Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 21 December 1950 — Page 13
cers yimen are ected by ity at In-
, Epstein,
esponding Fraternity ampus is re Road.
st modern
ly modeled . $87.50
What better way could you ANNE CABOT express sentiment than by cro- The Indianapolis Times - cheting this beautiful chair set : SE aul : No. 5155 Price 20c
THURSDAY, DEC. 21, 1050
WHITE POINSETTIAS, variegated holly, star-shaped red candles and Christmas balls form the centerpiece for this holiday table. The same type decoration may be used for the mantel. Red or pink poinsettias with the “pots wrapped in silver or matching colored crepe paper can be substituted for the white poinsettias. Other plants ‘being offered by florists is year
various types of evergreen. «oS
and prolong-the flower’s beauty. often flockéd a glistening white, pastel pink,
aqua or other pastel. flocked to blend in with color achiemes,
White Poinsettias aa Holiday Table!
include winter-berries; bayberry, mistletoe and
WHEN POINSETTIAS are used as cut flowers, sear.their stem ends to seal in the juices
This year, evergreen and other foliages are
Eat Well for Less—
Family: Likes | |
Pumpkin Pie
All Season |
Variation Provided
By Sweet Potatoes
By GAYNOR MADDOX SWEET potato and pumpkin pies are favorites from October to Christmas. Try this recipe and
they like any Yime. . GRANDMA’ 8 PUMPKIN PIE Two-thirds cup sugar, one ~|tablespoon flour, one-nalf teaspoon salt, ‘one teaspoon ginger, one teaspoon : cinnamon, oneeighth teaspoon cloves, one- -third cup molasses, two cups mashed pumpkin or squash, three eggs, one cup undiluted evaporated milk or light cream, pastry for nine-in¢h pie. Heat oven to 400 degrees F.
nlease your family with a dessert |
| (moderately hot). Mix first six in|gredients. Add molasses, pump-; kin or squash, eggs, and milk or] cream. Pour into a nine-inch pie
Pine cones may also be pan lined with unbaked pastry.
| Bake 40 minutes. or until knife
‘Mrs. Sunderman Will Entertain
Mrs. Enos Sunderman; 2746 N.| | Gale St., will be hostess at 2 p. m. | for the Christmas da Guild members and
[Sroup Hears
Open House Mrs. Baker
To Be Sunday |
Miss Diane Louise Woodward.
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J..tomorrow thei
James Woods, 3227 N. Pennsyl-lparty of the Friday Afternoon children was given yesterday by| the Community Welfare Depart-| Assisting her will be Mesdames ment of the Woman's Department |
vania St., will entertain infor-| mally from 3 to 6p. m Sunday at home. There aré no invitations. | Earlier this fall Miss Wood- | Florence Rettig, Earl Clampitt Club. ward left the Cincinnati Con-|/and Clyde Simmons. | Mrs, servatory of Music to go into the] music department of (CBS), Chicago.
{Literary Club,
William ¥. Krass Jr,
WBBM My Souvenirs.” There will be special music and a gift exchange. |
The Christmas party for Mon-
Program theme will be “Among chairman of the Guild. Hostesses | {for the party included Mesdames|
inserted in center of filling conies lout clean. Serves Six,
SWEET POTATO PIE |
Reduce sugar to one-half cup; {replace pumpkin or squash with! mashed sweet potatoes.
Friday's Menus BREAKFAST: Orange juice, shirred eggs with tiny link sausages, enriched tpast, butter or fortified margarine, | coffee, milk. i LUNCHEON: Casserole of Is! mixed vegetables in cheese sauce, toasted English muffins, Truit bowl, cookies, tea,
ir|
|Harold K. Bachelder, William B.| Milk. . $ * Kennedy, Robert G.. Moorehead DINNER: Green peppers Chair Set [s Welcome Gift and Frank B. Ross. | Stufted with luna sn and Mrs..-Hugh J. B tv | rice, cu e, i traveler, ake on Ate a buttered broccoli, buttered | Homes” in' Africa. | carrots, enriched bread, but-
Couple Plans Supper, Sing
ter of Mr. and Mrs. William Rogers, Golden Hill, from Stamford, Conn., for the holidays. The Rogers will entertain wi
bors on Christmas Eve,
ers will be hosts for a small coc tail party before the Tudor dan
Club.
bage counter. Cabbage with a y low hue is a poor buy.
attached firmly to the stem.
Miss Margaret Rogers, daugh- | Saturday |
their usual midnight buffets sup-| per and carol sing for their neigh-' A—Vermiculite is usually mixed; |
with soll, preferably rich loam, | loose texture
African violet roots seem to de-| mand. Vermiculite is also used
Margaret, Helen and Bill Rog-
Tuesday night in the Woodstock
Avoid Yellow Cabbage When Buying Vegetable-
White, green and red colors are the shopper's guide at the cab-
Besides that color guide, good {cabbage is known by its solidness, leaves that are free of damage and with bases of the leaves
tered or fortified margarine, sweet potato pie, coffee, milk.
DISHING THE DIRT
By MARGUERITE SMITH
BE. Times Garden Editor
will arrive! Q—I'd like to know how vermiculite is used for African vio-| lets. I'm not having much suc-|
th
- cess with it. MORRIS ST.
K- to give it the ce
all by itself to raise viglets in.
the plants
el-
water evaporates from spongelike surface.
By MRS. ANNE ‘'CABOT
by following a pineapple motif. Pattern 5155 includes com-
Name rn
pletihg crocheting instructions, — material requirements, stitch BASF NNNNNNNNNRRRRARRANTRRRRNINYS or your sh illustrations and finiehing di- . rections. Street S000 00RNNIRNRNIINIIERNARSNYS convenience Needlework Fans -—- Anne . : Cabot’s big new album is here. City SSsesasssssssssssessnnesee Many of the
Dozens of fascinating new de- = ‘Send an additiosal Sc for first.
signs, gifts, decorations and class postage to receive pattern Allied special features ... plus four more guickly. | 7 gift patterns and directions. % Florists’ It Isn't Too Late To Place | Shops will Your Order With Santa vibe aspen 3 For | Sunday,
Dec. 24th.
In Our Famous Fourth Floor Toy Department
EVERYTHING YOU DREAM OF TO DELIGHT GIRLS" and BOYS’ of ALL AGES
ALL-METAL . Compiste our ristmas
quickly . . .
| *HOLLY,
| Priced from - $700 $1000
opping
MISTLETOE, WREATHS
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES Junior Leaguers Play Santa
| i
|
Santa Claus had plenty of assistance recently in the distribution of candy favors at the Pre-School Health Conference, Visiting | Nurses Association's annual Christmas party sponsored by the !after her first candy sale 30 years | Indianapolis Junior League. It was held in the English Avenue 289.
| Boys' Club. Two league members, Mrs. R. F. Heimburger (left)
and Mrs, William A. Rugg (right) and Mrs, Vernon Carlin, VNA come in handy. Friends h
| cumstances.
ae
By ELEANOR ROOSEVELT
NEW YORK, Dec. 21—It is a great relief to know : that Mrs. Anna Rosenberg at last can begin to handle her difficult job in straightening out the manpower p
{ confronting the nation at the present time. She is well for this job by experience and character. She has beén unable y
| begin to organize her work all because certain crackpots, among them several ex-Communists, made up a tale that she had been a member of a Communist-front organization. i Anyone. in public life knows it is possible, if you go &hout it cleverly, to get almost anyone to join an organization, and until they actually | work in it they are not certain to discover that E | the organization is anything other than it was | represented to be.
* + @
I AM SURE Mrs. Rosenberg is far more | careful than I am even now. I was sure from | the beginning that everything would turn out { just d% it has, but I boiled inwardly that a good { servant had to go through such an ordeal.
v
Even had she been a member for a short time, she should
| have been allowed to say so, to esplain her reasons and the eirs . She could easily vindicate herself becausé her record | 1s too outstanding for anyone seriously to suspect her of disloyalty.
NEW YORK, Dec. 21
the single saucepan stage.
Fudge-Makers Told to Add Chocolate After Cooking
By ELIZABETH TOOMEY, United Press Staff Correspondent (UP) —
Almost every little girl tries her hand at candy-making in her mother’s kitchen. Few ever get past
Julia Steven Krafft graduated from one saucepan and her
mother's wood-burning
cook
stove at
the age of five to become
president of a company that produces 20. 000 pounds of candy a day. On a visit here from her home-
made candy factory in Chicago, spoon salti
Mrs. that
Krafft
brought business
“Like knew a little extra money
most
8
homemakers,
uccess
. METHOD:
three squares bitter recalled the events chocolate; one teaspoon vanilla.
” - Butter
a heavy
aluminum three-quart sauce pan i (eight inches in diameter) with
Tione heaping tablespoon of butter,
would | Add sugar, milk, sour cream and
staff nurse, helped him distribute the gifts. Mrs. Heimburger and ways liked my fudge, so I decided Mrs. John Watson of the league's child guidance and health com. |
mittee were in charge of arrangements.
Teen Problems—
|
Good Guest Is Gay,
a r JOAN
©.
PIR you're invited to
| spend Christmas Day or Christ-
i
But in that case you must give| regular doses of} liquid fertilizer since the vermiculite will not supply plant food| as soil does. Then vermiculite is also useful under pots of African violets, sometimes in a| saucer, sometimes in a metal] flower shelf, where it can be kept._moist. to provide humidity! 4n thé air around the plant as| its!
Here's Your Christmas Gift List! v ~ *FLOWERS and GREENS
1 A BRILLIANT COMBINATION . , . A GIFT OF CHEER FOR THE HOME!
FOR THE YULETIDE DECORATION OF TRADITION and CHARM!
*HER CORSAGE GIFT... BOUQUETS
LOVELY ORCHIDS, GARDENIAS, CARNATIONS, ROSES!
*10 YOUR CHURCH...
BEAUTIFUL, COLORFUL ARRANGEMENTS OF CUT FLOWERS!
*T0 YOUR BUSINESS FRIENDS
FLOWERS ARE Just RIGHT, Lise APPROPRIATE!
mas week-end with friends. What social. tricks and treats should a holiday guest know? Well, first-of all, take with you the gift of galety., A sourpuss, a grumbler, a try-and-please-me stuffed shirt has no place on the Christmas scene. Be appreciative of your hosts’ plans. Enter into the fun with a seasonable amount of joy and
jollity.
AND what about more material gifts? Well, it's. not necessary to provide elaborate presents for all the family. You'll probably want to give your gal or your pal a little something to remember you by, and you “ought to think of the Small Fry, if any. It's ‘their special day. Shop the ‘dime store for the
—Your FLORIST will make deliveries to any part of city!
—Your FLORIST can telegraph . FLOWERS anywhere!
you at home,
Gracious
small toys children love, For the rest it's nice to ante up with | a household present candy for instance.
If you receive gifts from your |
host's family thank each giver with heartfelt sincerity. If vou're left out, keep calm. Don't sulk or act sorry for yourself. Don’t be too nonchalant. Act interested in others’ gifts and remember your stock of presents is waiting for
{IML
{to try to sell that.”
ad al galt.
Cook slowly, stirring until the
sugar
is dissolved. Then bell:
A liftle bakeshop in Wheaton, briskly, not stirring, until when
bought the first 20 pounds in tested in cold water fudge forms {1920. From there Mrs. Krafft took ja medium soft ball, which will not
{a sample box of fudge to Chicago flatten out. Always remove the
{and sold it to the manager of a| {pan from the flame when testing. {drug store in-the railroad station.|and use at least one-half cup: Finally business outgrew her fresh cold water for each test. = When cooked enough, remove: moved to Chicago to set up the from the stove imemdiately, add, chocolate which has been cut in} Her fudge recipe Is no secret very small pieces.
farm kitchen and. Mrs.
Steven Candy Co.
{it was 30 years ago. Here is her recipe:
Krafft
STEVEN'S CREAM FUDGE
‘ia a |
|terred); ,
preciate:
“Llike leaving this one
because i” 8 marvelous 1or everyone in the family
"If you forgot to tell Santa, then be your own Santa Claus and give your family the really practical gift, the gift they'll most ap-
As
soon as’
a box of |and it's still made the same way chocolate melts put pan in sink or
{in large pan of cold water for five,
minutes,
Do’ not stir during this period. Remove pan from cold water and 1 {beat with a large tablespoon until
fudge is very thick.
INGREDIENTS: One cup fudge becomes creamy. Add valbrown sugar (medium is pre-|Dilla and stir slowly until the one cup of white sugar, ”
Then pour into buttered pan or Fn -half cup of milk; one-half CUP iplate. Nuts may be added te the. of thick sour cream; one-half tea- reeipe if you prefer, :
an Automatic GAS
Water Heater
No gift could be more welcome than the convenience of plenty of hot water always on tap, day and night, for baths, dishes, laundry, shaving and the hundred other household hot water uses.
The Automatic Gas Water Heater you give at Christmas is remembered every day of the years and years to come. It makes household tasks so easy, helps finish the work more quickly. It is fully automatic, needs no attention. It costs only a day to operate and supplies a constant supply of hot water at the the same fomperaturs 24 hours a day.
few pennies a
Be your family's Santa Claus and give them
»
Select one for your home now!
5%
an Automatic Gas Water Heater for Christmas. + There's a size to fit every family's need!
—— ——— ———-
»
