Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 January 1942 — Page 5
MONDAY, JAN. 5, 1042
omemaking—
Take
THI! BETTER you take care of that new el and more efficient service it will give you. Here are . electrical experts give for maintaining it in the best possible condition.
iVever wash the stove while the
fine porcelain finish. Warm soapy water, when the stove is cool, should
be sufficient to keep the outside of t
DEAR JANE JORDAN-I have been steyving with my Louisville, Ky. I was there all summer and loved it very much. I met a boy there and we started going together. a lot. My sister, who lives in In-
dianapolis, wrote to me asking if I would come and stay with her
aunt in |it to cool, wipe out with damp cloth
We liked each other |
Care of Electric Range] For Long and Efficient Service
lle
range, the longer e simple tips that surface is hot. This may crack the he range clean. Wipe off quickly any acid, such as vinegar or lemon, immediately. Remove spilled food from the surface before it has become dried and hardened. Clean chromium trim with soap and water, nickel with metal polish, if necessary, or just soap and water. Dry. Burn spilled food from open surface units, Do not use a stiff brush or sharp instrument for this purpose. You may ruin the coils. After using the oven and allowing
and remove any food that has spilled. Wash removable shelves with soap and water. File the directions for care that come with the stove and follow them carefully.
On Cooking Vegetables
little boy. She said it would only be three or four weeks; so I came and have been here two months.
My friend in Louisville wants| vegetables so that their vitamind
me to come back and I do so much | want to go. together, and this way I.am ere all day by myself and dont go! any place, only to a show and a dance once in a while. I am-so| afraid it would hurt my sister if] I left for I know she wants me to! stay. I dont know what to do.! Please advise me. L MS
|
Answer—If your sister wants you | to stay with her and be contented she must provide you with some | young companionship. No girl is willing to spend her life taking | care of another woman's baby without having any opportunity to en-| Joy herself. Get your aunt to invite you to! come back for a visit and insist that | your sister make some other ar-| rangements for the care of her baby. Then if you like it in Leuisville as well as you did before, you can posipone your returfh. This is & method of breaking the news gently to your sister that you are happier in Louisville, if you find that to be the case. There is no reason for you not | to be Complevely honest with her right now, if you wish. She should | be able to understand why you | prefer to be where your frien ere. After all she it married and | settled. You have a right to your | chance, t00. II your aunt still | wants you, go on a visit at least, zs & =
DEAR JANE JORDAN-T am a girl of 16 Yeeply in Jove with a boy of 23. He says he doésnt love | me but likes me a lot and respects me. Do you think I should still go with him or not? He thinks he can love me and I don’t care for any other boy. POP. Answer—Certzainly you should go vith him if each of you enjoys the other's company. Youre todo young 2 ay & boy to be seriously in ¢With you. It is enough that he wants to be with you. You also are too young to go with him alone | but should interest yourself mn | otherse Dont try to push the young man into a permanent relationship when | he is not ready for any such thing, | and neither are you. If you are! more in love than Le is, have the wisdom to conceal this fact before he wearies of your intensity. Lean to enjoy a casual friendship without being so intense about it. JANE JORDAN. Pat your problems in a letter to Jane
Jordag whe will answer your questions in this column daily.
I. T.-S. C. Unit Plans , Guest Party
A guest party will be held Friday in the Banner-Whitehill social room by the Jeanne D'Arc Chapter, International Travel - Study Club, with Mrs. C. C. Rothman and Mrs. S. 1. Bland as hostesses. Mrs. Robert Drake will be soloist, accompanied by Mrs. G. B. Nordstrom. Miss Barbara Suits, pianist, will play and Mrs. John W. Thorn-! burgh will talk on “Honduras.”
We had $0 much fun|reach the family table.
vegetables during cooking.
EVERY WOMAN should know the (few simple rules about cooking
and minerals she really pays for may
1. Use very little water in cook(ing. 2. Cook vegetables for the shortest possible time, only until tender. 3. Cover utensils to keep air out. 4. Dont put in baking soda to | brighten food colors. 5. Start vegetables in boiling water. 6. Once boiling begins, turn burner down to maintain gentle boiling. 7. Avoid unnecessary stirring of
8. Don’t throw away vegetable
For this attractive pattern, send 15¢ in coin, your name, address, pattern number and size to The Indianapolis Times, 214 W. Maryland St. Pattern, 15¢; Pattern Book, 15¢. One Pattern and Pattern Book ordered together 25c¢.
|Of Various
| the nine most prevalent chronic dis-
Lists Ailments
hay fever; hernia; heart diseases, high blood pressure, hardening of the arteries, nephritis and other kidney diseases; sinusitis; hemorrhoids; asthma and deafness, ” 2 2 FOR WOMEN of 20 to 34 years the nine most prevalent chronic diseases and impairments are: Rheumatism and allied diseases; the heart, artery and kidney diseases; hay fever; goiter and other thyroid diseases; diseases of the female sinusitis;
age groups. For men 35 to 64 years
eases and impairments are: Rheumatism and allied dieases; orthopedic impairments; heart, blood vessel and kidney diseases; hernia; hemorrhoids; deafness; hay fever; asthma and bronchitis. For women 35 to 64 years the most prevalent chronic diseases and impairments are: Rheumatism and |allied diseases; heart, blood vessel and kidney diseases; varicose veins; hemorrhoids; deafness; hay fever,
|
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‘PAGE 5
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By MRS. ANNE CABOT
Children love a jolly “Mammy” doll. You can make this one of scraps of materials from your lit-
tle girl's dresses or odds and ends |
from your piece bag. For complete pattern for MAMMY DOLL (Pattern No. 5272) which includes cutting pattern for body, apron, cap, fichu and instructions for embroidering face, send 10 cents in coin, your name and address and the pattern num-
ber to Anne Cabot, The Indian- |
apolis Times, 106 Seventh Ave, New York.
the automobile did to the horse jobless, But for movie organist Ora making heard around the world.
Broadcasting System, “Noisy”—the
throat. Thunder crashes, & prairie wolf howls, surf booms, soldiers march on a snow packed road, a ferry
{boat comes in for a landing, a
baby waiis with sufficient realism to make a young mother start toward the nursery. All these are none other than mechanical devices of this capable curator of clamor. A lady who has made noise her business for thirteen years.
Started as Organist
It was while she was organist in a local New York movie house and her husband played the drums with the pit orchestra, that they devised the scheme of creating sound effects to give silent pictures more realism. Now and then they worked their effects for air programs. As radio grew there were more and more demands for their talents, and finally CBS asked them to head their Sound Effects Department. Two years later Nichols died suddenly, and Ora carried on the work they had begun together. Today, she and her co-workers have compiled a complete library of recorded sounds. Screams, snores, typewriters, football crowds, the dropping of trees, monks chanting
\vespers and baby cries can be selected at random from a file of {more than 1200 records. And there are three times as many manual effects.
Behind Those Sounds |
The lawn mower you heard on!
|yesterday’s dramatic seript is really jan egg beater, Monkeys screeching (in the jungle are merely a cork rubbed across a milk bottle, and |cocoanut shells struck together | produce the effect of horses walking
They Call Her ‘Noisy— For Clamor Is Her Career BY ELLEN SALLABAN NEW YORK, Jan. 5—~When sound pictures did to the silents what
and buggy, a lot of people were Nichols, it began a career of noise-
As the only woman sound effects technician for" “the Columbia
nickname by which this quiet-
spoken, personable and petite woman is affectionately known around the studios—makes script programs “come alive” so convincingly that your spine prickles with apprehension and your heart jumps
to your
co-ordinating sound with action at the right moment and at the proper distance from the microphoae, so that there is a definite illusion of reality. Her musical training, she says, has helped immeasurably in setting the tempo for matching sound and music in such programs as “Bright Horizon” were singing and story are combined. Orson Welles, famous for the realism of his radio dramas, which
is diie greatly to the use of viique sound effects, always insists that Mrs. Nichols be assigned to his show whenever he broadcasts from New ‘York. His most difficult assignment, she says, ‘was the bridge-crashing episode in his dramatization of “The Bridge of San Luis Rey.” It took three days of experimentation and recordings before she fell on the right combination to give the effect of the structure breaking and crashing into the ravine below. The formula was a com= bination of sounds involving bamboo, an echo chamber, thunder-drop background and crushing of berry baskets, Everything is not always not what it seems, Mrs. Nichols laughingly assures us. And bears it out by citing the time the “Myrt and Marge” script introduced a towering Irish detective into its action. She tried every device to create the effect of his big flat feet clumping up and down the corridor, and then finally fell back on realism by donning a pair of heavy brogans and plodding up and down before the microphone herself.
i iin,
jon cobblestones.
{because of her rare faculty for| | quickly visualizing the scenes and’
Mrs. Nichols is tops in her field
ONE-DAY SERVICE
THOROUGH EXAMINATION
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liquids, use in soups, cream sauces, |
in vegetable cocktails or Toi
juice. 9. Keep foods as fresh as possible |
{before cooking — use dependable
automatic refrigeration. 10. Serve foods soon after cook-
{ing.
The Question box
Q—-Some years ago, at a party, we ‘played a game called “Sardines” I want to use it at & party I am | planning, but have forgotten the exact rules. Can you tell me? A—The game is practically indoor hide-and-seek and works out better | if played in several rooms, or even | the whole house. One person, iselected as “Mr. It,” disappears and | hides in the most inaccessible place | {he can find. Al the other players hunt for him. But, instead x
giving out a high shriek upon discovering his whereabouts, as each {player finds “Mr. It.” he merely! | joins him as quietly as possible in | his hideout. Sooner or later prac- | tically everyone will find himself behind & bookcase, in the shower stall, or under the ping-pong table, |
in the accepted sardine style. And
there they remain until the last |
person finds them.
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“P
i . i h 4
WE-ALL
Before that attack some of us thought in terms of
Neither of those terms expresses our feelings today.
represents only one person.
-~
“We” may mean only two or a few persons.
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form of government, and the freedoms which we cherish.
President,
"Ta Japanese attack on the United States instantly changed our trend of thought in this country.
‘I’’, others in terms of
Our slogan now 1s WE-ALL, which means every loyal individual in the United States.
We are facing a long, hard job, but when the United States decides to fight for a cause, it is in terms of WE-ALL, and nothing can or will stop us.
President Roosevelt, our Commander-in-Chief, can be certain that WE-ALL are back of him, determined to protect our country, our
