Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 December 1939 — Page 7
TUESDAY, DEC. 26, 1939
FOOD
WHEN PORK IS HIGH, combine it with potatoes and onions to make its grand flavor go a hit further. Try this stretch-out recipe.
Scalloped Potatoes and Pork Chops . (Serves 6)
6 medium potatoes 1 medium onion 2 cups milk Salt to taste § pork chops Wash potatoes, pare and cut in thin slices. Peel onion and cut in thin slices. Butter baking dish. Arrange layer of potatoes on bottom. season, then cover with layer of sliced onion, Repeat until all potatoes and onion are used, Add milk. Trim excess fat from chops and place them on top of potatoes. Bake in moderate oven (350 degrees I) for about 11% hours until potatoes and chops are tender, Here's another stretch-out recipe. This time it's veal that gets stretched beyond its original intention and does very well at it.
Yeal Chops Paris
{Serves 6) 1 egg 2 tablespoons broth or milk 1 teaspoon salt room sonp Pepper to taste 1% cup milk Beat egg, add broth or milk, salt and pepper. Wipe chops clean, trim, and dip in bread crumbs, then in egg mixture, then in crumbs again, Saute in a little fat until brown on both sides. Combine mushroom soup and remaining milk, Pour over chops. Simmer 45 minutes, or until the meat is tender,
By MRS. GAYNOR MADDOX
2 tablespoons flour
6 veal chops \ 14 cups dry breadcrumbs
chicken 1 can condensed mush-
By OLIVE BARTON
CHILDREN
SHOULD TOYS AND playthings be:
A. Muscle building? B. Aids to initiative and planning? C. Beautiful rather than wearable? D. Always suited to age? The old idea of buying a toy for a child was to have it last forever, The doll, if it cost enough, was the cause of many a whipping when it was broken. Today, we think more of toys as a means of developing the child's imagination and ingenuity, and we have learned to look upon reasonable wear and tear as natural. As for “A,” I think that every parent today knows that energy toys calculated to strengthen voung muscles and teach body control, are necessary. But there is such a thing as putting all the eggs into one basket, and neglecting constructive playthings that develop thought, wit and dexterity 5 un n u ” » THE PROUD FATHER WHO wants his son to be a Paul Bunyan will insist on balls, bats, boxing gloves, exercisers and so on. He may not be at all sympathetic with his wife who buys games or stamp albums or butterfly nets. Yet she is doing her boy a favor, because she tries to round out his play experience. So both “A” and “B"” should supplement each other. Mind-stretchers are as important as muscle-stretchers. Playthings should be chosen for the most part for their suitability as to age, although the preference of the child should be harkened to. Mental age and physical age do not always coincide. Tiny children learning to handle toys, need big safe things to drag about. At 3 they will suddenly develop a fondness for small things. The little fellow who was all for wagons and cars will suddenly take more interest in the things he can carry. The car passes from the “object” stage to the “agent” used as & means to an end. n on ” = ” n
THUS IT GOES all along the line. There are many stages in the child's toy hunger and need. Manufacturers have spent long vears of research in trving to discover the “seven ages of tovhood.” Often a child will say that he does not want a carpenter set, or a box of ready-made mechanics to construct miniature bridges, only to find later that he prefers it to all else. So children are not always the best judges of all they want.
JANE JORDAN
DEAR JANE JORDAN-—-I am & sophomore in high school and am 14 vears old, but IT am older in actions and looks. I live with my father and aunt. Because they are afraid for me, they won't
let me have dates, All of my school chums date each other and I want the consent of my father to do the same. I slip out quite often to be with a certain boy 18 years old whom I like very much. He is & very nice boy but my father wouldn't consent to my going with him. I have told my father that unless he agreed with me I would continue to slip out, but no matter what I say he won't chance his mind. How can I convince him and get him on my side? I need help terribly. I think you will understand and give me some advice. SANDY.
Answer—You can keep on pushing for what you want until your father gets so tired of hearing about it that he gives up. Each year you add to your age brings vou closer to your wish. After all you are only 14 and an 18-year-old boy is a little too old for you.
Your father isn’t altogether wrong when he objects to your going out alone with an older boy. Most 14-year-old girls arrange double dates and go in foursomes instead of twosomes. Plenty of them are not permitted to go out at will on single dates. A girl will willingly accept her parent's restrictions of her freedom providing they do not cut her out of everything a girl likes to do and shut her off from all contacts with the boys. Suggest the déuble date idea to your father and see if he won't compromise with you. If you can't go out, perhaps your aunt will let a group of boys and girls come to the house some evening that is not a school night. 5 n ” . » = 8 DEAR JANE JORDAN-I am a young girl of 17, a senior in high school. I am not the kind of girl who goes with just one boy. I am too young to think of going steady, but there is a boy whom I have been dating for about five months. At first he seemed very much interested in me, but lately it has worn off a bit. The boy respects me* highly I am sure because he has told many of my friends. We always had fun going out together, What I want to know is how I can regain his interest in me so we can keep on dating each other. I never have tried going any place where I think he might be, Do you believe that if I manage to see him and talk to him it would help? y JOAN, Answer—Propinquity is a great aid to romance. If vou are subtle enough in your method, it might help to bring about other meetings with him, but don't let him catch you at it. A better plan is to interest yourself in other boys and give him a rival to oust. JANE JORDAN.
Put your problems in a letter to Jane Yordan who will answer your questions in this column daily,
Anne Morgan on ‘Firing Line’
By ROSETTA HARGROVE PARIS, Dec. 26 (NEA) —When Herr Hitler marched into Poland, Anne Morgan was vacationing m Sweden. She immediately returned to France. For Anne Morgan, war work was starting up all over again, and there was no time to be lost, Last March, when the situation tock on an even more ominous turn, she saw Gen. Marie Gustave Gamelin, commander of the French armies, and asked him whether her services and those of her organization would be helpful to France. He replied that she could be not only useful, but most necessary, and the Comite de Secours Civil (Committee for Civilian Help) was there and then placed directly under the aegis of the French Army, with all the attending privileges and regulations. The work of the Comite de Secours Civil may be ‘‘unspectacular” as Anne Morgan herself describes it, but its value is most highly prized, not only by the authorities, but by the people who benefit from it. Quietly, efficiently, but with an unequaled understanding of the sufferings and needs of civilians in war zones, the efforts of this small group spell social service in the widest sense of the word. To Anne Morgan's organization the peasant populations of the northern and eastern provinces of France owe a deep debt of gratitude which they have rever forgotten, From 1915 to long after the signing of the Peace Treaty, she looked after them, helped them in the reconstruction of their farms and houses, fed the children and tended the aged. n ” on SHE IS NOW preparing to do the same work all over again in this war, and, as a matter of fact, her problems have increased, faced as she is with the horrors of evacuation, the new danger to civilian populations through aerial warfare, and all the sufferings and heartbreaks that would follow. She and her helpers are ready to face them all. “Dynamic” is an adjective all too misused these days, but it is the only one that fits Anne Morgan. More than twenty years have elapsed since the end of the last conflict, but today she gives the impression of having vast reserves of energy, strength and understanding still to draw upon. The Comite de Secours Civil has established its headquarters at Bierancourt, in the house which Anne Morgan donated to the French government to serve as a museum of the war for the department of the Aisne. It has at this date 33 members, 15 of whom are graduate French nurses, the remainder voluntary American and French workers, devoting their time and thought to alleviating the sufferings of the civilian populations, The planned evacuations of entire villages is a phase of this present war which has come within the scope of the committee headed by Anne Morgan. Trainloads of women, children and sick people had to be supervised, and here the devotion of the trained
£
“Dynamic” . . . “the only word that
fits Anne Morgan.”
. THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
the
nurses and voluntary helpers was called upon. With the prospects of spending 48 hours to cover a distance of some 100 miles, all these people had to be fed and comforted. in some way or another. So far as the nurses are concerned, these journeys often mean continuous duty. ” on ”
THE APPROACH OF winter and all its miseries brought Anne Morgan to Paris recently to buy and beg supplies for her people. Blankets, camp beds, stoves—the three most essential elements of life—are delivered to the hotel in the Champs Elysees, where she lives while in Paris, and once a week a well-filled truck leaves for some village where the contents are urgently needed and anxiously expected. Anne Morgan is also planning nurseries and school canteens for the children, as she knows both are of paramount importance to the rising generation. She is starting these at Blerancourt, but hopes to be able to install others wherever they are most needed. Anne Morgan is going to Amerfca to re-organize the committee which she headed and which was SO far-flung throughout the United States at the close of the last war. This was known as the American Committee for the Reconstruction of the Devastated Areas of France, Its new name will be the “Committee of American Friends of France,” and she is confident that the sympathy so generously expressed in the last world «war will meet her again there.
Claire
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Pretty Workers Find ‘Dates’
By GERRY DICK
ASHYNGTON, Dec. 28 (NEA) —There are probably more attractive and lonely young
women in Washington than in any city of its size in the world. They are the clerks, stenographers and secretaries in Government departments, New Deal bureaus and on the Hill. It would be hard to single out any one of these girls as typical of her kind. There are nearly 50,000 of them in all. But if you spent a week in Washington, in and out of Government offices, calling on your Congressman, conferring with Presidential advisers, you'd come away with a vague recollection that there was a pleasant young woman. in every place, She would be young, probably 25, slender, not so plain you
Boxy Jacket
A short, boxy jacket of leopard skin with a jauntily-tilted turban to match was the smart outfit worn Dy screen star Rosemary
ment, Indianapolis Times, 214 W. Maryland St.
iad
Lane, pictured oh a last-minute Christinas shopping tour.
4
| men, | the
| They ask her to go to the move | Yes occasionally and sometimes on
| think of herself as modern.
at Capital Aren't Plentiful
wouldn't notice her face or so pretty you would remember it exactly. She would be dressed in inexpensive but satisfactory copies of smart clothes. You'd carry away the impression that she was efficient, but too unobtrusive to be the ambitious sort. $s & 4
HEN she left the office
where you saw her, she went home to an apartment shared with two other girls. All of them earn from $1200 to $1800 a vear. They pay $50 for a bhedroom and living room with kitcheenette and bath, One of them sleeps on a daybed in the living room. When they cook their own dinners, they eat from a bridge table easily set up and whisked out of sight, When one of them has a date, the other two obligingly go to a movie. Any one of them could have a room alone in a boarding house with two meals a day for
| $40 a month. But she would have
friends in the room which
to entertain her community living
| would not compensate her for the | lack of personal | with the proportion of women to | men | balance, dates are scarce,
privacy. And
in Washington so out of
i do N Washington, she had hoped to. meet dashing, romantie But so far the only young men she has met are those in same Government bureau,
pay day, the first and fifteenth
| of the month, they take her to | dance at the Shoreham.
She is conservative, but likes to A couple of times a vear, she and her roommates entertain their friends on Saturday afternoon at a cocktail party. They serve luke« warm, indefinite-tasting punch and pretty appetizers. She has Saturday afternoons off and spends many of them wine dow shopping. Sunday she may rent roller skates or a bicycle and whirl around Hains Point for exercise. There are lots of places like the Smithsonian, the top of the Wash« ington Monument and Folger Shakespeare Library which are free and which she promises her. self to visit. Somehow she never
| finds time to see half of them,
vd. 4 ASHINGTION is a beautiful city, and she is conscious of
it. But it leaves her just a little |
cold and sometimes acutely homesick. In the first warmth of spring, blushful cherry blossoms circle the Tidal Basin. She strolls along the path beneath them with hundreds of others after 4:30. But it isn't much fun to oh and ah at nature's beauties with only the other girls from the office to hear you.
She has 26 daye annual leave |
and she saves it and her money with the idea that next year she may take one of Secretary Ickes excursions to Puerto Rico or Alaska. But in the end she goes
home just as she did Jast. year,
&
GE
a dasa
OPTOMETRISTS MEET JAN. 7-8
; More Than 150 Expected to
Attend Annual Convention Mere.
The Indiana Association of Optometrists will hold its 43d annual
Severin,
afternoon of Jan. 7. Speakers the first day will be Dr Glenn A. Fry of the School of Optometry, Ohio State University; Dr. C. W. Rutherford, Indianapolis ophthalmologist, and M. J. Julian of Better Vision Institute, New York City. Officers will be elected the second day. Dr. Marguertio Thoma, Milwaukee, and Dr. Irvine Lueck, Roch-
nooh. Dr. W. B. Needles, Chicago, president of the Northern Illinois College of Optometry, will speak at the closing banquet. Dr. Roy E. Denny, Indianapolis, is in charge of the convention exhibit which will feature modern equipment,
CRIBBING PROBE TOPS I. U, NEW
Poll of Students on Campus Rates Exam Peddling as Biggest Event.
Times Special BLOOMINGTON, Dec. 26-—The disclosure early this year of alleged peddling of Fnglish examination answers at Indiana University here won the title of “biggest campus news event during 1939.” According to a poll of students taken by the Indiana Daily Student editorial board, the “lifting” of English literature and composition exams received 69 points. The investigation by University officials revealed the theft and subsequent circulation of the exams among students. Other news events listed, according to their relative importance to the students, were: 2. Winning of second place by the University basketball team in the 1938-39 Confesvence, 3. Formal founding of the Independent Students’ Association, 4. Appointment of Daniel 8S. Robinson as president of Butler University. 5. Election of I. 8. A's candidate as prom queen. 6. Inauguration of the Quarterback Hour. 7. Establishment nautics Authority program. 8. Establishment of health center. 9. Appearance of Norman Thomas on Open Forum program. 10. Lectures by Harold J. Laski.
14 DIE AS SHIP SINKS
of Civil Aeroflight training
a medieal
LONDON, Dec. 26 (U. P.) —Fourteen persons were killed yesterday when the British steamer Stanholm, 2473 tons, was sunk with« out warning by a German submarine off the west coast of England, it was announced today. Ten survivors were injured. There was a terriffic explosion on the Stanholm two hours after the ship left port and while most of the members of the crew were celebrat-
ling Christmas below decks, “We had no warning and no time |
to launch a lifeboat,” BE. IL. Evands, A seaman on the Stanholm, said. “One of my shipmates told me that the radio operator had been blown to pieces.”
BLIND SINCE BIRTH. WINS ROLE IN PLAY
NEW YORK, Dec, 26 (U. P.. The childhood dream of Lillian
reality today. She was an actress in a Broadway show.
hit, “The World We Make.”
Kingsley’'s play. Miss Hillman wa seated on a chair in scene. A psychiatrist hand before her face and said, “A typical ecatatonic—no reaction all.” Then she was led away. was all. She didn’t say a word. “I loved it,” she said afterward.
KILLS POLICY FIGURE NEW YORK, Dec. 26 (U. P) A janitor confessed today,
ester, N. Y., will speak that after-
IN SURPRISE ATTACK
the opening waved his|
| | | Rix &
Newsmen to Hear Ludlow-=The Indianapolis Press Club has invited convention Jan. 7-8 at the Hotel newspapermen of the state, club to a More than 150 are expected to at-| buffet supper tomorrow night hontend. Dr. B. H. Kaplan, Michigan oring Rep. Louis Ludlow (D. Ind.), a City, association president, will pre- | who was long a newspaperman beside at the opening session on the fore he was elected to Congress. Mr. Ludlow will be the principal speaker,
members and nonmembers,
Santa Claus brought roller skates to S8-year-old Dorothy Johnson, yesterday, but he didn’t stay to teach her all the tricks of using them. Dorothy fell while skating in front of her home at 630 N. or S. Keystone Ave. The doctor at City Hospital said: “It's a broken arm.” The skates will be
| shelved temporarily,
Opens Gasoline Bids Tomorrow
Bids on a four months’ supply of | gasoline for four city departments |wm be opened at 10 a. m, tomorrow
| Agent Albert H, Losche, Bidders will
submit one estimate on the indi-|
vidual gasoline requirements of the | Works, Health, Safety and Park | Boards and a second estimate covlering the four departments as a whole,
Fox Face Police Trial-A sergeant and three patrolmen of a po- | lice emergency squad are to face a | police trial board to answer charges |that they did not turn in the per[sonal belongings of a prisoner to the property room. The four men al- | ready have been suspended. A mo-
Named to European Post—Betty torist arrested for drunken driv.
| Wason, 27-year-old daughter
|dianapolis for New York to sail for [Europe as a correspondent for | Trans-Radio Press, a news agency. Mr. ney general,
DeMolay to Give Dance-—The Or. der of DeMolay will hold a semi(formal holiday dance at 9 p. m. [Thursday at the Riviera Club. Aribert Young and Howard BEdwards are chairmen of committeas in charge of the dance, Music will be By Ear] Breech's orchestra.
Townsend 48 te Meet— Townsend
Club 48 will meet at 7:30 o'clock to- INE iNSPector, with a salary of $2205
night in the I. O. O. F. Hall, 1336 N. Delaware St. The Rev. R. M Daedrill will be in charge of the meeting. A program of entertainment will be presented.
Prosecutors to Meet—Prosecuting attorneys from Indiana’s 92 counties (will meet here tomorrow for the an(nual law enforcement conference. | Sessions will last through Thursday. Among the speakers will be Don F. Stiver, State Safety Director, and Alfred F. Dowd, Indiana State ( Prison Warden.
The Gallup Poll Shows—
By Institute of Public Opinion PRINCETON, N. J.
virtually no sentiment at this time But
whelming majority placed their sympathies with
today--although the overs of Americans the
that an average
son in 10 would
pense with the music of Wagner, Beethoven, Mozart and othe ers, or with the teaching of German itself. The Institute preceded its questions by a series of queries on the present European war and then asked: “Do you think orchestras and bands in this country should stop playing German music?” “Do you think American colleges and high schools should stop teaching the German language?” The answers were; Stop German Musie Continue German Music , . Stop Teaching of German,, 12% Continue Teaching of German van ae SR “We made those mistakes the last time,” voters sometimes commented, “but let's not make the same mistakes again.” Only about one
AMERICAN INSTITUTE
PUBLIC"OPINION
[Allies as before-~the survey shows of only one per=|
be willing to dis-|
of | ing claimed a carton of cigarets and Mr. and Mrs. James P. Wason, 4038 | two boxes of candy were not reN. Illinois St., soon will leave In-| turned to him when he was released |
jon bond Saturday night. The sus- | pended police said that the man had [given the merchandise to them as
[ turned, Inspector Jesse McMurtry | said,
| Inspector Exams Jan. 4--Fxam-inations for four inspectorships to [be created Jan. 2 in the City Build|ing Commission will be held Jan 4 (at the City Hall, George R. Popp lor. Commissioner, announced today, The examinations will be for two
[electrical inspectors and one plumb-
|a year, and one smoke inspector at [$1800 a year. Applications must be file¢ with the Safety Board no later than 5 p. m. Friday,
| Townsendites to Meet-—The Mc. |Claingville Townsend Club will meet lat 7:30 p. m. Friday at Troy and
[Carson Aves,
Award Contracts Friday—County | Commissioners will award contracts [amounting to $75,000 Friday for | highway supplies and materials, I'The bids were received last week.
a CR —- sr ——
No Sentiment for Banning German Music in America
A
) Dec. 26 Further signs of the vast differences between American public psychology in 1817 and today are revealed in a new study by the American Institute of Public Opinion which shows
for eliminating the playing of Ger-
man music from U. S. concert halls or the teaching of the German language from U, 8. schools and colleges, Both these steps were taken a generation ago as the American publie grew increasingly bitter against the Kaiser's Germany.
89 82
Persons 30 to 49......11 Persons 50 and Over. 18
|
Wason is a deputy state attor- presents. The merchandise was re-|
|
|
|
|
| |
. PAGE 7’
CALL O’HARROW FOR NEENAN AND GRIFFIN TRIALS
Attorneys Agree on Morgan County Jurist for Relief Case.
Morgan County Circuit Judge Omar O'Harrow was selected today
t the office of City Purchasing, preside at the trials of J. Barton
Griffin and John Neenan, charged with filing false relief claims. At the same time, a motion to quash four similar indictments against Dan R. Anderson, another of flve persons indicted in the Grand Jury's Center Township poor relief probe, was filed in Criminal Court. O'Harrow to Rule
Judge O'Harrow, who was ex= pected to qualify as judge this after= noon, was selected from a list of three judges submitted after the defendants asked for a change of venue from Judge Dewey E. Myers Thursday. A motion to quash the indicte ments against Griffin is pending in Criminal Court and will be ruled upon hy Judge O'Harrow, The motion to quash the Anders son indictments is the second pes tition filed in that case since arraignment three weeks ago. Judge Myers previously overruled a plea in abatement in this case.
Hold Up Disposition
Like the motion pending in the Griffin case, this motion to quash, charged the Grand Jury which returned the indictments was with. out legal authority to inquire inte the alleged offenses and set out that the facts stated do not constitute a cause of action. Disposition of the cases of Thomas Quinn Sr., former trustee, and Frank Bluestein, a grocer, the other two indicted in the probe, will be held up until action is taken on others. Mr. Quinn pleaded guilty to a charge of official neglect and deferred his pleas on two bribery charges.
JAPAN BARES MASS AIR RAIDS ON CHINA
SHANGHAI, Dec. 26 (U, P.).—A Japanese spokesman announced today that in retaliation for “the ineffective bombings by the Chinese airforce” in the vicinity of Nanning, former capital of Kwangsi province, the Japanese air force has made “mass raids on Kweiling, Luchow” and other Chinese bases, Japanese planes, the spokesman sald, have “wiped out” Chinese air bases in Kwangsi province,
CHUNKKING, Dec. 26 (U. P) — The official Chinese Central News Agency reported today that Chinese troops had killed 2500 Japanese in fighting at Paotou, western terminus of the Peiping-Suiyuan railroad, and that the Japanese had suffered
“We still need to have the Ger-| more than 1000 casualties in fight-
|sometimes remarked in answer to the question, | Independent [publishers indicate that while there (has been a falling off in enrollments lin German classes in American col|leges since last year this drop has
man language for students in engi- | ing near Nanning, former capital of neering and science,” younger voters Kwangsi province,
studies by textbook BALTIMORE & OHIO
INCOME INCREASES
BALTIMORE, Md, Dec. 26 (U,
(averaged less than 7 per cent in|P.).—November net operating in-
some 57 institutions studied,
sn ——
'SCALDED ON LEGS AS WATER BUCKET TIP
A SO —
|
come of the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Co. amounted to $3,423,282 against $1,674,985 in the corresponding 1938 month, the carrier reported today. In the first 11 months of this vear, net operating income was $24,049,980,
Suffering from first and second- | contrasted with $13,112,123 in the
(degree burns about the legs, George (Scott, 65, of 832 N, New Jersey St. | was taken to City Hospital
|
same period of 1938. Gross operating revenues in November totaled $16.659.862 against
yes- $12,131,521 in the 1938 month, while
'terday. Police said he was carrying | for the first 11 months of this year
‘a bucket of scalding water in his (home and the bucket tipped, ing the water on him, His condi [tion is fair,
Preston Sellers, 38, of 649 Indi(ana Ave, was burned about the
|
gross operating revenues totaled
spill. | $146.776,350 against $122,624,020 in
the 1938 period. RECRUIT IS 6 FEET § MOBILE, Ala., Dec. 26 (U, P.) —
Mobile is helping enlarge the TU, S. Army. The Mobile recruiting
voter in 20 (67) said that he was arms, neck and face yesterday when office has just enlisted William PF. undecided or without an opinion on |g bottle of gasoline he was carrying | Green, 6 feet 5 inches in stocking
the questions. With the facts previously uncovered regarding American opinion in
Hillman, blind since birth, was a the present war, today's Institute survey gives an interesting index of
the absence of traditional war psy[chology in the United States at this
Miss Hillman appeared on a radio a Senivivoens there . is Gr show two weeks ago and met Sidney | anning German music and GerKingsley, author of the Broadway
man teaching, the survey shows
[emotional carry-overs from 1917-18
As the following figures show [younger Americans between
German people: Stop
German Musie?
Yes No,
comes from older persons who re Last night, she went on in My Member the last war plainly and
«| Whose attitudes sometimes reflect
the at ages of 21 tod 30 are almost unaniThat Mously opposed to eliminating either (the music or the language of the
Persons 30 to 49 ...... 8
that he killed vincent OCangro,| Persons 50 and Over. . 13
small-time policy slip salesman, in a dispute over the affections of a woman. The slaying at first was ate tributed to the struggle for domina-
tion of the Bronx policy racket. Persone Under 30
police said, | Persons Under 30 .... 4% So % 87
Stop Teaching of G ?
I
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