Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 December 1949 — Page 8

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yra.d iy Wn By SUE BURNETT A darling little dress and Wpantie combination for the younger girls of the family. Tiny scallops finish the slanted elosing and trim the gay skirt, Panties are edged in scallops, too! . Pattern 8500 is a sew-rite perforated pattern in sizes 2, 3, 4, 5 and 6 years. Bize 3, dress, 2% yards of 39-inch; panties, % yard.

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By MRS. ANNE CABOT Any little girl will look sweet- | as-sugar and keep toasty warm in this adorable neck-protecting bonnet and mitten set. Crocheted in shell-trimmed afghan stitch, bonnet and mittens are easy to make and so practical you'll surely want to whip up several sets in different colors for your own little girl or as gifts for some other lucky child. Pattern 5638 includes comlete crocheting instructions, | stitch illustrations, material requirements and finishing direc- | tions, {

T Eat Well Tor Less— «a Plan Menus AY Ahead in | Yuletide Rush

citement of |Christmas, plan your family menus days in advance, To save money and eat well, many items as possible

roast potatoes, Cheesed spinach, apple cole

dressing, butter or fortified margarine; ap-|

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Choose Items from Plentiful Foods

BY GAYNOR MADDOX ’ NEA Staff Writer DURING THE hustle and. ex-| the weeks before!

select as| from the | st of December plentiful foods. | The following nutritionally bal-| need budget menus will help) oo | 3A

ou plan your own. ”

. DINNER: Ham steak, glazed arrots, parsley potatoes, spinach

and cucumber salad, bread, butter, or fortified ‘margarine, raisin ‘ tarts, coffee, milk.

D IN N E R: Chicken fricassee, ice in consomme, snap beans, |

cauliflower salad, bread, butter ar!

ortified margarine, ‘glazed apple]

slices, cookies, coffee. milk.

DINNER: Veal blade roast,

slaw, bread, butter or

{fortified margarine, prune ple, | [cottee, milk. DINNER: Sausage pork loaf,

baked yams, broccoli with French| stuffed celery, bread,

ple brown Betty, coffee, milk. DINNER: Spaghetti vegetable casserole, mixed green salad, bread, butter or fortified margarine. baked custard, coffee, milk.| DINNER: Pork hock ragout, | sauerkraut, buttered beets, green salad, bread, butter or fortified margarine, ginger pears, raisin cookies, coffee, milk. ~

| 7 ¥ ; |

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ONE OF THIS SEASON'S resort and cruisewear

“Tie Holder ~ Can Be Made Of Ribbon

Here is a timely recipe: for plentiful winter pears:

ANNE CABOT PEAR CRISP

214 W. Maryland St. The Indianapolis Times Four to six Anjou por Bosc| Indianapolis 9, Ind. _ | . 530 8. Wells St. Pear eon juice. grated No. 8500 Price 25¢ i. Chicago 7, ML

rind of one lemon, one-fourth cup| hion Price . |putter, one-half cup sugar, onehose Book 2% No. 5638. Price 20c | fourth cup flour, one-fourth tea-| ame spoon cinnamon. ‘N Name ..eecececccnse srivederssi] poen, and core pears and slice linto a casserole, Add water and| cans Sesssessssssssneneneer iamoh juice. Work together “the! butter, sugar, flour and cinnamon | {until a fine crumb. Sprinkle over, |the pears. Bake uncovered at 375 |degrees F. about 35 to 40 minutes. BLA iccvsccssncassssssssssesss Serve warm or chilled with cream. |

To order, use the coupon.

SUE BURNETT The Indianapolis Times

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Blackwood on Bridge—

Mr. Abel Grows Even More Confused

. POOR MR. ABEL. By the time this hand came up, he was sure ponent ruff in. ‘Phew! of only one thing—that Mr. Champion was a better player than he. be good. | ’ This was the sixth deal of a rubber and under his partner's ¢on-| Now Mr. Abel realized: that he stant criticism, Mr. Abel's game had gradually deteriorated until would have to take the diamond now it was merely a vague and confused shadow of its former state, finesse in order to get enough In today's hand, four sp i |trieks to fulfill his contract. He should be made easily, Normally East dealer. Irecalled that Mr.. Dale had failed Mr. Abel would have made it. But| Both sides vulnerabie. to return a diamond at trick two.

, not this Mrs. Keen opened MR. CHAMPION

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SEERA NANNNIAN INRIA

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_ the eight of hearts and Mr. Dale's 3—-Q 10.4 8 king; and If he did, the finesse ace felled Mr. Abel's king. 2 H 9s Ve work. 3 Sr 4 DQ J 10 . Finally Mr. Abel decided he had| Loses Count of Trumps I +O-=K Fy | petter make sure the trumps were| Mr. Dale shifted . KE MR. DALE |out, so he laid down the 10 of . 10 the Jack ot 8-8 72 Sd | {spades from dummy, which took : H-34 8 be Hed 10 8 2 the dast spade from his own hand. DK § £40 £55 | M# Dale had to discard a small CA 12 OC-854 {heart on this trick in order to MR. ABEL | keep one diamond. In other words, S—-AK?965 [if a diamond finesse had to be H—K {taken by declarer, he didn't want D—A 18 [to show out on the first round of C-Q 10903 the suit. The bidding: Mr. Abel's next lead was the

from the

took the ace and led an- pAgT SOUTH WEST NORTH queen of diamonds

wr entered dummy with the heart. Whereupon Mr. Dale ran ing of clubs and it was at this He tried to remember for sure off all the rest of the tricks with point that he suddenly got the but he couldn't. What would Mr. his heart suit for a snappy down idea there was still a trump out. Champion say If he let an op-! three.

Fog «

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Send Your FINER

Why? Maybe because he had the

styles already has been adopted for winter wear in chillier climates. That's the separate cotton skirt printed with dashing, outsize motifs in brilliant colors. Originally designed to bloom beneath sunny skies, it now finds itself “borrowed” to form part of a dinner-at-home costume _. . or for wear at any informal party at home. It may be ensembled with shirt, blouse or sweater. Here a Zukin-designed cotton skirt ($16.98 at Block's) is worn with a lime green jersey blouse made with plunging neckline and push-up sleéves. The

blouse, also at Block's, is $5.98.—By LOUISE FLETCHER.

Sher De op L as Save], Pass 18 Pass 2 8 |board, which was permitted to and Mr. Abel ruffed. en Spot) pags 3s Pass 4 8 ride. Mrs. Keen pounced on it * | All Pass ’ |with the king and led her last

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‘Everything's automatic in

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You con got all the information you need “to plan an Electric laundry from your Electric appliance dealer or Power & Light's Home Service division, Riley 7622.

THINGS

INDIANAPOLIS

| te Swiss

home laundry because, of course, it’s Electric. The Electric water heater, washer and dryer are arranged for stepsaving, work-saving efficiency that takes

~

Makes a Novel Christmas Gift

It goes without saying that!

Christmas gifts will be wrapped, with ribbon. But many of the! gifts themselves can be made, |

charmingly and inexpensively, of | ribbon. ’ ? Men's gifts always seem a prob-| lem. But Robert Piquet of Paris)

“has a really top idea In a tie |

holder of ribbon. All that's needed | {s a strip of ribbon 12 inches wide| and 27 inches long. Seam it neatly at either end; use one of the zippers that open out—and there you are. A ring at the top makes it easy to hang up on home or hotel | closet door, or in a train compartment. A narrow band of the ribbon, half an inch from the top, provides a neat way of holdipg| {the ties in place for hanging. If the giver wants the tie holder | in his school colors, use those, |getting three widths of four-inch| |ribbon-or-two of six-inch. (Even |4f- he tsn't an old-school-tie addict; |most men like combinations of] colors.) 3 For small fry of the female) |gender, there is nothing nicer than| {sets of hair ribbons, cut to the |way they wear their hair. Slick bows already made up are great |favorites. And from six up they {seem to like the headbands which their deb-sisters take so seriously. Here again is a beautiful chance |for eolor combination. And noth{ing 4s more becoming worn in the; |hair than velyet. Why not sur[prise young sister with a whole, new set of velvet ribbon bows andi hairbands?

More gifts to be made of ribbon!

are collars, evening bags, compact slipcovers, and even boleros and capes. Simplest of all to make are scarves which require only fringing of ribbon ends to turn them into super gifts.

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"Designing Woman—

{Refinish That T

' Kon kh By ELIZABETH HILLYER

THERE'S MANY a slip betwixt a good’ idea and the finish line, and missing the boat can't always be blamed on a careless job. For instance; there's the table that could serve you proudly

| again if it were not for a dis-

figured top. If it is old and badly battered it may be that the table top simply is not worth the good intentions and elbow grease it takes to refinish it. » » -

MARBELIZED, tortoise shell or book lining paper, or even a splatterdash patterned paper may look much better on the table top than it's none too good wood restored. Certainly applying the paper is the easier chore. But there must be no glipups or the paper covered surface will be disappointing. Sand the table top and fill in deep scratches. Band again 80 the paper will adhere firmly | and smoothly. :

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MONDAY, DEC. 5, 1040

rable Top

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Use wallpaper paste, not glue, which may bleed through. Apply water white lacquer over the .paper, not just any clear lacquer which ‘may con« tain enough color to spoil the paper's own color effect.

Tuesday's Menu—

| | |

BREAKFAST: Orange juice, ready - to - eat cereal, bacon roll, jelly, coffee, milk.

LUNCHEON: Tomato juice, creamed hard-cooked eggs on toast, cabbage and apple slaw, gingerbread, tea, milk.

DINNER: Shoulder pork chops, mashed potatoes, canned corn with green pepper, rye bread, butter or fore tified margarine, celery and raw carrot sticks, apple ple, coffee, milk. i

Completes Murals

NEW YORK — Violet Oakley,

{famous American painter, recente

ly completed 10 murals depicting

{great women of the Bible.

this planned

N° matter what the outside temperature may be, L it's always a sunny temper inside for the homemaker who planned an automatic Electric laundry. She

has no weather-worries;no washing-work. because eyery- ~

thing moves along smoothly, conveniently, effortlessly.

Clothes ‘are washed, rinsed and dried by the flip of a

switch. Let us help you plan your-own Electric laundry

and show you how to gain extra hours of leisire.

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MONDAY Sr Santas A ~~ HOLLYW (UP) — T students g school for tomorrow aranteelr ow. to ap) sing 12 C

and put ol beards.

“Say It)

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