Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 July 1939 — Page 5

0 . By MRS. GAYNOR MADDOX

FOOD

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appetite. Pack vitamins and calories into a meal small in size with all the food requirements and you will be able to call youran expert in, summer catering. Try these balanced “small

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* Asparagus, Ham and Eggs Milanese (One serving) | Six stalks fresh or canned asparagus hot, grated Parmesan leese, 1 small piece fried ham, 1- fried egg, lemon juice, salt id pepper, small piece butter. __ Place serving of asparagus on dish. Sprinkle with grated cheese. Dot with butter, add a few drops of lemon juice and season to taste and place butter on top. Place in hot oven while egg and ham are g. Remove from. oven and place ham and egg on top and

A 1 rves 4 to @) . | Three slices bacon, 1 small onion, 1 tart apple, 1 tablespoon powder, 1; teaspoon salt, 1 can beans. hop ti and fry lightly. . Chop onion and apple, and fty_in the bacon grease. Blend in curry powder and stir well. Then add be Simmer about 5 minutes. Serve with bowl of green salad. : lads made of canned fish, celery and tomatoes and hard d eggs are always acceptable as “small meals” on torrid days.

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By OLIVE BARTON

' CHILDREN

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¢ T= experiments of Dr. Clara M. Davis in allowing children to eat when and as they pleased, were no doubt astonishing to all ‘mothers. To think of ‘one little fellow eating 10 eggs, then going to . sleep and feeling fine the next day is something that belongs in Wonderland. And then there was the other gne who loved cod-liver oil and helped himself to it by the tablespoonful. Will wonders never cease? Of course no mother would dare do such a thing as to allow ‘her children to eat exactly what they want and as. much as they like. But in the case of the sickly, rickety little folk that Dr. Davis was working with, it was all so scientific and well-planned, it was not only a new lease on life for her patients, but an example that gives us all something to think about. Her idea is that many children won't eat because of pressure at meal time. She also believes that nature puts in her own demands through appetite. Now, that does not mean that our Jimmy may i sundaes and candy all day long week after week. The foods offered must be wholesome and simple.

p small charges got well, gained ‘in weight and recovered from their chronic malnutrition, fatigue, rickets and other illnesses. All because -they were not made to eat at any particular time, were not reminded of manners, could refuse if they liked and could eat as much of the simple foods offered as they wanted. t us get a real lesson from this incredible experiment. You + and I know that the minute a child comes to the table, we to mention his manner¥, Yes, we certainly have to, but if he’s not eating at all, is nervous and poorly, mdybe he would nibble a 1 .we kept quiet. for a while. “Now drink your milk, darling.” If anyone said that to me a He times a day I should think of milk as poison. But if some-

one made up a story about it that dressed up the milk a bit, I would t my glass with new eyes.' There is a trick about all eating. ut let us ask the doctor before we go on any amateur sprees about feeding our families.

«BEAUTY

LL manner of criticism is leveled at week-end guests. Articles are written, speeches made and cartoons drawn on the mistakes 8 guest makes and what he might do about it.

By ALICIA HART

Averyone abhors the house guest who forgets her bathing suit or

cold cream or toothbrush, If she ever dares to borrow a little bath powder, she’s supposed to be ogre of bad taste.

But what about the week-end hostess—she who, presumably, in-

vites people to her home because she wants to see them? Lik really 80 Srfadrul for a guest to ask for some suntan lotion or ‘a spare comb? | ~ : In the first place, there ought to be a spare comb in the house— ‘any house. And if the purpose of having guests is so t everybody —guests as well as hostess—can have fun, there are several other little items which should be part of regular household equipment. They make for relaxation and ease. And why shouldn't a guest be relaxed and at ease—even if she did forget to pack several things? 8 of » ® #2 =» NE A phane containers and keeps two or three, along with a tube of toothpaste and a little bottle of mouth wash, in a transparent box on each dresser in each guest room. Also handy are suntan lotion, small Jars of cleansing, night and foundation creams, as well as face powder, cleansing tissues and small cotton powder puffs. Her guests don’t have to ask to borrow such items. They find them handy—part of standard guest room equipment. - Furthermore, in each guest room closet are two pairs of paper

bedroom slippers, one pair medium size and one large. These cost 10 -

cents a pair. Also at least one boxy swagger coat of pure white, turkish toweling. Jackets of this type are easy to launder, of course,

x ; e T= sight of too much food in hot weather can frighten the

smart Connecticut hostess buys 5-cent toothbrushes in cello- -

> TE UN FE SAT

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and are useful on half a dozen occasions during the average summer

week-end.

TODAY'S PATTERN

Using this one easy design, Pattern 8522, you can make yourself a lot of vacation fashion for very little work and money. The pattern is perforated for a sleeveless style, so that you can make it that way for tennis and outdoor activities. But it’s so pretty with the

' flaring, brief sleeves, that you'll un-

doubtedly want it both ways. Add the bolero, and you're all set for street and business. It’s a charming style, darted in to a slim waistline, with very wide circular skirt, youthful square neckline and gay trimmed contrast— carefree, practical, becoming. Gingham, pique, sharkskin and linen are smart materials for this design, It will be especially pretty in white, with bright contrast. Pattern 8522 is designed for sizes 12, 14, 16, 18 and 20. Size 14 requires 4% yards of 35-inch material for dress and 1% yards for bolero; 2% yards for bias fold or binding. The new Spring and Summer Pattern Book, 32 pages of attractive designs for every size and every occasion, is now ready. Photographs show dresses made from these patterms being worn; a feature you will enjoy. Let the charming designs in this new book help you in your sewing. One pattern and the new Spring and Summer Pattern Book— 25 cents. Pattern or book alone—15 cents. To obtain a pattern and step-by-step sewing instructions inclose 15 cents in coin together with the above pattern number and your size, your name and address and mail to Pattern Editor, The Indianapolis Times, 214 W. Maryland St. Indianapolis.

made of canvas drapes

2 BOYS HELD IN LOOTING OF CARS

North Side Thefts Solved, Police Believe; Burglars Get Nearly $300.

Scores of auto accessory thefts from cars parked on the North Side were believed solved today with the arrest of two boys, aged 11 and 13. The boys were stopped in the 300 block N. Meridian St. by Patrolmen Roy Reeves and Joseph Grotendick, who said they admitted rifling cars and produced a variety of objects taken. Among them were two flashlights, socks, gloves, cigarets,-a safety, razor, bandages, tape, a screwdriver, steering wheel knobs, cap pistol, paste, a pencil and threg boxes of matches. : The boys were turned over to the juvenile aid division. Theft of money and valuables

{amounting to nearly $300 was re-

ported to police overnight. Jean Anderson, New Augusta, said someone took her purse in a theater. It contained a ring valued at $150, a watch at $75, and $6 in cash, she said. Roscoe Brown, operator of a tavern at 4001 E. Michigan St. told police someone took his bilifold as he left a tavern in the 600 block Massachusetts Ave. . It contained $21, he said. Police were told that someone entered the home of A. H. Votaw, 803 W. 43d St, and took coins valued at $26. A vase containing 900 pennies was taken from the apartment of Clara Miller, 617 N. East St., she reported to police. The

{thief also got $8.85 from a shoe, she

said.

FINDS FATHER AFTER 25-YEAR SEPARATION

BLUFFTON, Ind., July 25 (U. P.). —Only 42 miles separated George Jones of Bluffton and his son, Edward Shafer of Marion, during the

past 25 years. Neither knew the other’s whereabouts. Recently Mr. Shafer, who had taken the name of his adopted parents, heard of his father through another brother, and today father and son had been reunited.

{UST A SCRATCH’ COSTING ‘PLENTY’

Times Special CHICAGO, July 25—~“Oh, nothing, just a scratch. , , .” But “just a scratch” and comparable small cuts and lacerations were a million dollar item last year for organizations that pay compensation to employees. The 1939 edition of Accident Facts, the National Safety Council’s statistical yearbook, notes:

“One out of ten compensated occupational injuries involves infec-

it’s

small scratches or lacerations that

‘|would have resulted in no disability

if proper medical treatment had been given promptly.” The yearbook points out that if all states had similar proportions of infections and paid compensation on the same basis as four states in which a survey was made, the national compensation total for infacted occupational injuries in 1938 was about 11 million dollars. :

BURGLAR SUSPECT

A 32-year-old burglary suspect was captured by police in the 100 block of E. Washington St. today after a downtown storekeeper sel off his holdup alarm to summon officers. The storekeeper said he saw the man walking by his store and recognized him as being wanted by a detective friend of his. The police emergency squad answered the alarm and caught the man after a brief. chase. He was ‘charged

Story-of-Month Club to Initiate

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¢ Miss Iris Irwin, 3128 Graceland “| Ave, Will be initiated into the active . \gsection of the Story-of-the-Month : Gian tn services at 8 p. m. Thursday in the clubroom at the Indiana World War Memorial. Miss Irwin was former feature writer and woman’s editor of the Vincennes Pos Among new initiates of the asso-

ciate chapter are Mrs. Ralph Meyew Augusta; Miss Hortense

Silk Chiffon Is Used For Afternoon Frock

While silk chiffon is primarily an evening fabric, latest showings at famous French houses indicate that it is importantly considered by Paris

couturiers a formal afternoon fabr as well.

. Ritterskamp Date Set

Ritterskamp family will be held Aug. 6 at the Gregg Park Shelter House in Vincennes, Ind. Oscar F. Ritterskamp, Freelandville, is pres-

Y. A. M. Club Meets The ¥. A. M. Club will meet at 7 p. m, today at the home Miss

with vagrancy and his bond was set at $1000.

STUDENT, 22, DROWNS ELKHART, Ind. July 25 (U. PJ). —Erena Georgieva, 22, a native of ‘Bulgaria, who had been studying at Schuffler College in Cleveland, drowned yesterday in Birch Lake in Cass County, Michigan, where she was employed as counsellor at a Y. W. C. A. summer camp.

The 13th annual reunion of the } y

10 BIG, COOL GLASSES

Evaleen Ross, 3025 N. Meridian St.

of these “cubby hole” offices have been installed in recent years.

tion. Many of these cases begin as|C:

CAUGHT DOWNTOWN.

The ornate public lobbies of the State House gradually are being filled with “private offices” and thin boards as the number of government bureaus

us increase yearly. Six 8 8 8 . a ain :

‘By NOBLE REED

. FNHE State House, when it was erected in 1886, comfortably housed

ho all the central divisions of State Government with plenty of room spare. ; But after 53 years of adding bureaus, commissions and countless boards along with the general reorganization in 1933, “the State” has outgrown its quarters, spilling over into six other buildings. - A survey disclosed that more than 1500 State workers in Indianapolis are housed outside the State House while others are quartered in basement rooms originally designed for storage space. Back in 1886, there were only about 15 divisions of government whose total annual expenditures were $4,405,556. There were only a few hundred employees in those days. Now there are more than 9000 State employees and the annual expenditures of the State government total more than 80 million dollars. e annual State payroll now is several times more than the entire government expenditures 50 years ago. .

s 8 = 8 8 =

ALARIES were different, too. The top pay of any State official 50 years ago was $3000 yearly. That was the Governor's salary "and two or three others received that, but the average was nearer $1200. The Governor's salary now. is $8000. The largest State House annex recently acquired is at 141 8. Meridian St., where the Welfare and Social Security divisions are housed. More than 1000 workers sre quartered there. In another four-story building at Senate and Market Sts., west of the State House; nearly 400 more have desk space. In this building are the State Health Department, its subdivisions and the main Highway Commission offices. There are more highway offices in the Old Trails Building at Senate and Washington Sts., and the highway laboratory staff has another building on West Market St., a block west of the State House. The general highway garage offices are in another building next door to the laboratory. The sixth building, at Senate and Ohio Sts, houses the State Conservaifon Department, the State Library and the Historical ureau, ' :

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T= Motor Vehicle License Division has overflowed its quarters in the basement of the State House. Forty-five workers are cramped in an inside room without windows. It originally was designed for storage space. : Balconies have been erected in once palatjal office rooms, giving a terraced effect with clerks perched upon the balconies. Many of the old private offices that rivaled the Governor's in Size. have been converted into space for stenographers and filing cabinets, : Many State House departments have spilled out into the corridors where half a dozen temporary structures have been erected around the marble lobby pillars for desk space. : The State Budget Committee recently began considering the - possibility that another building may have to be leased to house the expanding staffs. : : : The Committee was advised that the Levey Printing Co. building on Ohio St. just north of the State House will be available for lease to the State soon, but Committee members said ho action on it is contemplated at this time. :

NEGRO NOMINATED T0 HEAD BAPTISTS

ATLANTA, Ga., July 25 (U. P.)— A Negro pastor, Dr. L. K. Williams of Chicago, today was proposed for the presidency of the Baptist World Alliance shortly after Dr. J. H.

Rushbrooke of London, Alliance general secretary, had denied reports of “color segregation” in Alliance meetings here. : R. C. Barbour of Nashville, Tenn., Negro editor of the National Baptist Voice, offered Dr. Williams’ name to the congress resolutions committee. “The election of a consecrated, learned, experienced. black Baptist minister to the presidency of the Baptist World Alliance will answer” the challenge of ‘barbaric paganism,” Dr. Barbour said. Dr. Williams is vice president of the World Alliance and presided over one meeting of the Congress. Dr. Barbour and Dr. H. M. Smith, Negro dean of the Chicago Baptist Institute, also protested signs in the Municipal Auditorium they said

IF YOU'RE

repre

empty joke.”

friends,” but took the signs down.

¥

Here are seven of more than 40 employees of the State Motor Vehicle Bureau who are forced to

work in a windowless basement room originally

erected more than 50 years ago.

in tended for storage space when the State House was

sented “segregation and made “Baptist fellowship a brutal and Convention officials said the signs were merely intended to permit delegafes to “sit with their

91 MEDICAL AIDS NAMED FOR 1.0.

Announcement © Made by Dean Gatch for Next Year.

Appointment of 21 resident physicians and surgeons at the Indiana University Medical Center Hospitals for the coming year, was announced today by Dean W. D. Gatch of the Indiana University School of Medicine. : Resident surgeons appointed are: Dr. Herbert L. Egbert and Dr. Richard E. Gery of Indianapolis; Dr William PF. Montgomery, Plymouth; Dr. R. W. Oliphant, Parmersburg; Dr. Daniel D. Stiver, Goshen; Dr. D. J. Caseley, Charleston, Ill, and Dr. Henry 8. Tanner, Paris, Il. Resident physicians are: Dr. J. L. Sims, otolaryngology; Dr. Mary Alice Morris, opthalmology; Dr. A. L. Marshall Jr., orthopedics; Dr. R. McC. Vandivier, medicine, and Dr. R. M. Ferguson, medicine, all of Indianapolis; Dr. Noel R. Bailey, Peru, -obstetrics; Dr. John D. Van Nuys, New Castle, medicine; Dr. R. A. Henderson, Ridgeville, and Dr. B. J. Siebenthal, Bloomington, pediatrics; Dr. Harry Baum, Madison, cardiology; Dr. R. M. Nay, Muncie, pathology; Dr. 8. A. Manalan, Gary, medicine; Dr. C.. 8. Culbertson, South Vevay, pathology, and Dr. R. E. Estlick, Columbia City, otolaryngology.

ANDREWS CROSS-EXAMINED WASHINGTON, July 25 (U. P.).— The antilabor House Rules Committee today cross-examined WageHour Administrator Elmer F. Andrews and Rep. Graham A. Barden (D. N. C.) on the question of granting right-of-way to Rep. Barden’s proposed amendments to the WageHour Law. After the hearing it was decided to try again for a compromise. x

THRIFTY

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| LAKE LOUISE ond + EMERALD LAKE én the Cenadiane Rockies J Hors s world of toworing smart diversions in Alpine air: Castle-like hotels at Banff and Lake i d a Swiss-like Chalet at

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Wed in State, “Widow Faces Fraud Charge .

- St! JOSEPH, Mich., July 25 (U. P.)—Mrs. Josephine Pelikan, 40, a self-styled wealthy widow with at least four living husbands, was held here under $4000 bond today to face embezzlement charges brought

by one of them. Mrs. Pelikan, pictured by State Police who arrested her as a woman who practiced embezzlement by wholesale marriages throughout the Midwest, was charged at her arraignment last night with bilking Joseph Brcka, 70, of New Buffalo, Mich., of $3700, after a marriage the complaining husband said was performed at Michigan City, Ind, in 1933. Brcka told police he knew of 15 other men in Chicago who had been similarly bilked. ; At the arraignment Mrs. Pelikan demanded examination, which was set for Aug. 4. She was unable to furnish bond. The first step in the onewoman marriage bureau, according to officers, was advertising in Bohemian. language for a husband by a wealthy widow. Police also said there were charges pending against her in three cities for allegedly placing “knockout drops” in the beer of several men, then robbing them.

TRUCKER HEL IN 3 DEATHS HUNTINGDON, Pa. July 25 (U. P.).—The driver of a truck which crushed an automobile into the Juniata River following a bridge collapse at Alexandria, Pa., 1i three persons, was charged with involuntary manslaughter today and held in jail in default of $1000 bail. Victims were Edwin Kaufman, 32, of Sunnyside, L. I.; his wife, Sophie, and their son, Bobby, 3.

Lg

To THE / fw bod Fars IN

PANAMA TREATY RATIFIED WASHINGTON, July 25 (U.P.).—

The Senate today ratified the Pana-

ma general treaty, 64 to 16.

Pe

hy HALT?

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THE WATER LEVEL ROUTE - YOU CAN SLEEP

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