Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 January 1942 — Page 14
PAGE 14
—
Homemaking—
‘Nutrition Primer’
Stresses Need
For Including Minerals in the Diet
For Patriotic Duties
LA Hay
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i
2%
ABI 10
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THERE'S SO MUCH EMPHASIS on proteins and vitamins in food 3%
today needs. written diet, as well
Bu tton Front
that we may overlook the
“America
Among the little the button front popular feature in frocks, for it
helps youngsters of the tender ages|
to learn to dress and undress them- |
selves! detal voke
You'll note other pleasing] Is about this clever style; top, for instance, set off with ric rac and completed with a cun-| ning turned down collar. Also, the | side sashes which tie in back and control a smooth fit through the] waistline.
Pattern No. 8020 is in sizes 2, 3,|white won't burble out if two tea- | Size 3 takes 2!
4 5 and 8 years. vards, 36-inch material; i yard 36inch contrast material for collar. For this attractive pattern, send 15¢ In coin, pattern nu dianapolis Times Today's Pattern Service, 214 W, Marviand St.
Selets the next new styles for
vour home sewing from the Fashion| our complete catalog of re-| Send for]
Book. cently your
issued patterns. copy today.
dered together, 25c.
nS . To Give Review The Riverside Kindergarten Mothers’ Club will hold meeting zt 1:30 p. m. tomorrow.| Mrs. J. W. Spatz of the South Grove Library will give a book review,
Hostess to Sorority
Mrs. Frank Bartee will entertain hot oven (450 degrees F.) for from for the party, Garnish with | This makes about 18 sand- |
Delta Chapter, Phi Delta Pi Sorority, tomorrow at 8 p. m. in her home, 12351; Oliver Ave.
two-to-sixers, | closing is a very|
the |
mber and size to The In-|
which covers the minerals in our
stand manner. Heres a brief summary {chapter on minerals from “America’s Nutrition Primer.” Eating foods rich in minerals is | the easiest way to get minerals. | Calcium is necessary for adults and | children. It is used in building! bones, teeth. fingernails and toe-| (nails. If adults and children do not have enough calcium daily they | ,are likely to be nervous. They may ‘have cavities in their teeth. They! may have muscular soreness. | Children may develop rickets and have poor bone and teeth structure. | | Milk in its various forms. with! |the exception of butter, is the best] {source of calcium. Foods rich in|
equally important minerals the body | X Eleanora Sense, an accredited dietitian with wide experience, has, §& s Nutrition Primer.” as Other essential nutrients, in a simple and easy to under-
of the 3
| calcium are whole or skimmed milk, | 3 |buttermilk, dried milk, evaporated | milk, condensed milk, whole milk]
cheese. Other of calcium are chard, collards, greens, molasses, everyone should listed foods rich
broccoli, kale, clams. eat in calcium.
Iron for Pep
IRON IS NECESSARY for adults and children. If they do not have enough iron daily they are likely to have low vitality, no pep, and a pallid complexion. They may have a decreased number of red blood cells and develop anemia. Children may have retarded growth. Meats, egg yolks and green leaves are the foods richest in iron. Good sources of iron in foods, are liver, kidney, heart, lean meats, whole eggs and egg yolks, poultry, especial{ly dark meat, oysters, shrimp, vegetable greens, kale, spinach. dried peaches and apricots. Phospherus is an important min-
eral for body functioning,
contain calcium also have factory amounts of phosphorus, F = = Quick Tricks TO TAKE the fishy smell out of a frying pan, rub the pan with a cloth dipped into a little prepared! mustard. The smell will depart quick-quick. = = = To keep rice grains from clinging {“glue-ily” to each other after cooking. try a few drops of lemon juice lin the cooking water. = = = Want to boil a cracked egg? The spoons of salt are added to the boil|ing water, = = = To get the maximum amount of]
your name, address, juice from lemons. warm them in|6, 1917 to Nov.
boiling water before introducing
them to the reamer. 2 kh. =
The Question Box
Q—What will prevent rusting of a gas range oven?
A—Leave the door open for half] Pattern. 15c: Pattern Book. 15c. an hour after baking to allow the] the introduction of the bill.
One Pattern and Pattern Book, or-|
| moisture from cooking to escape.
Q—Please tell me the ingredients {for chopped frankfurter sandwiches. A—Grind !: pound of frankfurters, 3 small pickles and *{ pound
ichopper, using the medium knife. Mix well with one-third cup mayon{naise and spread on buttered finger Irolls. Arrange the filled rolls in a
| covered baking dish, and place in a
{seven to ten minutes. [1ettuce. wiches.
* ¥
YOU ARE INVITED TO ATTEND
but | fortunately most of the foods which | satis- |
food foods sources] cabbage, | vegetable | Every day| some of the!
piece afternoon dress in beige ga
stresses soft fulness in the sleeves and skirt. ceramic button accents the comeliness of the costume and serves to
highlight the tiny waistline of th jacket.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Y.W.C As Annual Dinner
To Be Friday
Leonard P. Aries Is Scheduled to Speak
R E CORD IN IN By Fremont Power
“The Implications of a Democracy at War” will be the title of a! speech made by Leonard P. Aries, at the 47th annual dinner meeting! of the Indianapolis Young Women's! Christian Association at 6:15 p. m. | Friday in the Central Y. W. C, A.
Building. Mr. Aries is a practicing attorney of Chicago, having received Ph. D.| and Doctor of Law degrees from the University of Chicago. A well-| ‘known writer and lecturer, he has) worked with youth groups spon-| sored by the Chicago Round Table! | of Christians and Jews. The National Conference of] Methodist Youth used Mr. Aries as| a resource leader on the discussion | of racial barriers and the Y. W. C.| A. Lake Geneva Conference used] him as resource leader on minorities. He is the author of the recently published “Let's Talk It Over” which is based on his work among young people, Mrs. Howard J. Baumgartel, a member of the board of directors and general chairman for the annual meeting, will introduce the speaker. Mrs. Boyd I. Miller, board president, will preside. Dr, F. Marion Smith of the Central Avenue Methodist Church will give the invocation and the Verse Speaking Choir of the Y. W. C. A, directed by Miss Malvin Morton, Girl Reserve Secretary, will participate in the short worship service by presenting, “The Creations.”
Assistants Listed
Members of Mrs. Baumgartel's committee are Mesdames Miller, Floyd Hunter, Robert Loomis, John F, Champ, Joseph Ward, Theodore Kuhns, Misses Betty Bartel, Mary
Becoming and practical for patriotic duties is this tailored two-
A New York creation, it The huge rose-colored
bardine.
e otherwise loosely-cut, easy-fitting
| Asks Change in War Mothers Charter
i | Times Special
WASHINGTON, Jan. | Raymond S. Springer (R. Ind) | | vesterday introduced a hill to! ‘amend the national charter of the| { American War Mothers to include |
20.—Rep.!
{those who now
| service.
The original charter by Congress|
i
i provided membership eligibility for others of sons serving in the armed forces of the United States land its allies during the World {War. Dates established were April 11, 1918. The new | dat e proposed is Dec. T, 1941. Headquarters of the organization are in Washington. made the Memorial Day address at ithe group's services in Arlington Cemetery last vear. Mrs. { Ochiltree, Connersville, Springer’'s home town, arranged for
Party Proceeds Will Go to Red Cross
The Ladies’ Auxiliary to the Fra-
its monthly|of American cheese through a food ternal Order of Police will sponsor |
a benefit card party Feb. 2 at 2 p. m. in Ayres’ auditorium. Proceeds from the party will be donated to the Red Cross. Mrs. Clifford Becker, chairman will have as her cochairman. Mrs. Roy McAuley. Mrs. Roy Pope Sr. is president of the | group.
~~
Fhe Crghleontl dnnval
HOOSIER SALON
Originating in Indianapolis This Year
An exhibition of outstanding paintings, etchings and sculpture by Indiana's
leading artists,
* * *
January 19 Through 31—9:30 to 5:30
THE WM. H. BLOCK CO.
No Admission Charge
Auditorium, Sixth Floor
have sons in the |
Rep. Springer |
Estella Rep. | 8
| We, the Women:
Papa Can Help ‘On Budget
Problems
RUTH MILLETT THE AMERICAN family {decides that there has to be some fancy economizing done the economizing usually falls on Mama. It is up to her to cut the food
budget as much as possible, to pitch ¢ in and how to make slip covers for the furniture instead of hiring] it done, to get|
|
By | WHEN
|
household to take advantage of sales and to make a real study of prices so that she knows at which store to buy one article and at which to buy another. She's so ingenious about cutting corners that the rest of the family often sit back ‘and let her cut them, without figuring out any way of helping. Papa is especially good at sitting back and letting Mama do the economizing. It seldom occurs to him that there are just as many things around the house he could do—at a saving to the family bud- |
Miss Millett
Heaton, Eleanor Young and Jean S. Bogan. Miss Elizabeth Ann Blaisdell, general secretary, will give a report on the work of the Y. W. C. A. during the past year. Mrs. Champ and Mrs. Loomis will be in charge of the hostess committee and Misses Bartel and Heaton in charge of table decorations and programs. Miss Margery Dudley and Mrs. Annella Gore, members of the Y. W. C. A. staff, are arranging an exhibit to be shown in the building lobby.
learn]
along without | split up I cry like a baby and beg help. him to come back and he always
(care for my
DEAR JANE JORDAN—I have been going with a boy for three |vears. I will go as far as to say |I love him because every time we
has, so far. He says he loves me and hopes to marry me some day but I know my father would not consent because we have different religions. My father likes the boy but hates his religion. Personally I never did father’s religion but | would like the boy's religion very! much. The boy gave me a beautifull watch for Christmas and I was al-| lowed to invite him to the house New Year's eve. At other times I am not allowed to see him, but I slip out without my father’s knowl-
edge. My mother likes the boy very much and sees no wrong in our friendship. I am 16 and he is 18. school and has a good job.
He quit We do
|get—as there are things that Mama not intend to get married for two
can do. { Of course, it means taking on| Some extra work for him. But al-| most every way in which Mama | economizes means extra work for| her. Almost any man could, by putting his mind to it and giving up a golf {game occasionally, act as general (handyman around his home.
gf 2 § | HE COULD learn to do simple] Jobs like putting up shelves, repairing screens, painting porch furni-| ture, and doctoring the machinery | of the modern home before it needs | more attention than an oil can.
That would not only help the | family budget—it would help Mama’s morale. For after she has spent | an afternoon trying to save a dol-| {lar by shopping around from store to store she is bound to resent it} just a little when she asks Papa| to do some little job around the house and he says, “Why don't you call up so-and-so and get him to do it?” Budget cutting is never any fun, but it's even more painful when responsibility for it isn’t shared by the man of the house—who is usually the first to cry—"“We simply have to cut down expenses.”
Plan Skating Party
A skating party will be sponsored by Alpha Chapter, Omega Nu Tau, tomorrow evening at Rollerland Rink. Mrs. Harold Smith is general chairman.
| | i Sorority Meeting Miss Barbara Schwartz, 5221 E. (Ninth St., will be hostess to Beta
Chapter, Phi Theta Delta Sorority, {in her home at 8 p. m. today.
| the right to choose my companions,
[see the boy
| boy and that his company will not be forbidden
| ferent religions should be no handicap, particularly when you are will-
strong convictions on the subject. It is too bad that your father sees
|or three years but in the meantime [don’t you think I should be able to enjoy his company and find out
| titled, this one and the
Wagner:
“Die Gotterdammerung,” Siegfried’s Rhine Journey (Act I)
and Siegfried’s Funeral Music (Act III), the NBC Symphony Orchestra, Arturo Toscanini conducting (Victor). Toscanini’s bristling drive, his demand for turbulent, electric energy, will surely make this three-record album welcomed by the discerning
Wagnerites.
It is bold and virile throughout.
Wagner wished his music to convey the dramatic intent of his operas, and Maestro Toscanini's reading here fulfills that wish. One may notice a very few technical imperfections, but the total grade is positive and not far from 100 per cent.
Sonata No. 26 in E “Das Lebewohl” (or
Beethoven: flat major, “Les Adieux”), stein, pianist (Victor).
cident in his life.
tique.”
tions at the forced parting of his friend and patron, Archduke Rudolph, 1809 siege by the French. a sorrowful moment for Beethoven and throughout movement of the sonata, there is
a pervading atmosphere of quiet |
gloom and melancholy.
But the Royal Family returned
after the peace was made. It is
thus that the composer is found | in a brighter frame of composi- |
tional mind in the finale. Mr. Rubinstein’s interpretation, as one would expect, is very finely chiselled, very precise, very on the-dot. While some likely would have wanted a more airy treatment, others will hold with Rubinstein, who makes the sonata clear —and sometimes cold. Sibelius: “Tapiola,” a symphonic poem; the Boston Symphony Orchestra, Serge Koussevitzky directing (Victor). This is Sibelius
is by a man whose gifted competence ranks him as one of the few great directors of our present day —Serge Koussevitzky. At the moment I could think of no better example than “Tapiola” (Tapio, the forest god, is the root word) to
show the manner in which Sibelius | uses form only insofar as it will | voice his thoughts, his memories
and his observations.
With but a single main theme,
“Tapiola” paints a colorful picture of Finland: Spirals of sound spring upward from the strings, a menacing
the flutes.
of his odd genius.
Wagner: “Schmerzen” and “Traume” from the song cycle, “Funf Gedichte”; Helen Traubel, soprano, accompanied by the
Philadelphia Orchestra, Leopold |
Stokowski directing (Victor). There are some charges which might be
only three songs of the cycle were recorded, thus
squeezing of “Im Treibhaus”
prelude.
But despite these objections, the
album is an exciting one, literally. Miss Traubel has that dramatic force, intensity and the nobility
that the singing of Wagner re- |
quires. Written to poems by Mathilde Wesendonck, the songs, which are true Wagner beauty-through-strength music, are just the stuff for Miss Traubel to proclaim that she is the American “white hope,” now that Flagstad is absent Mr. Stokowski's accompaniment is precisely excellent, frequently adding to the beauty of Miss Traubel's singing — and
rate recording. Rachmaninoff:
and orchestra: vitch, pianist, with the London Philharmonic Orchestra, Basil Cameron directing (Victor). Here is the musical setting for
Artur Rubin- | | sorts that Rachmaninoff composed Beethoven didn't often write | | music to typify any particular in- | In fact, only | two of his 32 piano sonatas were | “Pathe- | I Ing, With “Das Lebewohl,” the com- | poser aimed to express his emo- | | that since the London Philhar-
from Vienna during the | It was |
all but the last
the musical | naturalist, and the interpretation |
undertone comes from the | drums and the brass, a chirp from | That is the way Sibel- | ius writes and this is an excellent | addition to the permanent record |
“Im Treibhaus,” |
technical | made | against this album: The fact that |
leaving out “Der | Engel” and “Stehe Still,” and the | onto | two sides by cutting the orchestra |
such | things, as you know, make a first- |
“Rhapsody on a | Theme of Paganini” for piano | Benno Moisei- |
the Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo’s dance, “Paganini,”’ a concerto of
despite the fact that Brahms previous!y had used the same material: The 24th Paganini Caprice. It's a fulsome-sounding recordwith Moiseivitch frequently making 10 fingers do the work of 20. And Victor points to the fact
monic is disbanded because of the war, possession of the album takes on a bit of added significance.
Paul Hindemith: “Matthias the Painter”; the Philadelphia Orchestra, Eugene Ormandy directing (Victor). With rich, broad strokes, and some quick ones, too, Mr. Ormandy leads the orchestra through a musical painting which Hindemith was inspired to compose by the famous Isenheim Altar of Mathis Grunewald. Patterning his work after that of Grunewald's great murals, Hindemith divided this symphony into three parts, “Angelic Concert,” and “Temptation of St. Anthony.”
They are drawn from his opera |
whose title is the same as this group of excerpts. It is program music, to be sure, but of the kind that needs no
| program to speak its worth.
‘Entombment”’ |
TUESDAY, JAN. 20, 1942
Writes Book On Records
Koledin's Work Termed Mine Of Information.
A comprehensive gold mine of ine formation relating to recorded music is currently offered by Dou bleday, Doran & Co. ($3). By Irving Kolodin, the New York Sun's emi=nent critic, “A Guide to Recorded Music (from Palestrina to Proko=fieff)” should be of inestimable help
to any serious collector. Mr. Kolodin’s back-breaking com pilation covers 184 composers, 2000 works and more than 5000 recordings. The author uses a set of symbols to indicate his opinions of the reproduction, interpretation and selling price and then writes a brief criticism. Where there is more than one recording of a given work, Mr. Kolodin discusses them all. Whether or not you agree with the critic's opinions, of course, will depend largely upon your own. Buf | whatever, the book fills a long= | standing need. As Oscar Levant, says on the cover, “it does tor re= | corded musi¢ what Roget did for words.” | The plan is to issue subsequent { editions to cover new record re- | leases. —F, P.
FILM MAY INCLUDE BOTH BING AND BOB
HOLLYWOOD, Jan. 20.-—Boh Hope and Bing Crosby may be teamed up next in “True to Life,” recently purchased by Paramount, The plot revolves about two write | ers of a radio family serial, who { become boarders to get color for | their seriot.
Polar has the RIGHT STOKER
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Different makes of Stokers require different kinds of coal, for greatest efficiency.
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for sure if this is the real thing
or not? Should my father ‘have
tell me whom to go with and whom to marry? LOST IN THE WQODS.
o s ”
Answer—The wisest thing your father can do is to allow you to so that you will have {an opportunity to find out whether or not he is the one you want toj| marry. To separate you is simply to add fuel to the flame and bring out the very thing he wishes to avoid. You were permitted to invite the boy to your home New Year's eve. Does not this indicate that your father {is beginning to soften toward the
to vou from now on. In my opinion you are entirely too young to be considering marriage, but if your affair lasts, dif-
ing to adopt your husband's beliefs. Trouble over religion comes when there is a conflict over personal convictions, but you seem to have no
no good in any religion but his own. However, since you aren't ready to marry, why thresh this subject out now? JANE JORDAN. Put your problems in a letter to Jane
Jordan whe will answer vour questions in this column daily,
Knit for Red Cross
Alpha Chapter, Rho Delta Sorority, will hold a special meeting Thursday at the home of Mrs. Lester Hart to receive knitting instructions. The group is working for the Red Cross.
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