Indianapolis Times, Volume 34, Number 142, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 October 1921 — Page 7
SALARY LISTS LACK EVIDENCE OF ECONOMY Three Years of Republican Rule Fail to Better Conditions. TAXES STILL INCREASE By ITALLACK BA9SFORD. WASHINGTON, D. C-, Oct. 25 Every day the Washington newspapers contain Republican preachments of economy, and occasionally there creeps into the new* columns a concrete example of the sort of I economy it really is; It Is economy for J the wage earner in the navy yards and ! extravagance run wild in the places where personal and political pull are most effective. Here it a sample from the salary list of the Federal Reserve Bank in New York. The first column gives the salaries received under the Wilson administration, while the second column gives present | salaries. Os course it would be ridiculous : to assert that these men whose salaries t were increased 500 to 600 per cent would I not have remained with the bank at increases of 100 to 200 per cent. Be it remembered that every salary grab of thia kind inevitably passes on to the taxpayers and consumers of the country—like the law of gravitation, it operates all the j time. Here are the figures from the Manu- 1 lecturers’ Record: * • • Benjamin Strong $30,000 to $30,000 ' Pierre Jay 16,000 to 30,000 J. H. Chase 20.000 to 30,000 E. R. Keusel 4,000 to 26 000 L. F. Sailer 7,000 to 25.000 G. L. Harrison 4,000 to 22.000 ; L. H. Hendrick* 6,000 to 18,000 i Shephard Morgan 5,000 to 15.000 A. W. Gllbart 18.000 to 12,000 J. D. Higgins 2,500 to 12,000 ! J. W. Jones 2.500 to 12,000 L. R, Rounds 2,000 to 12,000; J. L. Morris 9,000 to 12,000 W. D. Matteson 1,500 to 10,000 A. J. Lins 1,500 to 10,000 Finis Garrett of Tennessee, the brilliant young statesman who leads the House Democrats In the absence of Mr. Kltchin, Is a parliamentarian of the first rank, an able debater, a deep logician— In short, a leader of real strength—but he is also at home in prodding the Republicans with short-arm Jabs that are frequently touched with humor. The other day the House passed the bill to extend the provisions of the "emergen ?y tariff act." In the course of the discussion Mr. Garrett said: “Mr. Chairman, for almost three years now the Republican party has been in complete control of both the legislative branches of the Government. For eight months, practically, that party has been In control of both the executive and the legislative branches, and this measure this afternoon is the substance of its three years of effort and labor, to wit: a measure to extend the life of a measure which even when it was passed was a joke and which has since lecome the universal laughing stock of the Republic.) “With a world in turmoil, confronted by conditions the most serious that ever confronted the human race. with our own Nation torn by dissension and threatened by economic ills, the most serious, perhaps. In the Nation's history, we find this party, this party of proud traditions, this party that has had its great leaders, this party which has been wont to boast that It possessed the only ability along the line of statecraft to be found in any party, stumbles and staggers through almost three years of legislative power and through eight months of complete power without a single measure designed to meet the afteramth of conditions growing out of the World War, without a single measure holding forth an idea of relief to a starving, suffering world and to a panic-stricken, frightened Nation, except this continuance of a poor, pitiful joke that was a travesty upon statesmanship and a shame upon any legislative body.” ARMS EMBARGO ON CHINA TO BE PRESSED BY U. S. Diplomats Favor Quieting of Factions and Removal of Jap Control. WASHINGTON, Oct. 25.—The American delegation to the forth-coming conference on Far Eastern questions will be fully fortified to press for the enforcement of an arms embargo on China—a project virtually agreed upon by allied diplomats In Pickin in 1915—but never fully lived up to by the powers except by the United States. The attitude of the United States, It was learned, rests upon the belief that the tranquility of China, the preservation of Chinese integrity and the maintenance of the “open door,” depends upon , the quieting of the warring factions within the republic and removal to no large extent of the control of the Chinese military establishment now virtually exercised by Japan. LODGE MOVES TO ADVANCE VIEW. Action designed to place the United States in position to advance its view has been taken by one of the American delegation, Senator Lodge. Mr. Lodge has introduced In the Senate a resolution giving the President authority to place at his discretion an embargo on arms shipments to Latln-American countries and to countries where the United States exercises ex territorial rights. The first part of the resolution Is designed only to give the President authority which he has bad under executive war power, but which ceases with a formal declaration of peace. The second refers directiv to China. The problem Is understood to be complicated by the attitude of Japan, not only as the result of the now famous twenty-one demands, bnt also in the socalled Chlno-Japanese agreement. The question of arms shipments to China always has been a delicate one and is understood to haTe formed the basis of at least one of the five of the twenty-one demands which China rejected. The demands are said to have included the Insistence that Japan be given exclusive right to shipment of arms to China and also have asked for Joint control of arsenals operated In Chinese territory. Some such arrangement which virtually gives Japan control of the Chinese military, is said to have bean effected despite international confab at Peking which sought to withhold arms. RESOLUTION PUTS U. 8. IN READINESS. According to the best Interpretation here, the passage of the Lodge resolution , put the American delegation in position to inform the others of the readiness of the United States to continue its embargo on arms shipments to China. But at the same time, the United States will be calling for a showdown. If other countries, or Japan, insist upon continuing the shipment* the United States will be forced into the field as an active competitor for the “business.” American manufacturers, It Is understood, have been chaffing over the attitude of the Government, which in adherence with the Pekin agreement, has been preventing American firms from partlcl >attng in the lucrative trade.—Copyright, 1821, by Entile Ledger Company.
IN THE REALM WHERE WOMAN REIGNS
Keeping House With the Hoopers [The Hoopers, an average American family of five, living in a suburban town, on a limited income, will tell the readers of the Daily Times how the many present-day problems of the home are solved by working on the budget that Mrs. Hooper has evolved and found practical. # Follow them daily in an interesting review of their home life and learn to meet the conditions of the high cost of living with them.] a TUESDAY. “Don’t you think you had better have that washerwoman we had a few weeks ago again today, Mary?” asked Henry when Mrs. Hooper came downstairs as the family was finishing breakfast. “I am sure she would come even as late as this if you telephoned for her and I certainly don*’t think you ought to do the washing yourself this week.” “That is nonsense, Henry,” was Mrs. Hooper's reply. “It is no effort at all with the washing machine, and I am not going to pay a laundress $3 a day to do the kind of work that woman did three weeks ago.” “Oh, she is Just dying to come again,” spoke up Helen, “She stopped me two or three times on the way to school and asked me if we were going to send for her any more. She has changed her mind about the washing machine and she wants to try it.” “Well she had her chance to try it when she was here,” said Mrs. Hooper, “and I hope it will be a long time before we need her again.” "Anyhow I don’t think it Is right for you to do it,” grumbled Henry. "You are as thin as a rail and as pale ns a ghost, and there is nothing to prevent your taking cold going from the warm laundry out into that chilly back yard when you hang up the clothes.” “Oh, don't you worry,” laughed Mrs. Hooper following him to the door and turning up the collar of hig overcoat as he stepped out on to the porch. “Mother has Just been Insisting that she was going to do the washing if I didn't tend for the laundress, but I’d much, rather she’d stay upstairs with Betty all morning. and as the Bride is coming over for a while after luncheon, to relieve her I won't have to stop after I have once be-' gun to work.” “You know mother, I saw the dandlest thing in the window of the hardware shop the other day," remarked Roger as he reached the front door where hts mother and father were still standing. ; “The sign on it said that it was an ‘in- ! door dryer,’ and you didn't have to go out in the storm and cold tb hang up the clothes if you had one.” “What kind of an arrangement was it?” inquired Mrs. Hooper interested at once, while Henry paused on the top step to hear about it also. “Weil,” went on Roger laboring to describe the device. “It was made of eight or ten narrow parallel strips of wood fastened together that were raised and lowered with ropes and pulley. It was hung over the stationary wash tuba In the laundry, and the clothes were put up in rows on the wooden strips the same as you bang them on the clothes line. When they were all filled, the thing was hauled up to the celling where the washing was left to dry.” “It sounds very practical,” said Mrs. nooper, "bnt I shouldn t think that it would hold all the washing for a biff family. It might be all right where there was only the clothes for two people to be taken care of.” “Well, you'd be surprised, mother, how
DANDERINE Stops Hair Coming Out; Thickens, Beautifies. Thirty-five cents buys a bottle of “Danderine” at any drug store. After one application you cannot find a particle of dandruff or a falling hair. Besides, every hair shows new life, vigor, brightness, more color and abundance.—Advertisement. YOU’LL GET HID OF BLACKHEADS SURE There Is one simple, safe and sura way that never falls to get rid of blackheads and that Is to dissolve them. To do this get two ounces of oalonlte powder from any drug store —sprinkle a little on a hot. wet sponge—rub over the blackheads briskly—wash the parts and you will be surprised how the blackheads have disappeared. Big blackheads, little blackheads, no matter where they are. simply dissolve and disappear, leaving the parts without I any mark whatever. Blackheads are simply a mixture of dust and i dirt and secretions from the body | that form In the pores of the skin. Pinching and squeezing only cause Irritation, make large pores, and do not get the blackheads out after i they become hard. The calonlte powder and the water simply dissolve the blackheads so they wash j right out, leaving the pores free and ' clean and In their natural condition. Anyone troubled with these unslght--1; blemlHhes should oertalnly try this simple method,—-Advertisement, | TIMELY BEAUTY HINTS Society women wash their own hair, not because It la a fad, but because they wish to obtain the greatest possible hair beauty and be sure they are not using anything harmful. They h*ve found that in washing the hair It is never wise to use a makeehift, but is alway* advisable to use a preparation made for shampooing only. Many of our friends say they get the best results from a simple homemade canthrox mixture. You can use .his at a cost of about 3 cents a shampoo by getting some cancbrox from your druggist and dissolving a teaspoonful in a cup of hot water. This makes enough shampoo liquid to apply to all the hair Instead of Just the top of the head, as with most preparations. Dandruff, excess oil and dirt are dissolved and entirely disappear In the rinsing water. Your hair will be so fluffy that It will look much heavier than it la. Its luster and softness will also delight yea.—Advertiser oc
'Men You May Marry By ETHEL R. PEYSER Has a man like this proposed to you? Bymptoms: Slv feet, young, made a lot of money. Feels he wants to enjoy it. Handsome, clear eye. Doesn’t quite know what to do to enjoy it. Travel? Yes. Marriage, if with the right girl. Intelligent but not intellectual. Strong but not strong minded. Kind but not soft, not soft at all. But after a hard fight for funds and fun, feels that the world was made for him. You know he wants to marry, yet you know he’ll only marry for love, but it has to be in combination with pretty fine ore. IN FACT, He’s made his mint in ore and is a good assayer. Prescription to his bride: 11. Keep up your pre marital metallic ring. Absorb This: SOME LIKE TO SEEK THE GOLD VEIN IN THE ROCK AND PURSUE IT. (Copyright, 1031.)
many pieces of clothes that thing held," insisted Roger earnestly. “There was a crowd around the window all day, and every one said that it was a wonder.” “How did you come to be so Interested In a display of washing?" asked his father. "We didn’t see you sticking very close to the laundry when Helen and your grandmother were struggling with our wash.” “Now that will do, Henry,” warned Mra. Hooper, “you know I never want Roger fussing around with housework, any more than I have ever approved of your doing It.” “Well, Helen tried to rope me into it every chance she got,” growled Roger,
500 SMART DRESSES In This Sale Wednesday Q— $ jcn $ j 9 5Q ‘® a { e Don’t I ij | ' „.. W Mornh,J f/JPpf Wjt Biggest (j at 8:30 : / Y ... f Season Sale J'k A Very Unusual Dress Buying Opportunity A Timely Sale, A Money-Saving Sale, A Real Old Time Bargain Sale Five hundred Smart Dresses. Nearly a hundred different styles to choose from. Dresses for which one usually pays considerably more than the prices named. Dresses for street, for travel, for business wear and charming frocks for social occasions. Fashioned in the newest styles of the most favored fabrics of the season. Included are: Wool Tricotines, Poiret Twills, Fine Serges, Roshanara Crepes Splendid Velours, Can ton Crepes, Rich Satins and Georgette Crepes Straight line models, long waist models, cape effects, drape effects, tunic styles, over-skirt models, coat effects, flowing sleeves, novelty trimmings, yarn embroidered work, beaded, silk girdles,'-ilk tassels. A full range of sizes from 16 up to 48. Not every size in each particular style—another reason for early shopping. Planned for the biggest dress sale the Downstairs Store has ever held. [Wednesday morning at 8:30 sharp.
INDIANA DAILY TIMES, TUESDAY, OCTOBER za, vszi.
remembering his many grievances on this score, “and father thought I ought to do a lot of things like helping to make the Jelly and run the washing machine, and dampen the clothes and put away the Ironing, that you never thiuk is my Job, mother.” “That's why I can’t understand your great interest in a washing demonstration lu a hardware store window,” answered his father teaslngly. “Oh, there was a girl in the window all day—” began Roger. “I see,” 1 laughed his farmer aa he ran down the stairs. “Well, the ’indoor dryer' doesn’t sound like a bad invention, any how," called
out Mrs. Hooper as she put her arm around Roger "and I wish you would ask how much it costs, Henry when you come by tonight.” The menu for the three meals on Wednesday Is: BREAKFAST. Stewed Prunes and Lemon Waffles Cereal Coffee LUNCHEON. Boiled Rice and Milk Baked Apples Peanut Butter Sandwiches Cocoa DINNER. Essence of Tomato Soup Boiled Onions Creamed Cod Fish Mashed Potatoes Romalne Salad Apple Pie (Copyright, 1021.) CULINARY TERMS. (Continued.) “Frappe”-—Sernl-f rosea. "Frontage”—Cheese. “Galantine” —Meat, boned, stuffed, rolled, and boiled, always served cold. “Gateau” —Cake. “Glace" —Iced or glossed over. “Grilled”—Broiled. “Glaze" —Stock boiled down to a thin paste. ‘Gruyere”—A brand of fancy cheese. “Hors-d’oeuvres”—Relishes side dishes. “Hachls de boeuf” —Beef Ha h. 6TEWED PRUNES AND LEMON. Wash and soak prunes for two hours. Drain, put over the fire with Just enough water to cover them. Slice a whole lemon Into this and cook all until tender. Turn out and cover until cold, put on ice an hour before sending to the table. Avery little sugar may be added while cooking if prunes are liked very sweet. RISEN WAFFLES, Four eggs, two cups of milk, three lablospoonfuls of melted butter, one tablespoonful of sugar, three cupfuls of flour, sifted with half a teaspoonful of salt; one-half yeast cake dissolved In warm water. Beat well and long, set in a warm place to rise and bake in wafrio Irons. creamed codfish. Flake cold boiled cod into bits with a silver fork. Cook together a tablespoonful of flour and one of butter, and pour upon them a cupful of milk. Season to taste, and when smooth, stir in the flaked fish. Stir and toss until very hot, add salt and pepper and serve. MASHEI* POTATOES. 801 l and mash white potatoes and whip to a cream with a cupful of hot,
milk and a tablespoonful of melted . butter. Whip for fully five minutes with ; two forks, then pile on a hot platter. BOILED ONIONS. Peel and lay for an hour In coll water. 801 lln two waters until tender. Drain, sprinkle with salt and pepper. Pour Into a deep vegetable dish and pour over them a large spoonful of melted butter. Helpful Household Hints TO CLEAN MIRRORS AND WINDOWS. Rub over with chamois skin wrung out of clean hot water, then polish with dry chamois skin. This saves much work I and also strength. TO CLEAN BLACK LACE. If it be real lace, you can treat it at home with reasonable hope of succees. Boil a black kid glove in a quart of water until you have reduced the liquid by one-third. Squeeze the glove and throw it away. When you can tear your hand comfortably in the water, dip and shake the lace in it up and down a dozen times. Shake off the water and squeeze the lace in a soft towel. Do not wring it. While wet, begin to pull the lace straight with the tips of the fingers, getting every mesh and edge of the into the right shape. It must be In order and still damp when laid on the ironing-cloth. Spread a piece of old cambric or linen, or better still, a piece of clean tissue paper over it, and iron on the right side; then harder on the wrong side to bring out the pattern. Hang it in the sun, or in any hot, dry place to dry quickly. Roll upon a card or smooth board to preserve the smoothness. TO DRT-CLEAN WHITE LACE. Wash in flour. Rut the flour in as you would soap; let the lace lie for some time and then shake it out. If it be not quite clean, repeat the process, which will make it look like new. • PUSS IN BOOTS JR. i By David Cory "Let me think a moment,” said Puss Junior to King Coal and his brother, old King Cinder, who, you remember in the last story, had Just asked our little traveler to tell them one of his adventures. “I must run over in my mind what would best suit your royal ears.” "Ha, h 81” laughed merry King CoaL "Give us a tale of warlike deeds. Excitement, my good Sir Cat!” But crusty old King Cinder never said a word. He was a chilly old man, not at all like his brother. "I will tell yon of my meeting with the noble Sir Launcelot of the Lake,” resumed Puss Junior. “One day as I was walking through some woods I met a knight all dressed In armor bright. And upon speaking with him I found
that he once knew my father, the fa- ! mens Puss in Boots, now Seneschal to my Lord of Carabas. “And then, to my delight, this noble knight asked me to accompany him, for said he, ‘Perchance we may come upon an adventure, you and I little comrade in boots 1” So I climbed up behind him on his war l.orse and together we rode forth until we came to a bridge that spanned , river on the opposite of which stood a castle. “But when we attempted to cros*, the keeper of the bridge laid hold of our horse’s bridle and would have detained ’us had I not beat him upon the hand Y r lth the flat of my sword.” At this point In the story King Coal clapped his broad band on his leg and cried: “Bravely done, my good Sir Cat!” But old King Cinder never said a word. My! but he was a crusty old king! “Well, after a little,” continued Puss Junior, “we came. Sir Launcelot and I, to the castle, .and the ladies In waiting did muke much fun of me and of S:r Launcelot for having so strange a comrade as a cat in boots. But on learning who Sir Launcelot was and that I was ! the son of the famous Puss in Boots, I ihei* laughter stopped, and we were invited to spend the night at the castle. “ : Jow the lord of this castle was a very wicked lord, and in the middle of the night he stole Into our room, and had I not been awake he would have killed the noble Sir Launcelot. “It was indeed lucky that I heard a noise at our chamber door and that 1 stood beside it just as the wicked lord crept it, for had I not wounded him in the arm with my sword he might have
®spi ri,t “Bayer* on Genuine Aspirin— say “Bayer”
Warning! Unless you see the name “Bayer* on package or on tablet* you are not getting genuine Aspirin prescribed by physicians for twenty-one years and proved safe by millions. Take Aspirin only as told in the Bayer pack--1 age for Colds, Headache, Neuralgia
harmed my knight ere he could grasp his own weapon to defend himself.” “Bravo!’’ cried King Coal, as Puss finished ; “you have told me a good tale, and now we shall have a good dinner. Eh, brother?" and he nudged his crusty brother in the ribs until be coughed. But old King Cinder never, never said a word. He was such a crusty old king. After dinner Puss was entertained by the Court Jester, and the next morning resumed his Journey of adventure on the Good Gray Horse, and what happeaec later I will tell you In the next story, ii you will promise never to be like crusty old King Cinder. —Copyright, 192 L (To be Continued.) MORE JERSEY JUSTICE. NEWARK, N. J., Oct. 25.—1 tls aU right to take a 4-year-old boy to a ball game Sunday, ruled Vice Chancellor Bakes in the suit of Mrs. Grace A. tinea Egainst her husband, in which she asks the custody of her son. The father la permitted to see the child on Sunday*. The court directed that the Sunday afternoon arrangement be continued. He said be saw no harm in the father taking hla boy to the ball game. WOMEN WORKERS. CLEVELAND, Ohio, Oct. 25.—Eightmillion women in this country are Jot'* holders and of these OO per cent are listed as teachers and 37 per cent hold sec* retarial positions. These statistic* were given by Dr. Amelia Reinhart, president of Mills College, Oakland, Cal., addreesing a convention of the Nationr 1 Federation of Business and Professional Women's Clubs.
Rheumatism, Earache, Toothache, Lumbago and for Pain. All druggists sell Bayer Tablets of Aspirin in handy tin boxes of 12, and in bottles of 24 and 100. Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticacldeater of Salicylicacld.—Advertisement,
7
