Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 September 1938 — Page 12

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WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 28, 1038

Gen. Johnson

RN Ra EE Nr RNR oe ba e— shes Ce in i EE a OD oe A Ul

PAGE 12 The Indianapolis Times Fair Enough

A SCRIPPS-HOWARD NEWSPAPER)

!

LUDWELL DENNY MARK FERREE ) Business Manager

By Westbrook Pegler

}

rice Ia Marion Coun-

S a copy; deliv:

Tier, 12 cents

subscription ates

$3 a year of Indiana, 65

month.

escape

upon

he Hed

LS hours his

conierance

A Bureau Manager Who Breaks in On the Press Wires With a "Hadh' Had Belfer Have Front Page News. |

NEY YORK, Sept. 28—1 find among new N = men and Particularly Press association men a {ment against the misuse of the word commentators, advertismg copy | writers and e journalistic ignoranti who have never covered a story or filed a wire, A flash is just what he word Itsell ests. Tt seldom contains more md iS used to announce

importance, Tt

wr

Says—

# Would Be a Blessing if This

Scheme for a Jeffersonian Party’ Of Liberals Can Be Carried Out.

\ THITE SULPHUR SPRINGS y 3 Sept. 28. = The quest { hes liscussed most frequently iS Whether there will be a split in the Democralie Party or a new px The Democrat

It is a Democra

Deal leadersh

+ Ian them

Democrats

133

wo

ated a

ana

SEN —" MN oR (ROR om

i A

PSYCHOLOGIST TAKES ISSUE WITH THE GENERAL

Business Bv John T. Fvmn

Qin a3 S AQnaAcly

dae 4a

Id s

CALIING G. OO. PATTENTION » TO THE OLD DAYS

By Rebecea NS. Stewart. Brasi!

track ded i men leani on irpose mm show

were ele

QUEEN TODAY By ANNA E YOUNG

)

PSYCHO Ical ser

assistance

heln nell

DAILY THOUGHT

from

tha Lhe

much bet Before and Wan mstean of fine and the aver<0 Short on hat if sirloin had soid for nickel a pound he could not have 1 ach Juxury-—these 1}

ve

® " CURRENT EVENTS MAKE VOTHER REL LIKE A LIAR

5 a feel ike | Fair play indeed! Have Chamberlaqier shown IFAageous people hat does it prove? S over right; 1 hes & purpose; ) schood ana cruel methods

in order lea™m to Te

dealing, in

» ® ” SEES CHAMBERLAIN AS JUDAS ISCARIOYT Elizabeth Bawman

Judas Iscariot

couniry to

mass of beasts

LET'S EXPLORE YOUR

A Woman's Viewpoint

Bv Mrs. Wahi Tau Br DR. ALBERT EDWARD WIGGAM

Fe a

| PRIDE ISS 1

wis x READ

making more ont NE Tv workina woman DO &O FROWN : LACK OF ABILITY: YOUR OPINION

UK |

titudes of others. Everve observaiion reveals they take

more pride in the home and

1 DID YOU ever coe in to their personal surroundings

ANSE WAamen seem te 3 reat sr it appearance and fumMmishings pride thsn men Several A108 Tin 1s shown ssHecially when a

b

bottom of all urban discont (show they are more sens men’s mining camp is Wansiormed

MIND

rom & awty nn of shacks, hardly ner than { stys, inte a ewil a community the moment women in If this norld ix vey cleaned up. omen will have io the most of it o N & FORTY YEARS ago this prob lem was investigated by psychologist, the late G. St: 11. Later it has been Chormaike, Sherbon and other psychologists and thev find that about three and a half times as many women as men contmually weave romances about themselves and live in a world of dreams, » uy » IT IS a good deal owing to how ™ von define “aoilitv.” The Carnegie Foundation made a study on 10.000 men of the qualities on which success depends and concluded that the technical ability for doing the 0b is only 15 per cent of the gualifications necessary ior real success. They found 12 other qualities made up the other 85 per cent, namely, attitude toward the job, initiative, thoroughnesss, observation, concentration, creative imagination, decision, adaptability, ieadership, organizing ability, ~xpression and, knowledee If we call all these combined “ability,” men do fail from lack of ability, but the mere ability 0 do the technical operations of the job is a small part of the total abiaty.

Democratia 1340 problem

ersonian Democrat

to the fact that 1 of Jefferson's polit= promises, into reverse

ited into them-—

cH] principles as wel and that decentralization { rnment, no more Governe local governe Jefferson's then “Demo=

Democratic.”

their eonvens New Deal PETS rite the platform and nominate the national ticket If they failed © would waik out, form mp convention an ll those things,

agoptin e “Jellersonian Democrat” platform.

usual

Che Jeffersonian Democrats would then reconvene and pick those ¢ ida the Democrats. There are all ds of 11 in this plan, but there are treme 1S advantages. { preserves the old Republican local organi: ns in the North and the Democ n th It would al more old Republicans than old Democratic 1 inees for the enate and the House in the North, but only in the first year. It would gi

il

the Presigency t the old emocrats but no President and backward 10 It would into the open Qo We neeq oconomi

Vist econom)

I Seems to Me

By Heywood Broun

Once Writer Thompson Got Going She Had Hitler Back on the Ropes.

VD W ATS YQ p y ny og Fy UHRA, Sel $ HAV taken cracks from

spaper

and timid

nushen PS

I listened with fascinated interest as she spoke in Madison Jar arden on in at a meeting called » Save zochostovakia Dorothy Thompson ¢ t § respected the aemo CTacy

ICT 111s a

ana am under the impression pearance in the Garden

a severe OSU upon all speakers.

Warming to Her Work

elcome her re truly things ontender can

wm

T his pins behind the

ighting 1

don t

Laompson,

Watching Your Health

By Dr. Morris Fishbein

NINCE hu

Wo ceptibie 1

AY ©

a la ™ nN DeoT ir

till peodle

hink that the seating of tomatoes is a ated rheumatism, For years there was a com impression ti banana was hard digest and that it should never be eaten by invalids, babies, or old people. With mora recent scientific studies he field of dietetics, the banan as come to § rite article of diet. Now a specialist in disc { chk reports

has been used as

f

Or {WO Vears i solid tood for babies 1 weeks of age and older in the New Yor Hospital. Moreover, he submits the records i bahies. chosen abt random from the record of the hospital. to show what effects the feedin Mf the banana a 1 on the infants [he infants were not while taking the banana. hey did, of course, receivs their regular milk formulas, and also cod liver oil and orange juice. AS a result of extensive study, investigators are convinced that banana, because of its digestibility, is an ideal first solid food to offer to infants to make them accustomed to solid food. The number of gastro-intestinal upsets of infants who received this food was less than in the average, It was found that ripe, m&shed banana was easily digested by infants six weeks of age or older, that it was easily assimilated, and that it did not tend to n= crease the weight but did sometimes help control the weight curve,