Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 June 1951 — Page 18

SHUBARE--Chaap. i» \d STRAWBERRIES wo tly higher.

A PRESH VEGETABLES ARTICHOKES--Scarce,

ately priced. hi scarce; new BEANS—Higher; very scarce. here, B Reasonable, LETTUCE—Abundant.

" CELERY~Reasonable.

CHIVES—Moderately priced. CORN--Less expensive,

Higher. = PEACHES—Plentiful; top quality. EGGPLANT-—Reasonable, - PINEAPPLES—Cheaper, ENDIVE utuy priced.

i ehigan GARLIC-Reasonable, ~-Lo88 expensive, HEAD LETTUCE—Higher,

ASPARAGUS—~Plentiful; moder- MUSHROOMS-—Abundant.

CELERY CABBAGE-—Expensive. SWEET POTATOES — Very

CUCUMBERS--8lightly cheaper. TURNIPS—Reasonable.

ESOAROLE- Eapousive. GREENS-—Cheaper,

KALE-—Cheaper. LEAF LETTUCE—Very cheap.

ONIONS-—Green crop, plentiful; dry varieties, high. PARSLEY-Moderately priced, PEAS-—S8carce; high. PEPPERS-—-Higher, POTATOES -—- New crop high; others reasonable, RADISHES—Cheap. SPINACH~—Cheaper.

scarce; higher, TOMATOES—Less expensive.

WATERCRESS—Off the market temporarily,

~ 'New' for Bored Diners

: a YOUR MEALS—A sunburst casserole is answer to meat budget problems.

If you, the housewife, have a Teor a) about beef, bring sun‘shine instead of sadness to your dinner table with a sunburst ‘casserole, The casserole includes a base of noodles folded into a cheese sauce with fresh chopped green beans added. Stiffly beaten egg whites centered with the whole yolk garnish the top. Accompany the one-dish meal with green pepper rings, radshes, cucumbers and thick slices of cold tomato. Poppy-seed rolls and iced tea complete the menu.

SUNBURST CASSEROLE 4 oz. medium noodles

the

Cook noodles in boiling salted water until tender, about five minutes. Drain and rinse. While noodles are cooking, melt butter or margarine in saucepan, Stir in flour and salt, Gradually add milk, stirring constantly until thickened. Add cheese and stir until blended. Cut beans into one and one-half inch pieces saving about two

maining beans into cheese sauce with noodles. Pour into greased individual casseroles. To egg whites add one-half teaspoon salt and beat until stiff. Pile lightly on noodles in casseroles and make a well in center of each with n. Carefully slip yolk into eachiavell. Bake in a moderate oven at 350 degrees F. about 15 minutes or until yolks , {are set. Arrange five or six beans at the edge of each casserole to form points of a star, Serve immediately for four.

|The Doctor Says—

Bathers Note: Use Care

By E. P. JORDAN, M. D. IT IS A RARE summer Sunday or holiday which passes by without one or more unfortunate deaths from drowning. And the worst of it is that these deaths are so unnecessary; just a little more care and they would have been prevented. Swimming for pleasure (or to get cooled off) is enjoyed by millions. It is a good and healthful sport. If there is no physical reason to avoid it (such as a bad heart, the water is not too cold, and if a few precautions are observed, it is as good a summer recreation as there is. One caution which should always be emphasized is not to swim alone. Drownings also come from swimming in unsupervised areas whether they are ponds, rivers, lakes, or the ocean.

1 J # ” IT IS NOT wise either to go in swimming too soon after meals. An hour should be the minimum. The reason for this precaution is that after eating, the blood gathers near the stomach to aid digestion and is therefore not available to the muscles used in swimming or to keep the body warm. A friend who is also an experienced swimmer once commented to me that an important cause of drowning is alarm or excitement on the part of the swimmer who is in a little trouble. This exhausts the swimmer and he is less likely to use his head in getting out of the difficulty,

Teachers Session Set

Times State Service

TERRE HAUTE, June 14-—-The annual state conference of the homemaking teachers of 'the southwest district will be held Monday through Wednesday at Indiana State Teachers college

Miss Hortense Hurst, Indian~_|apolis, state supervisor of home ~~ |economics, will help carry through + [the conference theme, “Toward Es

By MRS. ANNE CABOT

Here is a lovely peacock deeign which makes a hapdsome chair back set, . Pattern 5561 includes . complete crocheting instructions, material requirements, stitch fllustrations and full directions. Needlework fans—Anne Cabot's big album is here. Dozens ‘of fascinating ‘designs, gifts, decorations and special features . . . plus four gift pat- : and directions

Sunburst Casserole Something

dozen pieces for garnish. Fold re-

Eat Well for Less— Beef Tongue Suggested to Cut Costs

By GAYNOR MADDOX HAVE YOU thought of

tongue as a means to offset, the high price of meat? It is one answer. So let's take a look.

Beef tongue comes fresh,

smoked and. pickled. Bmoked tongue probably is the favorite choice with most families, ;

PREPARATION or BEEF TONGUE Fresh Tongue: Simmer in water to cover. Add salt and additional seasonings, such as whole black peppers, bay leaf, sliced onion and cloves. Cook one hour per pound. (Pierce with fork to test tenderness.) Remove tongue from water and when cool enough to handle, carefully remove skin and trim off roots. Slice and serve with white

horseradish and a little mustard. Smoked Tongue: Cook as above but omit salt. Heré’s a good raisin sauce to serve with smoked tongue: Mix one-half cup brown sugar with one and one-half tea-

sauce heavily seasoned with!’

¥

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

How fo Beat the Heat

By SUE BURNETT How to’ look comfortable and unwilted all through these warm days is easily solved by sewing several different styles that suit a variety of occasions. Pattern 8720 is a sew-rite perfommted pattern in sizes 36, 38, 40, 42, 44, 46, 48, 50, 52, Size 38, 4% yards of 39-inch. Pattern 8579 is a sew-rite perforated pattern for sizes 36, 38, 40, 42, 44, 46, 48, B50, 52. Size 38,4 314 yards of 39-inch; % yard contrast. Send today for your copy cf the spring and summer Fashion, our complete pattern magazine. It's colorful, interesting, informative. Smart, easy to make frocks; decorating tips; gift patterns printed for you.

The Mature Parent— 4 Train Child In Privacy on How To Behave Properly In Public Life

By MURIEL LAWRENCE THE SMITHS ARE PEOPLE who have never made up their minds that Bobby and Ellen should go to bed at 9 o'clock.” Let's look in on them the night busi-

ness friends of Mr. Smith have dropped by.

At 9 o'clock Mr. Smith and his guests are discussing their firm's advertising policy. At the other end of the living room, a background of villainous snarls from the television set absorbs Bobby

wrecks a social evening and may do damage to a business relationship. If we lived on desert islands with our chil. dren, we might be able to get away with incon sistent discipline. We don't. We live among people—relatives, neighbors, friends. If we don't train youngsters to behave in private the way we want them to behave in public, we are faced with a choice of becoming hermits—or going in for public crackdowns. Public crackdowns are as bad for us as they are for children, To anyone who witnesses the unpleasant scene that results, we reveal ourselves as incompetent and confused parents.

And we know we do. A and Ellen. Mr. Smith looks ; frritably at his wife, and a : That's Tag for us. a)

little nervously, she picks up his cue. She says with false cheerfulness, “Bedtime, youngsters. Say goodnight to Mr and Mrs, Jones.” Without bothering to turn his head, Bobby says, “It will be over in 15 minutes, mother.” The Smiths are faced with two alternatives. Before Mr. Mrs. Lawrence Smith's business associate, they either expose themselves as people whose children make their important decisions for them—or they crack down. Mr, Smith decides to crack down. He walks over to the television set, turns off the program --and turns on a flood of juvenile wrath that

THOUSANDS OF WORDS have been written about the importance of consistent discipline to children’s confidence, Not so many have been written -about its importance to our confidence. But we should be warned often of the loss of selfapproval we can suffer. Few of us are so sure of ourselves that we can afford to let our lax training become a subject for discussion and criticism to our social circle. Few of us are so noble that we are above feeling pretty resentful at the child who humiliates us by defying our authority in public. Consistent discipline is our insurance against the kind of panic that besets us when we venture into public with a child who doesn’t trust us to mean what we say.

SUE BURNETT The Indianapolis Times 214 W, Maryland St. Indianapolis 9, Ind. No. 8720

No. 8579 Size.

Fashion Book Price 285¢

wove

NAMB sesessscssscsssescennren

Price 30¢ Price 30¢

\week by the Marydale Guild. A'Q_1 have five lilac bushes in my

tainment and refreshments, each] graduate will receive a personal ot Hom the S guild

Guild Sets

Two Events

Two events are scheduled this.

EDIsHING THE DIRT £

By MARGUERITE SMITH "flowers, Circle each bush with Times Garden Editor a little high phosphate general | garden fertilizer (sold under yard and only three of them| ...,.. trade names). Water bloomed, and then only three t0| nis in well, You might also

seven lilacs. Please tell me what give each bush a quart of bone mittees will function as usual] to do to make them bloom.| meal. Then cover the soil around during July and August. E. 38th St. the plant with rotted manure if The eighth grade and highia__ start right away to give your, you can get it—if not, use

: | { |

1:30 p. m. meeting Friday in the]

Meridian Room of the Colonial Furniture Co. will be the final meeting for the summer. Com-|

school graduates of Marydale| ground corncobs or a rich comSchoql will be treated to a party| 'lacs plenty of plant food If| po. hese things will all help Saturtiay. Preceding the enter-| You want flowers next year. to produce flowers. Your lilacs

For as soon as they finich blooming they begin to package up buds that make next spring’s'

also may need more sun if they are in deep shade. Keep them

well- watered uring summer.

"MANUFACTURER'S CLOSE-0UT

Street .cecesccscccerscsssnscne. |S

City State

Sess sesssRsesRRRIRRRRRRRRS

spoons dry mustard, and one tablespoon cornstarch. Slowly add one-fourth cup vinegar and one and one-half cups water, Add one-third cup raisins and cook over low heat, stirring constantly until thickened, Cook 10 minutes longer to plump raisins. Add one tablespoon butter or fortified margarine and serve hot. Pickled Tongue: Cook like fresh tongue, but omit seasonings. Leftover Tongue: Here are a| few suggestions for the use of leftover tongue: Creamed tongue and peas on biscuits; tongue a la king; baked tongue and cheese

rarebit on toast; scalloped tongue and corn; tongue with baked lima beans; tongue and macaroni salad.

. ' Friday's Menus BREAKFAST: Cantaloupe, parsley omelet, enriched toast, butter or fortified margarine, ‘tart jelly, coffee, milk, LUNPHEON: Leftover vegetables in cheese sauce, cold cuts, rye bread, butter or fortified margarine, fruit cup, cup cakes, tea, milk. + DINNER: Smoked' tongue with horseradish sauce, mashed potatoes, buttered broccoll, rye bread, butter or fortified margarine, green salad, apple ple, coffee, milk.

far longer . . .

a

My Day—

Maybe Liberal Rationing Is What We Need Now

By ELEANOR ROOSEVELT

HYDE PARK, N. Y., June 14—I hope it will not be necessary for Congress to continue the present Defense Production Act on a temporary basis simply because it will not have time to improve it and have it ready by

June 30.

So much time has been given to delving into our

Far Eastern policy and into the recall of Gen. MacArthur that many of the things that are vitally important to our domestic

economy are coming to a head and require attention. They have been neglected in the past few weeks. The Defense Production Act is essential, and if it is

TON! REFILL ONLY s]

. leaves your

not revised it will have to be extended on a temporary basis. I believe, for instance, that no one single thing that

we do will control inflation. I think we should have what Roger Fleming, who is secretary of the Farm Bureau Federation, suggested on my television program. He said heavier taxes are necessary, particularly where profits have been unusually high, and he urged the curtailment of certain types of credit, particularly where these credits permit the public to compete in buying things that will be scarce,

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THURSDAY, JUNE 14, 1951 -

THURST

Enemy

Machi

Russia

Only th Are Chi

By WILL United Press ON THE C Korea, June 1 war machine “made in Russ The only tl the Red armi the Allies out men. The ta: vehicles, the supplies—all ¢ the Chinese u sian labels. If you doub along a main miles from C Korea to Sany Parallel. Eve Scattered a and through t burned and be the latest-mod T-3§ tanks, 1 zers, antitank guns, and ever Over there ammunition ¢ loads of Soviet and shells, Along one road I counted sian self-prop antiaircraft a They ranged caliber machi range, revolvi meter guns. ‘Each gun be 2 Russian fact symbol. Immobilized numerous to copies of the | ican General let trucks. Oth design. But all have imprinted on t Hamme Howitzers oc dozen or more pieces identifie One ammun must have yi Russian rifles the hammer branded deep all. Tons of Rus: small arms al pons also ha intact. The sa sian “potato m The only trul found have bes copies of the meter recoilles:

State Fair Hit All-Tim

Prizes for t State Fair ha record total o ville Miller « board president The total is an over 1950 prize Two events the Aug. 30 tc An Indiana sq will be held in 29 before offic Fair. A “Derby | running races | 1, one day befc harness racing Harness raci pected to tof $177,000, a new be distributed : on Sept. 1 and circuit racing.

Wrong-Wa Gets in 2 H

SOUTH BEN A Greyhound breezed past a ended up in M here was bla causing his pa: hours late. The driver w from Chicago yesterday wher He was told b) ist informatior 12 that he ap, make an east east of Michig Retracing hi arrived here—] A dozen Sou his confusion. ted they were got off the bes

Troops Nee

Chine: To Ske

By HARR) United Press F

There doesn't doubt that the nists are prepa initely in Kor defeat might cl but at the mon signs of accept pulling quietly The grapevin mainland carrie day that top‘! tary leaders ha 10 days ago in ] those present, Chinese Natio service, were chen, acting ch Chinese Red Ar fleld command Kao, ng, tor leader In Manc

Anti-Surren

Their meeting the background feats in the After the decis war despite the question of hov fortunes in th ture came up. ‘The biggest to be an incre the part of the render at the The intelligenc