Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 August 1951 — Page 5
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rame up Mr. it it was nip The open= f diamonds, 11 and Mr, ack. He re- . Mr. Abel's
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mith, 19 N, ces the apAug. 24, of ‘vn Ann, to ydmansee Jr, remony will Presbyterian
bridegroom, Voodmansee, a student at
seasoned and with a few sprinkling of ps “Rice Ori« ly with lamb, it the raisins serves for
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MONDAY, AUG. 13, 1951
Eat Well for Less—
Cook Chicken With Peanut Butter
By GAYNOR MADDOX ‘CHICKEN and peanut butter are both plentiful this month. - So! it's a good time to try this novel
&
recipe for fried chicken and pea-|
nut butter, Ea | SOUTHERN PEANUT-BUTTER CHICKEN One three and one-half pound dressed fryer, cut up, flour, salt and pepper, one-third cup chunk | style peanut butter, one table-| spoon grated onion, one ‘¢up milk.
€lean frying chicken. Dredge in flour and season with salt and pepper. In a heavy skillet, heat fat; brown chicken pieces. Drain fat from skillet. In a bowl, blend peanut butter, onion, milk, and two tablespoons of drained fat. Pour peanutbutter mixture over browned chicken pieces in skillet; cover. Bake in moderate oven (350 degrees F.) 45 minutes. Peanut butter has good keeping qualities these days because; of its new process and techniques, | such as hydrogenation. Hydrogenation keeps thé oil! well distributed through the mixture and produces a peanut butter! that is creamy right down to the bottom of. the jar. " Peanut butter will keep on the pantry shelf. However, once the jar is-opened, it retains its flavor longer if kept in a ‘dark. cool place or in the refrigerator. Serves four to six. » ”n ” PEANUT-BUTTER CHICKEN CHOWDER One three-and-a-half-pound dressed fowl, cut up, three quarts cold water, two tablespoons salt, one-quarter cup ‘creamy peanut butter, three sprigs parsley (broken In pieces), one small po-
talo, pared and diced, freshly ground pepper. Wash and drain fowl. In a
kettle, place cold water, chicken and salt. Cover and bring slowly to a boil. Boil gently 40 minutes. Skim off fat. Mix peanut butter with one-half cup of the chicken broth until thoroughly blended: stir into boiling chicken broth? add parsley. Continue boiling gently for 30 minutes. Remove pieces of chicken; meat from bone into bite-size pieces. Add chicken chunks, potato and pepper to boiling chicken broth. , Cover and continue cooking until potato cubes are done, stirring occasionally. Serve hot with a sprinkling of parsley, if desired. Serves eight.
cut
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Forcing Obedience by Threat Is Form of Persecution .
By MURIEL LAWRENCE
CORA G. has. hit on wbat seems to be a sure-fire, get-re-sults-quick formula for making
her two children obedient.
Three-year-old Emmy objects to brushing her teeth and her moth-
er says, “Brush them-—or they'll turn black, fall out so that you can*t eaf.”
+ If Emmy objects to finishing her orange juice, Mrs. G. says, “Drink it- or vour bones will turn soft.” If she stoops to pick up a piece of shining silver paper from the pavement, her ‘mother says, Drop that dirty old candy wrapper—or you'll catch some bad germs.”
’ is As for seven-vear-old Buddy,
the formula is the same, a little To him, his mother says, train away-—or
stiffer. ‘Put spank you.” Emmy sucks her thumb. Buddy stutters. Emmy and Buddy are frightened children. To threaten, according to the dictionary, is to ‘coerce by the prediction of evil.” If obedience by threat were efficient, there might be something to say fpr it. It isn't. We can get away with it only so long as children are too voung to recognize blackmail when they see it.
your
When they wake up to how we of disaster, it is not training in are persecuting them, they will giving, but training in apprehenavenge themselves upon us by de- sion. It handy place to clip it for safety. veloping all kinds of hewildering tive obedience.
Duplicates Are Popular
By SUE BURNETT Look-alike styles for big and little sister or mother and daughter are such fun to sew, so pretty to wear—and always in fashion. Each of the pair illustrated fits so nicely, has a pretty contrasting yoke, Pattern 8753 is a sew-rite perforated pattern ‘in sizes 10, 12, 14, 16, 18 and 20. Size 2, 43% yards of 39-inch; 2 yard contrast. Pattern 8752 is a '=ew-rite | perforated pattern for sizes 3, 4.'5, 6, 7, 8 years. Size 4, 2% vards of 39-inch; % yard contrast. of M. Don't miss the fall and ,win- mous
r
Sees Desses'| Collection
By ELIZABETH PATRICK PARIS—It's really some-| thing to be in Paris when the “news happens” . .. as fash-’ ion news is happening now
and here. One night the address was 17 | Ave. Matignon, the former home Eiffel, engineer of the fatower,
ter Fashion. It contains 48 The collection being shown was “pages of new styles, simple to by Jean Desses, thé young man make frocks for all ages; deé- who made such news in the
] emotional health
orating tricks; gift patterns February collections. Everything printed inside the book. Send here was blue . ., black-blue, peatoday. - cock-blue (similar to the shade - presented at Fath's), aqua-blue, IR ] JET" ‘pastel-blue. m sue CARE Par the program stated, the The Indianapolis Times bluebird theme -and the bell line 214 W. Maryland St. predominated. - And the collection Indianapolis 9, Indiana closed twith a wedding dress in
blue, proving that Desses had exFashion Book Price 25¢ pressed romance in his collection. No. 8753 Price 30¢ I thought of all the Indiana women who like to wear blue and
Size......
No. 8752 Price 30c¢ the men who like them to wear NAME sovisvesvsrsssrsnncnsunss it arses seers ssnsane eressanne Bird in Flight Street” ciiavrvenens tassssasenne The Desses silhouet was won CHT oi iiriinss Ceimresn vers. rderful in motion . . . referred to : as. “bird in flight! There was a Stale ....crovnavnrveerinenns ** noticeable flaunting of back fullse — TY iness Motion was expressed in
coats, suits and little dresses with stand-up, forward-pointing revers, Skirts were made full with tucks folds and pleats. The newest pleating is slightly diago for movement —a little like folds of a very old fan when
and complicated emotional prob is closed. Petticoat 2 always lems. buoyed out the fullness and gave I recently heard a distinguished added motion psychiatrist say, “Children are Coats hang softly full from delinquent because they believe narrow shoulders. Several fitted
princess coats had full skirts with the fullness thrust toward the
back.
that they are doomed to live .n an evil, threatening and predatory world.”
When ‘we force obedience by . a threatening disaster. we present Fashion Details our children with exactly that Textured fabrics of all types kind of world. are shown by Desses—backing Di up the trend to surface interest Wrong Training seen in American materials.
theentens Efmy Details seen in the Desses’ collection: Boot-button fastenings... high-climbing winged collars . . . the affects of hlack or blue for muffs to give think she contrast news, .Hats profiled contrariwise to dresses and featuring front interest (as at Jacques Fath's) . . Jewelry sparkling ip necklaces, and spray pins (often combining baroque pearls and clear or colored stones),
Burns on Carpet Not Always Serious
+ A cigaret burn on the carpet need not always be the tragedy
WHEN Mrs. G with tnothlessness, soft bones and disease germs as disobedience s protecting her child's physical
she may
health. Since Emmv's physical health is intimately linked to her she is not protecting it at all. She is bombarding Emmy's total well-being thoughtlessly and cruelly. She is telling Emmy that a most innocent act may explode disaster at any moment. She is hinting that her child has no power over what happens to her. She is implying that Emmy has ; arrived in a pretty nightmarish it appears at first glance. place. < If it's a superficial burn, snip Obedience. as 1 have said be- the blackened ends off the wool fore. is training in giving. If we tufts, then follow this with a force it from a child by threats SPORging with soapless cleaner and water. If the area is badly burned, call in a professional to is useless and destruc- take care of the damage by wool replacement,
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Mrs. Patrick Pink, Blue Ribbon Winners
2864
“
Exercise for
Midriff Sag
By ALICIA HART WHEN THEIR abdominal muscles begin sagging many
women feel they've been dealt an
unjust blow below
Fate, it
the middle
seems, {8 notoriously
poorly grounded ‘in the rules of fair play. Exercise is frequently an aid in tautening these muscles. Lying
flat on your bed, raise your legs
'without bending your knees until
the bottoms of facing
feet are the ceilyour legs are touching
your upward toward ing. Then - lower slowly until they the bed again.
un n ” "ANOTHER flat-of-your-bhack exercise involves lying upon the floor. A firmer support is needed for this one. Stretch out straight, with your legs together and vour
. arms extended at shoulder height
Then draw your legs up until your knees are high in the air and your heels as close to your hips as you can get them. The next step is to raise your torso as high off the flaor as possible, supporting your weight on your feet and your shoulders. Your body will slant downward from your knees to your shoul ders, but you should try to arch your back a -bit as well. Tauten your hip muscles as much as you can, : To bring vourself hack to the floor, avoid relaxing and collapsing all at once, You'll derive more benefit if you ease vourself down,
The Doctor—
When a Baby
By MRS. ANNE (MABOT Here is a wonderful gift that! will be a “winner” with any By EDWIN P. JORDAN, M. D. mother-to-he. Baby's sacque 1s! A NUMBER of prospective a miniature edition of mother's mothers have asked for a discusbedjacket .and both are easily sion of rooming-in. This is simcrocheted and gayly trimmed ply a hospital system whereby the with -ribbon. newborn infant is kept in a crib Patterns 2863 and 2864 include or bassinet close to the mother’s
complete crocheting instructions ped instead of in a nursery with (small, medium and large sizes), other babies somewhere else in stitch illustration, material re- the hospital. : quirements and finishing direc- Surely. ' the idea of having tions. mother and child close together is Needlework Fans-—-Anne Cab- gjd and the hospital nursery is a
ot's big album is here. Dozens of comparatively fascinating designs, gifts, decora- y tions and special features , . . plus four gift patterns and directions.
new development, so it would not be correct to consider rooming-in as anything radical or new.
PAGE 5
' > eo 1 ; Rooms in . .. The principal advantages of rooming-in, according to its advocates, are the lessened danger of infections spfeading from infant to infant, the increase in the number of babies who become breast fed and better satis« fied mothers. Undoubtedly some mothers, doctors and nurses will prefer one method and some the other, It seems clear, however, that thé development of rooming-in has been highly successful in many places and is extremely popular with many of those who have tried it.
ANNE CABOT The Indianapolis Times
TTT STS TS TS wre
Our Plant 1s Completely Equipped With Automatie
79 Ww. Quincy St. For Fire Preventian, Soni Chicago 6, IIL ®
No. 2863 Price 25¢ No. 2854 Price 25¢ y y ray : EVERY LAUN Cabot Album 25¢ NAINE oases ecerstrrsrssvssssee .
CRY sieve ennvanssivecrnes “sean
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Prats RRta EE ee
BREAKFAST: Orange juice, griddle cakes, sausages, butter or fortified margarine coftee,
sirup, nilk.
LUNCHEON: *Fruit salad
French dressing, cottage cheese, melba toast, butter or fortified margarine, pound cake, iced tea, milk DINNER: Southern peanut. : 7 butter chicken, mashed pota N\
toes, paprika - buttered broc coli; soft rolls, butter or fortified margarine, watermelon,
coffee, milk.
Removing Stains Coffee or. tea stains may be
removed from porcelain surfaces with a little bettled bleach.
125
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