Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 December 1949 — Page 7

Jood

in Rite Sughtety

od took Miss erty as his ht ceremony today in the

rian Church, ~ 8. Moorhead . .

'h was decor. reen. erty was her or. She wore silver green’ nations with greenery, in matching borah Morse, ster of the Mary and Wilma Sex-

broca igh neckline, 11 skirt with in. A satin ertlp illusion vas of white eaves and

Im was the s were James Eldon Allg, dingham and

in the home its, Mr. and y, 3440 Cend is the son Patullo, Car't 8. Osgood,

dark green cessories for 0° Acapulco, will be at

*d Maryland n and the graduate of hi Psi Fra-

its

Health re Topics

arent-Teach-nounces the iy group and week. of School 60 ). m, Wednes1 of “Bitting ng course in chool. Miss tridge’s girls will be the

also meet at The Amerigive the proa film, “Hu-

n safety will 33 unit meet+ dnesday. The al Insurance e of the pro-

t Hunt New 1 be at 12:30 Indianapolis

| follow a 10 rl B. Barnes ckam are in

at

ich party of jaenger-Chor ear's Eve in all, 521 E. and their Joseph HarLn.

uce

nd Pimentos Pimentos

n logna

ouls INDENT NG CO. JIS, MO.

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THURSDAY, DEC, 20, 1040 ____ fon | Serve ik | Casseroles Straight From Oven

Eat Well for Less—

Try New os With

Canned Corn

Family Will Like Chowder Recipe

By GAYNOR MADDOX NEA Staff Writer CANNED CORN is on the United States Agriculture Depart-

ment’'s list of plentiful January:-

foods. It's also on the family's list of favorite meal-in-a-dish speclalities.

» . . CORN CHOWDER A Four tablespoons ham fat, but.

ter or fortified margarine, one large onion, sliced, one No, 2 can whole kernel or cream style corn, two cups diced potatoes, three cups milk, one cup diced cooked or leftover ham, optional, one teaspoon salt, two tablespoons chopped parsley, one-eighth teaspoon Tabasco, Add onion to fat in large saucepan and cook until tender, but not brown. If whole kernel corn is used, drain corn and add corn liquid to saucepan. If cream-style corn is usfed, add one-half cup water to saucepan. Bring to a boil and add potatoes; cover and cook 10 minutes. Add corn, milk and ham if desired. Add salt, Heat thoroughly. Add parsley and Tabasco.

Friday's Menu— BREAKFAST: Stewed prunes, scrambled eggs, enriched toast, butter or fortified margarine, marmalade, coffee, milk. LUNCHEON: Corn, potato and ham chowder, crackers, baked apples, gingerbread, tea, milk. DINNER: Fried quick-fro-zen fillets of haddock, tartar sauce, parsley potatoes, chopped spinach with egg, enriched rolls, butter or fortified margarine, celery, apple pie, cheese, coffee, milk.

The Doctor Says—

Babies Thrive On Affection

Fondling Not Harmful When Not Overdone

By EDWIN P. JORDAN, M. D. A FEW YEARS ago the late Dr. C. Anderson Aldrich and Mrs. Aldrich wrote a book called “Babies Are Human Beings,” which 1 hope is still in print. The main theme is that babies should not all be treated alike because their individual person-| alities would have little chance to develop. | There is practically nothing so bound up with tradition and prejudice as the care of babies. Anyone and everyone offers free advice on how the baby should be fed, clothed, and how it should be trained. This. advice is given with the best of intentions but usually comes from a strange mixture of what grandmother did, what I did, and what somebody else's aunt did.

ONE QUESTION Which the Aldriches discuss is about fondling or loving babies. Conscientious mothers often ask whether fondling is proper. For some reason they sometimes feel that it may be\wrong for babies to be rocked, hugged

“ey

Individual casseroles of cauliflower au gratin are a good way to serve New Year's Eve hot buffet dish,

ing her good looks.

treatment can come from creaming your face before you begin cooking. It's the eombination of steam and cream which is beautifying; the steam makes the skin more receptive to the cream, If you're limited on time in which to shampoo, set and dry your hair, make use of the stove here, too. The heat from the stove will help to dry your hair rapidly. Just tie your hair up in a gay kerchief and start the family dinner. You can't stay away from the stove, but you can make it % double duty.

Knee-Deep Bends

Beneficial exercises are to be found in housework, too. Don't just stoop over té dust table legs, or to sweep up. dust. Take knee-deep bends, keeping your

or mothered, and that the infant in order to be healthy must be raised as practically “untouched by human hands.” Everyone thrives on some af- _ fection and probably infants most of all. Of course, it is good to! fondle babies—good for the baby | and good for the parents. This does not mean using dangerous roughness or giving the child an infection, like a cold. It is not good, of course, for a baby to have indiscriminate

fondling by friends and relatives.

Like everything else, this matter can be overcome. The more people who come in close contact with the baby the greater the chance of giving the infant some infection.

Theater Party Set Saturday Afternoon

Mary Gale and Thomas Graber] entertain with a theater, party Saturday, afternoon. They will attend the Junior Civic 'Theater's production of ‘“Pinocchio.”|

will

Their guests will be Vincent Sanders and Cindy Lou Phennig.

AKO

PIE CRUST MIX

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{

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By SUE BURNETT Designed to compliment the

more mature figure is this handsome afternoon frock in a_ wide range of sizes. Soft shirring accents the shoulders, the many-gored skirt is a favorite with every woman who sews. Pattern 8434 is a sew-rite per forated pattern for sizes 36, 38, 40, 42, 44, 46, 48, 50 and 52. Size 38, 41 yards of 39-inch. To order pattern or our Fashion Book, use the coupon.

SUE BURNETT The Indianapolis Times 214 W. Maryland St. Indianapolis 9, Ind.

No. 8434 Price 25¢ Blze.iveesvvaswine Fashion Book Price 25¢ Name

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ao H ousehold | Beauty Hints

By ALICIA HART, NEA Staft ‘Writer The average busy woman finds little time for primping, but it's possible to make household chores double as beauty routines. In fact, the kitchen stove can ald and abet a woman in guard-

Consider, for example, the possibilities of a vapor treatment right at the stove. The equivalent of an A expensive salon vapor

back straight. This is excellent for trimming hips and thighs. To whittle waistline and midriff muscles, make use of those picking-up and bed-making tasks. When you reach for scattered magazines, stand with Your feet apart and t. Swing down at the ivi foot with the right hand as you pick up, then reverse hands. Bed-making really pays off in a trim waistline if you stand at the center of one side of the bed and swing your body from the waistline, keeping feet straight and reaching out for sheets and blankets. When you dust high objects or wash windows, don't use a stepladder. Reach, Instead, and limber up those back, arm and neck muscles.

The Times Pattern Service

| green parsley and serve with

legs

| - comes from an injury.

EMALL CASSEROLES served straight from the oven will splke a New Year's Eve buffet supper. Creamy cheese flavored sauce is the match. maker between crisp caulifiowerets and macaroni in the au gratin dish. Garnish smartly with fresh

ham or turkey, spiced fruit and hot breads. . » ” CAULIFLOWER AU GRATIN 4 oz, elbow or long macaroni 3 thsps. butter or margarine 3 tbsps. enriched enriched flour 115 tsps. salt % tsp. paprika 1% c. milk 1 c. grated American cheese (% Ib) 13% c. steamed caulifiower (about 2-pound head)

3, c. buttered bread crumbs

Cook macaroni In boiling salted water until tender (about 10 minutes). Drain and rinse. While macaroni is cooking, melt the butter or margarine in the saucepan. Stir in the flour, salt and paprika. Gradually add milk, stirring constantly until thicks ened. Add cheese and cauliflower. Mix well. Fold in the

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES We, the Women —

Many: Wives Now Facing New Puzzles!

macaroni. Pour into a greased one and one-half quart casserole or four individual casseroles. Sprinkle crumbs, Bake in a moderate oven (350 degrees F.) for 15 minutes,

Serves four,

I * What's Right Question: Please say something about’ a ruptured spleen. Does an enlarged spleen always rupture? Answer: A ruptured spleen is almost always sudden and When possible, a ruptured spleen is, completely removed by operation as soon as possible. An

enlarged spleen rarely, if ever, ruptures by itself. . - ~ + : My neck and

shoulders break out in sores

could cause this? Answer: Without knowing

057

By MRS. ANNE CABOT Embroider a cummerbynd

blouse with demurely delight- |

ful daises for added interest. Make “the round -necked sleeveless version to wear with suits, the plunging neck, capped sleeve pretty for separate skirts.

Pattern 5057 includes tissue pattern for sizes 14, 16 and 18 included, hot-iron transfer for embroidery, material requirements, sewing and embroidery instructions and finishing" dir-

ections. To order, use the coupon. ANNE CABOT The Indianapolis Times 530 S. Wells St. Chicago 7, IL

No. 5057 Price 20¢,

Wame CE EX LLL EAA dd

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Street SABER EINNNNNNRIRRIRRRANS

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ST WRN How to make leffover dishes delicious

You can do wonders with tefe overs, when you combine them with golden-rich Ronco Pure Egg Noodles. They are extra nutritious, and money-saving, wo! Ask your

for Renco Pure Egg Noodles _

wwonderful for mlads, soups, and delicious dishes made from lef

more, it is impossible tc even guess at the nature of this: difficulty. If in a young person, acne or pimples is a possibility. Why not let your doctor look at it?

Teachers Program

The Indianapolis Piano Teachers Association will have its holiday program at 8 p. mm. tomorrow

lin the DAR chapter house.

with bread ’

which itch considerably. What ;

£4

Gl Students ’ Change College Life

By RUTH MILLETT NEA Staft Writer ‘1 WAS TALKING to a home economics dean the other day about how college has changed since the GI's took over the campuses, » Here are just a few of the problems some of her students are facing: One student, the mother of a 2-year-old child, confessed she was getting gray hair worrying for fear her football player husband might get seriously in jured in a game. “After all” said the student wife, "giving all for dear old alma mater is - harder on the wife than on the football hero,” Other students with small children are scheduling their courses, not primarily by what subjects they would like to take, but by the hours when their husbands will be available as baby-sitters. --And then she has a major whose husband has decided that he'll open a restaurant near the campus as soon-As he gets his degree. That has changed his wife's interest from home economics as a background for homemaking to quantity cqoking and institutional management, * . . THERE IS also the student who had to lighten her scholastic load in order to take a parttime job. “We're going to have a baby,” she explained to the a “and if I can work for three months I think we can manage to pay for it.” And so it goes on the college campus of today. The married students seem to be getting along all right. But I'm just as glad I got my education in the days when all we had to worry about was whether dad's next check would be big enough to cover a new evening dress for the spring formal. And when a campus beauty didn't have to hustle around and find a baby-sitter for the big night when she received her crown.

8000 U. U.S. Women In Medical Practice

the United States. Elizabeth Blackwell, the New York Infirmary.

ing medicine throughout

serve in hospitals.

NEW YORK — In 1853 there/wood Ave, was only one woman physician in{of the 84th birthday of her fa(ther, Gottlieb Flick, with an open house from 2 to 4 p. m. Sunday.

She was Dr. founder of

Today 8000 women are practicthe country, 780 of them in New York. Of those in New York, 338 are in private practice and about 442

bo)

COUNTS Club members are determined to have a New Year's Eve party. They decided that a coat of white paint was all the basement in Dave McCarthy's home needed to make it a perfect |v rumpus room. The squires held a council of war, picked up their brushes and pitched in. Dave, Jerry Tooley, Jack Kos and Roger Kiley (left to right, top row) and Walt Lindemann (left) and John Foley put the finishing touches on the cellar shops.

Plan Open House

sleeve pretty for seperate skirts. day. There are no invitations.

| TC West, South * |

! ducts pouring in from the South

: —- very nice,

{Lemons Extremely high; scares,

To Celebrate Birthday

Miss Ruth M. Flick, 33 8. Linwill entertain in honor|

Mr. and Mrs. John Millar Smith, 8240 Kenwood Ave. will have an '

Fresh Vegetables and

Fruits are Plentiful

By JEAN TABBERT

FRESH FRUITS AND vege tables are plentiful now with proe

and West, The first crop of straws ° {berries is In a week early from _ Ti Florida and the price is fair, the

FRESH FRUITS A ApplesVery cheap and good, | Avaeades—8upply will SU the demends | Bananas—Plentitul; not too high. Coconuts—Medium orice: ample supply, Cranberries—Pentiful: reasonsole. 1 Pates—-Suftistent 4 supply; slightly cheaner ood it i | as ent quality available; priced & | Grapetruit—Not too nigh: very nies.

{Limes Very scarce, | Ors v ood pit Solittie Raney californias abou Pears Rather high;

a

scarcer than for

Porta mon Availabe. x Micient supply; mediume preyed TAG or 28 107 hi in Wha annual rem ave VEGETABLES ; i; moderate price; geoff ~~ livia oe A Vil 2 Rh, Sie 3 tel! * Eh

Fras the same, slr 1s vp

: orice woous the URE

very mies.

By MARGUERITE SMITH Q-Please tell me how to raise ay

successfully English I seem to have no T. N.. W. Washington St.

answer to practically all ivy problems. For as regular readers will recall I like to cite the case of an ivy that grows nicely while suspended just over the end of a radiator—if you think of a worse spot. It gets each fall a potful of almost straight compost with just a speck of chicken manure mixed in. So try potting your plant in the loosest richest soil you can i, For some reason the earth under an oak tree (where oak leaves have fallen and decayed over a period of years) seems to voork magic on a sullen ivy. Aiso, try watering the plant from the bottom. Keep soil moist most of the time but not soggy wet. ‘Spray it off once a week to keep leaves free of dust and insect pests.

Send your questions on garJaning to Marguerite Smith, lis Times, 214 W. a. St., Indianapolis 9.

|

| Teen Problems—

| |

DEAR JEAN: I have been

year now. We are very much in love' but we always disagree on sports. You know how girls are, they're always right. What can I do to prove that once in a while I am right ?—E.C.H.N, Sports, it seems, is a relatively trivial subject for a quarrel between steadies, But the point, of course, is the gal always thinks she’s right! That can be serious! The arguer who sees only one side of a question—her own! She's a mighty unpleasant companion and a real menace to permanent contentment. » » ” WHAT can you do, Brother? Well, don't take your sports arguments so earnestly. Treat the subject with good-natured casialness, Kid your gal a | bit when she gets too positive, Most argument addicts. give up

makes light of the matter.

baters, I guéss. Something makes ‘em stubborn about their

Tips on Settling Sports Rows

going steady with a girl for a

the battle when the opponent

Girls as a rule are poor des

it's a relic of ancient days when women were supposed to have no opinions worth mentioning. InstinctiVely, present-day women work overtime trying to prove how smart they are, Any wise gal recognizes this trait in herself. She bends over backward to be a good arguer—fair and tolerant and humorous.

A~—T believe loose rich soil is the

can,

opinions and attitudes. Perhaps

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Ls

————

LOK

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DAILY STORE HOURS —9:30 TO §

ock's

Continues in

Full Swing

.

open house from 2 to 5 p. m. Mon- auslity: price chess fof hap ul, -

and Even More *