Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 July 1948 — Page 17

Page aed atholic Church Altar ponsor a card party morrow in the hall, ad.

, Davisson, 1526 8, | entertain members apter, Phi Delta Pi } p. m. today. klin Center Junior will have a picnic Ellenberger Park.

olph Stemply, 489 will be hostess for nd social meeting of pter, Rho Delta 3 p. m. tomorrow,

Dellwood iment Scout Camp at Mee reek State Park will ird camping session s Mary Jane Nelson f this group. enior girls attended session ‘which ‘ended advanced campers

pack riding and bie ell as hikes and outs

one hundred camps lled at Camp Delle amp opened Sunday rection of Miss Florof Brownie Scouts 1g “this session for mping experience. ns for the third sess 1p Dellwood are still seriod will begin on

> _local day camps second sessions yesey will operate for a week for the next The next session will . Miss Gretchen Reigrvisor, 1 Taggard *h Grove day camp; all Joyce directs the rails day camp, and n B. Shideler is direc: Voollen’s Gardens daj

s. Floyd Bass tertain Mrs. Floyd Bass, W. 11 be hosts at a re their son and daughe Mr. and Mrs. F, Kaye 0 p. m. Sunday. le was married June shapel of the Decker Church, Decker, Ind,

nake their home with yarents. ;

Convention ndianapolis doctors wives have returned ding the 51st midsume ntion of the Indiana Association and its

uxiliary this week at k. They are Dr. and Shreve, Dr. and Mrs. te, Dr. and Mrs. Ray r. and Mrs. Robert James P. Leeds and , Davey.

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Let a Child's Interests Develop Naturally

MUSIC "JUST FOR FUN"—Sidney Foster, American pianist [wa who will be soloist with the Indianapolis Summer Symphony Orches-

tra here Sunday, accompanies Justin, in some "just for fun" musi

THE THEORY that musicians are born, not made, is behind the advice that Sidney Foster gives to parents who hope to make musicians of their children. Mr. Foster will be the featured piano soloist with the Indianapolis ‘Summer Symphony Orchestra in the all-Gershwin program Sunday in Butler Bowl. “Forcing an unmusical child to study piano, voice or violn in the hope that he will thus learn to love music is just as cruelly illogical as it would be to send a crippled youngster out on the football field in an effort to make him enjoy sports,” Mr. Foster explained. To learn whether or not a child is musically inclined, the pianist recommends letting him hear a great deal of music, but without making an issue of it in any way. Boys and girls who hear music constantly as a natural part of daily life will be-

WEDNESDAY, JULY 14, 1048

v

Dbn’t ‘Mother’ Crippled Child Too Much

year-old a full-length left leg, but she’s going

# Advice Is Offered By Doctor-Mother BARBARA BUNDSCHU United Press Staff Correspondent NEW YORK, July 14 — FourSuzanne Wears steel brace on her to learn

CONTINUING WASSON'S WHITE GOODS SALE

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come conscious of it in their own good time and will ask for their favorites without prompting, he said. Even if the youngster does. show an enthusiastic interest in hearing music, Mr. Foster warned, this does not necessarily mean that he is gifted as a performer or that he will want to learn to make music himself. y Mr, Foster also pointed out that it is unfair for parents to expect that the time and money spent in musical study will automatically pay off in terms of a glamorous career. “If * the parents’ attitude is ‘You must go on, you must succeed. Look what we have given up to make it possible,’ the strain on the child becomes almost unbearable,” Mr. Foster explained. “In all too many chases, the result is a thoroughly unhappy person and unsuccessful musician,”

EE Tai

Meta Given

I KNOW butchers are having a hard time these days. But some what he is missing.

of them aren't doing their best to

high-priced meats we are forced to buy. For example, it is common to see steaks selling at 98 cents a pound, laid together with common brown paper. When one gets home, the paper is soaked with meat juice, which means a lot of

flavor and food value going into the garbage. If the butcher would use waxed or parchment paper that would not soak up the juice, the purchaser would only be charged a penny more and he would be in a much happier frame of mind. ” s » SWISS STEAK (For Saturday dinner) - 2 ‘Ibs. round or shouider arm steak, at least one-inch thick 15 c¢. flour 2 tsps. salt Dash pepper ' 3 tbsps. shortening 2% c. water or No. 2 tin tomato juice ’ ‘ Wipe the steak thoroughly with a clean damp cloth. Rub the flour, salt and pepper into the steak; do not pound with a heavy saucer or mallet. Melt the shortening in a heavy skillet and brown the steak slowly on both sides. Add one-half cup of the water or tomato juice. Cover tightly and place in a slow oven (300 degrees F.) for about one and one-half hours, or until very tender. Add the remaining water or juice gradually to prevent the skillet from going dry. If preferred, cooking may be finished on top of the stove over low heat, rather than in the oven. Serve the meat in its own gravy. Serves five or six.

» FRESH SOUR CHERRY CREAM PIE

| (For Sunday dinner) 14 e. flour 12 c. sugar 14 tsp. salt 115 c. scalded milk

give us our money's worth in the

2 tbsps. butter 14 tsp. vanilla 134 c. pitted sour red cherries 1% c. water 1 tbsp. cornstarch 14 to % c. sugar, according to tartness of the cherries Almond extract Mix the flour, one-half cup of sugar and the salt in the top of the double boiler; add threefourths cup of the scalded milk and stir vigorously until well blended. Add the remaining hot milk and cook over direct heat until thick and smooth, stirring constantly. Beat the egg yolks well, stir in a little of the hot mixture and pour back into the double boiler; cook over boiling water for two minutes, stirring constantly. Remove from the heat and stir in the butter and vanilla. Pour the filling into ‘the pie shell. the cherry topping by washing,

sour red cherries over a saucepan to catch the juice; there will be

pitted fruit. Drop directly into the saucepan, add water, cover and simmer until tender, about 10 minutes. Drain off the juice. Mix one tablespoon of cornstarclf with one tablespoon of water. Blend to a smooth paste. Stir into the hot juice. Cook, stirring constantly, until the juice becomes smooth, thick and transparent. Add the sugar, almond extract and the drained fruit. Cool and pour over

3 eggs, separated

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to dance and play golf despite infantile paralysis which crippled her before she was six months old, her mother said today. Dr. Winona G. Campbell, 37, di-teach-t

ing program at the University of Colorado Medical School, is here for the first international polio-

sage for other parents of afflicted children. Restrain the impulse to mother them too much, Dr. Campbell warns. Encourage them to take

things which normal do. Offer them every opportunity to find out what they can do. ncourage them to develop a competitive sport in which they can

excel, Dr. Campbell learned the hard

y. “Susie is my first, and my only, child,” she said. “As a mother and as a pediatrician, I had wanted perfection in child. It was a terrific blow en I became sure she was going to be crippled.” Suzanne today rides a tricycle and climbs higher and more eagerly on the gymnasium equipment than most of her nursery school classmates,

Let the Older Victims Help Plan Futures

“She falls a great deal” Dr. Campbell said, “but we don't pick her up. We never tell her she can't do a thing because of her leg. We let her try.”

Suzanne probably can ‘never play a good game of tennis, her mother said. “But in two years we will have a set of golf clubs for her. She has good shoulders and arms, and we'll start her very early. It hurts to think she won't be able to dance well, but we have thought of sending her to dancing school when she is six.” Suzanne, in the snapshots her mother pulled from her pocketbook, is a sturdy little girl with a smiling face, and a brace on her leg which her playmates, Dr. Campbell said, look at a little enviously. Dr. Campbell said her problem has been less difficult thah that of parents whose children are stricken. in adolescence, when the child himself can see too well

With those older youngsters, Dr. Campbell recommends direct and realistic planning for the future with the child as soon as it is certain that he will be permanently affected by the disease. Ten to 15 per cent of children who have infantile paralysis do carry some crippling mark. “What they. want most is to be independent,” Dr. Campbell said.

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