Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 December 1944 — Page 15

25, 1944 Need rition e

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25.~1f as a for all our do for the a better-fed, | youngsters, is not the en's bureau, , for far too oup are not L ‘still needs tnowledge of all income an do better joes without fed, but by ) ¥ done on ollow the ng them, say ists, “and as oy is apt to iber of the ren and the i the measure children are ists add, aley to cover Beyond that uch depends knowledge of ertness to the

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* your home's design and furnish-

_. tional homes will be of great inter-

* formerly costing hundreds of dol-

gallows only healthful rays into the

: Conserve Fuel

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MONDAY, DEC, 25, 1084 _____ hse

Tore

Functional Design will Characterize 4

The Homes

of the Post - War Era

Nurses

“GOSH!” IS ABOUT ALL YOU CAN THINK of to say when the

“Whoopee” boys are through telling

you about the post-war stove which

cooks meals in a drawer, the television set which tells you who is at the door, and all the other bits they like to describe.

The boys may be enthusiastic, b

ut they're slightly inaccurate, Wise

planners, engineers and designers are inclined to take a very dim view

of their tales. But there's no question that your post-war home will be. a far cry from the one you're living in today. Let's take a look at its design. Mostly, it will be- functional, mean= ing simply, that it is designed as your servant, an .exact reversal of the old formula: “She’'s>a slave to her kitchen!” Functionalists stress simplicity in design because the more simple

ings the less work there is for you. Of course, no architect or decorator is going to push you into an empty room. That would be simple, all right, but not functional. Va ow #

New Wall Treatments WALL TREATME

est. It will take away your desire for a house full of hard-to-clean oddments, extra pieces of furniture which you used to need to brighten up rooms whose walls were just walls, Post-war walls will feature new lines, new colors, new textures. Not only will you hang pictures. on walls, but they.will provide background for maps, pieces of sculpture, glass objects, bulletin boards, photo murals, shelves and brackets for growing things, Plaster walls will be muralcarved, stippled in new ways for striking effects. Some will be so interesting in themselves that they will require no pictures or ornamentation. Walls will be relied upon for many of the néw eye-saving and dramatic lighting effects. Some serve as movie screens. Walls in private rooms will became a more integral part of the room’s personality. Those in family rooms will be more in keeping with the room’s chief function. " os ”

Easy-to-Clean Finishes

DRAMATIC LIGHTING effects will be achiewed on special “pebbled” gypsum plaster walls. For the dark side of your -house there will be glass blocks with an internal prismatic structure which brings in more light than a clear glass_ window, Striking wood paneling effects,

lars per room, will be achieved with gypsum grain boards: knotty pine, walnut, bleached mahogany. For movie screens there will be the “pebbled” surface of a gypsum plastered area over the fireplace to provide interesting contrast with darker walls. Window walls will be of a solid, uninterrupted glass panel which

room. Such a panel also will block all but 4 per cent of the sun's rays which fade furnishings. Rooms will be no longer square. Hard-to-clean, sharp corners will be out. Even the gypsum grain boards ¢an ‘be curved to achieve a. rich-looking and unusual corner. You'll. have curved corners almost throughout and interestingly shaped rooms suited for their functions.

For Dress-Up

What little girl wouldn't adore a new “dress-up” frock like this? Full gathered skirf and ric rac trimmed bodice and collar ‘are exciting details. Pretty for school, too, in ging-

ham or percale, Pattern 8507 is designed for sizes

3, 4 5, 6 7 and 8 years. Size 4 years requires 17 yards of 35 or 39inch material; 17% yards trimming for collar and front waist. y

service, 214 W. Matviang ty Indianapolis 9. :

Permanents

Aid Children

MANY a stringy-haired little girl is spared pin pricks of vanity by having a mothér who will con-

sent to a permanent. Contrary to. .all arguments put forth by disapproving moms, a permanent won't harm a childs hair if degree of heat and strength of lotion are cautiously keyed to its needs. Disproving another fallacy, a permanent does not blight for life any natural curl that may be

NT in fune<{teebly budding in a child's hair.

UNDAUNTED, shy tendrils. will shoot back up as soon as a permanent grows out. Stand convinced? Then give your child a permanent if it can swing the scale of balance between a plain little head and a charming one.

Leftover Soap Use

Here's a Clever way to use up leftover slivers of toilet soap. Put them into a small turkish toweling bag and tie the bag over the shower spray.

v i

[Armed Forces Need More

By JANE STAFFORD Science Service Staff Writer. BATTLE CASUALTIES are nounting and the army and navy urgently need more nurses, thousands more, to care for them. Providing these nurses, making sure that no one of our wounded fighting men suffers for lack of a nurse's care, is not just a job for the army and navy and nursing profession. It. is everybody's job, a builetin from the nursing information bureau of the American Nurses’ association points out. If the radio and press could broadcast, as they do when disaster strikes at home, every time an

J|evacuation plane, train or ship had

arrived at a general hospital with a cargo of badly wounded men, the whole community would respond, Nurses would come from far and near, and laymen and women volunteer to help in any way they could. Arrivals of hospital planes, trains gnd ships, however, are military secrets. Only the staff of the hospital concerned is there to receive the badly injured men. Our job is the less dramatic but no less important one of making sure army and navy hospitals at home and overseas are staffed with plenty of nurses for the arrivals of casualties,

o o ” WE CAN DO this job: in many ways. We can support efforts to recruit nurses. We can encourage young “people to take up nursing. We can encourage the senior cadets in nursing schools to apply for service in army or navy hospitals during their supervised practice periods. Women who qualify can become nurses aids to serve in army

and navy hospitals or in civilian

By ALICIA HART NEA Writer

GROOMING EXPERTS of Fifth ave.salons who solve girl-meets-job

-

-|problems say the biggest improve‘iment comes from changing a fly-

away bob into a net-trapped hair-do. “The minute hair is bagged in a net or wound into a chignon,” says Lura. DeGez, one such expert,

almost ready for the job.” But admitting that her help goes farther than that to remedy another common fault of collegiates—an ex= | aggerated casualness in get-up — Miss DeGez cites the transformation job that was done for Nancy Wall, a South Boston, Mass, girl who came to New York to study for a fashion career. o ” lJ AFTER HAIR CARE Nancy was taught make-up—how much better lipstick looks when it's applied with ‘a brush; how much better powder sticks when it has a foundation to which to cling, After that came a clothes restyling” job, which swapped Nancy's sport togs and oxford shoes for a trim tailored suit, high-heeled pumps and ‘a bumper beret. Now that she's dressed for the role, Nancy has no fears about the future of her fashion career when she finishes her present course.

hospitals where their help may release a professional nurse for military service. Men and older girls as well as women can take courses in home nursing, so that they can conserve a nurse's time when a member of the family is ill. A course in home nursing will not only enable you to release a nurse for military service if illness strikes in your home. It will teach you much that is useful for protecting your own and your family’s health now and in the future. Your local Red Cross chapter will help you enroll in a home

nursing course.

. THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES = Style Advice for Career Seeker

“a girl fresh from the campus looks-

Nancy Wall: Careerist.

Re-dyeing Hazards Do not try to dye badly sunfaded or worn garments, or clothing which excessive perspiration or use of deodorants may have weakened. Such garments will not

+ ‘World Seeks

Of Peace’

By MRS. WALTER FERGUSON Scripps-Howard Staff Writer CHRISTMAS IS here again. It reminds us that the Infant Jesus brought into the world a new idea, that men might live together in peace. Ever since that night long ago when the herald angels sang their message, people of good will have hoped and dreamed and prayed for the coming of world fellowship, Comments about Christmas this year will have an insincere ring unless we can keep our thoughts on the future and upon this dream. The present is filled with confusion and darkness. ‘We look about us and nowhere is there any peace; only strife and hatred and war. » o ” YET, IT 1S for the old, old Christmas dream that our young men are dying. Because we believe in the ultimate possibilities of peace on earth and everything the term implies—tolerance, justice,

give all we possess, our efforts, our wealth, our traditions and our sons, These mighty sacrifices, all this tremendous outpouring of American strength, represents the measure of our belief that men can achieve a workable plan for world co-opera-tion to rid the planet of war,

2 8 8 . . THE ENTIRE Christian world Is now engaged in most un-Christian activities, Paradoxical as it may sound, we are -so engaged because ye have a profound faith in the principles brought to men by Jesus of Nazareth, Not often are we strong enough to live by them, yet thousands of our finest men have died for them.

withstand re-dyeing or may cause lan uncven dyeing job. ’

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Elmo’s

Let the politicians never forget

. Ln " Powder 1.50. Cake Make-Up 1.30 ; Prices plus 207,

.

The Old Dream

brotherhood—we have - elected to}

Wartime E ating 2 Meta Given

sheet of meat because of the muscle structure, but if cut cleanly with a| sharp knife it will serve very successfully, ve ® ® 8

TUESDAY MENUS

Breakfast Orange juice. Poached eggs on toast. Toast slices with jam.

Luncheon

Cheese dumplings on sauerkraut. Frankfurters, R Bread. Fresh chilled apples.

Dinner

Veal birds with sour cream gravy (see recipe). Mashed potatoes, Carrots and celery. Sliced tomatoes. Poppy seed rolls, Vanilla. pudding with sauce. Milk to drink: Three c. for each

chocolate

that. After this titantic struggle those. who guide world destiny must not “fall the dead. We dare not let them fail. If we do, Christmas will have no meaning fer generations to come, The poor little baby Jesus, the angels and the star will be rio more potent to influence men than a myth. To win the war and lose the

* |peace will plunge us into paganism

to invite close-ups. Five glowing shades.

and a new Dark Age.

New Photo-Finish Face Powder

Dream-light powder that creates for your skin a clear, fine-textured glow—and clings so well there's no need to retouch.

Face powder that follows closely that Photo-Finish formula—

federal tax

IMAGINATION AND CARE plus good ingtedients are the only essentials for preparing handsome veal birds. to the cook, the care is divided between the cook and .the butcher. that is to be rolled attractively around stuffing must be cut rather thin, uniformly thick and must hold together, Veal leg whether cut on the bias or straight across is not_ one united

The imagination belongs Meat

3

child, 2 c. for each adult. Two red pts. needed for cheese. . ® #& =» Rae Veal birds with sour cream gravy} Four strips bacon, 2 tbsps. onions, 3 ¢. white bread crumbsy 1 tsp, salt,

1 tsp. poultry seasoning, % tsp. pepper, 2 beaten eggs, 2% lbs» ved steak in pieces 3 in. by 5 in. and % in. thick, 3 tbsps. shortening, 1 & hot water, 1 ¢, sour cream. Pan-fry bacon until done. Remove slices and crumble with fork. Saute onion.in bacon fat until done. Season bread crumbs in bowl with salt, poultry seasoning and pepper. Add eggs, sauteed onion and fat and mix well. Place a portion of stuffing on each slice of meat, Roll meat around it and secure with toothpicks. Roll veal in flour, brown in hot shortening. Add wae ter, cover and simmer gently for 1 to 1%. hours. Add more water only if necessary. When tender, add sour cream to gravy, blend in until smooth, thicken if desired. Continue to cook covered for 15 to 20 mins, to blend flavors.

‘New’ Brooms

A new broom sweeps clean--s0 does a clean “broom. To keep a broom fresh and clean, douse it in medium warm suds, rinse well and hang by the handle to dry thors

oughly.