Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 November 1948 — Page 17

2, 1048

berg, ler.

Vows

Wed lub

inberg and married at in the In“lub. Rabbi the Central n and the nov, cantor le, officiated. daughter of 1 Steinbérg, Mr. Schabler na Schabler,

Steinberg, nd maid of a turquoise Irs. Isadore bridegroom, ore fuchsia

Miss Lois 53 Sue Ann s of chamnior brides and Phylis pagne satin. of ivory de in southara of pearls her finger arried white phanotis. rved as best ', ‘brother of skovitz, ‘Berorton Smith

ng trip the me at 5634 e bride atversity. Mr. uate, is atrsity’'s law

nrist re ner

‘due Univerplturist, will r at the anCooking iditorium at

demonstrarothy Potts, ie economics t Purdue. perating in the Indiana n and “the ick Growers jer will cook given 48 a to be made the school, include hyof tomato iving foods 1, and potaown in the ndiana. cuss. some of cial developnade at Pureveral years. » of the spe1 in Purdue to the oldest esent at the

, Walkerton, ibbon in the ; contest at p Show held y will make dience.

| Club TOW ~ r Kindergar-

vill meet at in the kin-

of the Cen*h wil speak Child's Ques-

1 e Mesdames n Shedd and

; a

wb seen

et Delta Sigma 1 meet a3 8 ome of Mrs. st Road.

ATTY

'. Building Demonstration

1:30 P. M. NING STAR x O.ES. TY LY) OWENS, yd

8:00 P. M. AMMA NU

TY {, Chairman

MONDAY, NOV. 22, 1948

Sie of Pans Affects Result In Baking Cake

Sometimes Recipe Must Be Changed By META GIVEN IT’S NOT always possible, as you may have discovered, to use your favorite layer cake recipe with good results in a sheet or loaf pan or cup cake tins. The texture and color of crust usually are disappointing because there’s such variation in depth of the batter and surface area exposed to heat. Not only size of the cake pans

are to blame. The batter made by|

various cake recipes differs greatly in composition and in the amount of volume increase during baking. When you try a recipe for eake in pans of a size not specified, note results on the recipe card for future use. For instance, the recipe we are giving today was first developed to bake perfectly in two 8-inch round layer cake pans 1-inch deep at 350 degrees F. for the entire baking time. But when baked in one 8-inch square pan two inches deep, a lower temperature had to be used at first. When baked in a pan 11x7x11; inches, the low temperature was used first for level rising but for

five minutes less than the deeper|

square cake. The second period at a higher temperature was also five minutes less for this shallower: cake. Both of these cakes baked level and beautifully brown. » ” s

TUESDAY'S MENUS Breakfast Tomato juice Corn flake cereal Cinnamon toast

! Denver sandwiches eon

pepper Head lettuce 1000 island dressing Applesauce Dinner Liver loaf Pan gravy ‘Buttered noodles Harvard

Milk to drink: One q ohild; one quart for each adult, in addi. tion to that used in the day's menus, a 8 8

FEATHER CAKE

1% ec. cake flour - 11% tsp. baking power 1, tsp. salt 14 c. butter or other shortening 1 c. sugar 2 eggs, beaten 1 tsp. vanilla 1; c. milk. Sift flour, measure and resift two or three times with baking powder and salt. Cream butter unti] soft and smooth, then add sugar gradually and continue creaming until light and fluffy. Add ‘beaten eggs and beat vigorously until velvety and light. Stir in vanilla. Add flour mixture and milk alternately in four or five portions beginning and ending with flour, beating until just smooth after each addittbn. Pour into two 8inch layer pans with bottoms lined with thin plain paper. Bake in a moderate oven (350 degrees F.) for 25 to 30 minutes, or until cake JUST begins to pull away from sides of the pan. It is easier to overbake then underbake a cake. And baking a minute or two too long is too much for fine cake. Cool five minutes in pans on cake cooler.

Then turn out on cake rack to finish cooking, Invert immediately.

Men and Women— Extravagant!

No, Girls Say

By ERNEST E. BLAU 0 YOU REMEMBER wearing a .$2 million dress last summer? Well, you mightn’t realize it, but maybe you did. It may be hanging in your closet right now, and

you never even wear it any’ '{

more! It's that syn-back bolero created by a New York maker which sold 171,500 copies as of last spring, at an average price of $11.66. Yep, there was something about that dress—the girls just gobbled it up—but did they need it, two million dollars worth? Do they, in fact, need half the dresses they buy? 2 » 2 NINETEEN out of 20 women, according to a study, say they do not think they spend too much on clothes. A “well-dressed wife, of course, is an asset to any man—and most men know it, even if they won't admit it When she wears smart clothes and blossoms out in a new outfit every week or so, like a movie star, you just know her husband's a successful and generous man.

YOU'LL LOVE THE FLAVOR! YOU'LL. BLESS THE PRICE!

By KAY SHERWOOD NEA Staff Writer NEW YORK, Nov. 22 — Have you a gypsy on your Christmas list? ~ New streamlined, space-sav-ing Juggage and cleverly designed travel accessories make the selection of a gift for a gard—about a cinch this year.

A four-in-one “nest” of suit-

-. cases, for example, is designed

to give a pair of gypsies a set of matched luggage at a moderate price. Four suitcases — two styled for men, two for women —which graduate in length from 29 inches to 21 inches nest one inside the other for space-sav-ing storage between trips. Made of waterproofed durable canvas, these cases are bound in cowhide to give added resistance to wear and scuffing at the edges. Passport-sized billfolds are designed to simplify the globetrotter’s travel problems. Spe-

Gadabout Items Are Streamlined

(®)

cial compartments are designed to keep money, passports and business papers separate, Cards or credentials slip into transparent swing-windows for easy visibility. s 2 2 TO HELP the motorist or the arm-chair traveler map his itinerary is the aim of a pre-cision-made device for measuring distances on maps. When the device is pushed along a road line on the map, a dial records distance in inches or centimeters which can then be computed into miles by using the map’s miles-per-inch scale. Another candidate for the gypsy’s favor is a tiny postal scale which swings out of a leather case. This is designed to weigh a traveler's letter home to solve the problem of figuring out the amount of post- « age needed. More luggage ear-marked for the traveler includes the fitted

Traveler's passport fits inside this leather billfold which has transparent swing - windows to keep credentials in view.

Dial on this precision-made device for measuring distances on a map records mileage in inches or centimeters.

overnight case with removable jewel case and easel-back makeup mirror. A zippered leather tie case designed for the gentleman traveler has a fold-down hook attached so that ties can be hung up with no necessity for removal from the container: A carrying case for baby’s provisions has space for formula bottles and separate pockets for dry and wet diapers.

Teen Problems—

Be Friendly This Holiday

By JEAN ; EACH STEP upward in school gives a teener a feeling of elation and superiority. Junior High or High, the local Academy or Seminary, boarding school or college! Going to a new school is exciting and satisfying. Do you bring this feeling of satisfaction and superiority home with you? Do you lord it over younger brothers and sisters, over less fortunate friends? Let's think about the long week-end ahead, the Thanksgiving recess. If youre a

boarder home for the first time, you'll have to watch your step. L

= » » IT'S SO easy to be highhat toward the stay-at-homes! If you're. on vacation from a

local school, take care not to vy

be patronizing toward your family and your neighborhood. Any way you look at it, highhat tactics are senseless. Going to a different school doesn’t make you better than your neighbors. Smug snobbery is an unpopular trait. People. won't love yqu for it! You have go on living with family and friends, you Know. Might as well keep in their good graces. Might as well be friendly and cordial in . spite of your pride in your new Alma Mater.

YOUR MANNERS—

Situation: You must leave a party early. Wrong Way: Stand up’and and say to the room at large: “Well, I hate to break up the party, but—" Right Way: Slip away without breaking up the party, telling your hostess goodby quietly and asking her not to leave her guests to see you to the door. . ” » » Situation: Your new nextdoor neighbors seem a ‘little stand-offish. Wrong Way: Keep running over to their house, to borrow, to visit, to talk with them in the yard, etc.—thinking that you will soon have them acting in a less reserved manner.

Right Way: Don’t rush things. They may prefer to be on pleasant but not too friendly terms with their neighbors. » s " Situation: A dinner guest telephones you to say he will be almost an hour late and asks you to go on and serve dinner without him. Wrong: Way: Tell him you'll wait until he comes, even though it means your dinner will suffer and your other guests will have to wait until quite late to eat. Right Way: Agree to do as he suggests, and save back a plate of food for him to eat when he comes.

wEW! PREFERRED|",.¢:: BY MILLIONS Rep CHILDREN $O PURE, SO FAST, totak SO DEPENDABLE J Has orange St.Joseph Ei ASPIRIN fl Buch: 8a Try it)

Quick Work

By MRS. ANNE CABOT Anyone can knit mittens and have fun at the same time with| this pattern! Knitted on two needles in plain stockinet stitch. The fat little squirrel may be, worked right in as you knit or embroidered on" the complet mitten. You'll be knitting mittens’ for all the youngsters you know when you discover how easily and quickly they work up. To order complete knitting instructions (sizes 4, 6 and 8 in-

cluded) for Pattern 5592, use the coupon below.

" ANNE CABOT The. Indianapolis Times 530 S. Wells St. Chicago 7, IIL No. 5592 Price 16¢

Name

Street cecccecceccccsccnsscncnee CIty eccceccccccscsccessscssnce

17-17

30 Women in Diet TOKYO — Thirty women have

Smog F ight Not Ignored

By EDWIN P. JORDAN, M. D. THE AMOUNT of smoke and fumes belched into the air varies widely from place to place. Some cities have many industries, |apartments burning soft coal and other sources of air pollution. Other communities do not have the problem at all. The control of air pollution has not been completely ignored. Re-

Public Health contained a series of articles concerning this problem in Cleveland, Pittsburgh, Los Angeles and New York. The Cleveland report indicated that the problem could be at-

the industrial plants, in residential neighborhoods and by other means. The, same report warned that the community must not be misled into believing that complete elimination of air pollution is possible. Also, such programs on smoke abatement as can be carried out are costly.

2 »” ” THE PITTSBURGH report stated that 1500 smoking stacks in that city had been cleared in the previous four years, and that this should have had some effect on general conditions. The Los Angeles experiments

indicated that the co-operation of health department offi

accomplish a great deal for air pollution control. With enormous industrialization

a pressing matter which fully merits all the efforts which can be put into the subject by health officials, sanitary engineers, industrialists and communityminded citizens.

DR. ANSWERS—

Question: Is Bell's palsy curable? Answer: This condition almost always cures itself after a length of time. Measures can be used, however, which speed the recovery. #" ” ” Question: What are the symptoms of Buerger’s disease? Answer: This is a disease of the arteries of the extremities. A purplish color of the toes often with pain is one of the most common early symp-

AN’S x DAYAN'S x DAYAN'S

been elected to the Japanese Diet. : -

Gregg Service, of Course—for

HOLIDAY FORMALS

But Better Yet— Gregg De Luxe Service!

(Costs a bit more—is WORTH a lot more)

! As Convenient as Your Telephone. RI. 8321

toms.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

British-Made |7he Tailored Prints Retain ,

i {United States. Prices in Ameri-

EE |softly detailed shirtmaker styles

£ lassociated in any language with ¢ [fine dressmaking.

tacked at its point of origin in >

1g, .engineerings ahd Industrial’ ei buréaus working - together cduld'Q’

of our large cities, it has become >

DAYAN'S x DAYAN'S x DAYAN'S x DAYAN'S x DAY

Pretty Pattern

Dresses Designed for International Look By BARBARA BUNDSCHU | United Press Siaff Correspondent | NEW YORK, Nov. 22—Flower-| scattered cotton prints designed with a Paris touch, sized to American patterns and made in Britain may give Main St, U. 8. A., the look of an international garden party next summer. The dresses, among the loveli-| est cottons which have turned up here in many years, are the product of Horrockses, a 158-year-old British cotton textile manufacturer which started making clothes with its fabrics four years ago. They've been sold since then throughout the Empire, in Scandinavia, France and the

can stores on the current collection are estimated at $25 to $72. The collection for 1949—some 75 costumes—sticks fairly closely to a pretty, feminine pattern. The majority of daytime dresses are

with full skirts, padless shoulder lines and the type of tuck and pleat and collar and cuff detail

New Dresses Lose

Round-Shouldered Look

The majority nf the dresses are in fresh colored floral prints, unsuitable for most city wear, but delightfully wearable for all-day casual or dress-up use from the suburbs on out. A few polka dots and sal) calico prints should be equally fine for hot town days. Housecoats, playclothes and evening dresses are included in the collection. Short-sleeved dresses lose their round-shouldered look with tricky cuffs or collar treatments. Skirts are flared, gathered and pleated. One day dress has restrained extra fins at the hemline all around giving a clever not-quite-a-pleat dash to the skirt. A few dresses are cut slim, usually with fullness at the front hipline. Ivy, autumn leaves, daisies and geometric designs are used for more nearly two-color prints. One

8343

cotton carries an all-over white lace pattern on a gray ground.

on

By SUE BURNETT Pattern 8377 is for sizes 14, 16, 18, 20; 40, 42, 44 and 46. Size 16, short sleeve, 5% yards of 39-inch. Pattern 8343 comes in sizes 12, 14, 16, 18, 20; 40 and 42. Size 14, blouse, 23% yards of 39-inch; skirt 3% yards. Two separate patterns, cents each,

Don’t miss the latest issue of Fashion. The fall and winter book has a wealth of sewing data for the home dressmaker. Smart, easy to make styles, fabric news—free gift pattern printed in the book. To order patterns or our Fashion Book, use the coupon.

25

< For those of you who do, here's a surprise low x price for bead-trimmed blouses. Three styles to » choose from, each generously touched with x hand-sewn beaded motifs in gay colors. Rich

a x > < a x » a

ow Zz <

<

Sketched from stack

rayon crepe in white only.

hs do 7 "

Look

SUE BURNETT The Indianapolis Times 214 W. Maryland St.

Indianapolis 9, Ind. No. 8343 Price 25¢ No. 8377 Price 25¢ [email protected] ‘on

Fashion Book Price 25¢ Name. .cconaresnessssncrannsass Btreetisesesasssnssececesnnseess

Clty: esensstentsscctssasssaseses

PAGE ‘= Bargain-Buyer Is Christmas Gift Spoiler

By RUTH MILLETT

THE WOMAN shopper, looking over a table of “greatly reduced” knickknacks — probably reduced because they were 80 obviously useless — turned to her companion and said: “I think Ill Ruth Millett buy a few of these for Christmas gifts. They're such a bargain and I can always figure out somebody lo sive them

That is how and why women clutter up : each other's houses with useless gifts. Two attitudes expressed in those remarks account for most of the “but-whatever-will-I-do-with-it?” gifts people are always receiving. The first is that any time you can find an object that has been reduced in price or looks more expensive than it is—you've got a bargain in a gift. The second is that it doesn't really matter what you give somebody—just 80 that you give them SOMETHING.

. » » . BOTH attitudes take the fun out of giving and receiving. It's really no fun to shop for presents unless you are shopping for just the right present for a particular persons And it’s not very exciting to get a gift that isn't something that was bought with your own particular needs and taste in mind. 80, if you're doing your Christmas shopping early don’t make those two mistakes.

Own Railroad Stock

NEW YORK—Women are sald

BtatBusvesessrssnisssvesernerna

to own 48 per cent of the railroad stock in the United States.

20% EL I ROE RAL

® GET THEM NOW FOR CHRISTMAS

98

L-

»

.. . and so lovely to look at it white, sizes 32-38. Blouses, Main Floor

A

©25 W. WASH

Charge—Layaway—B

Ee SOME LIKE THEM

LACE TRIMMED

Marvelous values for your money. Luxurious rayon crepe blouses delicately frosted with deep Venice lace yokes and frilly lace edged ruffles. So feminine

SOME LIKE THEM = = = = = = ce ec merece eee =

i BEAD TRIMMED

cently the American Journal of |»

Po] “MAIL N ORDERS ACCEPTED

INGTON

udget Terms

We, the Women—

ol