Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 January 1940 — Page 13
z~Carolyn Atherton, R. Malott Fletch-
“Case, Frank McKibbin, Frank W.
ivGruner and Sue Howe.
of fat.
FRIDAY, JAN. 12, 1940 _
"Orloff Trio to Be Presented
By Pr opylacum on Thursday
The entertainment committee of the Propylacum Club will present .the Orloff Trjo in a program at 2: 30 p. m. Thursday. Mus. Frederic
..B. Matson is chairman.
Members of the trio include Jean Orloff, violin; _.cello, and Frances H. Rybolt, piano.
Robert wy
Mrs. Matson’s assistants will include Mesdames Wymond J. Becket
“J. Ottis Adams, Hugh J. Baker, Oscar A. Jose Jr, Harold Feightner, G. H. A. Clowes, Weber D. Donald“son, E. W. Harris, C. Fred Davis, Harry E. Campbell, H. E. Barnard,
er, H. M. Gilchrist, Frank Hoke, Arthur V. Brown, Byron E. LaFollette, Theodore L. Locke, Fred W.
Cregor, Frank A. Hamilton and the Misses Juliette Bryan, Meta B.
Others will include. Mesdames “William F. Kuhn, Francis P. Hus~ton, Charles W. Alkire, Henry R.
Bliss, Ernest Rupel, James W. Lilly,
Jesse C. Moore, Charles R. Peddle, Ferris T. Taylor, Allen A. Wilkinson, J. H. Pattison, A. Kiefer Mayer, LeRoy Kahler, Wolf R. Ibler, Clarence R. Rhodes, John M. Shaw, William H. Stafford, Thor G, Wesenberg, Marshall T. Levey, Hortense R. Burpee, Harry R. Miesse, Augustine Coburn, James M. Ogden, Robert Elliott and Charles F. Voyles.
Brownie Unit Meets The Brownie Chapter of the SubDeb Club met last night at the home of the president, Miss Rosemary Reuter, 1014 Prospect St.
FOOD
By MRS. GAYNOR MADDOX
COME SUNDAY, COME duck or goose. that might be a good rule every few weeks.
At this time of year From the Federal
Bureau of Home Economics comes this general advice on buying and
» roasting both ducks and geese,
Select a plump, aristocratic-looking "bird with a good covering
However, avoid one that is too fat because much of its
_ weight will be lost in grease that cooks out. Get.a fowl that has
seen only one summer.
_ pliable; hard and rigid on old ones. more yellow in color and the breastbone is harder. : Ducks do ‘better for smaller families. . about 5 or 6 lbs, dressed—that is picked but not drawn, and with Figure about 1% Ibs. dressed duck or goose for
head and feet.
The windpipe on young birds is soft and
Older birds have coarser skin,
Most of them weigh
.-each serving. Most of the young birds on the market are called
-Long Island ducklings.
These are fast-grown ducks ready for the
‘table when about 12 weeks old. Their skin is always white and the legs and beak are yellow, almost orange.
2 2.8
IF DUCK OR GOOSE is to make a good appearance at table, it must be carefully drawn and prepared. Pull out the pin feathers
and “down” and singe off the hairs quickly.
Then cut off the
head, feet and oil sack on top of the tail.
To give the neck a trim finish,
first make a cut in the skin
at the back of the neck and carefully remove the crop. Then pull - the skin down and cut the neck off short, saving the neck for making
stock for the giblet gravy. wise cut that is made under the tail.
Finish drawing the bird from a length-
Wash bird carefully both ine
side and out, with cold water. Dry thoroughly, Fill both neck and body cavity with stuffing, but do not pack. (Wild rice makes a delicious stuffing for both duck and goose.) Then draw the skin ‘of the neck back and fasten neatly with string or
skewers. Sew up the opening in the
where the marks will not/show.
} = »
tail. Tie the legs close to the
| body and fasten the wings with a string that crosses at the back
# » ”
START ROASTING THE BIRD with the breast down on the
rack of a shallow pan, without water and without a cover.
Roast
5 to 6-pound young duck in moderate oven (350 deg. F.) for two to two and a half hours, or until the breast and thigh are tender
when piereced with a skewer.
Roast 10 to 12-pound young goose
in moderate oven (350 deg. F.) for three Yo four hours, until tender.
A gogse or duck is so fat {hat it
needs mo basting. But turn it
‘eyery half hour to get all parts cocked evenly. If the bird is very
1, prick
the skin during the roasting to allow the fat to drain out.
JA
VE JORDAN
JANE JORDAN—I am a wife of 17 and my husband is 22,
- We peng been married a year and
he can’t remember that he is
: married. Nothing I tell him is right because his mother tells him
what to do and what not to do.
We are expecting a baby in March, but still he doesn’t think he
is making enough to get by on.
father and I stay with my mother and father.
He lives with his mother and
He makes from $18
to $29 a week and yet he says he can’t make a home for me and
our coming baby.
I am wondering what to do about it.
be best to get a divorcee or wait and the baby comes?
8 = =
Do you think it would see if he will be different after A READER. s
s »
Answer—The trouble with you is that you married a child instead of a man. By consenting to a marriage in which you both remained in a childish position without assuming the responsibility for your
marriage, you brought this situation about.
Now at last you are
obliged to face the fact that your husband is immature, still tied
to his parents, instead of a strong,
masculine protector.
| I do not know whether he contributes anything to your support.
If not, he should da so. As long as
of it should go for you and the baby to come,
he earns anything at all, part Let this be his first
step in the belated process of growing up. The next step should be to save something toward a home, no
matter how little. The prospect of supporting a wife and child apart from his parents is too overwhelming for him to consider now, He will have to advance toward it by easy stages. 1 suppose you could divorce him now for non- support, but you should not do so before you are certain that he never will shoulder his responsibility. As long as he feels affection for you there is hope, and it would be wise to avoid an estrangement as long as possible. Besides, he may grow attached to the baby when it comes and gradually assume more and more responsibility. Your attitude
toward him should be more encouraging than critical.
inadequate he feels, the less desire of husband and father,
The more he will have to fulfill the role
In this his parents should encourage him with moral support and, if possible, financial aid. "If they do not want him to leave home, your problem is twice as hard. The more you condemn him,
the_-more he will cling to them for justification and comfort.
It is
better to charm than to condemn. Try to make him feel your love of him, need of him, and dependence on him, These are your
most powerful weapons.
confidence in his masculine strength will do it.
If anything will make a man of him, your
JANE JORDAN.
Put your problems in a letter to Jane Jordan pio will answer your questions in this column dail :
PATTERN 925 COTTON DRESS GAYLY SCL Deep
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Jd
NEW TRIAL PLEA |_
1S SCHEDULED IN SHIDELER CASE
Notice of Appeal Also to Be Filed; Broker, 35, Gets Eight Years.
tice of appeal will be filed in Federal Court next week for William A. Shi deler, local investment proker.
years in prison by Federal Judge Thomas W.
curities Act. The jury, six of whom were farm-
utes.
ment immediately. Judge Slick did so after reading the Federal probation officer's report on Shideler,
One Count Dropped Shideler will be eligible for parole at the end of two and two-third years. Judge Slick said he would make no recommendation to the parole board, but would not object to parole, The indictment returned Sept. 30, 1939, had 12 counts of alleged mail
fraud violation, four counts charging violation of the Securities Act, and one conspiracy count. During the {rial the Government dismissed Count 11 in connection with the mail fraud charge since no mailing had been proved. Judge Slick sentenced Shideler to two years on the conspiracy count and to three years each on the mail fraud and Securities Act counts. Julian C. Ryer, attorney for the 35-year-old broker, yesterday gave the Court notice of his intention to file a, new trial motion on Monday. He; will appeal the case to the SeW®th Circuit Court of Appeals at Chicago, he said.
Pleads for Leniency
After his client -had been sentenced Mr. Ryer pleaded with Judge Slick to reduce the time. “I am sure. from my association with this defendant that he is honest and that he believed what his father told him,” Mr. Ryer said. “Our failure -to have his father here is due only to lack of financial means. If he had been here I'm sure he would have absolved his son.” Shideler’s father, Frederick Ww. Shideler, is serving a seven-year term at Leavenworth Penitentiary for his conviction ‘on the same charges for which his son was convicted yesterday. Still pending against both men is
dictment returned Nov. 4, 1938, charging them with embezzlement, grand larceny and falge pretense. It is expected now that these charges ‘will be dismissed. In answer to Mr. Ryer’s plea, Judge Slick said that “Shideler violated the law. and should he punished.” ‘Still a Young Man’
“He still is a young man,” the judge said. “With his personality and knowledge he has a chance to reclaim himself. He still can come back and be a good citizen.” “I was struck by Shideler’s intelligencésen the stand. He had knowledge that these people did not have and should be held more accountable.” When Mr. Ryer asked that the Court not exact more than its pound of flesh,” Judge Slick said “were not here to punish for vengeance.” Testifying for himself Shideler told the jury that his father told him’ that there was stock on hand at any time which could be converted into cash to pay customers Shideler testified that at the ime he had no knowledge that his father was perpetrating a fraud, but “I know it now.”
‘My Father Was Lying’
“Obviously my father was lying to me about transactions with customers and the condition of Shideler & Co.,” he told the jury. “Then you say your father is a liar and a thief?” Mr. Nolan asked. “That’s a hard thing for ‘me to say about my father when he’s serving time in a Federal penitentiary for what he did,” Shideler replied. In summarizing the case for the Government, Howard B. Caughran, Mr. Nolan's assistant, told the jury “this is one of the most dastardly, obnoxious schemes ever testified to in this court.” Mr. Ryer made no closing argument for his client. His failure to do so prevented Mr. Nolan from presenting arguments in rebuttal as is his custom. Investors Testify -
During the three days’ testimony, 14 investors testified they had turned over stock and money to Shideler & Co. to invest and that except for several checks of about $100 they received mothing in return, - They said that Shideler told them he had a “peculiar knowledge” of stock market fluctuations, that they could lose no money because the firm had a $300,000 reserve fund to protect customers, and that, “a lot of money” would be made for them. Shideler testified that ‘he was merely a salesman for the company
Zion a weekly salary, that he had nb
financial interest in the firm and that all his actions were made at his: father’s orders. He said he relied on. his father’s representations and relayed them to the customers.
STATE TAKES LIVES OF FRIED KIDNAPERS
OSSINING, N. Y., Jan. 12 (U.P). —Two kidnapers died in the electric chair last night. They were the first to pay the extreme penalty in New York State. They killed their victim, but the State was unable to prove murder because it couldn’t produce the body. it did prove kidnaping which Bu punishable by death under the state’s “Lindbergh Law.” Joseph Sacoda, 28, received the 39th visit in the death house of his sweetheart, Marie Lamont, a few hours before he was executed. Sacoda followed his partner, Demeterius Gula, 28, to ‘the chair. Arthur Fried, a
Shideler was sentenced to eight}
Slick of South Bend|. yesterday after a jury found him] guilty of using the mails to defraud| and of violation of the Federal Se-|
ers, reached its verdict in 40 min-! U. S. Attorney Val ‘Nolan| moved that the court render judg-|
a Marion County Grand Jury: in-
Both a new trial motion and no-|- ie
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES _- ‘Queen of the Rose at Butler
Miss Nancy Ann Trimble, 3755 Washington Blvd., will reign as queen at the annual Rose Dance of the Butler University freshman class tonight at the Murat Temple. candidate, was chosen at an election yesterday.
Miss Trimble, the Independent
MORA, N. M, Jan. 12 (U. P.)— Avelino Espinoza solemnly assured his wife that he would not turn her nor himself into a frog and they returned together to their home yesterday in the Sangre de Christa Mountains where Espinoza is considered a sorcerer of unusual talent. In the Murphy Canyon community where they live, everyone is afraid of Espinoza. The residents don’t dare cross him lest he turn them into frogs or donkeys or birds. (Mrs. Espinoza crossed him. inutes later he disappeared frog appeared. And the frog was so very angry it bit her. So her husband arrested on a charge of mayhem. Police brought the Espinozas here, together with some Murphy Canyon residents. In excited Spanish— Spanish is the language of Murphy Canyon—Mrs, Espinoza said her husband had conversed with the devil whenever he wished and that he, in the form of a frog, had bitten her. EoDInos smiled blahdly hrough
{for more than a year.
Vows He Won't Change Ruffled Wife Into Frog
her recital and would not deny her allegations. He was told that he would have to provide $1000 bail or go to jail and he produced it—in cash.
This caused some Surprise because Espinoza had been receiving relief Relief authorities were investigating that angle of his case.
Police recalled that they had investigated the death of Espinoza’s 15-year-old son on Christmas Day, 1938. Residents had told them that the youth had screamed at his father: “You made me this way. You put witch powders in my candy.” Investigation showed that his death had been due to natural causes.
HOBOES FAVOR 3D TERM
DAVENPORT, Iowa, Jan. 12 (U. P.).—The executive committee of the Rambling Hobo Fellowship. of America met in a local hotel yesterday and decided it would be all right for President Roosevelt to seek a third term..
Brand New i wi ye es HD a A swea ter sale
Regular Price $1.00 SPECIAL SATURDAY
WOOL St spring pastels and white in a complete selection of styles, including slipons and cardigans. Sizes Ph to |
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CABINET CRISI NEARS IN-JAPIN
rie Abe and Aids ay
Give Way Sunday to os | Civilian Group.
(Simms, Page 14) TOKYO, Jan, 12 (U. P.).—A long brewing Cabinet crisis is to reach its climax Sunday in the resignation of Gen. Nobuyuki Abe, the Premier, and his Cabinet aids, it was understood today. There were . strong indications that the next Cabinet might be largely a civilian one, includin;; representatives of the chief pciltical groups, except as regards th: De-
‘fense Ministries, which are traditionally headed by a general, for the|§
Army, and an admiral, for the Navy.
Premier Abe called a Cibinet|§
meeting for 9 a. m. Sunday and ar-
ranged to report to the Premicr im-|§ mediately afterward. It was ex-ected | J Em- |
that he would present fo Peror the collective resignation of his Ministry. Prince to Be Consulted Kurahei Yuasa, Lord Keeper of the Privy Seal, was expected 10 vis-
iit 92-year-old Prince Kimmochi
Saionji, who is ill of a cold at his home at Okitsu. The venerable prince is always consulted ir such matters as a Cabinet crisis. The expected fall of the Cabinet was bound up not with the grave foreign problems which Japan faces but with domestic problems, notably the alleged maladjustment of the supply and demand of rice ard the alleged growth of bureaucracy. Speculate on Changes However, the crisis comes when Japan faces first the inauguration of a “central government” in (hina, headed by former Chinese Premier Wang Ching-Wei, which will seek, under Japanese domination, to undermine the influence of the Chinese Government and sue for peace; the demand that France stop sending war materials to China by way of the railroad extending from French Indo-China into south.western China: the expiration of the Japanese-American trade - ireaty Jan, 26; and a drive to further expand the United States Navy. Newspapers, speculating on Abe’s successor, asserted that the Army hoped Prince Fumimaro Konoye, whose Cabinet fell a year ago, would take the Prime Minisfry. However, Prince Konoye, now the president of the Emperor's Privy Council, was understood to be reluctant to do so
Lat present.
BOXER IN HOSPITAL" Kenneth Hassler, 13, Brauil, a Turkey Run CCC camp enrolle?, was in Ft. Harrison Hospital today with injuries received Wednesday night when he was knocked out by Burn Lewis in an amateur boxing but at Crawfordsville. An X-ray slowed he‘had received a basal skull frac
CHENILLES! New
|Officers of Pythias Take
Posts Today|
New officers oF the of the Indianapolis Lodge 56, Knights of Pythias, and Banner Temple 27, Pythian Sisters, will be installed at a joint public ceremony at 8 p. m. today in Castle Hall, 230 E. Ohio St. Lodge . officers include Burton L. Perrine, chancellor commander; Fred E. ; Sedam, vice Nettie I. Osborne chancellor; Robert N. McDuff, prelate; Garold G. Brooks, master of arms; Ralph C. : Uppfalt, inner guard; William Summers, outer guard, and L. H.
work. Temple officers are Mrs. Nettie I. Osborne, most excellent chief; Stella Sellers, past chief; 5 f§ Orona SumBurton L. Perrine mers, excellent senior; Nellie Houldson, excellent junior; Mable Hoffman, manager; Georgia M. Grant, master of records; Mary Jane Sheppard, master of finance; Estella Whitton, protector, and Mary Chew, guard. <
- CIVIL WAR VETERAN DEAD PERU, Ind. Jan. 12 (U. P).— William J. Rennaker, , Miami County’s last Civil War - veteran, died today at. the home of his son, Sylvester, in Converse near here Fungral services will be held sun’ ay. :
INDIANA FUR CO.
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SER. PAGE 18°
WPA INQUIRY IN
STATE FINISHED
Two Investigators Ready for Nolan's. Call; Leave “Late This Month.
‘George J. Shillito and Matthew J. Connelly, investigators for the Congressional Committee investigating the WPA, will leave here late this month to begin a similar probe at Miami, Fla., they said today. The two investigators, who came here last summer, have completed their study of WPA conditions in this state, except for a few “loose ends,” but will remain here in. case District Attorney Val Nolan decides to call them as witnesses before the new Federal Grand Jury, which con= venes Monday. At the same time, agents of the WPA'’s own division of investigation, who have made a parallel investiga~ tion, were back in the city cleaning
{up their cases in preparation for the
Grand Jury meeting. The indictments against Carl Kortepeter, former WPA district director, and his father-in-law, Gurney Derbyshire, were returned by the previous Grand Jury on the basis of evidence submitted by the WPA agents. Both Kortepeter and Derbyshire were convicted: by a jury and have appealed. Mr. Shillito and Mr. Connelly said they recently completed an investi gation of WPA activities at Marion, Ind. “Our task is finding means of pre= venting future irregularities rather than curing those of the past,” Mr. Shillito said. “Any evidence of criminal misconduct we have found will be turned over to the district
attorney.”
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