Indianapolis Times, Volume 40, Number 81, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 August 1928 — Page 21
AUG. 24; 1928.
STRANDED WAR REFUGEES ARE PUTTOWORK More Than 2,500,000 Now Definitely Settled in New Surroundings. BY HENRY WOOD United Treat SUIT Correspondent GENEVA, Aug. 24.—The Great *V’ar, and its various peace adjustments, left 3tranded over the face Os Europe and Asia more than 8,000,000 war refugees. Today with the exception of about 200,000, all of the three million people that were left without a home and without a country, have been definitely settled in new surroundings on a self-supporting basis. The task, is one of the largest that the League of Nations has acEompllshed, and one about which he least is really known. Many Left Stranded These human derelicts, without home and country, which the war icreated, can be roughly divided into thrc-e classes. First, with the breakup of the bid Russian regime and the arrival 'Of the Bolshevists to power, |Bonie 1,500,000 Russians were left Stranded. The second great category was created by the treaty of Lausanne under the terms of which it was agreed that all of the Greek residents of Asia Minor were to be uprooted from their homes and sent back to Greece, while the Turks that still remained in Greece were similarly to be torn from the soil that had been their home to be Bent back to Turkey. That was without precedent in history. It involved the transfer of nearly 1,200,000 Greeks from Asia Minor back into Greece and about 400,000 Turks from Greece into Turkey. Russians Big Problem All of these are being steadily down on a self-supporting basis under the auspices of the league and With the help of an international loan floated by Greece with the league’s backing. The problems of settling the Russian refugees presented difficulties of a different character because of the manner In which they were scattered all over Europe. The principal countries in which they have been established or from which they have been transferred to other countries is roughly as follows: Germany 600,000 France 400,000 Turkey 100.000 Poland 90,000 China 100.000 Czecho Slovakia 30,000 Bulgaria 30.000 Serbia 30,000 Latvia 40,000 Esthonia 20,000 Finland 15,000 In addition to the above nearly 100,000 more were scattered through a score of other countries. RACES TRAIN; ARRESTED Motorist Barely Escapes With Life at Crossing. B’l United Press BURLINGAME, Cal., Aug. 24.—H. D. Towers, Redwood City, was arrested because he risked his own life by racing a fast train to a railroad crossing. An officer stationed near the crossing, where two people had been killed recently said he signaled for Towers to stop. Instead he raced on and was barely missed by the train. pigeon" " beats dog Races Whippet Against Handicap 200 Yards. Bu United Press LONDON, Aug. 24.—A whippet recently lost a 200-yard dash against a pigeon. The race was held by miners near Coalville, Leicestershire. The dog was given a handicap but the bird came in first in a close finish. The pigeon flew on a straight line with the winning post and was never more than eighteen inches above the ground.
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Leaps 15,200 Feet in Air
NBA Washington Bureau. Leaping from an airplane 15,200 feet above Washington, William F. Scott, chief machinist’s mate at the Naval station at Anacostia, D. C., broke the Navy's record for parachute jumping. Scott, who wore two parachutes, life preserver, goggles, helmet, bicycle leg guards andl a few other little safeguards, landed on top of an apartment house, unhurt. Scottt, pictured above as he appears just before leaping, soon will try to break the 24,000-foot record held by Captain Albert Stevens of the Army Air Corps.
Pi ize Winning Recipes
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spoons flour, salt and pepper to taste. Fry in bacon fat, dropping the mixture from the end of a spoon, browning it and turning it like ca fc eS MRS. WILLIAM COURTNEY. Chesterfield. * Spanish String Beans tpgether""two large onions, two large tomatoes, four tablespoons drippings and one chile pepper. Brown one tablespoon flour and cook two pounds green beans in flour and sufficient water to cook sclowly one and one-half hours. Add two teaspoons salt when half done, and also the first vegetable mixture. AUDREY WILHITE. Grayford. Pecan Muffins Cream one-third cup of butter, add one-fourth cup of sugar, then add alternately, one egg beaten and mixed with three-fourths cup of sweet milk and two cups of flour sifted with four teaspoonfuls of baking powder. Mix thoroughly, then fold in three-four cup pecan meats coarsely chopped. Bake in hot, well-buttered muffin pans about twenty-five minutes. LUCILE B. YOUNG. 1028 N. Colorado Ave., Indianapolis. Cinnamon Buns One-fourth cup sugar, one cup mashed potatoes, one cup warm water, one-half cake yeast dissolved in tepid water. Set at night. In morning early add two beaten eggs, one-half tablesp X)n salt, one quart flour, one-half cup shortening rubbed in flour. Roll out dough a piece at a time and spread with following mixture: one-half cup butter, one and onethird cups sugar, one rounding tablespoon cinnamon. Roll up like jelly roll, cut in inch slices and let rise again. Bake in slow oven. CLARICE STONE. 5115 Carvel Ave., Indianapolis. S’ammer Kisses Into the contents of a can of condensed milk stir as much shredded cocoanut as the mixture will take up (about one pound), a few drops of vanilla and sufficient powdered sugar to make the mixture into balls. Place on a buttered pan two inches apart and bake in a moderate oven. MRS. C. C. MORGAN. 411 W. Thirty-Second St., Indianapolis. Peppermint Ice Cream Two eggs, one-half cup of sugar, two and one-half quarts of cream (or part milk), 7 sticks of old-fash-ion peppermint stick candy. Crush candy and dissolve in a small amount of the milk; beat eggs, add sugar, milk and dissolved candy and freeze. This makes a very pretty pink and delicious ice cream. MRS. GEORGE H. KROGER. 953 S. Meridian St., Indianapolis. Shrimp Jambalaya One-half pound of sliced bacon, one onion, one green pepper, one clove of garlic, one pound fresh shrimps, one and one-half cups cold water, one-half teaspoon salt. Cut the bacon into one-half-inch pieces crosswise and cook in a heavy skillet slowly until all the fat is
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drawn out. Remove the bacon and into the fat put the onions, green peppers and garlic, all finely chopped. Cover and simmer about five minutes, without browning, then stir in the shrimps, washed and peeled, and cook gently five minutes longer. Add the rice, salt, cold water and bacon. Cover tightly and simmer one-half hour or until the rice is done. HAZEL WITHROW. 128 N. Pennsylvania St., Indian- . oils. Saccharine Pickles One gallon cider vinegar, one scant cup of salt, one and a half cup mixed spices, one-half cup mustard seed, one teaspoon saccharine, one root horseradish, one lump of alum (size of butterbean). Put cider vinegar, saccharine and alum with the salt. Let these get hot and then cool. Wash and dry each pickle with cloth. Put in a large jar and add spices, mustard seed and horseradish root. Pour vinegar over them and let them stand. They will be ready for use in twenty-four hours. MRS. P. B. M’HAFFEY. 2415 N. Gale St., Indianapolis. Ice Cream Meringues Four egg whites, few grains salt, one cupful sugar, one-eighth teaspoonful cream of tarter, one teaspoonful vanilla. Beat the egg whites stiff with the salt and cream of tarter, then beat in the sugar and vanilla. Spread in rounds on paraffine p£per,. place on a board and bake until dry in a slow oven—about fifty minutes. When cold, fill the shells with ice cream, top with a second shell and serve. MRS. J. E. MEEHAN. 422 Congress Ave., Indiarapolis. Fresh Plum Pudding Line a deep baking dish with a light paste rolled out to a quarterinch in thickness and fill with plums, each one pricked several times with a fork. Sift over them one-half cup sugar for each pint of plums. Cover with a sheet of paste, fastening securely to the lining by moistening the edges and
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pinching together. Tie over all a floured cloth. Put in kettle of boiling water and cook two hours or a little longer. Turn out of mould and serve. DORA LEE HOWARD. Cloverdale. Three-Egg Angel Food Cake One cup sugar, one and one-third cups of flour, one teaspoon cream of tartar, f hree teaspoons baking powder, pinch of salt, two-thirds cup of scalded milk; one teaspoon vanilla, whites of three eggs. Method for Mixing—Add flour, baking powder, cream of tartar, salt and sugar. Sift five times. Add the milk while hot and beat continually for five minutes. Beat the whites of the eggs until stiff, then fold in and add vanilla. Put in an ungreased Angel cake pan. Place the batter in a cold oven, turn on the gas full for eight minutes and then lower the gas and bake about twenty-five minutes. MISS ISABELLE GILSON. 2415 N. Gale St., Indianapolis.
Sweet Potato Caserole Cook six medium-sized sweet "potatoes in boiling water until snft. Drain, peel and mash. Add two tablespoons butter and one-fourth cup pineapple syrup from the can and beat until light. Half fill baking dish with potatoes, cover with layer of wedge shaped pieces of pineapple and marshmallow's cut in halves. Fill dish with potatos and lay slices of pineapple on top. Sprinkle with brown sugar. Place whole marshmallows in holes of pineapple slices. Bake in a moderate oven until the marshmallows brown and melt slightly. MISS C. FERRY. R. R. 5 Box 649, Indianapolis. TOWN’S ONLY TOT DIES English Village Is Quieted, Saddest Place Following Drowning. LONDON, Aug. 24.—Cadlecote, in Huntingdoneshire, is believed to be the quietest and saddest place in England. Since the death, by drowning, of its only child citizen, the merry laughter of youth has not been heard in its one straggling street. The town now has a population of thirty adults.
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BABY ‘SIGNS’ MESSAGE ANNOUNCING HIS BIRTH Crawfordsville Cousin of New Arrival Receives Telegram. Bij Times Special CRAWFORDSVILLE, Ind., Aug. 24. —The following telegram received by Charles Moyer, local boy, is the “self-signed” birth announcement of David Glasscock Jr., whose grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles N. Glasscock live here. “I arrived here this evening. Mother and I are fueling fine but dad is no good. I weigh eight pounds. We are staying at the Bethesday hospital. Your cousin, DAVID GLASSCOCK JR.” The baby was bom at Springfield, Ohio, while his parents were en route to Terre Haute where the father is an instructor in Indiana State. The “dog days” are in July and part of August. They are so called because Sirus, the dog-stai most brilliant of all the fixed stars, then rises and sets in the daytime and not at night.
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