Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 July 1950 — Page 5

On-EBa-Ota . 8:30 p.m. in the home , 438 N. Ribe

by bridge.

& . ~~ "Use on leed Drinks, Berries or Puddings CREAM, whipped or plain, is the prima donna of the foods. Use it on berries, on . dings and on top of iced b ‘erages. It packs lots of food value and is everybody's favorite.

CHOCOLATE-MARBLED PUDDING Two unsweetened choo-

third cup chopped nut meats, two tablespoons flour, one cup whip-

ping cream. Melt chocolate in oven in heatresistant glass bowl, one and onehalf quart size. Set aside to cool slightly, In another bowl cream butter; add sugar, salt and unbeaten egg together; add milk. Sift .one and three-fourth flour and baking powder together and add to butter mixture. Add vanilla extract. Dredge nuts in two tablespoons flour; add to = ‘batter. Add half of batter to melted chocolate and blend. Fill a wellbuttered, one and one-half quart heat - resistant glass casserole . with alternate sections of light and dark batter, Cover casserole and bake about one hour in mod- ‘ erately glow. oven (325 degrees _F.), Serve with generous spoonfla of whipped cream. Serves

By JEAN TABBERT ADAMS’ WILL give a party Thursday night. The store has invited all of Indianapoiis to an open house from 7 to 9:30 o'clock. Star of the evening will be Cross Country Modern, a new contemporary group of furniture, exclusive with Adams’. (I-just-can’t-make-it-Thurs day-night enthusiasts may sneak preview the line beginning Thursday morning). Sturdily constructed of white oak, Croas Country

{ | WEDNESDAY'S MENU BREAKFAST: Canned | grapefruit juice, ready-to-eat | cereal, bacon and eggs, en-

riched toast, jelly, coffee, milk, LUNCHEON: Cheese om-

elet, mixed vegetable salad, enriched bread, fresh fruit cup, tea, milk, DINNER: Pan - broiled hamburgers, toasted hamburger rolls, chopped pickle relishi~sliced sweet red onions and sliced tomatoes, frozen French fried potatoes, chocolate - marbled pudding, coffee, milk.

| Dl

SHIN

By MARGUERITE SMITH

pieces have a soft beige-gray finish that blends well with any color scheme. The finish is not a highly mirrored surface, but a serviceable, glow-

ing one. It was developed to

protect against marring and to minimize dusting and polishing. It's highly resistant, too. to hot dishes and alcoholie beverages,

Basic Pieces

Groupings are co-ordinated, include both basic and speclalized dual purpose pieces. Open stock, units may be switched from room to room to suit the homemaker's individual needs. Architecture and acces

Blackwood on Bridge—

~~ Cane backs and seats of the chairs and parquet fable tops distinguish this adaptable collection of Cross Country furniture in Adams’ fifth floor Guild Galleries.

sories keynote the period of the furniture; in the correct. setting it's at home with Early American, modern, or traditional things. : ® Made by B8ligh Furnituregg Co. and built by the Grand Rapids Chair Co. Cross Country was designed by Herbert TenHave, winner of the 1949 Waters award for outstanding achievement in design. He's the creator of the butler-buffet, the piece that looks like a chest on chest, but opens out to serve umpteen guests. *

Specialized Units The furniture is moderately priced, yet it has design innovations typical of luxury lines. Some of the vieces that that combine space-saving features with engineering trickery are: The low lid bolster chest. This unit may be used under the window or the foot of the bed. The top lifts for storage, may be covered with foam rubber cushions for seating. These coms in a variety of sizes like the low drawer chest. This latter piece differs from the first in

that it has a drawer arrangement rather than a lift up top. : The corner television recor cabinet. This piece has distinctive cane doors, fits into a corner. There's room for records or magazines beneath the top, designed to hold the video set. The corner storage table. The piece has a 36 by 36 parquet top, may be used as a corner lamp table with studio | beds, The sides open for bianket storage. Basic storage pieces are constructed with top design characteristics. There are the above mentioned parquet inlays and cane insets, tarnish resistant trays, engineered drawers and a variety of foam rubber seats for auxil- . iary seating.

Moisten String

Before you tie up a package, growth by the aid of this vitamin! moisten the string lightly. The nay mean a lot one of these days. State

string will shrink as it dries, tightening up the knots.

- Felt on Clock

A noisy clock will be less noisy it you put it on a piece of felt.

Kibitzer Tries a Hand with Mr. Dale Uses Poor Strategy in His Defense

‘MR. NEW IS A kibitzer by birth and training. It may be said New won

Times Garden Editor Q.—Is the seed from - Oriental poppies the kind that is used on rolls and other baked goods? Rural reader.

A.—No. Oriental poppy seed is/g +n dealer. | finer than the popy seed usually path sides vulnerable. |

He is condescending.

used on rolls, A | | He al kid ently Je NORTH {three finesses and finding all the the opium . But 't bel ily op oy eS } be od) : 3 {ponent’s hand, Mr. New is right | game. contain any opium. Varieties of D—KJ10542 is there with the comment that| papaver somniferum (literally C—18 | he | X carrying sleep” , in! . : De . ot , in WEST EAST | He is living proof of the adage, | general, annuals, Salad oil is Mr. Meek Mr. New l, : a also made from these seeds. It ¢ gg 2 ss J1m07 2 little knowledge s a danis said to have a pleasant nut-| g_go 5 3 H—9 653 |BeTOUS thing. Wis favor: D—9 D—A Q6 (In the Game U R ili S h C—QJ 1092 . C—8864 At certain intervals (after he se Doi ing tarc Sor has forgotten the Stussofne ae i i Ts e sults of the last time) he decides For Flimsy Curtains Qs 4 [to get into the game. He held the AY He! starch piv Hl 3 4 : East cards in today's hand. Mr. through flimsy curtains O—A K 5 Meek opened the queen a Sine 3 — land Mr. Dale won wit e king. So try this: prepare a boiling The bidding: A te that Mr. Dale purposely hot starch solution, dip the cur-| SOUTH WEST NORTH EAST : h tains in and then run them/l H + Pass 2 D Pass jafasinan Tris Baring the ase te ger. Nr 3SNT AM Pass ould have fooled exactly nobody

The is the typical kibitzer, He is irritating in a mild, polite way.

as to the location of the king.

vs of you'll fine

nea us

__The delight of

PLATED SILVER

every Hostess, and Summer Bride

® for Buffet Serving!

(Complete with Tongs. Tongs only available separately at $1.50) . PERFECT WEDDING GIFT

Every hostess and homemaker wishes for one of these delightful footed serving bowls because of its versatility. So pretty and dainty! So handy and useful—it holds a permanent place on every table—and in the heart of every summer bride. Measures 712" across top, 312” tall. 2

Phone and Mail Orders Carefully Filled

| At trick two Mr. Dale led a diamond and finessed the 10. Mr.

Teen Problems— =

Don't Foster Y

| tung ox. two

ings—said, “Assume . ‘have Bot” ©

When a player takes a finesse in a suit in which there ail four outstanding cards, and loses to a singleton king, Mr. New is likely to say that he would have gone up with the ace. Not only that—he actually believes it!

the king.

fired back - actly what Mr. Dale wanted, He ducked and Mr. Meek won the nine.

In other words Mr. New was good enough to know that if Mr. Meek’s clubs had been headed by K Q J or K Q 10, he would have LED

But when Mr. Dale won with “ithe king of clubs; he left doubt as to the location of the ace. (Mr. Meek might have led from

a holding of A Q J and one orf \j.le i mirror-bright and use more small ‘cards, :

Vital Entry

By JOAN . A FIFTEEN-year-old wrote recently: I have been going with a boy five months. I have grown very fond of him but I'm very jealous. I want

to be friendly with other girls and not be jealous. What should I do? Root out your jealousy as if it were poison ivy ‘cause that's what it is—strictly : Sow

poison. If you can't gét rid of the

| scourge all at once, conceal it.

Shakespeare —who knew a about human be-

five months of going with this

, club. This was ex

“Mr. Meek could not lead a spade

| trom his side to knock out that} When a player goes down one vital entry to dummy, so he led at a game contract after losing another club. : Mr. Dale now had time to set] outstanding trumps in one op-ithe diamond suit and make his

] This is a clear-cut case of when |} he would have stopped below pot to “return partner's lead.” With that long diamond suit in dummy, Mr. New should have led spades at his first opportunity, killing the only entry to the board.

Designing Woman

* Biizabeth Hillyer. Try a trick and practical on that lazy lower half of the bathroom window.

I _the-sill-for-a-powder new powder niche adds decoration without subtracting an inch of valuable space.

our Jealousy ee}

80-0, pretend to be friendly and eventually you'll form the habit of friendliness. Foster your jealousy and you'll end up full of green-eyed misery, suspicious of everyone, disliked by all.

Jealousy is “usually based on lack of self-confidence. After

boy, why are you so unsure of his affection? Perhaps your suspicious manner is undermining his feeling for you. Any boy is uneasy with a jealous girl. He begins to wonder why?

In general, folks will take |

you at your own evaluation. If you're afraid of competition, best beau will doubt your desirability. Yes, definitely!

SAR

rRrry

—Lymant___ PICTURES : AND FRAMES Made to your needs for any decoration. oN 3

AA

Vitamins Are Being

Discovered

Now Employed | For Anemia Cases By EDWIN P. JORDAN, M. D. "NEW VITAMINS keep on .being discovered. Now it is vitamin B-12 which is the most exciting. It looks as though thiz vitamin will prove

a number of serious or troubling conditions.

One of the important uses of . vitamin B-12 seems to be for pernicious anemia. form of anemia which 30 years Ago was almost always fatal in - {the long run; but which for many years has been successfully treated in most cases with liver preparations. Now vitamin thanks to our scientists, is now available in pure crystalline form) seems to be even better than liver preparations for pernicious anemia, ; Indeed vitamin B-12 seems to! {have proved helpful in some ad{vanced cases of pernicious anemia, with nerve changes which have heretofore resisted any known| forms of treatment. {

B-12

PERNICIOUS anemia is not a common disease, therefore there has been a great deal of interest in another action of vitamin B-12, namely, its ap-| parent effect on growth,

iage from 5 to 12 years. !

There is much still to be done| {on vitamin B-12 and its relation-!|

th the queen and

{

'ship to growth in children. There

3 i! BS

particularly useful to in their treatment of

This is the

*

B-12 (which,

- » »

however, and

pocket.

A bold striped fabric works up effectively for this stunning {frock for teen-agers. Buttons on a slant accent the side closing and trim the neat

quarter sleeves, Pattern 8543 is a sew-rite perforated pattern for sizes 11, 12, 13, 14, 16 and 18. Size 12,

— Mother Needs Rest iv

From Worry, Chores

By RUTH MILLETT : THE FIRST thing Papa did after he and Mama and the kids reached the spot wheres | they were going to vacation for | two weeks was to give the kids a little pep talk. ! “So that this will be a vacas {| tion for all of us” he sald, { “we’re going to have to make a few rules—just a few—Qut no- | body is to break them. “The first one is that when- | ever you want to go for a swim or out in the boat, you must report where you're going. That's for safety and to keep | your Mother and me from "| worrying about you whenever | you're out of sight for a while, “The second rule is that your Mother and I aren't to be teased when we say ‘No’ to | some request. One ‘No’ is all | you get. “The third rule is that you | aren't to holler ‘Mom’ everytime something seems a little hard to do or you can’t find something you need. Each one of you has to be responsible for looking after himself. “The fourth and last rule is that every morning we are all going to pitch in and do what few chores have to be done. That way it won't take much time for anybody.”

¥

By MRS. ANNE CABOT Decorate tea towels with these amusing designs, reminiscent of the “good old days” and as quaint as the bicycle buiit for two. Simple stitches and gay: colors will help you turn out a design a day. Pattern 5281 includes hot iron transfer for designs measuring

Have short or three-

The Indianapolis Times 214 W. Maryland St.

Indianapolis 9, Ind.

Harly in the work with this 5 by 5 Inhes, color chart, stitch vitamin it was found to stimulate! Shion sleeve, 4% yards of 39 fllustrations and finishing direc- tT , . surprise {the growth of a germ. It was neh. tions, MUCH TO Mamas {later tried on 11 children who had] the four rules wor ae {not grown normally, varying in| SUE BURNETT Shara. And slie snd with the

ANNE CABOT Te t s : s C ren. |" The Indianapolis Times Rule one eliminated worrying 530 8. Wells St. about the kids’ safety. Rule two

kept the days peaceful and

{is a real possibility, however, that! No. 8543 Price 25¢ hi rns Crane i. | owmprm | Hho’ ona lai {fully in at least some children] Size..... . No. 52 i {whose growth is abnormally slow.| Fashion Book Price 25e ? 51 Price 20 me thee purpeiseq fos

No parent should rush out and N itry to buy vitamin B-12 in the {hope of stimulating the ErOWth Of] .c...ouvicesisssesrsssessonssses| la youngster. i {scientific progress which is being Street ssessercsresnsraesaserees [Street Gets ssNENss Ess ERR RNENS

{made in

that's both easy

shelf. The

FERRER

Nevertheless, the

the study of aiding

All Items Adv subject to Prie

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List all items. Here

are a few typical

money saving

features You'll

FIND MANY MORE ON EVERY FLOOR

*

BLOCKS Closes

_ +: Saturday at 1 am

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INAMO susesesasessosscnsnnsnsss| discovered she had been jump- | ing and running to do things sessvsessscsncennsssnsnnescreessi for the children they were ens tirely capable of doing for themselves. And even the chile dren seemed to take pride in learning to do more and more things completely on their own.

'WEDNESDAY—LAST DAY!

SHOP 8:30 TO 5

$8 fo. 10.95 SUMMER RATS 1.

$2 and $4

"A sweeping clearance of straws and fabrics, in white, natural, and colors.

BLOCK'S Paragon Mats, Fourth Fleer

INFANTS, KINDERGARTEN ro rr

(100) 2.98-5.98 Sunsuits for Girls ............1.99-3.99 175) 1.98-3.98 Swing Skirts .....c..cicee0 9%, 199 (50) 1:69-2.98 Girls Gabardine, Picolay Shorts. .99¢, 1.99 (50) 2.98-4.98 Chintz Swim Suits for Girls ....1.99, 299 (35) 2.98 Dotted Swiss, Plaid Blouses .........c..1.99 (30) 3.99 Nylon Sacque, Cap Sets ........... “499 (100) Odd, Ends Infant, Childrens Wear, Greatly Reduced

10.98 and 1298 SUMMER DRESSES

698

4