter .\ spicy hot sausage are in dewith watercress, heart leaves mand. 3 of lettuce and parsley. Nest Liver sausage, mixed with among them wedges of avo- chili sauce and a bit of horsecado and tomato marinated in radish to taste, is good spread Frefch dressing, Place a row on small rounds of pumperof thinly sliced marinated cu- nickel, centered with small cumbers around the fish, "pickled onions, . Serve a bowl of tartar sauce Kosher green tomato pickles . at the ‘side of the fish platter, add zest to the rest. Slice them Our tartar sauce is oil mayon- and cut into halves, naise mixed with plenty of eae. minced onion and a few rinsed SPANISH Canapes are made
by using one bottle of chill sauce and adding two dashes of Tabasco and one-half cup of tomato juice in which two teaspoonfuls of dissolved gelatin is mixed. Pour onto a flat plate to a depth of one-fourth inch. When jelled, cut with a round cutter the size of your toast rounds. Center each with a dot of mayonnaise and a curled anchovy:
HUGE STOCKPILES of frozen foods account for the present low prices on many kinds. The best quality, however, is not always the product of the best-known packer. The most satisfactory way to test the various brands is simply to taste them and see for oneself. We have found packages of peaches and apricots selling from 19 to 29 cents each that make good cobblers, dumplings, pandowdles or are equally good thawed nut for simple desserts, Be sure to discover a reliable brand before making the peach cobbler for Tuesday’s dinner. The menus for next week follow.
For Readers of Meta Given Food Columns
'Meat Sundries’
__® Meta Given has a new " booklet containing 19 savory recipes on “Meat Sundries” that bring variety to the menu. ® Sent for 10 cents. Ask for “Meat Sundries” and include, along with coin, . 8 LARGE 3-cent-stamped, self-addressed = envelope. Send your request to
Meta Given The Indianapolis Times 214 W. Maryland St. Indianapolis 9
® = 8 custard satce MONDAY pe Breakfast Tomato juice Milk toast with bacon crumbled over the top Luncheon *Watercress soup Eggs a la goldenrod on ‘oast Frozen sliced peaches Dinner ° Beef turnovers Creamed pea sauce Buttered corn niblets Lettuce, avgcado and green pepper salad . Bread and butter Cocoa puff
BS RE NI TR RE ET
bids one no trump. What shoul you do? You have a count of four for ‘the ace ‘of spade three for the king of spade four for the ace of heart three for the king of @ and one for the jack of club a total of 15, By bidding one ne trump your partner has you that he has a maximun count of 9. Therefore your con bined count of 24 does not in dicate a possible game and yo
. Cold Boiled Salmon dominat- .- ing buffet tables. You can hav ie ‘one £1 home, and it isn’t too
And there is your piece de resistance tor your cocktail SUP- . PER, for that is what most cocktail parties are nowadays, ” » & TO BALANCE the kingly salmon, place at the other end of the table a ring of Chicken Mousse (chicken gelatin with whipped cream added). Fill the center of this ring with olives, stuffed with almonds or filberts. . Have small pieces of Melba toast handy, so the guests may spread the mousse on them. i Hu o » BONNE BOUCHE is a “good mouthful” as the name implies. Use tiny ampuff cases filled with is mixture: One-half stick of butter, three hard boiled
*Frozen peach cobbler Y 2 n » = WEDNESDAY Breakfast
HE
5 = » The Mothers Chorus Federation will have a concert at 7:45 p, m. tomorrow dn‘ School 62. The choruses from Schools 1, 62 and 82 will sing and the School 62 : ..8 9 . lorchestra, under the direction of PIQUANT Cheese Paste [John Shepherd, also will take takes one-fourth pound of |part. : Roquefort or blue cheese, two | The chorus directors are Mescakes of Philadelphia cream |dames N. Lee Harris, Clifton cheese,. one: tablespoon : of [Rousch snd livin Hegael and the chop chives, one teaspoon |accompan esdames I re a Oe Charles Dickson, Howard Tudor|" pole Wheat toast - ‘ Tabasco, six minced olives and (and James Bowen. Miss Jenney Dinner
BRERA AER ee
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RECA Fresh pears TUESDAY 1 Breakfast Hot cooked cereal with sugar and Grapefruit halves Butterpd English muffins Orange marmalade
Fried eggs
1 3
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cream Sugared doughnuts Luncheon. . *Excellent aspar sandwich Buttered cauliffower Molded orange gelatin salad with creamy mayonnaise Mock chicken legs Parsley buttered potatoes Buttered green peas Grated carrot and raisin salad.
. Clubs Q1 With the above hand yo open with one spade. Let us s: that your partner responds three no trump, showing - Jinigum of 16 . points. Yo hold "17 points. Your combir count of 33 should produce small slam, therefore you b six no trump.-
Luncheon Cream of corn soup Vegetable saladrwithejulienne of ham
=
side and lift off
eggs, one good tablespoon of minced onion, one-half teaspoon of lemon juice and one glass of
one téaspoon of sugar. Mix into a paste with one teaspoon of Durkee's dressing
Men and Women—
i # a
By ERNEST E. BLAU - OMEN ARE not all alike,” said a U. 8. wartime booklet. “Some prefer overalls to aprons.” No, you can't herd all women into the job of homemaking and expect them all to like it, any more than you can expect all men to be happy farmers or bookkeepers. - Gln ti A gal's reaction to housekeeping, however, is different from a man’s reaction to a
for homemaking, like motherhood, is deeply rooted in most women. Millions of them don’t think of it as a job at all, but as a process of successful, daily living. . ” # » THERE IS an ‘“all-house-wife” type of woman, whose interests are completely monopolized by her home. Fiftyone per cent of women in this country are of this type, according to a study by ‘a woman’s magazine. There is also a second group—totaling 31 per cent ~who might be called the
+ Do All Women Learn, Eventually, To Like Housekeeping
Lf Sl] ‘“balanced type.” After mar riage, they are capable homemakers, but have numerous outside interests as well. These two homemaking groups represent about eight out of 10 American gals, Finally, there are 11 per cent of the “can opener” type. They feel that homemaking imprisons them, wastes their talents, As one babe said, when interviewed: “I can tell you my ideas about housework in three words—'I hate nr" 5
A Special Selling of 100 GENUINE LEATHER
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and the rest boiled salad dress ing. Spread on rounds of bread® and sprinkle over the top the small bloom granules from the top of raw caulifiower. Dust ‘with paprika. } . » » ¥ AVOID the bane of all epicures—sweet sandwiches, Keep hot canapes hot , . . your party ‘will go on with blithe spirits. The French have lovely words for it: Crepescule-Soiree (“twilight into evening”)-—and then good night.
We, the Women— ‘Cooking Fills
Creative Urge’
By RUTH MILLETT . NEA Staff Writer A WOMAN delegate to a recent conference on women sponsored by the Women’s Bureau of the Department of Labor branded as “baloney” another woman" dele gate's statement that some women get creative satisfaction out of cooking.
Karnes, Mrs. Floyd Amos and Raymond Wilson also will he on the program. Mrs. C. E. Straub
Beef liver with fried onions American fried potatoes Watercress, beet and lettuce salad
is: president of the federation.
Bread and butter
Of course, women get a creative satis- } faction out of Ruth Mellett cooking. Why do food columns in newspapers and magazines have such a devoted following? Why do cookbooks sell year after year? Why do women trade recipes? Why do they constantly experiment with basic recipes—changing them with a dash of this and a touch of that? Why do they spend a day on a company dinner if there's no creative satisfaction in putting on the table a delicious dinner, beautifully served? 3 ® 8» WHY do they beam so proudly when their husbands praise a meal or a woman guest says, “I'd love to have that recipe.” Why do they hate to serve their bridge foursome an angel food cake that isn't as light as it should be?
Why did they ship during the war countless packages of cookies made by their own hands to their men overseas?
The answer to all those questions is the same, A woman takes pride in her cooking ability. For her it is a creative activity, and she gets real satisfaction not only from preparing a favorite dish for her family or her friends, but from their enjoyment of if and from their praise,
Chapter Meets
The Theta Chapter, Phi Delta Pi Sorority, met yesterday for a theater party.
! 246 By SUE BURNETT
Here's the sort of dress you can depend on for a fresh, charming air on warm days. Sleeves are so cool and comfortable; the surplice closing can be accented with a flower bouquet, or closed with gay noveity buttons; the gored skirt is particularly appealing. Pattern 8315 is for sizes 32, 34, 24, 38, 40, 42, 44 and 46. Size 34, 4% yards of 39-inch. Don’t miss the spring and summer Fashion — better than ever witn special features, smart styles — free pattern printed in book. : To ‘order pattern or! the Fashion Book, use the coupon below.
SUE BURNETT The Indianapolis Times 214 W. Maryland St., Indianapolis 9. No. 8315. Price 25¢.
Size.icensssnee Fashion Book Price 25¢
Name shtestsessseesasereane
Street ese ssNIssRR RENNES
CltYsesnsssecsosca State,veees
By MRS. ANNE CABOT Tie the adorable duck and dog to baby's crib and make the knowing kitten bean bag for sitting-up fun. Ducky-dear is made of yellow felt with a blue beak and eyes . . . Puppy-pal has a pink complexion with blue details, while Benny-bean bag is dark green with pink features. To obtain hot-iron transfers for three toys, embroidery stitch illustrations, material requirements and step-by-step sewing instructions for Pattern 5768, use the coupon below.
ANNE CABOT The Indianapolis Times 530 8. Wells St. Chicago 7, IIL.
No. 5768. Price 16¢.
NAME cansssessssnscasoseesss
Street sssccertciirtniiniiiies
CIty svesvaracass State couens
Units to Meet
The following units of the Riley Hospital Cheer Guild will meet next week in the hospital: Monday — the Robison-Ragsdale American Legion Auxiliary 133; Tuesday—"“Knee Deep in June” and “All Kind Mother”; Wednesday—“An Old Sweetheart of Mine"; Thursday— Volunteer, and Friday—"Circus Day Parade.”
EL
Bread and butter Canned Queen Anne cherries 8 td » THURSDAY Breakfast Tomato juice
and cream Caramel pecan rolls Luncheon
eggs Buttered beans and cauliflower Pecan cookies Canned blackberries Dinner Lamb and rice casserole Buttered kale *Chef’s salad Bread and butter Chocolate peppermint
whipped cream) » # 2 FRIDAY Breakfast Sliced oranges Poached eggs on toast Additional hot buttered toast Luncheon
Ready to eat cereal with sugar
Frizzled dried beef and scrambled
parfait (chocolate cornstarch pudding alternated in glass with pepper-mint-flavored green colored
Stuffed frankfurters (frankfurt-
Canned pear and watercress , Salad . Bread and butter ‘{*Custard pie Supper Creamed tunafish on toast Lettuce and tomato salad Sugared doughnuts J
*Recipes for dishes mark with asterisks will appear tomor-
row through Wednesday, *
Teen Topics—
Make Visiting Short, Sweet
By JEAN used to be.
certain occasions. Brief visits
so-called party calls.
school or have a job in a strange town. Some friend of
or new acquaintance may invite you to, dinner. Now, your hostess doesn't know you well enough to crave your, companionship on personal grounds. merely a courteous gesture.
turn gesture. Simply drop around at the lady's house some afternoon or evening a few days after the dinner. If she’s not at home,
have one, or a brief message or a note,
last more than one hour. But
family will click and you'll stay on for a game of gin or something. Then don’t, please don't hang around toward mealtime! And, boys and girls, when you decide to leave, git up and git! Whether you're visiting Grandmother in the hospital or paying that party call, quitting time is up to you. As soon as there's a lull in the conversation, interject a smooth, “It's been nice, but I mus! going.” Then and out the door, gt »
PAYING FORMAL CALLS | isn’t as socially necessary as it |
But even now, it's courteous ' to drop around to see adults on !
to the’ sick and the old. And !
» = 8 ! SUPPOSE you're away at
the family or distant relative i
Her invitation is | Al party call is in «order as a re-
leave your visiting card, if you |
” 5 ” A CALL need last only half | an hour. Usually, it should not"!
maybe you and your hostess’ |
|
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{ Charles Mager wa Comp
a © 29 WEST WASHINGTON STREET ©
BPW Club Group To Have Meeting
An open meeting of- the I ternational Relations Comm tee, Indianapolis Business Professional Women’s Club, be held at 7:30 p. m. tomorrow the 38th St. Branch, Indi National Bank.
THE 1948 SILVER PARADE
Featuring ORREFORS Crystal
The Orrefors Works was established in 1726 at this idyllic place, situated in one of the oldest of Sweden's cultural centers. It has developed into one of the most distinguished art glass works in the world.
Don't miss seeing the Rare Collection of Fine Museum Pieces designed by the late Simon Gate. These eleven extraordinary i pieces are now on a National Tour. All Indianapolis will find this exhibition an outSy standing and memorable treat.
* Shown On Our Fascinating Second Floor.
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