Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 September 1948 — Page 17
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FRIDAY MENUS
Breakfast Orange juice * Creamed ci chipped bee! on toast Additional hot buttered toast Grape jam
Luncheon Pan-fried luncheon mest sandwiches . on Assorted fresh fruits Cream cheese
Dinner . Pork chop, rice, jomate and green . Raw beet and cucumber salad Toasted French br
10 Ibs. Concord grapes. Wash and stem grapes. Place in a large preserving kettle, add no water and heat very slowly until juice can be seen on bottom of kettle when grapes are lifted aside. Turn up heat to medium and continue heating until juice flows freely (about 20 minutes). Remove from kettle and place in cheesecloth bag suspended over large bowl. Let drip until no more juice flows. Do not squeeze. Juice is then ready for freezing or jelly making. After extracting juice from grapes, put pulp and skins into a fine sieve, colander or food and rub through 'as much as posgible. Freeze in quart cartons
grape jam at which time thaw puree, and to each quart of sieved ‘pulp add three cups granulated
uice. Place in a preasiving kettle large enough ‘to allow space for vigorous ‘boiling. Cook rapidly with constant stirring for 20 minutes or until mixture gives the jelly test (two drops sheeting from edge of metal spoon). Pour into “sterilized glasses and seal while hot with melted paraffin. Makes about one quart jam from each quart of pulp. (Use less sugar for very ripe grapes.)
Reservations Made
For Civic Theater Mr. and Mrs. L. G. Gordner
opening night of the Civic Theater production, “State of the Union,” Friday Sen. and Mrs. Homer E. Capehart, Mr. and Mrs. A. Noling, Misses Sara Lauter, El-
dena Lauter, Gertrude Weyerbacher and Dr. A. F. Weyerbacher.
Guests of Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Curry will be Mrs. L. M. Manker, Mrs. Louise Hansen and Fred Beck. Mr.’and Mrs. Ralph Stahl will entertain Mr. and Mrs. William Fink of Plainfield. Mr. and Mrs. G. L. Ramey will have as guests their daughter, Suzanne, and William Carr. Attending together will be Messrs. and Mesdames Myron J. Carl J. Weinhardt and L. H. Earle. Other reservations for the opening night have been made by Dr. and Mrs. Russell Morre, Messrs. and Mesdames Kurt Pantzer, Harry Pritchard, and Paul Rochford and Miss
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mifl|this country each year than there
W.{specialist, therefore, must be over
|TEEN PROBLEMS—
Watch Trolley and Bus Behavior
School.
The Doctor Says— M.D.’s Training Is: Long, Hard And Costly
By EDWIN P. JORDAN, M. D.
WHY SO many people, think they want to be physicians is something of a mystery. Even though many change their minds for one reason or another, there are still many more qualified applicants for medical schools in
are available places which provide proper teaching. The budding physcian must go through a lot before he can have the doubtful pleasure of working 15 hours a day or so, getting Lut of a warm bed at 3 o'clock in morning -on a cold winter night, and suffering the discouraging experiences of not being able to help all of those who seek his assistance. n = ” IT TAKES about 20 years of regular school work to make a doctor; there are eight years of grade school, four years high school, four years college, and four years of .medical school. At least a year of internship in a hospital is generally required. The specialist has still farther to go. In most cases, after the internship, he needs at least three or four years more in which to qualify himself as a specialist in one of the major fields, such as the eye, the skin, surgery, or internal medicine. Almost every
30 years old before he even begins his practice—and, of course, many years more KB are usually needed to build up a good practice. Indeed the road of the welltrained physician is not easy. Why then do so many seek it? There is, of course, something dramatic, particularly in certain fields of surgery. There is also the feeling of being needed and the deep-seated pleasure of being able to relieve pain and even sometimes to save life. Society rewards the physician by giving him or her in most cases a pretty good living during the years of practice. Few physicians die rich, but in comparison with other
HAVE YOUR FARE READY—Mary Ann Smith (left) and Carol King know that considerate bus riders always have their fare ready for the motorman. models in this photo especially posed for The Times are students ‘at Shortridge High
By JEAN YOUR BEHAVIOR on a bus can make or break your reputation. . At school bus stops, teeners tend to leave . their manners on the curbstone.'And they rate plenty of criticism from adult passengers. It's ladies first, you know. And you needn't trample them under foot. Give them time to get aboard’ before you swarm in. And, gals, have your fares ready so you won't hold up the line as you fumble through your purses. # » . ONCE inside, avoid jostling, loud talk and would-be wit. Give grown-ups a chance at the vacant seats before you scramble for them. And if you're seated, it's tops in good manners to surrender your places to adult standees. Giving up your seat is a
e| must when an adult is a friend
or acquaintance, when he or she 4s elderly, lame or toting a baby or a heavy burden.
oN BOYS on dates allow their gals to board the bus ahead of them. But descending, the guy hops out first and helps his date to alight. ; If the bus trip is a short one and only single seats are vacant, the guy seats his date and stands beside her. He should not desert her to scurry
posite end of the vehicle.
Bride
fields they are well treated by society even though the road has
Jane Flaherty.
been long and costly.
spreads. In this service we the table linens and
ro
Telephone MArket 2481
Thousands of Ladies Use Our Three-Quarter Finished Service
—in which we FLUFF-DRY the bath towels, knitted underwear, chenille bed-
also HAND-FINISH bed linens.
ress
the Soft Water L AUNDRY
and Routeman Will Call.
Fritch-Hale photo, RITE READ — Miss - Carolyn Ruth Edwards was married Aug. 29 in the Englewood Christian
Church to Jack E. Booher. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Clyde K. Edwards, 206 N. Ox. ford St.. and his parents are Mr. and Mrs. Maurice A. Booher, Westfield.
‘Rockford Official
To Visit Here
Mrs. L. J. Hall, Dubuque, Iowa,
izsions at Rockford College, 1 dents this week at their respective high schools.
at the 1245 p. m. dessert luncheon the Rockford College
in the East New York Street Branch, Indiana National Bank.
group include Mrs. Ross M. Halgren, president; Mrs. Herbert A. Sloan, vice president; Mrs. A, L. Payne, secretary-ireasurer; Mrs. Frank Weiland, admissions committee, and Mrs. A. Bailey Colvin, corresponding secretary. Miss Joanne Peese, the daugh-
E. 46th St, school.
Jamboree Planned
fs a senior at the
Athenaeum Turners will enter-
a “hilibilly” jamboree at 6:30
ICouncil Plans
into an empty place at the op- |
assistant to the director of adinterview prospective stu-
She also will be a special guest Alumnae Club will give Tuesday
The officers of © the alumnae)
ter of ‘Mrs. laura B. Reese, 026
The Women's Auxiliary of the tain their husbands and guests at ' p.m. Monday in the Athenaeum.
Both ‘the
Luncheon
William H. Hessler, "foreign editor of the Cincinnati Enquirer, will address the Tuesday luncheop meeting of the Indianapolis Council of Women. It is to be held in the Columbia Club at 12:30 o'clock. v Mr. Hessler served in the mili. tary government and was a lieutenant commander in the Naval
Reserve during the last war, His subject will be “America’s Role as a World Power.” The luncheon will honor. Mrs. B. Lynn Adams, incoming presigan of the Council. yesterday to make final met for the event. director
summer
Bridge Addicts Must Be Strategists
podh
The groupi’
and iv stro
Forethought Vital In Tournaments
all enjoy in a bridge game is the strategy in planning that
oners during the war and later was assistant to the U, 8. Chief Justice at the Nurnberg trials, is familiar with=strategy himself. His attack in this hand was well timed. Declarer won the opening lead of the spade deuce in dummy with the ace and immediately took three rounds of trumps, Now the question was, did the general have a six or seven card club suit? If he had a six card club suit and three diamonds (South was quite certain that the opening lead of the deuce of spades was a singleton), it did not look as if declarer had any chance to make the contract. If he could find the general with a seven card club suit and just the king and one diamond, he could see. a way to make the hand. . ® r
AT THIS point declarer cashed the ace of clubs, then the ace of diamonds. He was
meeting ' during
+ Armor Falcon
months were made at the session.|
Co LORS: : Tudor Rose
VA A RAEI Sf Mr HI
By JEAN TABBERT FURNITURE can be designed to specifications just as houses are. At least that's the way the new: line of Willett maple furniture now being introduced at Ayres’ was created. The company, believing that the wood should fit into formal homes than the Tr. type, set about to design a sleeker kind of maple furniture. They picked Royal Barry Wills, one of America's foremost architects of small homes, to do the
. t The result is a collection of pleces that are multi-purpose, delicately lined and comfortable. The chairs are the kind in which one can spend an entire evening without feeling uncomfortable,
family living room at least two comfortable spots He's provided a other
for handsome desk to fill the
wall color, shows up in the barrel chair and
the wall-to-wall carpet. The red ShlaAyme
One modified: wing chair is cov=
table. There's apace inside for a typewriter, rec rd albums or more books, Mr, : thinks every
». » » THE color scheme for the liv. ing room was suggested by print covering 3 the hy iu ery racken green is repeated in then w soft blue|Grandma’s
and the
appears in the wing chair,
arger pieces include a storage - chest (illustrated), the|too top of which opens into a writing
should have
UTILITY. AND COMFORT—=This Dutch cupboard illustrates the practicality of the Willett maple furniture included in this: comfortable living room. A soft blu#; green and red color scheme blends with the deep glow o of the maple wood. i
ered with rosy red tweed upholstery; another barrel chajr is done in soft blue. The 1
of this
Hel 4
po
Men and Women—
By ERNEST E. BLAU N EXCITED taxi driver throwing a smoldering seat cushion out of his cab « + + & surly bus driver who wouldn't open a bus door . .. a noisy, milling crowd at commuting gate No. 19 , . . Pots Eas os on p you Pa Bnd ang I'm back in the big city, from walking $ country roads and talk-
wander whether millions: of . men and women in cities like this have ever been happy or Tense,
ever will be. . anxious; hurried, and being pushed
d. Year after year they fol-
hog oe Avenue, y elevator to the 1Tth floor.
City Tension Mars Habbinest Contentment
Romantic and soft-foned as a minstrel’s lute. . , the
Bronze
Black Panther Tournament
richest, most romantic stocking colors ever dyed. Col inspired by the splendor of medieval courts , , . magically ¢ ught . in vapor-sheer |5 denier nylons . . . Seam-Free for flawless beauty. a oe
3 Pairs 3.90 1.35
Pair
3
IN VISION SEAM-FREE NYLONS |
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