Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 August 1943 — Page 16
For War on Tuberculosis
By JANE STAFFORD Science Service Writer ~~ IN THE WAR against tuberculosis, every home or environment in which there'is an infectious case “Jan be likened to the pillboxes at “the front in military warfare, Dr.
"Robert E. Plunkett, general super-|
“intendent of tuberculosis hospitals, “New York state health department, pointed out at a recent meeting of “tuberculosis fighters. "boxes in the tuberculosis war, he “said, “must be attacked and ‘cleaned | %out’ in a humane and democratic | way through the use of modern ‘scientific weapons.” ,_ This means, first, removing the 4 patient who is in the infectious stage of tuberculosis, actively | spreading the.germs, into a hospital ‘where he will get proper care and learn how to protect others from - his germs. : i, ”
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SECOND, ALL other members of |
4the household must be examined to
~detect any other patients with tu- 1
. bercuilosis.
, Tuberculosis is a “catching” dis-|
"ease. The germs usually lodge in ithe lungs, and this means that they "may spread from one person to an-
_other on the breath or on anything.
~ that has touched the patient's “mouth or gotten some of his sputum “on it when he coughed.
I'm air-raid warden on my block My duties keep me moving, But then I eat my ThoroBread®, And find my health improving
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So sure are we that your dog will like this testy: toasted dog food that we say = buy.a bag of ThoroBread Kibbled Dog Food. If dissatisfied in any way, return the empty bag, and your money, plus postage, will be returned.
The ThoroBread Ce , Cincinnati,! Ohio
THOROBREAD A/BBLED Dog Food
100
These pill- |,
omemaking—
Purge All Waste From Your Larder By Careful Shopping and Storage
Is Planned by Clubwomen 7th District's Board
Care in handling vegetables saves endian precious food.
these days, learning every little; drinks and appetizers.
trick they can sto make the “most |
of what food their budgets and pace” Cool
have, cates that there still remains too; much of that characteristic American wastefulness that made thrifty the cold air can get at them easily. Europeans look at us with raised "
eyebrows. Here are a few hints to remem-| ber, when buying food and preparing meals, that will help you to get | the most out of your purchases. n |storing and in the summertime, the first place, plan your shopping |always store bread, well-wrapped, carefully before you start. Then buyin the refrigerator. all your family will need, but do not prepare too much, with conse- | quent wastage. What with gas rationing and tire scarcity, more and more housewives are turning to their
‘cold, or it will separate.
»
Storing Meat
tion. All raw meat
and “personal” service. ” » »
"Em Thin. fa
covered.
Peel
the peelings thin. You'll be sur-
prised at the amount of pota
this saves over & period. To avoid| 432 bag loosely, and handle fruits gently.!; Don’t leave ‘berries piled up in their original box, but spread them out clean dish, under in a flat container, like a tray, This jr possible, and cover lightly.
spoiled berries with the good ones.!jt first. Never store unwashe in the refrigerator. . tatoes, butter, foods should be stored away from tainted. the ‘light.
WISE HOUSEWIVES are busy|the juices for soups, gravies, cold
Keep cooking fats in clean, covered jars and store in a dark, cool and cover custards their ration books permit them to! quickly and keep them cold. MayBut a recent survey indi-| onnaise must be kept cool—but not Eggs, on the other hand, should be kept very cold, and in an open crock, so that
| TO AVOID MOLD, always cool {homemade cake and breads before
With meat so precious nowadays, it rates super-extra attenshould be | stored in the refrigerator uncovneighborhood stores for convenience ered. The opposite is true of cooked meats, which should be carefully "| house dresses and aprons on nutriChopped meat spoils easily, beWHEN YOU PEEL potatoes, keep, 'qause in total, its particles present , hundreds of surfaces for the operato! ‘tions of the germs that make meat
| Chopped meat should be eaten the bruising, store ‘cooking greens piled’... day you buy it. Don't put it tin the refrigerator in its original | wrapping paper, but, place it in a the freezing unit¥ If avoids bruising and contact of any you must leave it overnight, cook
5 egetables| And. Jastly, remember. the first ns, po- and most vital economy is to throw flour and glassed away food that is even slightly
Avoid freezing potatoes you can get ‘em) at room temperaiand apples and keep bananas (if ture. After cooking vegetables, save
Sets Aug. 27 as Date Plans for.a council meeting of all
the Tth district, Indiana’ Federations. of Clubs, and department and committee chairmen ‘were made this morning at a district executive
hotel. The council session will be held from 10 a. m. to noon. Aug. 27 in the assembly room of the Claypool and the year’s activities will be outlined. ; The executive board. this morning accepted the recommendations of
for a patriotic tea to be held Sept. 18 in the governor's mansion.
Broadcasts Planned
The affiliation with the district of the newly. organized Indianapolis group of the National Screen council also was announced this morning, and proof reading of the district directory for the coming year was completed. : Mrs. Royer Knode Brown, district radio committee chairman,: announced plans for a series of broadcasts .for the year and asked that all clubs contemplating important projects contact her for inclusion in the broadcasts. » »
The meeting of the delinquency and post-war planning committees of the I. F. C., scheduled for Aug. 24 at the Claypool, has been canceled. The meeting will be held sometime this fall, Mrs. Oscar A. Ahlgren, Whiting, I. F'. C. president, has announced.
‘Fifth Column’
Nations have died out because of bad selection of foods in the national diet. They were really conquered by an “enemy from within” reports Dr. M. L. Wilson, chairman of. the government ‘nutrition advisory committee.
Keeping It Simple Nutrition should no longer bé the exclusive domain of a few experts
and scientists, says Dr. Russell M. Wilder of the Mayo clinic. Putting
tional information — getting the facts of proper diet into the kitchen in every day language, is a national “must.”
Beach Hats
With vacation ‘luggage cut to a minimum, the old-fashioned beach hat has no place to go. Its place is being taken by coin-dotted cotton hats which fold up flat as a pancake—open up big as an umbrella.
Council Session
presidents of clubs affiliated with]
board meeting held at the Claypool{
the district recruiting committee]
There's something ultra smart about the low cut front of this jumper—and .the wide shoulders! It is the interesting way with which it sets off the blouse beneath which will make you like it enormously. Pattern 8405 is in sizes 12, 14, 16, 18, ‘20. Size 14 jumper takes 3 yards 39-inch material; short sleeve blouse, 1% yards. For this attractive pattern, send 16 cents in coins, with your name, address pattern number and size to The Indianapolis Times Pattern Service, 214 W. Maryland st., Indianapolis 9, Ind. Now you can order a summer issue of Fashion, our helpful sewing guide and pattern catalog! Contains over 100 new patterns, has information on care of clothing, how to make over, how to plan practical wardrobes; 26 cents per copy.
PLEASE BE PATIENT!
With the United States postal service being hard hit by wartime burdens; and with summer pattern mail breaking all records, there has been some delay.in the ‘delivery of some patterns. Naturally, we regret’ this—and we want our readers to know that every-° thing possible is being done to expedite pattern delivery,
JANE JORDAN,
neighborhood live a couple who
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| i
Ladies Dept ~First Floor.
continually fight. She is bigger than
he so she hits him and he has hit her so that she is black and blue. But when any of us neighbors go by their house and they see us coming they kiss one another and act so loving. She is a bad influence on young girls for she is always telling them she doesn't love her husband, that she steps out with other men, and that her husband is jealous of her, which we knew is not so. She is jealous of him and has nagged him so that he is afraid to speak to any womsn in her sight, but is friendly away from her. She is always talking about someone else’s husband, and how he mis-
understand how she can talk about her husband to us and then act so loving when she is with him, and why she talks so. If she were happy, would she do this? She has no friends any more. I like her and would like to understand why she is so down on men and yet so loving to her husband. Since so many of her neighbors ask what her trouble is and no one can solve it, we decided to write you as your advice is so helpful, NEIGHBORS. - f J » »
Answer—Some people. like to fight. Some are so strange that they never feel very loving except in the aftermath of the fight known as the “making-up” period. It is as if they first had to receive punish, ment, which they deliberately provoke, before they are able to enjoy the happier condition of love. In extreme cases such persons actually
DEAR Ia JORDAN—In our
treats his wife. We neighbors. don’t |
enjoy being beaten and must suffer pain as a prelude to love. Perhaps your neighbors are afflicted with one of the milder forms of the malady called masochism, It is quite possible for people to have two attitudes toward each
with hate. Even the most wellbalanced couples are irritated with each other occasionally. Sometimes even they feel more loving toward each other after relieving pent-up feelings in a brief outburst. Have you ever seen a
cover it with kisses? Such behavior all stems from the same source. We. do not notice it until it becomes. extreme. You mention that the woman accuses other wives ‘of accepting abuse from their husbands, and criticizes other couples for fighting. It is an old human custom to accuse others of guilts which we harbor ourselves. Very likely, the woman is ashamed of the fact that she loves and hates with such primitive abandon, and feels guilty about the poorly controlled aggression that makes her “down on men.” I imagine that she is an ynhappy person, but not a menace to young girls whose home life is healthy.
JANE JORDAN,
Put your problems in a letter to Jane Jordan, who will answer your questions in this column daily.
Some Fun in Summer
For summer meals, try berries atop water ice . . . mint in your limeade . , , canned shrimp in potato salad , , , Brazil nuts (salted)
with the first course juice.
Bos in Service.
SMART SUMMER FLOWERS eon THE HOSPITAL Send Flowers to the Wives and Sweethearts of the ; It Will Mean So Much.
Verne J Reeder
“|At Horse Show: I=
|ring secretary.
‘young children can get this kind of
other, one tinged with love and one’
mdther spank her. baby and then’
The ‘Brasil ‘nut—unrationed com- Use some of your: ! plete protein and vitamin B-—goes [yolks to make puddings with 1 well in ‘sandwich fillings; gives aged lemon pie filling and serve up ds crunch and tops’ casseroles with light cream in tall-stemmed glasses, Just tart enough,
To Be Official
both toastily and tastily.
Several Indianapolis persons will be among the officials at the 7th annual Shelbyville horse show Sunday afternoon and evening. The show is being sponsored by the Shelby County Pair association, Mrs. A. Hastings Fiske and Donald | Bose, both of . Indianapolis, will | judge the English and the hunter and jumper classes respectively. Ring steward will -be Verne K. Reeder of Indianapolis and announcers, P. O. Ferrel and E:. A. Crane, also of Indianapolis. Mrs. Marie Bowen, Indianapolis, will be
. P. WASSON & CO.
Closes at 1 P. M. Saturday
Judging ‘the western classes will | be Ed Crampton, Morristown, and Don Alexander, Rushville. The, program for the day will m-| clude the following events: six Western classes, three hunter and jumper; one plantation; one horse‘manship; two pony; four three gaited and five-gaited. . i L. V. Hauk, Morristown, is president of the show and Fred Sharp, Franklin, manager.
Between-Meals Snack Supplies Energy
Children will be. children, and since this is true homemakers may, as well make up their minds that the youngsters will always be hungry for a snack, between meals. It really doesn't hurt them as long as the snack is something light such as a -soft drink and crackers. These two items are digested quickly and do not remain .in the! stomach long enough to spoil appetites for regular meals. Even very
Monday Store Hours: 12:15 Noon te 8:45 P. M.
Tuesday through Friday 9:45 A. M. to 5:15 P. M.
BUY WAR BONDS REGULARLY —-WASSON’S STREET FLOOR
snack for themselves without bothering mother in the least.
Classes Come to Order in
Cool Cottons and Rayons 2
Lucky little misses with wise mothers
will get at least one of these ducky new school dresses! There are crisp _percales and poplins and woven _ plaids and spun rayons. And oh, what @ selection of new styles and patterns! Pine quality fabrics that stand hard play and hard wear, yet wash divinely. Sizes 3 10 6 and 7 fo 14.
Colorful Comforters Sateen top “puffs”, filled with long staple cotton, white
wool. Rose, blue, rust, wine prints: with plain. 72x84 in.
Cotton Blankets 9 8 ¢ “Labradors” in single 70 by 80
inch size. Blue or rose in Others from .
98
downy-soft harmonizing plaids. - . 1.391 1.98
64”x76” Cotton Indian Blankets
Bright jacquard designs; warm, comfort able and serviceable.
MATTRESS COVERS Twin Bed: Size a ’ . oa 19 PL
