Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 January 1950 — Page 7

daughter, cia Mae, to fie Heapes ing, son of . and Mrs, o Alexander vg, Webster oves, Mo. vows will be d Feb. 8 in

son

her Kappa {iss Pearson

1 will give a day Mrs. C, with a a lunch-

picts (ing

OSEVELT Y., Jan, 1l-w \dly sent me and another rsation. Une “Aw, come

mSDAION YR a

wo Fg wag yo something to» Lys. hehavey ty and kindt hat we have - one fault, 1 racteristic of

usual early e breakfast, 0 the woods, ome kind of 8s not, howe w him into he paid no I proceeded eaving him

he appeared nN expression tion. And I what really As being dise

in a HOME ‘urn now to ms. You'll )F HOMES ¥Y...nnd Times is r with the )S., Er T———

7

W 0 “hat a mids

As 2

_ delicate,

cups cold water, Wash, stem and carefully re-| , move seeds from pods of dried] ’ chill, Take care with the seeds. Put in cold water; bring te boil.| Boil slowly until skins slip easily, | usually three-fourths to one hour. (When you become expert you(¥ may roast the pods instead of boiling them.) Rub pulp through a colander or| sieve to make smooth paste.| Should yield one-half to three-| fourths cup pulp. { Chili powder, prepared com-| mercially, may be substituted for pulp at the equivalent of one tablespoon of chili powder for each pod of chili. Flavor is never as| but’ burn that results from too much handling of that! aggressive vegetable may“ bel avoided.

Round Steak Two pojinds center cut round

Steak, one pound center. cut, fresh! “ham:

.

co Trim. steak. apd Basis. Sut. iath |. pie Sdney dloow RhorreAt cine ey PMA atid wpa

“eUps Tat Yendered from beef suet; four cloves garlic, chopped, two) onions, chopped, two cups water. Saute onions and garile ip fat; add meat; cook until gray (not brown) in color. Add water, simmer one hour, One teaspoon comino seed, on teaspoon oregano, one Hep salt,

Add Chili Pulp

Rub comino seeds and oregano to a powder, roasting if necessary.! Add chili pulp, comino and ore-| gano powder and salt to meat; cook slowly for one hour. Chili is now a highly condensed food of about the consistency of | commercial packaged mincemeat. Will keep for days. To serve, cut off a chunk; cook in boiling water until a good meat! stew somewhat lighter than a good stiff gravy is obtained. This is chili “straight.” Chili is usually served over boiled beans. Often served as sauce over macaroni or boiled rice. Serves 12,

' Thursday's: Menu— BREAKFAST: Orange juice, oatmeal, raisin toast, butter or fortified margarine, coffee, milk. LUNCHEON: Creamed hard-cooked eggs on toast, celery, rye bread, butter or fortified margarine, stewed pears, cookies, tea, milk, DINNER: Texas <hili-con carne over boiled beans, corn bread, mixed green salad, garlic French dressing, apple | pie, cheese, coffee, milk.

Card Parties

Arranged

The Cathedral Unit, National Council of Catholic Women, will| sponsor two card parties tomor- | row in the Cathedral Social Cen-| ter.

8549

y SUE BURNET] A delightfully simple dress to get your day started right. This neat button front style has a pretty shaped collar, scalloped sleeves and a practical pocket. Nice enough for warm weather wear, too. Pattern 8549 is a sew-rite perforated pattern in sizes 12, 14, 16, 18,720; 36, 38, 40, 42, 44, 46 and 48. Bize 14, 3% yards of 39-inch, Send today for the new fall and winter Fagaign. To order pattern or our Fashfon Book, use the coupon.

SUE BURNETT The. Indianapolis.

Times . 214 W. polis 9. Ind St.»

BEN ARAN

Bize - Fashion Book Price 25¢

i

Street sesssssssenane

City sesessetrtitstisaistenaians

|Sdrority Meets

2

— RA TH oo,

By MRS. ANNE CABOT

This beguiling design makes a delightful shower, birthday or February bridal gift. Dan Cupid, complete with bow and arrow, is surrounded by colorful flowers, all worked in easy 'n pretty cross stitch. Pattern 5066 includes “hot iron transfer measuring 11x14 inches, material requirements, stitch {illustrations and finishing directions. To order, use the coupon.

Confusi tomatically qualifies a heart contract, He needed a D—Q Status ng a two bid, #% 4%. 10th trom his partner. Let's look| bRlvies Hi Olive ol. # By EDWIN P. JORDAN, M. D. | Before you can know how m lat the possible holdings Mr. Abel, WEST "EAST In Washing Gloves’ BY THIS TIME millions of You need to open with two in a might have with which he would a, Cnampion ~~ Mrs. Keen Practically” avery coon people have tried one or more of Suit, you must know with what Pass a one bid, but which would, g x 59 ¢ 8-Q 10 8 4 | that in’ and body ah ths new antihistamine cold reme- | strength your partner will re- still give Mr. Dale a play for ~ g_mg 5 HD and a hag other a some : BY one produst reaso ke hid of one In & sult. Thal . D—A J 83 D—K 9 3 | lukewarm water and mild soap. and by | n is that when you open! He might hold either black o—-Q 8 4 O—K J 962 gut most people don't know In other words, the cold goes With a two bid you are forcing king and nothing else in high! SOUTH | that Hsing 1h clear Water leaves’ merrily on. Voices of warning to game—even if your partner|cards. He might hold the king of Mr. Dale leather stiff and hard after it have been sounded that these has less than enough to reply to/diamonds and an entry in the SA 5 2

less, It is all very conf A th ay rein “Needed Tenth Trick

tiny living No one about one honor trick plus—pos-| He might hold secondary honors, 2H Pass 2NT Pass Members of the St. Mark's bs claims. that the antihistamines sibly a little less than that if he! in one of the black suits (Q J 2or| SH Pass SNT Pass Altar Society will sponsor a card act .on the viruses,” 80 what do has either a fit in your suit or a |1Q 10 2), which would blossom 4H All Pass party at 1:30 p. m. tomorrow in

they do? The answer seems be that at bid at the one level, some colds are On this hand Mr, Dale figured | throw-in play. He might be short one of his losers. As you, see, Mr,

lg the f partly allergy and the delicate that he could win nine tricks at! in either black suit, with enough

2! teins of the invading virus,

ANNE CABOT The Indianapolis Times 530 S. Wells St. - : Chicago 7, TH. No. 5066 Price 20c¢

ATBING, co arson pas en ws by pia

sYSRE REI Tris ruta

Th.

Hetty Eee a a a ARSENIO

The Alpha Chapter, Chi P

tresesssecs Gamma Sorority, met at 8 p. m. arations, remember that the adyesterday in the home of Mrs. yertisements you read are aimed Gordon Hulen, 2620 E. Michigan at selling the drug.

{State Frrrar rrr erervreeevrers St

,'isome colds, a great. step forward

Teen “Problems

Tips Concerning the Shy Ones

Hi Sue. SAY WHAT wdS THE ASS AMEN |

NT & EMOLISH? ISSED IT

Hi - @ET 5 how HER IN A CASUAL, OFF-HAND Wy~

DISHING THE

DIRT— A

By MARGUERITE SMITH

| Q—I have a couple of philoden-

dron vines growing in brass (or maybe they're copper) flat containers. When they were first given to me, they did very well, but now they look bad with leaves dropping off, etc. I don't

know if I can get flat clay pots:

By JEAN WE HEAR a lot about bash-

ful boys and how to put them |

at their ease. But girls are shy, too. So how do you treat the meek mice, Brotfier?

Naturally, you're not a Boy Scout, doing good deeds from a sense of duty. Btill, you can be nice to the timid souls without hurting your social prestige. Actually, the shy gal could turn out to be Miss America— in time. So don’t overlook her, Be your usual self and throw her a smile and a kind word when you get the chance. Maybe you've already spotted the meek mouse’s good points and would date her if she'd let you. Perhaps she's given you the deep freeze. Well, that's simply her shyness, you know. Ten to one, she’s suffering in

silence, wishing she'd been more friendly. A ‘ ” ” i GIVE the gal a second

| chance, son. Talk to her on the

to repot them in that will fit in-| side the dishes, though I sup-|

pose that's what I should try to do. Do you have any sugges-

Mrs. H. K,, N. Capitol

school campus. Get to know her in a casual, fore vou ease ihto dating.

And” you’ shy gals! If your | tongue goes numb and the sim- |

plest words stick in your throat keep smiling. Resist that impulse to give a brusque brushoff. Silence is better than the wrong word, And if your reputation for shyness is formidable in your own “bailiwick, go visiting. Many a timid lass has blos-

off-hand way be- |

"AMATEUR TRAINING SESSION or “Who's Taiping Who?”

The first will be at 2 ». m. and, tions? the second at 8 p. m. Ave. Proceeds of the party will be A—If your brass planters are in used for .the booth which the the sun, why not try filling unit will have at the city-wide! them with gravelly dirt and putCatholic Community Center Ba-| ting some cactus in them?

| somed out in new 'W surroundings.

AAUW | Plans

zaar. The bazaar will be Feb. 9, they're in the shade, you YY al Op M 10 and 11. try planting some-éwarf moth- en eeting Mrs. J. Herbert Hartman is] er-in-law’s tongue in them. The

“P f effect would be good and the] e first open meeting for the

sansevieria will stand up to the| community sponsored by the Inlack of .sun and warmth of a/dianapolis Branch, American Aslving ‘room. - “Then you could sociation “of University Women, perhaps - revive the philoden- bé Mar. 8 drons by potting them in fresh x rich soil in clay pots until you! have some special place to use {last night at the monthly dinner] them decoratively, by Mrs. Russell R, Benson, presi-| (dent of the local group. Dr. Arthur B. Fleming, president of Ohio Wesleyan College. | | Delaware, O., "will be guest] |speaker for the public event in| [the World War Memorial. Al {member of the Hoover commission, Dr. Fleming will report on! the findings of that group.

‘Kick Off' Dinner

Last night's dinner meeting in the Brbadway Methodist Church marked the “kick off” for the annual fellowship funds. Miss Lucille Hart and Miss Elizabeth Fletcher. are co-chairmen of the scholarship committee, which will direct the’ drive for the next two months,

Members were urged by the chairmen to back the fund, “one of the outstanding activities of AAUW.” Nationally, the organtion has a million dollar fund. Raising of the local per capita contribution from $1.53 to $3 win be stressed during the drive, Miss Sally Butler, international president of the Business and Professional Women, talked on “European Conditions as I Found Them.” She toured the Scandi. I. navian countries this summer in ¥ connection with a board meeting of the BPW held in Helsinki. She nayed tribute to the courage of ithe Finns in withstanding Rus{san Communfstic Influences and described lving in Denmark,

general chairman. Her assistants, are Mesdames Frank Orush, H. C. Eckman, Warren TD. Freeman, August F. Krieg, Harold Kurtz, | - Frank Linville, W. J. Morgan, | C. F. Neville, Joseph F, O'Mahoney, George Potts, Joseph KE. Quinn, James Sheridan and H. A.| _Zeyen and Miss Elizabeth ‘Bowar. |

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the requirement er & cold game in jis away South’ desler b. Wap" “liberalized” East-West erate,

4 NORTH Autre haar goni- too tar: inthe Mr. Abel players think every hand which JS-932

- H-—7 6 4

{dries, The thing to do is use a

may not be entirely Your one bid. heart suit. This would furnish AeA KQJiBss: nul of olive ofl in the rinse | the He trick if Mr. Champion D—3 Fi for a softening effect.

{had ace of diamonds. i

Colds are probably caused by Remember that partner should! : one or more viruses which are keep your one bid open with Other. Possibilities

OA: 75 The bidding SOUTH WEST NORTH EAST

Sponsors Card Party

——

long suit of his own which he can'into a trick through the opening ———— the Food Crafé Shop, X. of P. ‘lead or thfough a squeeze or| trumps to enable Mr. Dale to ruff building. Mrs. Raymond Borski is cha®*man of ‘the arrangements . Abel would committee,

beginning

lining of the nose and throat be-| a come highly sensitive to the pro-|

MLS ATR

~ - .

.. THIS CAUSES sneezing, running of the nose, and the usual imiserable symptoms. It is known that in allergy chemical sub- §

stances known as histamines are produced; hence, giving other substances which neutralize or § combat these histamines may help the symptoms of an allergy. § | ‘This is the reason for giving antihistamines at the beginaing of a cold—in the hope that it § . will conquer the allergy part of {the cold and allow the body a

{chance to overcome the virus. | Are they safe? The Council on § {Pharmacy and Chemistry of the {American Medical Association (has recently pointed out that some users of these drugs become drowsey and have even fall- § en asleep while driving oars: or § trig machinery: Too 4 is. can be: ey angetous.

HE Soren Hh

over long ‘periods of” re If the antihistamines can pre- §

vent, relieve, or shorten even ;

i

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fwill have been taken. But until

we know more about these prep-

Shop now for January Savings in our Greatest Annual Clean-Up Sale! You'll find the widest assortment of first

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