Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 September 1937 — Page 11

WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 22, 1937

Protein Held Valuable in Child's Diet

Helps in Forming Bones, Teeth and Muscles, Expert Says.

By RUTH CHAMBERS National Livestock and Meat Board Protein, the building food, is especially valuable in the diet of children. This seems very understandable when we realize that a child's chief business is growing. The food an adult eats is used to supply energy and to repair worn tissues, but the food a child eats must also 80 to form new bones and teeth and muscles. When we consider how much energy an active youngster—even a baby—uses up in a day, and how fast that small body is growing, we can understand the importance which nutrition experts attach to _ this question of the best foods for children. Meat, eggs, milk, fish and cheese are the chief sources of protein in our daily food, and some vegetables also contain protein. The protein of meat is of high quality. Meat also supplies iron, needed for rich, red blood, and phosphorus, sO uuportant in building bones and teeth.

Well Balanced Diet Essential

After the child has outgrown babyhood, and during those years of rapid growth, one can hardly overestimate the value of a varied

and well-balanced diet. Sometimes, during those years, it is necessary to tempt the appetites of the youngsters. A child, may be undernour-

ished because he doesn’t eat enough

of the food set before him. There is sometimes a tendency to anemia during these years of rapid growth. To guard against this, the wise mother includes liver plentifully in her child's diet. There are many ways to serve this iron-rich food. It may be ground and used as stuffing. It may be served in dumplings, or in meat loaf form. And, of course, it is always good when simply broiled.

Pork- liver is especially rich in

iron. Tempt Lagging Appetites

To tempt lagging appetites, meat | cooked with vegetables in stews, meat pies and various casserole combinations make delicious and wholesome dishes. The fact that the meat is cut in small pieces makes it easy to serve to the small children. Remember that children like variety in their fare quite as much as adults do. Here are some suggestions for dishes which may be new on your table and which will make a hit with youngsters.

Liver Loaf 12 pounds liver 4 slices bacon 3; cup chopped onion 1 cup milk 12 cup catsup .1 teaspoon powdered sage 2 teaspoons salt 2 wheat biscuits 3, cup cornmeal 3 well-beaten eggs % teaspoon pepper

. Scald liver, run through food grinder with bacon. Add the crumbled wheat biscuits, eggs, milk, cornmeal, salt, pepper, sage and catsup. Mix thoroughly. Place in loaf pan lined with bacon strips. Cover with more bacon. Bake one hour at 350 F. This makes a delicious sandwich filling when sliced cold.

Stuffed Liver Rolls

1 pound liver Hot water 1 tablespoon grated onion 1 tablespoon bacon drippings 2. cups dry bread. crumbs Water to moisten Bacon strips Salt and pepper

Have the liver sliced very thin and cut in even-sized pieces. Cover with water and allow to simmer for five minutes. Drain. Brown onion in the bacon drippings. Add bread crumbs and water to moisten. Roll pieces of liver around bread dressing and wrap with a strip of bacon. Fasten with a toothpick. Season. Place in baking dish, and water to cover bottom of dish and bake in a moderate oven (350 degrees F.) for 45 minutes. Remove cover last 15

minutes of cooking to brown the hacon.

Lamb and Lima Bean Stew

2 pounds lamb chuck, shank or neck.

1 pound lima beans Salt and pepper Celery salt

Soak lima beans over night. Drain and place in a heavy kettle. Have lamb boned and cut into 2-inch cubes. Add to beans, season with salt and pepper and cover with . water. Simmer until done, 2 to 2% hours.

SHIP SIT-DOWN BROKEN

CRISTOBAL, Canal Zone, Sept. 22 (U. P.).—The Panama-Pacific liner California left Cristobal with 192 passengers today after a crew sitdown strike had been broken up by Capt. W. B. Oakley'sthreat to declare a mutiny and ask for Federal troops. ’

This gold lacquered satin gown is among the many creations to be shown this afternoon . in the L.S. Ayres & Co. Fabric Fashion Show.

ATLANTA, Sept. 22

nation declined steadily and chewing tobacco market.

At the same time, big company buyers in Georgia's tobacco belt laughed at the decrease inf§demand for chewing tobacco and blamed it on paved streets and speedy automobiles. One buyer with a large Virginia company said: “A man just naturally doesn’t like to expectorate on a paved street.”

Chewers Self-Conscious

He said the expectoration necessitated by tobacco chewing was not

roads, but that modern paving was making tobacco chewers self-con-scious. He pointed out also that chewing in a fast-moving automobile has its disadvantages. ‘A wagon, he said, is the proper vehicle in which to chew tobacco if you must ride While chewing. Other buyers in Georgia—most of them from Virginia and North Carolina—said today’s younger generation was being encouraged to smoke cigarettes. A few years ago, a young boy in a small rural village did not reach manhood until he could chew and squirt tobacco juice through a knothole 10 or more feet away.

CHEF CONVICTED IN ‘BUTCHER’ SLAYING

DEDHAM, Mass., Sept. 22 (U. P.). —Oscar Bartolini, 51, a chef, was convicted early today of murdering Grayce Griffin Asquith, 41-year-old “Merry Widow” of Weymouth.

The jury reported after seven hours of deliberation. Death in the electric chair is mandatory. Mrs. Asquith was bludgeoned to death with a cleaver a year ago and her body dismembered with a knife and a meatsaw at her East Weymouth lakeside cottage. Bartolini, her choreman, was arrested as a material witness Oct. 8 and the charge was changed to murder Oct. 30.

EX-MILLIONAIRE’'S SON FACES DEATH

DES MOINES, Iowa, Sept. 22 (U. P.) —The Iowa Supreme Court today upheld’ the death sentence given

John Mercer, 28, son of a former Philadelphia, Pa., millionaire, for the seven-year-old murder of Robert Sproat, Tipton, Iowa, vigilante. Mercer was arrested a year ago in San Francisco, .Cal.,, on charges of stealing a radio. While being question he admitted the Sproat killing and was returned to Iowa. Sproat was killed in 1930 while he and other members of a posse were pursuing three bandits who had robbed a Davenport, Iowa, drug store. '

DEALERS TO | MEET

Roy L. Brown, Westinghouse Electric Supply Co. is to discuss “Distributors’ Co-operation” at the next meeting of the Indianapolis Electric Appliance Dealers’ Association tomorrow night at Hollyhock Hill at 7 p. m, it was announced today. »

~

On View at Fashion Show

Times Photo.

Tobacco Chewing on Decline; Paved Roads, Autos Factors

(U. P.).—The fine art of tobacco chewing promised to become a lost art today as the number of chewers in the there was little hope of rebuilding the

Officials of major tobacco companies reported an increasingly sharp decline in chewing tobacco sales this year.

so noticeable on dirt streets and

A ®

TWO MEN ARRESTED "ON GAMING CHARGE

Raymond Silverman, 37, of 5304 Park Ave, and William Limp, 27, of 915 College Ave. were arrested on charges of keeping a gaming house at 126 W. Maryland St., yesterday afternoon. Thirty-eight alleged betting slips were confiscated, police said. John Rynearson, of 39 E. Ninth St, was arrested for the second time in two days yesterday at 104% S. Illinois St. on a charge of operating a gift enterprise. He was dismissed on a gambling charge in Municipal Court 3 yesterday.

GERMAN CONDITIONS RAPPED BY VATICAN

CASTEL GANDOLFO, Sept. 22 (U. P.).—The Pope, declaring present conditions in Germany to be “deplorable,” addressed 1500 pilgrims and newlyweds today at his semiweekly public audience at the summer villa. Many Germans and Austrians were among the pilgrims. Turning to the Bavarians, the Pope said they were doubly welcome “because you come from a region of the country which I visited and which left dear souvenirs in my memory.”

SHOE WORKERS AND COMPANY SIGN PACT

Times Special HUNTINGTON, Sept. 22.—More than 20¢ employees of the Huntington Shoe Corp.. were to return to work today after a 13-day strike.

A contract signed yesterday be-|

tween the company and the United Shoe Workers of America recognized the union as sole bargaining agent and provided for a committee of three to study the company’s ability to grant a wage increase. The State Labor Division is repre-

E. E. LEWIS, VETERAN MINE OPERATOR, DIES

TERRE HAUTE, Sept. 22 (U. P.). —The body of E. E. Lewis, veteran Indiana coal operator, was to be returned te Sandoval, Ill, today following his death yesterday at his temporary home in Seelyville, Ind., a few miles east of here. Mr. Lewis died of a heart attack after an illness of several months. He had been associated with operation of a large strip mines at Seelyville. He was 65.

ACCOUNTANTS TO MEET

F. M. Pelton, Swift & Co., Chicago, is to address a meeting of the Indianapolis chapter of the National Association of Cost Accounants in the Hotel Lincoln tonight.

OGRESS

Rinses, also, in soft water.

- LAUNDRY

David Dietz

and a winner of a 1937 Pulitzer Prize.

‘Why Women Live Longer’

is the title of a new series of articles by David Dietz, Scripps-Howard Science Editor

It begins

Mr. Dietz is well known to readers for his brilliant articles upon the subject of medicine. Readers who remember his “Medical Magic,” “The Seven Horsemen of Death” and ‘Soldiers of Humanity,” will look forward to this new series. In it he tells how childbirth, once an ordeal by torture, has become : a comparatively safe procedure under the care of modern medical men. He tells what medical men are doing to unravel the riddles of . the ductless glands and discusses the war on cancer and®other subjects of particular interest to women. However, men as well as women, will want to read fascinating series of articles.

IN THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES ON MONDAY, SEPT. 27

this new and

0.0.P. TO OPEN

CAMPAIGN NOW. HAMILTON SAYS

Off-Year Drive to Renew Party Spirit Hinted By Chairman.

WASHINGTON, Sept. 22.—Republican National Chairman John D. M. Hamilton indicated today that the G. O. P. would inaugurate a broad, off-year program of rejuvenation. - Inspired by dissension in the Democratic Party precipitated by the Court reorganization fight, Mr. Hamilton said the Republicans planned an intensive campaign, beginning immediately, for Congressional seats in the 1938 elections. Reports of Mr. Hamilton's meeting yesterday with the big city Re= publican leaders indicated that the executive committee, which meets ‘Thursday, would consider three issues discussed with the Republican county chairmen from every city of more than 500,000 except New York and Syracuse, N. Y.

Issues Are Listed

These issues were: 1. The possibility of the favorable effect of Ku-Klux Klan charges against Supreme Court Justice Black upon Republican sentiment. 2. The proposal of Senator Vandenberg (R. Mich.) to solicit sup‘port of anti-New Deal Democrats in opposing “the Roosevelt Party.” 3. The suggestion of former President, Herbert Hoover to call a party convention this year to build up party sentiment for the 1938 elections. The last issue was sure to get major consideration. Mr. Hamilton announced that he would submit to the committee several petitions from various parts of the country urging such a course. Such a convention would be unprecedented in political annals. Neither party ever having held a dyed-in-the-wool national; convention heretofore except prior to a presidential election. Although Mr. Hamilton did not reveal his own attitude on the proposal, it was believed that he would not be opposed if the Executive Committee approved. He said he had petitions from the New England Young Republicans and another from the California Republican Assembly. urging such a convention.

Party Split Watched

. Mr. Hamilton said he had no comment on Senator Vandenberg’s Constitution Day address proposal to bid for the support of insurgent members of the Democratic Party.

2000 BEAT NEGRO AT S. AFRICAN POST

CAPE TOWN, South Africa, Sept. 22 (U. P.).—Two thousand Europeans lynched. a Negro at the Ve-

reeniging Post Settlement today.

The whites were holding a protest meeting against Sunday’s native riot in which three policemen, two of them white, were killed. The Europeans spied a solitary Negro squatting on the outskirts of the meeting, chased him and beat him to death.

LONDON, Sept. 22 (U. P.).—The Exchange Telegraph reported from Cairo today that riots had broken out in Syria and Lebanon in protest against the high cost of living, due to the continuous fall of the franc. Troops were standing by.

MOST PROBATIONERS MAKE GOOD, REPORT

Times Special ~ SOUTH BEND, Sept. 22.—A conference of 33 probation officers from eight northern Indiana counties ended here today following an address last night by Mrs. Inez Montgomery Scholl, Connersville, State Probation Director. She declared tha 80 per cent of the 11,000 Indiana probationers last year “made good” at a cost of “less than one-tenth the cost of institutional care.” j

BLIND FOR 16 YEARS; HELD AS PICKPOCKET

NEW YORK, Sept. 22 (U. P.).— John McGurk, who has been blind for 16 years, was arrested today on a charge of picking pockets. He was taken into custody in a midtown bar when a customer complained that $2.50 in silver had disappeared from his pocket. McGurk gave his lack of sight as one reason he could not be guilty, but he could not explain the presence of several coins on his person.

OLIS

11

Thomas Qualters, bodyguard of President Roosevelt, looks on as his bride, the former Arlene Eade, cuts their wedding cake, at their reception at the New Ocean House, Swampscott, Mass.

Roosevelt's Bodyguard

Weds ;

Times-Acme Photo.

Missouri Father Sees Son,

21, for First

JEFFERSON CITY, Mo., Sept. 22 (U. P.) —F. M. King, Omaha, Neb., saw his 21-year-old son for the first time yesterday—in the Missouri

Time in Prison

State Penitentiary. The son, Allison King, is serving a four-year sentence for automobile theft. : The elder King and his wife, now Mrs. Emma Bryant of Paris, Tex, separated before the boy was born. Later they were divorced and the father lost track of his former wife, although he knew the boy had been

mn. Recently, he said, he visited the youth’s grandmother in Ft. Smith, Ark. and learned that Allison had been sent to the Missouri prison. The father and son talked for two and a half hours. Happily, King boasted: “I think he looks a lot like me.”

HOFFMAN'S SLATE . BEATEN IN JERSEY

TRENTON, N. J., Sept. 22 (U. PJ). —State Senator Lester H. Clee won the Republican gubernatorial nomination by a plurality of nearly 70,000 votes, according to tabulations today. His opponent, State Senator Clifford H. Powell, backed by Governor HofIman, conceded defeat. Shortly before 11 a. m. the count showed Clee, 233,152; Powell, 174,048, with 137 districts missing of a total of 3517. U. S. Senator A. Harry Moore was unopposed for Democratic gubernatorial nomination and final figures on the vote he polled were deferred by election clerks until count was completed on minor contests.

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SON IS BOUND OVER AFTER FATHER DIES

Bryan Hawkins, 29, of 739 Buchanan St. was held under $1500 bond for Marion County Grand Jury action when arraigned before Judge Charles Karabell in Municipal Court today on an involuntary manslaughter charge. He was accused of kicking his father, Samuel, 56, on Aug. 6, and inflicting injuries which resulted in death Sept. 8.

LABELS WILL BE TOPIC

George C. Wright, committee chairman, is to report on ‘labeled buildings” to designate superior construction at tomorrow’s luncheon meeting of the Construction League of Indianapolis in the Architects’ and Builders’ Building. James H.

ARBITERS CHECK

POSSIBLE STRIKE

Three-Man Miners’ Board Also Studies Pay Pact.

TERRE HAUTE, Sept. 22 (U. PD. —Discussion of a five-months wage

dispute which threatens to provoke a strike of 13,000 Indiana coal miners will be resumed here today before a three-member committee of the International Executive Board of the United Mine Workers Union, John O'Leary, Pittsburgh, chairman of the committee named by John L. Lewis, international mine union president, said the group “went over quite a few points” at

the initial session yesterday but had

not reached a decision. Mr. O'Leary said the committee was to “investigate justification for a strike” of Indiana miners but added that the members would make every effort to avert the walkout and bring an agreement between district union officials and Indiana mine operators.

Asked Strike Authority

‘Members of the scale committee of District 11, U. M. W,, last week petitioned international h e a dquarters for authority t6 call a strike when negotiations with operators for a new wage and hour contract seemed deadlocked. Mr. Lewis dispatched the three international board members to the area to hold “a last resort” conference. : Mr. O'Leary said his committee had “full authority to call a strike” if unable to bring an agreement on a new contract to replace the one which expired March 31.

District 8 to Picket

Nonunion Pits

° BRAZIL, Ind. Sept. 22 (U. P)— United Mine Workers of District 8 today were expected to picket all mines in the Brazil block coal field using nonunion labor, At a meeting of the U. M. W. district ‘yesterday. President Lloyd Lambert said managements of a number of stripping pits had failed to sign contracts with the U. M. W.

and that pickets would be posted at these pits in an attempt to induce men working to quit until a union contract is signed. —

WOMAN ABDUCTED AND LEFT TO DIE

P.).—Alice Hew, 24, a heart diseate patient in the Malulani Hospital, was kidnaped from her sick room

tion’s front lawn. Attendants said they saw a Fille pino carry the girl from her room.

dropped the girl in the yard and fled. Miss Hew, who was critically ill, died 15 minutes later. Police took a Filipino into custody and sought two others in connection with the case. :

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a ECONOMY WEEK-END TRIPS

Coach Service Next Saturday CLEVELAND . $5.00

Leave 10:00 p. m. Return on any train until 2:18 a. m. Monday. Visit the Great Lakes Exposition.

DETROIT . .. $5.00

Pay a visit to the Henry Ford exhibit at historic Greenfield Vill in Dearborn. near Detrolt Hage

TOLEDO . .. $4.25 SANDUSKY .. 5.00

Leave 10:00 p. m. Returning reach - Indianapolis not later than Monday morning following.

Next Sunday CINCINNATI . $2.50

Greensputs $1.25 Shelbyville $0.75 Leave T: a. m. Return on any train same day.

ST. LOUIS . . $4.75 Leave 12:30 a. m., 2:45 a. m, or 7:40 a. m. Return on any train ~ same day.

NEW YORK CENTRAL

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. HONOLULU, T. H., Sept. 22 (U.

today and left to die on the institu

They gave chase and the abductor

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