Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 113, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 September 1932 — Page 7
SEPT. 2(7, 1932
Tourist Club Season to Open Today i “Our Own United States,’’ which will be the topic for the year’s study in the Hoosler Tourist Club, was to from the background tor the program this afternoon at the opening meeting, the president's day luncheon at the home of Mrs. C. C. Spurrier, 4455 North Pennsylvania street. Mrs. Thomas Davis was to be the assisting hostess. At the luncheon, one large table was to be arranged for the president, Mrs. C. E. Ferrell, the other officers, and the guests, with small tables for the other club members. A large bowl of autumn flowers was to center the officers’ table, with yellow tapers burning at either end, and bud vases of llowers were to decorate the small tables. Following the luncheon, the program was to open with a roll call, to which the members were to respond with reminiscences of the vacation just ended. Mrs. Ferrell then was to give a summary of the year’s program under the title, “Hoosier Tourist’s Itinerary. ’ The various topics, to be presented during the season, which will lead to places of interest all over the United States, will start wdth papers on Indiana, and continue on a mythical motor trip through the southwest. With the travel topics related bits of history, and romantic fiction will used to add variety. The club will entertain wdth its annual Christmas party Dec. 13, and with its annual guest meeting June 14. Election bf officers will be held March 7. The program committee is headed by Mrs. Spurrier, assisted by Mrs. Davis, Mrs. Salem Clark and Mrs. E. H. Johnson. The club was founded in 1915 by Mrs. Frank C. Robinson, who served as the first president, and Is now the historian. It Is fully federated, and has a limited membership of twenty-five active members, to be used by the members as an aid in preparing their topics. Other features are the space allowed for memoranda, and the printed copy of the constitution.. Women Voters Club Heads to Hold Luncheon A luncheon for the heads of young women voters’ clubs in the state was to be held today at the Claypool. Invitations have been issued by Mrs. J. E. P. Holland of Bloomington, Republican state vice-chairman, and Miss Lucy Patton of Martinsville, chairman of the young women voters. Those attending are: First district, Mrs. Bessie I.ane Hamilton. Gary; Miss Elizabeth Smith, Hammond, and Mrs. Jean Templeton, East Chicago; Second district. Miss Katherine Byers, Logansport; Third district, Mrs. Hazel Rimpler, Goshen, and Mrs. Margaret Cowglll, South Bend; Fourth district, Mrs. Fern Parker, Albion; Fifth district, Miss Mary Prior, Frankfort; Sixth district, Miss Jane Headley, Danville; Seventh district, Mrs. Esther Bray, Martinsville; Eighth district; Mrs. F. C. Jones, Jasper; Ninth district. Miss Katherine Bradford, Scottsburg. and Twelfth district, Mrs. Joe Swope. Leaders for the Tenth and Eleventh districts were to be named later, CIRCLE IS HOLDING OPENING MEETING Mary Conkle Circle of the Third Christian church was to hold Its opening meeting today at the home of Mrs. Oscar Montieth, 122 West Forty-fourth street. Luncheon was to be followed by the installation of officers conducted by the Rev. William H. Rothenburger. Officers are: Mcsdames H. F. Welsman, president; Oscar Montieth, first vice-president; Maude Berner, second vice-president; Ferd Smock, secretary; H. B. Bacon, assistant secretary; Eleanor McCollum, treasurer, *nd Harold Epler, assistant treasurer. Mrs. John C. Kreber is the retiring president. Mrs. Epler is in charge of the progra m, which was to include songs by Mrs. M. V. Warner, accompanied by Mrs. E. B. Palmer. Mrs. C. F. Voyles was to speak. Mothers Club Called Mothers’ Club of the Kappa Delta Rho fraternity, will meet at 2:30 Thursday afternoon with Mrs. Gino A. Ratti, 329 Buckingham drive. Miss Smith Hostess Miss June Smith will be hostess for a bridge rush party to be given by the Beta chapter, Phi Theta Delta sorority tonight.
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Sweet Spud Days Here; Good ‘Buy’ i BY SISTER MARY N'EA Service Writer SWEET potatoes are coming into market in abundance these days and are an economical means of adding variety to menus. They can be served in a number of appetizing ways that increase the calory content of a meal effectively. When you buy sweet potatoes, remember that they are not hardy like their Irish cousins, but are susceptible to temperature and dampness, and spoil quickly. Calculate your needs and buy them in comparatively small quantities to avoid waste. Consider Whole Meal In substituting sweet potatoes for Irish potatoes, the whole meal must be considered. Sweet potatoes are higher in fat and carbohydrates but lower in protein than Irish potatoes. One-half of a baked sweet potato provides 100 calories, while one whole, medium-sized Irish potato is necessary to furnish the 100calory portion. Both sweet and Irish potatoes are good carriers for fat, since their palatability depends greatly upon generous seasoning of butter. Vitamin A—So essential for growth and the building of new tissues—is present in sweet potatoes in considerable quantity. In fact, it’s a much richer source of this vitamin than is the Irish potato. Vitamins B and C are found in small amounts. Southern cooks are adept at cooking sweet potatoes. They make delicious rolls, using sweet potatoes in place of the usual Irish. Make Good Desserts Desserts also are delectable made with sweet potatoes, while the vegetable dishes are many and inviting. Twice-baked sweet potatoes are very simple to make. Bake until tender. Then cut in halves lengthwise and scoop out pulp. Mash and season with salt, pepper, lots of butter and cream to make moist. Beat until light and fluffy. Chopped nuts can be added, if liked. Pile mixture lightly into the shells and brush over with meltr butter. Return to the oven to make very hot End Drown tops. Sweet potatoes can be mashed and seasoned and piled in a buttered baking dish to be topped with marshmallows. ’ Put into a moderate oven to toast the marshmallows. Be careful not to have the oven too hot, as the marshmallows cook quickly. n n n SWEET POTATOES BAKED WITH APPLES This delicious dish comes from Virginia. Use three medium-sized sweet potatoes, 4 apples, 2-3 cup sugar, 1-3 cup butter, % cup hot water. Scrub potatoes and boil until tender. Peel and cut in thick slices. Pare apples and cut in slices like potatoes. Put in alternate layers in a wellbuttered baking dish with potatoes in bottom of dish. Sprinkle each layer with sugar and dot with butter. Pour over hot water and bake until apples are tender. It will take about thirty minutes. Serve from baking dish. Miss Schmitt Bride Mrs. Marie Schmitt has announced the marriage of her daughter, Miss Georgette Madeline Schmitt, to Frank B. Dowd son of Dr. and Mrs. Frank Doud, 1507 Broadway. The wedding took place July 16 at Ft. Wayne. Mrs. Sayre Is Hostess Mrs. Russell Sayre will entertain members of the Theta chapter of Sigma Epsilon sorority at a dinner party tonight at her home, 6111 College avenue. Club to Give Dance Josef R. George Health Nature Club will give a dance Friday night at the Brookside park community house for the benefit of its child nursery. Thesi Club to Meet The Thesi Club will have a rush spread tonight at the home of Miss June Grimes, 3530 Guilford avenue. Dinner to Be Held Beta chapter, Epsilon Sigma Alpha sorority, will have a dinnermeeting at 6 Wednesday night at the Washington. A business meeting and educational program will be held at 7.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
WAY IS PAVED FOR SALES TAX, SAYS ZOERCHER Tax Board Member Cites Ogden’s Upholding of 15-Cent Limit. Attorney-General James M. Ogden has paved the way for adoption of sales tax by the 1933 general assembly, it was charged today by Phil Zoercher, member of the state tax board. Zoercher pointed out that only by j passage of a sales tax at the next i legislative session can the state bud- j get be met under the Ogden ruling j that thi total state rate shall not ! exceed 15 cents. Ogden upheld the 15-cent clause of the $1.50 property tax limitation law although the special session of the legislature subsequently adopted a $20,000,000 state budget, Zoercher pointed out. ‘T do not think that any outgo-, ing administration should hamstring an incoming governfnent,” Zoercher declared. “That opinion leaves no alternative but to pass a general sales tax to care for the budget deficit. Because anew tax must be levied that can be enforced at once. Should an income tax be passed it would be more than a year before collections could be made and even then it might be further delayed by court cases involving constitutionality. “So the ruling is a complete victory for sales tax advocates. During the special legislative session, which passed the $1.50 property tax limitation law, effort was made by Senator J, Clyde Hoffman (Rep.), Indianapolis, to put across a general sales tax. It was vigorously opposed on the grounds that it entirely ignored “ability to pay.” PROBE 'SUICIDE TRY' Cops Dissatisfied With Story of Shooting. Claiming to have attempted suicide Monday afternoon in a house at 1425 West Twenty-seventh stret, Howard Downs, 38, who refused to give his address, is held by police for investigation. Occupants of the house at the time of the shooting, Mrs. Tony Parisi, 34, of the Twenty-seventh street address, and her brother, Carl Jett, of the same address, also are held. Police were told by Mrs. Parisi that she and Downs had quareled. Running into an adjoining room to call her brother, Mrs. Parisi said she heard a shot in the kitchen, and returned to the room to find Downs seated in a chair, wounded. Jett left the house, saying he would call police, but failed to return. He later was arrested. Police also are investigating report that a woman was seen leaving the house after the shot was fired. NOYES BACK ON STAFF Returns to Teach I. U. Classes After Four-Year Absence. Returned to his duties as assistant professor of English in Indiana university, after an absence of four
years, Russell Noyes has been assigned to teach in the afternoon and evening classes of the extension division at 122 East Michigan street. Other English teachers will be D o n a Id Smalley. Joseph Friend, James H. Pitman and Samuel F. Davidson, who will be here one 1 day a week. Classes will begin
at the division Thursday. During his absence, Noyes has been an instructor in Harvard and Boston universities. New ‘JT’ Leader to Be Feted Harry W. White, new general secretary of the Indianapolis Y. M. C. A., with Mrs. White, and their daughter, Alice, and son, Lawrence, will be guests of honor tonight at a dinner in the Y building. Leaders in the Y movement from a number of other cities w'ill join in the welcome to the new secretary.
Mrs. Kaye Don
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Mrs. Eileen Kaye Don, fox-mer-ly Eileen Martin, is seen here in her Greenwich (Conn.) home, which she will leave soon to join her bridegroom in Paris and Switzerland for the honeymoon. He’s the famous British boat racer and engineer. ACT TO KEEP BUSSES More than 100 resident of Norwood signed a petition opposing a proposed abandonment of the Prospect street feeder bus service by the Indianapolis Railways. They would be required to walk two miles to a car line if the bus service is abandoned, the petition contends.
until I’m worn out” I’ m not sorry about the outcome—l looked at all those furnished apartments we saw adlUnik vertised last nite and I’m sure you wouldn’t EP have liked any of them for the rent that was (linilfllisll Then I met Margaret after the show and walked to the Ideal Furniture Company with her to pay on her account. While there I mb thought I would just look around and was I dumbfounded—after walking all day long I found just what we wanted there—a complete room outfit for only $69. Now we can rent an unfurnished apartment and the disI II I l lllli l lllli ference in rent will pay for nice furniture W 1 .'free 'i and HaagS “CUT-PRICE" Standard W DRUGS GROCERIES 111 With Each $lO Purchase You Will Receive a Coupon t Worth $1 in Trade at Any Haag Drug Store or Standard Grocery Store. I OPEN EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT | DELIVERY /cuT"\ K|jlsyyE [titA k\ INTEREST in j c -price i |liiiiiiniiiKi| ( mpA ] no I INDIANA ||B|M| Vjlljy FINANCIN " ———— —■My—————
Noyes
BOY, 11, IS SLAIN IN MILL STRIKE IN NEW JERSEY Brickbats Hurled as Guards Fight Off Workers: Troops Called. By United Prc SOUTH RIVER, N. J., Sept. 20. State troopers restored order here today after a textile strike riot in which an 11-year-old boy bystander was shot to death, and four other persons, including another boy, were wounded by bullets. Several others were injured less seriously by brickbats, stones and ether missiles hurled in a clash between mill guards and strike sympathizers. Boy Falls Wounded The riot occurred as workers were leaving the plant of the R & P. Wash Suit Company late Monday. The mill had been placed under a guard of detectives when it reopened Monday morning after a strike. There was a flurry of shots as a crowd of strike sympathizers descended on the plant. Walter Rozek fell mortally wounded. Incensed, several hundred citizens joined the strike sympathizers, swelling the crowd to an estimated strength of 3,000. It rapidly turned into a mcb. Brickbats, stones and clubs began to fly. The detective force, increased io forty, hopelessly was overpowered. The guards fled eight blocks through a rain of missiles to the Borough hall. Detectives Stoned More shots were fired, but none was believed effective. The detectives, however, suffered from the bricks and stones. As detectives toqk refuge in the Borough hall the mob ominously circled the building. That was the scene as* twenty state troopers arrived shortly before midnight. The detachment dispersed the crowd within half an hour without any serious clashes. '
BUSINESS UNCHANGED, STATE SURVEY SHOWS Sentiment Is Improved, Asserts Review, Seasonal Gains Cited. Business conditions were reported by the Indiana Business Review today to have remained virtually unchanged during August. The Review is issued by the Indiana university of business research. “Most changes in Indiana trade and industrial volumes during August were of a seasonal nature or were offset by other factors moving in the Opposite direction,” the review said. “The improved sentiment is the result of a carefully planned campaign based upon intangible factors and ‘hand-picked’ facts,” the Review set out. “It is too early to judge the results of this campaign but it is hoped the better sentiment will cause people to spend money that now is being held in reserve.”
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TAKE BANDIT TO LOUISIANA Watson to Be Tried There on Robbery Charge. Beaten at every turn in his fight again return to Louisiana to face a bank robbery charge. Hunter B. Watson, 30, bandit and escaped convict, is en route today to that state. He will be tried on a charge of aiding in robbery of a bank at Oiia. La., in which the loot was $6,000. Final blow to Watson’s hopes of evading return was delivered by Governor Harry G. Leslie Monday when he granted plea of Louisiana authorities for extradition. Watson and his 17-year-old wife Loletta were arrested Sept. 9 at Twenty-first and Harding streets as they were driving from the city after spending two weeks here.
