Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 September 1950 — Page 25
ing the twe ne time you
. But I could t my partner . might not be my next turn ht develop in I might need ds later on. I read my play 1g & diagram
— FRIDAY, SEPT. 81080 =~ Fo
Mennonite ‘Recipes
Eat Well for Less—
Are Given
Chicken Potpie } Is Economical
By GAYNOR MADDOX MANY READERS want to khow more about the Mennonite Community Cookbook by Mary, Emma Snowalter, reviewed —re-— cently in this column. So -here goes, witn a look into the book's pages on chicken. a Fowl is now plentiful and an economical buy. These Mennonite recipes, therefore, are right in line with our budget menus.
® = PREDICTION OF THINGS TO GOME—Mme, Marguerite “Bick, internationally known wr CHICKEN POTPIE stylist, says hairdos for the coming. season. are taking a more feminine look . . . as in the one picture One chicken, preferably a four-| ; "phroa views above. In Ayres’ Beauty Salon today and tomorrow for customer consultation, Mme. pound len, one leaspoch. salt} Buck says hair will not be longer (no more than one and one-half to two inches below the hair neck-
Tig ha I lured line), but that by spring 1951 ‘coiffures will have slowly and gracefully developed the rounder,
minced parsley, . more féminine appearance.—By L. F.. er flere see onl POTPIE DOUGH: Two cups. TE TT
flour, one-half teaspoon salt, two Blackwood on Bridge— ’ eggs, two to three tablespoons i
pac, 5, 0s Mr, Champion Agonized by Blind Luck sit when aickes w sino ot Of Gabby Mr. Muzzy's Chaotic Playing
add the sliced potatoes. Add! squares of potpie dough and cook 20 more minutes.
Potpie Dough:
Two_ cups fact made it all the harder for Mr. Champion to bear. partner
x irs {eer sared her thro: well in the flour and add the eggs Mr. Muzzy was giving some advice to a group of new players So se n lear 1 or ! ros, . h 1 ‘ me » 11 Snes; 1 < sel and salt. Work together into a who were kibitzing the game (thereby setting them back at least ou made ne : os od hoar el ; stiff dough; if too dry, add water 10 years) and he failed to pay close attention when Mr. Abel , ok le. SH n 7 1 . u , 1 i - : . able. Think 111 0 up stu or milk. Roll out the dough as opened the: queen of clubs. He “It's, easier on
thin as possible (one-eighth inch), pulled the four .from the board “Slipshed But Wins Trick Ping. Lo and cut-in one-inch squares with 03 11, veq “the eight from his =... CT a knife or pastry wheel. Drop : Ha Into the boiling broth, which! should be sufficient to cover the! chicken well. Add the chopped parsley. Serves six to eight.
" IS not vour lead, dopey.” own hand. "Then he promptly led replied ‘Mr. Champion firmly:
a small heart. “Abel won the trick.” Mr. Champion pushed the card Mr. Muzzy claimed the queen back. “Is it asking too much.” of clubs came from the dummy
he said, “to request that we try hut he was finally overruled. -ito--avert- complete -chaos--hy ob- Even he eould see-that he had serving some of the basic rules to- lose three diamonds and a of the game?” spade for down one. Now-he had “What are you talking about?” lost” a club in addition. asked Mr. Muzzy belligerently. When order was restored Mr. —e - - Abel continued with the jack of clubs. This time Mr, Muzzy couldn't help winning
Sunday's Menu BREAKFAST: Honeydew melon, link sausage, griddle cakes, butter or fortified margarine, sirup, coffee, milk. DINNER: Mennonite chicken potpie, mashed potatoes,
By MARGUERITE SMITH
Times Garden Editor
| South dealer | Both sides vulnerable
ace. He led a heart to dummy's to root African violet leaves? io PRR NORTH 10 and returned . the jack of How long before roots form: raw carrot sticks and celery, Mrs. Keen ‘spades. Mr. Champion covered x A EY fresh peach ice cream, choco- S—J 1087 ‘with the queen and the ace won.’ oy a Y % on i Viole : ans late cake, coffee, milk. H—K J 10 Dummy was entered again with STP ys ick Jaaves inte the soil SUPPER: - Creamed deviled D—865 * /the jack of ‘hearts and on the I!" Wh h. plants £re already eggs in casserole, toasted C—K 54 (king of clubs Mr. Muzzy .threw 8rowing. ut if “you're a begin-
English -muffins, currant jel- WEST EAST his last spade.
. if you use straight sand or a ly, ginger pears, tea, milk. Mr. Abel Mr. Champion Stumbles to Victory half sand and half soil mixture, Tm S—632 S—KQ54 NEXT HE LED dummy’s 10 . Leaves are less likely to rot N. E. Boyers to Give H—9 2 H—8 6 of spades and ruffed in his hand “before rooting in sand, especialD=AQ93 D—K 104 when Mr. Champion covered with ly if you cover them with a Gadget Party Sunday C—QJ 103 'C—9762 the king. Now the King of hearts glass. Time of rooting varies Mr. and Mrs. N. E. Boyer will SOUTH got him on the board again to greatly from a few weeks to a entertain with a gadget shower Mr. Muzzy lead the eight of spades. There few months. But let the leaf from 3 to 6 p. m. Sunday in honor S—A 9 3 followed an agonizing moment as stay put so long as it doesn't of Miss Joan Mildred Geisendorff i Mr. Muzzy tried to remember _get loppy—for that old saying and Wallace O. Lee Jr. The party H-—A 7 343 whether this card was goed. Mr. about where there's life, there's will be in the Boyer summer ow Abel fidgeted. . . hope is specially true of a root-
home, near Carmel. Mr. Champion was tense anc Miss Geisendorff and Mr. Lee The bidding: grim. Mrs. Keen couldn't bear to will be married at 3:30 p. m., SOUTH WEST NORTH FEAST ook. She held her hand over Pass. Bee Pass --her-eyes: _-— ee r—— All Pass At last Mr.
ing African violet leaf.
Send questions on gardening
Church. | 4H Muzzy discarded Times, Indianapolis 9, Ind.
AGAIN TODAY MR. MUZZY put the whammy on the great two diamonds on the good spades Mr. Champion. As usual he stumbled into the right play but that and announced, “Only down one
with the @—What kind of soil shall I use
ner you may have more success
h— = THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES = Hairdos Are Becoming Softer, More Feminine
We, the Women—
Papa Takes It Easy In Town Air-conditioning
Helps Office Worker
BY RUTH MILLETT “THEY'RE MAKING offices entirely topo comfortable “these
days.” I recently heard a wom-. |
an complain. ; “Jim ‘works air-condi-
I've
soon as the
in an
tioned office, and noticed
that as weather Jim starts longer hours at the
set sweltering working oince, “ile won't admit he just doesn’t want to come home and
swelter with us in our un-air- | conditioned dream house. But | ‘he looks. mighty sheepish when | I accuse him of stretching his |
workday just because he's a lot more comfortable in the office than at honve,
“And another thing. I stopped by his office the other day and couldn't help but notice how fresh and crisp and cool-look-ing all the secretaries were, sitting there in that nice cool office. “I must be ‘a sad contrast when he comes home atsnight to--tind me mopping -my brow with one hand and turning over the pork chops with the other completely worn out from trv. ing to do housework in this heat.”
” ” »
" MAYBE SHE has something ,
there: Biit at Teast the men are having to pay in one small way for all this working comfort they ‘are getting that their wives don’t have. No husband who toils away in an air-conditioned office all day can expect any sympathy from his little woman when he comes home at night. If he tries to play the tired businessman with her he'll Just hear: “Well, T sure did envy you today in that air-condition-ed office when I was cooking and ironing and.it was 98 in the shade without a breath of air stirring.” The picture of poor Papa going to work in the hot city is fast changing to poor Mama having to stay out in the hot suburbs while Papa has it easy in a nice, cool office in town.
NEED A HOME near schools? Will Wear Pink Satin
Turn to The Times classifie
pages and read the Homes For bert T. Romeril, best man; and Sale columns. You will find HUN- Curtis DREDS of offerings and many Minn, Marvin Romeril and Gene of them are located near schools. Sgro, ushers, {To find the home you want READ |
—-to-Mre- Smithy Fhe- Indianapolis THE TIMES CLASSIFIED SEC
TION!
& (ombare
100%, worsted woo gabardiné red green, navy, brown,
100%, worsted wool gabardine — black,
teal, wine, black. wine, teal, brown, Misses’ sizes 10-18, navy, green, red. | § .' Misses' and Petite = °
Junior sizes 9 to 15. $ : $ sizes 10 to 18, $38
100%, worsted woo gabardine. In teal, : J wine, black, brown, navy, red or green, + Misses. sizes 10. to
0. 438
Here It Is! The
~ Magpnificent’Menswear Worsted Checks and 100% Worsted Wool Gabardines "Made to sell for Many, Many Dollars More . .. But Through Special Planning— )
Here at exactly the right ime .. , new fall and winter suits. At a price your budget fairly cries for, in colors
-and fabrics your fashion-loving heart sighs for! Insure your selection TOMORROW!
® FASHION FEATURES
holes and lining hems, fabrics treated to dry clean safely, precision cut to fit without alterations inter... faced with hair canvas to hold their shape indefinitely, linings guaranteed for the life of the suit “ea
these plus’ many, many more for only $38!
@ NEW COSTUME SHADES, IN THREE SIZE RANGES. Choose the gabardine in red, green, navy, ©
brown, teal, wine or
Cv. bizés 10. to 18, petite
a
¥
A a A ER RC EH ed A RS RR
PAGE 25 Designing Woman— The Doctor Says—— =
Paint Woodwork Wall Color (),een First |
Carrier of
Descendants
Suffered
By EDWIN P. JODAN, M. D. ¥ SO FAR AS is known Queen Victoria of England was the first carrier of the hereditary factor or ‘gene respondible for the famous roval bleeding disease. Ten of Vietoria’s male descendants have Suffered from Hemophilia and seven of her female descendants have been proved to be carriers of<- the !gene, Where and how Queen Vie--torfa acquired the fateful gene is however unknown. | In many cases of hemophilia {the hereditary line is not easy to trace. The condition is limited to the male line although it is carried by women to their male children. Although in rare cases women bleed almost as easily as true hemolphiliac men, the dis--
Dr. Jordan !
THE FINISH may come off with a cloth after an -application of varnish remover, or it may nced several applications of the remover and industrious use of a wood scraper, The actual bleaching is done
By ELIZABETH HILLYER DON'T TRY to ignore the woodwork Jn a color scheme. Even he handsomest wall
color is a disaprointment if it's smudged with dark ceiling
moldings;baseboards und door by bleaching preparations, ‘au¢e is usually considered to be frames that don’t natch or usually - two sister kinds that a strictly male disease. harmonize with anything else are as easily applied as_paint x ® Woodwork painted the wall and give excellent results PERSONS subject to this bleedcolor makes an amazing dif To {ind out how much work ing tendency are remarkably ference, and if you don't want “bhieaching your own woodwork healthy. and- are different from to cover the wood grain, wood would be, select an incon- [gthers only in their liability to work can be bleached. You can = spicuous patch of wood for a |easy and excessive bleeding, A bleach it yourself try-out, perhaps on the inside [trifling injury which would not
The difficulty of the job de“pends more upon tha finish removal than the bleaching.
of a closet door, and sxperi— be-ef-any consequence to a norment stap-by-step with remover ma' person will cause severe and bleach, {bleeding in a true hemophiliac.
LL o - "| Under such circumstances the Miss Lewis To Be Wed
{blood may trickle or ooze on and on and prove almost imposIn a double ring ceremony at will hold her fingertip veil. She ible I stop. Shtuting Ty. BS Jue 7:30 o'clock tonight Miss Kathryn will carry a New Testament top- Serna as well as Suton. 28 {Lee Lewis and Bill (G. Romeril ped with a white orchid. | attacks ar age a Jome ne will be married. The Rev. John, A reception in the church par- JE even xe . Biury " H. Bergen will officiate in the lors will follow the ceremony, POtDICE more an a sig Amp Wallace Street Presbyterian The bride has chosen a navy blue! . ‘Church. suit with wine accessories for heel RR a Hears hd Ar. Mrs, ‘ar . Lewis, wedding trip. {RC Sa and Mi Tow and wm Gi ng mr long some better treatments will
Mrs. Elbert F. Romeril, 4301 Eng“ Ricketts Go East {become available.
lish Ave. are the parents of the Mrs. William F. Rickett and Maennerchor Ladies jcoupie, ” son, Michael Patrick, formerly of my - ' His, Eibels I, Romer], matron py Harrison, have left the city Plan Year S Program u ig » 11 Near an Olive SEEh for Falls Church, Va., where they| Mrs. Will Hauck, president of - - = gne : a. : ge Fir Wil join Capt. Rickett, now on/the Maennerchor Ladies Society, Je Soper Ored froth; Mra duty in the Pentagon, Washing- announced committees and activiCR ¢ Ys Bn.00%T} gion, May. ton. Since her husband was called ties for the year at a meeting toard King aii pn na Mrs. MaY-least five weeks ago Mrs. Rickett|day in the Athenaeum. nard King will be bridesmaids. |. her son have been living with] Mrs, Katy Kerz and Mrs. her mother, Mrs, Ernest Fullen- George Grabborn were hostesses. 1. The bridegroom has chosen El- Wider, 1320 N. Delaware St. ————————————— : ——= Sprouts Useable | There's no need to throw out Inexpensive place mats can be onions which have. sprouted in made from leftover wall paper. your vegetable bin. Plant them in The bride's gown _oi.blush pink Cut them -out-with-pinking-shears; &-pot—on—your—window st -and— — - satin is fashioned with a cathed- and then waterproof them with a use the sprouts to flavor your ral train. A satin seed pearl halo coating of shellac. ‘cooking. ”
Thomas, Lake Lillian, Mat Idea Given
x
WASSON'S STORE HOURS: 9:30 A. M, TO 5.00. P. M. MONDAY THRU SATURDAY
»
a
Best Value News Your Budget Has Had In Years!
etm mm mr tet
-
a.
.
WORTH FAR MORE! Everything you've been asking for: Hand-made button- -
black; the check in green or rad with black, green: or red with brown. In misses’ sizes 10 to 18, half sizes’ 12, to 24! , junior sizes 9 to 15." v) 5 : = Thee hii 2 ® 3 . og 4 Wasson's Complete Sit Shop, Second : aioe 4 2 3
