Indianapolis Times, Volume 34, Number 175, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 December 1921 — Page 4
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Jttifcma Uatla STirnea INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA. Dal y Except Sunday, 25-29 South Meridian Stm, Telephones—Main 3500; New, LI ncoln 8351. MEMBERS OF AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS. „ i Chicago, Detroit, 8t- Louis. G. Logan I’ajne Cos. Advertising offices } New York. Boston. Payne. Burn* & Sin’th, Inc. IT APPEARS to be Albert J. Beveridge's next move. WE’LL WAGER “Fatty" Arbuckle isn’t worried very much about the outcome of his trial. THOSE WHO put In their coal early have been wondering what they are going to do with it. SOME OF THOSE speakership candidates probably wish they were as lucky as Senator New. , PERHAPS Congress would be only too glad to pass the tariff problem over to the President, as he suggests. WHILE THE BANKS are being urged to help the farmers, someone should do something about the bandits who rob banks. IT IS REPORTED that the arms conference may open the door for the United States to enter the league. Doe* this mean its name will be changed? CHICAGO WOMAN says dogs and cats are happiest when treated kindly and she is going to treat her husband that way. Could he say he will lead a dog’s life? On Jailing Newspaper Men “The State Supreme Court has just decided that Judge Collins of the Criminal Court of Marion County was Justified legally In citing James L. Killgallen, erstwhile managing editor of the Indiana Dally Times, for contempt and sentencing him to jail. In answering the citation for contempt, Mr. Killgallen denied that the article in question was contempt, and that if It was., he was not responsible for its preparation or publication—the re■ponslbllity resting upon the editor who wrote it and over whose actions the managing editor had no control. The editor took the same position publicly in his paper, accepting the responsibility. Instead of citing the editor who admitted the responsibility for the article, and who was not under the direction or Jurisdiction of the managing editor, for contempt, and dismissing Klllaallen, Judge Collins stood on his original theory of responsibility. The matter was appealed to the Supreme Court which decides that Collins was right This is very Interesting to newspaper men generally, and if trie decision is to stand as the law of the State, newspaper men will have to act upon an entirely new theory in the future. Sending newspaper men to Jail for criticising public officials has never been extravagantly popular with the American people. Even criminal courts are not above criticism from the press. It would be unfortunate for the people If they were. For many years ever since Erskine and Mackintosh and Curran made their great arguments on the liberty of the press, It has been assumed that without such liberty no other could long continue to exist- Judge Collins has hardly strengthened himself In public esteem by his action.”—Ft. Wayne JournalGazette.
Corrupting the School Children The revelation that the Indiana Medical College has contributed to the delinquency of young school boys by paying them a dollar apiece for cata to be used for vivisection purposes, and the bland announcement that the school will soon be in the market for dogs gathered by the same youthful agencies add another damning count to the many already totaled against the present management of the institution. The rightful indignation stirred in the principal of No. i school when ahe learned that boys of tender years intrusted to her were being tempted to become petty thieves by a State-owned institution of supposedly higher learning, finds a ready sympathy In those of us who feel that the public schools should be maintained free from all immoral influences. Possibly, however, an institution that in the pa3t has defended its right to exist as a market for 6tolen dogs sees no wrong in inducing youngsters to go about the streets and alleys picking up what in many cases are treasured pets for a financial recompense. Those unfortunate boys who fell under the influence of the college are of sufficient age to know right from wrong, yet, encouraged by the lure of seif-earned money, they are not likely to raise any question whether the animal they have caught is-a pet, prized possibly by some other youth, or just a “stray” doomed to be sacrificed on the altar of vivisection. It is indeed unfortunate that an institution of this kind, which should be looked upon by youths as a center of wholesome culture and refinement, ahould stoop to such an unwholesome practice. The laws of Indiana have surrounded children with many safeguards, among which is one that fixes a punishment for those found guilty of contributing to the delinquency of minors. Any who “knowingly encourage, contribute or In any way cause any such child to violate any law of this State or the ordinance of any city; “Or knowingly permit, contribute to, encourage or cause any such child to be guilty of any vicious or Immoral conuduct * • • shall be guilty of a misdemeanor and may be tried for such offense In the Juvenile court and upon conviction shall be punished by fine or Imprisonment, or both • • •” The Indiana Medical College officials have persistently violated the laws and seemingly have been immune; they have persistently demonstrated that they are not amenable to public criticism, but now that they have directed their predatory agencies to work through the public schools it is time for the authorities charged with the enforcement of the law and those who ahould exercise control over the institution to take a hand.
Democratic Opportunity The Democratic State committee will meet Saturday under peculiarly propitious circumstances —probably the most favorable that the party has had for several, long lean years In Indiana. The municipal elections showed an unmistakable Democratic trend in thi state and as a result Democratic mayors and organizations were introduced In more than fifty-three Important cities, some of them turning to the party for the first time in years. From an organization standpoint the city elections were important but what was far more important was the temper of the people who went to the ballot boxes. Next fall Indiana will elect a United States Senator and State officials. Candidates of the proper caliber and with a public mission, rather than self aggrandizement should be selected for these places. The Democratic party can supply them and should. The State committee occupies a strategical position In relation to party success at the polls and on its makeup depends, in a large measure, the fate of the candidates. It would be well for the organization, while it Is assembled, to see that its own house is in order and that it is prepared to go before the people with its record clean. If it cannot look to the future with sanguine hopes then it should set about to correct its defects. McCray’s Declaration The statement of Governor Warren T. McCray that he is “favorable” to the candidacy of Senator Harry S. New and the triumphant declaration of the Senator that “the Governor is for me absolutely," is of more than passing note In the course of Hoosier poltics. It means that, in the event the Senator is obliged to fight for renominatlon, he will have the support of the powerful agencies that can be summoned by the Governor and in any political tilt this is a reinforcement of no little consequence. The compact between the Governor and the Senator recalls the firm stand Governor McCray took last winter for the repeal of the State-wide primary law. At that time it was charged, and never contradicted, that the death of the law was being sought in order to facilitate the renomination of Senator New. With the primary law still on the books, the Senator, like the good politician that he is, is losing no opportunity to form those alliances that may prove valuable to him when the crucjal moment arrives.
Keeping House With the Hoopers [The Hoopers, an average American family of five, living In a suburban town, on a limited 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 dally In an Interesting review of their home life and learn to meet the conditions of the high cost of living with them.] FRIDAY. When the Woman’s Club assembled Mrs. Hooper called the Home Economics Section to order and then remarked: “We want to finish the subject of 'advancement' in connection with our budget today, and be ready to consider the question of savings. We might prolong our discussion on the advancement apportionment but I think talking about it In detail will be more valuable later, after you hare experimented with the possibilities of living within an allowance of $3 a week.’’ •'I tel! you, Mrs. Hooper, that I shall never be able to do It,’’ began the woman who always objected to everything. “Even after cutting down my newspapers to 23 cents a week, and deciding to buy no magazines or books but to use those In the library and to content myself with donating only 2o cents a week to the church, the remaining |2.30 seems pitiably small to cover all the other Items, such as vacations and the doctor and dentist and pleasures.' “Why If you saved the whole $2.60 every week for six months you'd only have about SO3, and that would not be enough to cover all those expenses If yon had it in one sum," complained a second woman. “Oh. you’ll be surprised how you can manage those expenditures If you stick to the schedule,” remarked Mra. Hooper. “Well, now, there Is a very practical problem before me,” put In a third woman, “and several of you may be considering the same one. I want my little girl to Join the dancing class which Is to cost a dollar a week and which must be taken out of what remains of that three dollars a week allowance. I’d like to know how some of you are planning to do It, as it seems to me impossible.” “I'm very glad you brought up that special difficulty,” said Mrs. Hooper smiling. “I was hoping someone would suggest It so that It might be discussed.” “How do you think I could manage St,
Ve TOWNE GOSSIP Copyright. 19ft, by Str Comptmy. By K. C. B,
Dear K. C. B.—Do you think you can find someone to play Santa Claus for three children? Their father Is working only a couple of days a week and I won’t be able to give them anything. Other year* we have always had plenty, but now we cannot make ends meet and the children do not see what money has to do with Santa Claua. Please do not make our name public for no one knows our troubles. EDNA . DEAR EDNA. • • • I RECALL. • • • THAT ONCE on a time. • • • X 1.0 VED a girl. • • • BY THE n*m of Edna. • • • SHE WAS eight year* old. • • • AXD I was tan. • • • AND THE way I lort her. • • • WAS OX Hallowaen. • • • SHE WAS diving for apples. • • • AXD FELL In the tub. • • • AND WAS nearly drowned. • • • AND I laughed at her. • • • AND HER pride was hurt, • • • AND nER love grew cold. • • • AND I'M going to pretend. • • • THAT SHE comes again. • • AND IT'S Christmas time. • e e AND WHERE she la. ARE THREE little kids. * • • WHO CAN’T understand. • * • VrnAT DOLLARS and cents. * • • MAY nAVB to do. * • • WITH SANTA Claus. • • • AND I have a friend. • • • WHOM I'LL tell of them. • • • AND HE will prove. • • • THEY WEBB quite right. * • • AND THE dollars and cents. . * THEY DIDN'T have. • * * HAVE NOTHINO to do. • • • WITH SANTA Claus. • Id ITL DO this thing. • • • IX jrr*T this way. # • • AND SQUARE myself. • • • FOR TIIAT I laughed. * • • AXD HURT the pride. • • • OF THIS other F.diia. * • * WHOM I loved and lost. * • • SO LONG ago. • • • I THANK you. BTSTOHT DEADHEADS. NEW YORK, Dec. 2.—A youth called upon a famous theatrical manager here and requested his autogrnph on a clean, white card. On the following Saturday afternoon the card was presented at the theater, with this addition: “Please give bearer six seats." Six boys enjoyed the show and the fraud was no< discovered for several days.
BRINGING UP FATHER.
■¥%T. 8 /> .tT* [ on: doctor - 1 woz. jovt I II w*"* thimc, j f some hose T| 'WELL -BY £Ollv - 1 F|! !>.. ,C ‘ • 1 LO.M4 TO THROW A Sf f P POOT It. v EB * I' WOULDN'T O' tjG3C ! JU!' WHEN it DIPPED *ND r~> X EVERT one. HAE, r L _ --A SKBVICT. INC- | 12~2
INDIANA DAILY TIMES, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 2,1921.
Mra Hooper?” Inquired the woman who had iMwWftt up the question. “I should like someone to tell us who has already decided to send her child to the class,” aid Mra. Hooper. “I understand several of you have given your names to Mrs. Chapin.” “Well,” began Mrs. Owen, “I Intended to take the dollar a week out of my allowance for clothes. There wasn’t any other way so do It and I don't think I ought to deprive my child of the advantages that the • dancing class will afford.” "But then you are not playing fair as far as your budget Is concerned.” interrupted Mrs. Hooper hastily. “In a few weeks you wou'd be taking a dollar from some other department to use for something else, an 1 a return to the old system of ‘robbing Peter to pay Paul’ would absolutely destroy all your care-fully-laid plans to follow a budget. Had you decided to pay for your daughter’s danelng lessons In the same way, Mrs. Wright?” “Yes,” admitted that lady, “except that I intended to take my dollar from my food allowance of S2O, where I think I could spare It best.” Mrs. Hooper laughed. "I wonder how many of you have decided as I have to stand by your budgets which do not permit anything as extravagant as dancing ’essons at a dollar a week ?” Aerfore thei e could be any reply to this question Mrs. Chapin spoke up. “After talking with Mrs. Hooper last Saturday I saw very clearly that the plan I had outlined for a dancing class for the children of Mayfield was too expensive for most of yon, and that 1 had arranged it on the basis of my own larger Income. Asa result of thinking It over and making further inquiries I have something entirely new to suggest. I find that we can use this room without any rent as long as the mothers of the children all belong to the club, the Bride has a friend who will play the piano for us very reasonably and I have found another dancing teacher who Is far less expensive so that the cost to each one of us will be 30 cents Instead of tl.” “On the bails of fifty cents a lesson 1 see no reason why that Item cannot be fitted Into each one of your advancement schedules now,” said Sirs. Hooper, “and I for one will subscribe at ouce and I hope that the class be started as soon as possible.” The menu for the three meals on Saturday Is: BREAKFAST. Sliced Oranges and Bananas Cereal Hot Cakes Coffee LUNCHEON. Salman Cakes Lettuce Sandwiches Preserved Fiult Nut Cookies Milk DINNER. Noodle Soup Baked Beans Brown Bread Spanish Omelet Vegetable Salad Apple Betty APPLE, OLIVE AND NUT SANDWICHES. Grind through the meat chopper 2 peeled apples cut In small pieces, of a pound of shelled walnut meats, a cupful of stuffed olives and 2 stalks of celery. Season lightly with salt
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Men You May Marry By ETHEL R. PEYSER Has a man like this proposed to you? Symptoms: Dark, handsome, reasonable height, slender enough, has a little hard brush of black mustache. This seems like a baby’s husher ring to him. It calms him because he bites it continually. This was the first thing you noticed about him. The next —that he was always in a hurry and always more or less excited. A bit late to everything but he never misses out. IN FACT; He is the “get there” lad. 'KTS Prescription to his bride; Supply quieting atmosphere in the home. Don’t y hurry; let him get your pace. Absorb This: MORE HASTE LESS NEED. (Copyright, 1921.)
and paprika, moisten with mayonnaise dressing and use between buttered slices of tread.—Copyright, 192 L BRAISED CALF LIVER. Trim liver In shape and skewer. Place In deep pan with some pieces of salt pork on top, or make lardons from the pork and lard top. Put pork trimmings In pan around the liver, also a minced onion and a little celery cut fine, a few peppercorns snd two cups of brown stock or water. Cover closely and bake slowly for one and three-quarter hours; uncover and brown one-half hour longer. Remove liver, strain the liquor and make a brown gravy with It by using two tablespoons of butter and two of fiour. Melt butter, add the flour and pour on the liquor. Serve round the liver. NUT OMELET. One-fourth cup ground nuts, three egg*, three tablespoons of water, onefourth teaspoon of salt, one-eighth teaspoon of paprika, butter size of walnut. Beat eggs, ester separating yolks, until lemon color and thick, and whites very stiff. Add salt, paprika and nut meats to yolks, and mix well, then fold In the whites, and In hot omelet pan put the pieces of butter, and with knife butter bottom and aides of pan. and cook slowly, shaking so the omelet does not burn. When well set, fold and turn
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on hot platter, Garnish and serve at once. FISn SALAD. Season two cups of cold flaked halibut, haddock or white lake flsb with salt, pepper, lemon Juice and a little oil. Let It stand for at least half an hour. Drain well and add cucumbers (fresh or pickled) cut Into cubes. Dress with whipped cream to which Is added lemon Juice, two tablespoons of grated cucumber, one teaspoon of onion Juice and paprika . Serve on lettuce leaves with slices of cucumber to garnish. LADY-FINGERS. Whites three eggs, yolks two eggs, onehalf teaspoon of vanilla, one-third cup powdered sugar, one-third cup of flour, pinch of salt. Beat whites until stiff and a dry, add sugar gradually and continuing beating. Then add yolks beaten until very thick. Add flavoring and fold In flour and salt well mixed. Then with pastry bag and tube shape Into four and one half Inch lengths, one inch wide, making them narrow In the center on a tin sheet, covered with unbuffered pa per Sprinkle with powdered sugar, and br.'.e eight minutes In a rather moderate oven. Remove with broad, thln-bladed knife. LETTUCE SALAD. Wash, dry and thoroughly chill a fine
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By GEORGE McMANUS.
head of lettuce. Place In a salad bowl In shape by placing the outside leaves next to the bowl, and the tender hearts In the center. Serve with French dressing. THE LONG CAPE. For many seasons style leaders were trying to force the long cape upon the the fashion loving women, but it did not seem to ‘t’ake’’ with them. However, when it was finally presented, beautifully trimmed in fur, it at once became a decided favorite, and so for a few winters past, we have seen the cape gracefully worn, and It Is still with us. A lovely model In black is trimmed around the bottom with black caracal fur extending upward In -points. Another has the fur put on in bauds, crossing In military fashion, over the chest. It also has a high collar of the fur. Helpful Household Hints TO CLEAN SATIN SLIPPERS. Take a little alcohol and drop three or four drops of lemon juice on it. Apply this to the slippers with a piece of soft white cloth or linen. TO MAKE FERNS HEALTHY. To promote the growth of ferns, dilute a small quantity of sweet milk with a little water and apply to the roots, not oftener than twice a week. This acts as a fertilizer, and will Insure a luxuriant growth to the moat stubborn house ferns or rubber plant. PUSS IN BOOTS JR. Hr David Cory —— For some time Puss Junior and Tom Thumb sat beneath the tree wondering how they would be able to rescue Rapunzel from the wicked enchantress. And then, all of a sudden, they saw a handsome young prince. ''lie walks as though he were blind,” whispered Puss. "Did I hear a voice,” cried the Prince, stopping to listen. “1 am blind; there-
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fore help me, for I can do no harm were I so inclined.” “My gracious Prince,” cried Puss, stepping forward and taking the blind Prince by the hand. “I am Puss in Boots Junior and with me as my comrade in arms, is Tom Thumb.” “ 'Tis my misfortune that I cannot see you both, for I have often beard of you In rhyme and story,” replied the Prince, sitting down and passing his hand over, his poor, sightless eyes. I “We are now seeking the unfortunate Rapunzel,” said Puss Junior. “What!” exclaimed the blind prince, jumping to his feet, “I, too, would find her, for she is dearer to me than life." And then he commenced to tell Puss and Tom Thumb how he had visited Rapunzel every evening by climbing up her beautiful golden hair until he reached her little tower window, and how she was weaving a silken ladder with the skeins of silk, which he brought her. “And when It was woven and ready,” concluded the blind Princess, “we were to climb down together and be married.” “But how did you come to lose your eyesight?” asked Tom Thumb. “Alas!” answered the blind Prince, “one evening when I had called to Rapunzel to let down her hair, I found on entering her chamber, not my beautiful Rapunzel, but an enchantress, who mocked me, saying she had taken my beloved far away. Then In my despair I leaped from the Window, falling into a thicket of thorns which pierced my eyes.” “We will not rest until we find the beautiful Rapunzel,” cried Puss. “Join ns, dear Prince, for we have followed Rapunzel until we lost the trail.” ‘‘‘Faint heart ne'er won fair lady!*’’ cried Tom Thumb. “I, too, will help you, my dear Prince.” "And I pledge myself to find her!” cried Puss. “You are a brave pair,” said tha blind Prince. "Let us set out at once, for while there is life there is hope, and no good will come of mourning over our misfortunes. Only the brave deserve the fair!”—Copyright, 1921. (To Be Continued.)
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