Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 January 1940 — Page 5

MONDAY, JAN. 15, 1940 _

CHILDREN

PSYCHIATRISTS TELL US that there is a difference between - the neurotic and the psychopathic. The neurotic is a person who cannot face real life contentedly. The psychopathic has been bruised in his emotional life in childhood and too deeply hurt to be cured. * Therefore he becomes abnormal in his thoughts and attitudes, al- * though to all intents and purposes he is sane enough. -. The adult “neurotic” is not hopeless, because he may be able to pull himself out of any later Slough of Despond if he tries hard enough. The real “psychopath” cannot do this. The scar that remains to dog the child's later life, may be neuroticism or it may be the more serious psychopathic twist. The first is often a result of over-indulgence in childhood and on into adolescence. The boy or girl grows up without knowing any reverses. Another type of neurotic is .the over-sensitive one who is afraid of real life and deliberately elects to dream. ; * The psychopathic ik ore probably the victim of a feeling of disgrace or guilt. - He may have been discouraged and shamed any one of a dozen ways. A very small boy who was being looked after in a behavior clinic, puzzled his doctors by his persistent and seem= ingly ‘insane conduct. ~ 5 sn 8 | ® # = . THEN THEY DISCOVERED that his mother was a profeSsional shoplifter and spent periods in jail. The neighborhood children called names. This little bpy began to be the terror of the community. A foster home was found, and he improved. But not as much as he should. The mother was the source and his affections were tied up in her. At 6ithe scar was set. : And so it goes. Either through himself or someone dear to him, a small child may suffer. Inferiority is a splendid breeder of ab-

normality. I try to preach a half-way doctrine of discipline and encour= agement combined, because either extreme may work harm. : Thus I maintain that the safe middle way is best, making a

happy blend of discipline and indulgence.

FOOD

WHEN THE WORLD sits down to dinner, all men have something in common. To understand, turn the pages of the “World Wide Cook Book,” Pearl V. Metzelthin’s collection of 500 recipes from practically every corner of the earth. If you like to give u usual parties, here's your guide to far-off ideas. Many of the recipes fit well into the average family menu, too. Here are two example

“ Maia Me Ka Niu

(Serves. 6) |

By OLIVE BARTON

By MRS. GAYNOR MADDOX

£

1 cup cocoanut, freshly grated 24 soft ladyfingers 153 cup whipping: cream This banana - cocoanut dish is a Hawaiian delicacy

6 medium-sized bananas, quartered lengthwise and cut across in 2-inch | pieces 114 tablespoons butter 1% cup honey 1; teaspoon salt 114 teaspoons lemon juice

Peel and prepare ripe, firm bananas. Put in pan with butter and

fry until golden brown. Grease baking dish, put in honey and melt. Lay bananas in honey and add salt and lemon juice. Mix. Allow to cook over low. fire. Fold 3% the freshly grated cocoanut into banana mixture and spread thickly on 12 ladyfingers. Lay remaining ladyfingers on top, sprinkle remtaining cocoanut over sides of spread. Cover and allow to ripen and chill ‘at least six hours. When ready to serve, garnish over top with whipped cream. / . Aijet Beythat (Egg Kabab, from Arabia) . {Serves 6 to 8) : 8 hard-cooked eggs 14 cup butter ‘ Jen 3 spoon paprika : Ti a eggs. With sharp fork, prick the white of the egg all over so that butter can reach center of egg. Heat butter

3; teaspoon black pepper 3; teaspoon cinnamon pow-

in pan, do not allow to burn, and over low flame fry eggs, turning

them until light brown. Mix the spices well and when eggs are

ready, sprinkle with or roll them in the spices. Serve very hot as a

condiment, or for curry.

JANE JORDAN

- DEAR JANE JORDAN—Would you say that respect is absolutely necessary to make a marriage a success? Just how important is it? My husband struck me a few months ago and has not acted the same since. He says he lost all respect for me at the time he hit me. I have gone along disregarding this. I figure that if anyone should have lost respect it should have been I. In the course of several weeks he has made many remarks such as asking me to leave, accusing me of seeing other men, and all because I was away from home over the holidays. He walked out on me for three days and said he went to his folks. a Naturally I didn’t stay in an empty house alone during the holidays. But need this mean that I was untrue?’ This is all too deep for me. I can’t decide what to do. Shall I break up our marriage? He refuses to say he is sorry., He is the stubborn type of man. Or shall I figure that he just feels cheap and guilty over what he has done? : : PUZZLED.

ANSWER—Of course your husband feels cheap and guilty because he struck you. Certainly you are the one who should, and did, lose respect for him instead of vice versa. Naturally the loss of your respect is intolerable to him; It is a good old human trick to reverse the situation in self-defense and say, “It is not you, but I, who have lost- respect.” ; The weakness of such a defense lies in its departure from reality. He has made himself appear both higher and lower than you simultaneously. By transposing your positions he pretends that he is the one who is abused and you are the one who gave offense. But the transposition fools nobody, not even himself. It provides a false relief for his sense of guilt without banishing it entirely. This mechanism is quite usual in childhood. In cotrecting a child an an parent may say, “You aren't any good. You will never amouftt to anything.” The child, because it is weaker than an * adult, may be obliged to conform to the parent's wishes, but in its heart of hearts it reverses thé situation and says to himself, “It is you = who are no good, you who will never amount to anything.” | This secret attitude creeps out in rebellious behavior seldom understood by the parent. . Usually we outgrow these childish mechanisms and discard them as useless in adult life. As our experience in dealing with reality increases, we find it easier to admit our mistakes and apologize in order to be reinstated. Somelimes we cling to such childish attitudes to the discomfort and confusion of those whose fate it is to live with us. . If you want to help your husband exiricate “himself from his untenable position, you will have to forgive him and make him feel that he has regained your respect. Ii will take considerable skill on your part to shake him loose. If you are too magnanimous he will feel more unworthy than ever. If you insist upon reparation he will strengthen his stubbornness. Let go of the incident yourself, if you can, and dwell upon it no more. Your own relief from tension will help to relieve his. At present you are so disgusted that you don’t don’t know whether it is worth while saving your marriage or not. You must be the judge, for you know more about him than I. ; JANE JORDAN,

ret your problems in a letter to Jane Jordan who will answer : your questions in this eolumn daily.

|STATE AWAITING

‘will co-operate in bringing farmers

4

7

: PATTERN 974 HERE'S YOUR NEW "SPRING PRINT!

DESIGNED FOR the’ young-at-heart matron—this Claire Tilden newcomer! For Pattern 974 has the dignity and gracious lines that a thirty-four-to-thirty-eight figure demands, together with the new sofly casual look that spells youth. First see the double panel thag¢ runs all down the front, from the shoulder to the hem. It magically takes away from width and gives a taller and slimmer appearance. With two panels in front and a _single back panel, the skirt has flattering, rippling fullness. And the bustline is gracefully softened by fullness held in at the shoulders with neat darts. Tie -the belt in front, bring it from the sides to tie in back, or have a front buckle. The sleeves may be either long and tailored ,with nice “elbow room” and smooth-fitting wrists, or short, perhaps softened with shirring and lace. As a crowning touch, do sew on the long, becoming collar, either in self-fabric or in contrast, with lace edging. : Pattern 974 is cut -in women’s sizes 34, 36, 38, 40, 42, 44, 46 and 48. Size 36 requires 37s yards 39-inch fabric and 2 yards lace edging. Send FIFTEEN CENTS (15¢) in coins for this pattern. WRITE CLEARLY SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS AND STYLE NUMBER. : Send orders to Pattern Department, Indianapolis Times, 314 W.

1 {sonal holding companies could be

j{for an Ohio Congressmanship.

After two years of operation, 14-year-old Carolyn Minnich’s ply-wood business has grown so she now has two salesmen. :

- It all began when her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Zimmerman, gave her a wood burning set and her other grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Minnich, gave her a painting outfit. Carolyn began burning and painting wood plaques. One day among her father’s tools she found a coping saw. She traced figures from a nursery rhyme book on scraps of ply-wood obtained from a local cabinet maker. Then she cut them out with the saw, burned necessary lines, painted and varnished them. She added hooks and hung them on the wall. Little Bo Peep and Lucey Locket ‘became: hangers for hot pan holders or tooth brushes. : Her friends saw her work and

Girl Turns Hobby Into ‘Big Business

Carolyn Minnich . . . zips out a doll bed for her sister. Nita Jean.

bought it. Sales increased and at Christmas a year ago her father gave her an electric jig saw. She found she could make the novelties in much less time. She began making letter holders, what-nots, doll furniture, yard ornaments and backs for autograph albums." Her mother showed the "albums to. members of her West Edgewood Homemakers Club. The club asked Carolyn to make backs for the year books. Other clubs followed the Edgewood group. Carolyn designs the backs with the club name or mongram burned into the wood. At first her sales ran to about 60 cents a week. Now they sometimes reach $7. Carolyn buys material for her clothes with her income. She’s hoping to save enough to go to college. She is a freshman at Southport High School and is on the B honor roll. She’s taking a home economics course.

‘THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

As

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From her 4-H Club work she learned to sew and now makes her own clothing. She’s been a member of the West Edgewood 4-

H Club four years. Carolyn has received blue ribbons on all her clothing exhibits with one exception and that was a purple special merit ribbon for a slip in secondyear work. This year she made her own Christmas gifts. Her little sister, Phyllis Sue, received a set of doll" furniture. Her school teachers were given gifts appropriate to the subjects they teach. Carolyn operates her business from her home, 1457 Jasper St. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Garner Minnich. hire |The two salesmen are her younger sisters, Beth Beverly and Nita Jean. Carolyn pays them a commission on orders they get and pays them for bringing her wood and delivering her products.

6.0. P. FIELD DAY

‘Joe’ Martin Speaks Feb. 19; 7 Hoosier Congressmen To Attend Hearing.

Times Special WASHINGTON, Jan. 15.—Republicanism will be rampant in Indiana next month, with Minority Leader Joseph W. Martin Jr. and the seven Hoosier G. O.P. Congressmen scheduled to descend on the state. “Joe” Martin, the Massachusetts Man of the Year who is now being mentioned as a Republican dark horse Presidential nominee, will be the speaker at the annual Beefsteak Dinner at the Columbia Club on Feb. 10, he announced today. On Feb. 9-10 the Indiana Republican Congressmen are going to Indianapolis to conduct hearings regarding farm problems. This is one of the activities being conducted in the farm states under the auspjces of the Republican Special Agricultural Study Committee, of which Rep. Clifford R. Hope (R. Kas.) is chairman. TN

Gillie, Landis Members

Indiana members of the committee are Reps. George W. Gillie and Gerald W. Landis. Rep. Gillie was so busy with his committee work last week that he missed the roll-call vote on the Anti-Lynching Bill. Next day he explained that if he had been present on the floor he would have voted to pass the measure, as did ail other Indiana Congressmen, both Republican and Democrat. Chairman -Hope recently named Rep. Landis as subcommittee chairman to investigate the difficulties of the vegetable producers of the United States. The Republican State Committee

to the hearings and farmer constituents of the seven Republicans also have been invited by personal letters from them.

Trade Treaties on Program

reciprocal trade agreements, as well as the Administration’s farm program, will be explored, it was announced. Reps. Charles A. Halleck and Noble J. Johnson were among the Representatives from farm states who signed a Republican National Committee criticism against continuation of the trade treaty powers last week. : They also expect to attend the Indianapolis hearings as will Reps. Robert A. Grant, Forest A. Harness and Raymond S. Springer.

PROFIT TAX REVIVED? NO, SAYS TREASURY

Times Special ‘ WASHINGTON, Jan. 15.—Rep. John W. Boehne Jr. (D. Ind.) has been assured by the Treasury Department that no effort will be made by the Internal Revenue Bureau to “revive by indirection” the undistributed profits tax. Rep. Boehne had been informed that such an effort was being made through an order to collectors to review cases where an old law designed to force out earnings of per-

applied. . He immediately protested to the Treasury and received a satisfactory reply from John W. Hanes, who has just retired as under secretary. Rep. Boehne termed any attempt to enforce the idea contained in the repealed tax “an abominable situation.”

BROMFIELD ‘BUSY, TAKES ‘HAT’ BACK

HOLLYWQOD, Jan. 15 (U. P.).— Author Louis Bromfield is too busy writing for the movies, he said today, to throw his hat in the race

Mr. Bromfield decided against running for the office because of the “pressure of work.” He said he agreed a week ago to seek the office on a farm program, but was forced to telegraph Roe E. Wolfe, Ashland

County Democratic chairman, that he would be yunable te beco:

Lawyers Becoming More Like

{skilled artisans into this country

Doctors— They re Specializing

132 U. S. Boards for Attorneys to Appear Before; Indiana Bar Association Meets Here.

How the farmers feel about the||

TAKE IT FROM a couple of

practicing lawyers, the legal pro-

fession is getting more and more like the medical profession. The pair, Milo N. Feightner, president of the Indiana Bar Association, and Wade H. Free, Anderson, Ind., didn’t put it in just those words, but in an interview during the week-end bar association meeting, they cited higher standards and specialization.

SOCIALIZED MEDICINE DR, FISHBEIN'S TOPIC

Socialized medicine will be discussed by Dr. Morris Fishbein of Chicago, editor of the Journal of the American Medical Association, at the Catholic Charities Bureau

annual dinner at 6:30 p. m. fo-,

morrow in the Claypool Hotel. Approximately 200 members of Indianapolis social agencies are expected to attend. Activities of the bureau in .1939 will be discussed by the Rev. Fr. August. R. Fusseneger, diocesah director of charities, and The Most Rev. Joseph E. Ritter, bishop of the Diocese of Indianapolis, will give an address of welcome. . A total of 818 families received direct relief service from the bureau, according to Fr. Fusseneger, and 12,305 days care was provided babies at St. Elizabeth’s Home. A total of 330 orphaned or neglected children were cared for through the bureau. George H. Bischoff is chairman of the committee in charge of the dinner. Charles L. Barry Sr. is bureau president.

FIVE INDICTED, 1 IN DEATH OF HUSBAND The new Mon Cots Grand

Jury today returned indictments against five persons, including Mrs. Agnes M. Wyant, 4125 Oliver Ave., charged. with involuntary manslaughter in the death of her husband, James M. Wyant. It was ine first report of the new jury. Mrs. Wyant, according to the inictment, shot her husband Dec. 15, 939. He died Jan. 7. Mrs. Wyant told police she shot him after he beat her during a quarrel in their home, i indicted was William Clem,

harged with reckless homicide in he traffic death Oct. 20, 1939, of Virginia Mae Byers, . Emmett Gardner was jndicted on charges of second degree burglary and grand larceny. He is alleged to have broken into the Quality Shoppe, 5624 E. Washington St., Dec. 29, 1939, taking approximately $1400 worth of clothing. !

GOLD IN “THEM POCKETS”

MARYSVILLE, Cal, Jan. 15 (U. P.).—Jorn Oldag, old-time prospector learned to his sorrow that “there’s gold in them thar pockets.” He came to town with his pockets

well lined with gold and other nug-

gets ranging in value from $3.50 to $1.50. He sold one for enough to acquire sufficient “shuteye? to cause him to go to sleep by the railway tracks. When he awoke, he discovered that another “prospector” had ‘worked his pockets.

“Why, there are 132 Governmental administrative boards before which lawyers practice now. The work before those groups is nothing like law practice used to be, but those men are lawyers just as much as the general practice men,” Mr. Feightner said. 8 = =» “THIS SPECIAL PRACTICE of law, as practiced before commissions is not new, but it’s growh by leaps and bounds in the last 10 years. The Interstate Commerce Commission was the first of these special groups, Mr. Free said. “Just like ear, nose and throat doctors, these lawyers are experts in a small phase of law,” he added. - : Both said that one of the most important problems facing bar associations is building up standards. They said that: part of the necessity for this arises from the profession’s growth. Indianapolis, with 750 lawyers to 365,000 popution, is just about at the “saturation point,” Mr. Feightner said. To combat overgrowth of bar membership and because of the growing complexity of law practice, requirements have been stepped up. ” ” ” “THERE'S NO MOVE to restrict membership,” Mr. Feightner hastened to add. “The requirements must be raised only because the public demands and should . get good service from lawyers and because the business is becoming more complicated.” And what is the best way for a young law school graduate to break into this “saturated” profession? That's an old question,

but Mr. Free says the answer is

still the same: “Get in with an existing firm and - get practical - experience. Then hang out your shingle.”

CHESS CLUB PLANS

CITY-WIDE TOURNEY §

Ar angements for a city-wide chess tournament were under way today as the next big event on the

schedule, of the Central Indiana|g

Chess Association. : At an exhibition match Saturda night two international experts, I. A. Horowitz and Harold Morton, played 36 opponents simultaneously, and beat all except J. A. Harper, Anderson, who got a draw. The experts played tandem, making alternate moves. The next 16-team match in. the series being played by the club is scheduled for Jan. 23. The club is ar-

ranging a return match ,with the|’

Cincinnati Club in the spring, President Daniel B. Luten announced.

FEARS POLAND MAY BE SCENE OF MASSACRE

“If the 600,000 Jews still in Germany are pushed into Poland, we are likely to witness a situation as bad as the Armenian massacres

after the World War,” Dr. Conrad Hofmann Jr. of New York told the inter - denominational - missionary convention here today. Dr. Hoffmann, who recently went to Germany on a refugee-relief mission, said there are already 1,500,000 Jews in Poland and that they are denied food, jobs or relief. The speaker urged ‘that all countries, including the United States do “as much as they can” in providing homes for the refugees who escape. He especially urged admission of doctors, scholars and

and he proposed setting up temporary camps for those who could not be permanently admitted.

Women Hold Sessions

In an interview, he said the strength of Germany should not be under-rated and said the British propaganda against the Nazis has been futile because the German people are convinced the British are trying to get rid of Herr Hitler because the Feuhrer made Germany strong. Women took over the convention today. The Home Missions Council's' meetings have been concluded and the meetings today were a continuation of the sessions of the Council of Women for Home Missions.

Here’s looking across the counter at Mrs. Roy Fleming, Hot Springs, Ark., chosen Mrs. Tyicai Customer for 1940 by the National Retail Dry Goods Association. She's buying things for a New York trip that comes with the title.

Dr. Mark A. Dawber, Home Missions Council executive secretary, spoke to the women this morning on the sharecropper - problem, urging them to help support a missionary couple to co-ordinate the work of the various denominations in the Federal Government's LaForge, Mo., resettlement experiment. He also asked the women to back a program of trying to get landowners to allot 10 or 15-dcre tracts to sharecroppers as permanent homes. >

Bishop McConnell Speaks

The Women’s Council also heard a summary of the past year's work at this morning’s session. The joint meeting of the Home Missions Council and the Council of Women for Home Missions was climaxed last night by an address of Methodist Bishop Francis J. McConnell of New York, a former DePauw University president. Bishop McConnell urged that the Americans treat their minority and racial groups so as “not to reflect upon the United States in the eyes of other nations.” He spoke at a mass meeting in the First Baptist Church. : b The two councils decided to hold their 1941 convention simultaneously with four other inter-denomina-tional religious bodies—the Federal Council of Churches of Christ in America, the International Council of Religious Education, the Foreign Missionary Council and the National Council of Churchwomen. The location of this meeting has not yet been decided.

HARVESTER TO HAVE

charged during period, 357 found employment, Mr. Correll said. use dtraining given them in CCC camps to find jobs for themselves. Through direct efforts of CCC camp executive officers, 115 were employed.

JOB CAMPAIGN

AIDS CCC BOYS

Nearly Third Discharged in

6 Weeks Have Found Private Work.

~ A campaign to make “CCC boys

employable” resulted in jobs for nearly one-third of the youths discharged from State camps during Sept. 15 to Oct. 31, according to Robert Correll, Indiana district educational adviser,

Of the 1119 youths who were disthat six-weeks’

Of this number, 242

Some to Steel Mills Some of the discharged youths

found employment in steel mills in

the Calumet area, where production has been stepped up, Mr. Correll said. Most of these jobs went to boys from camps in the northern part of the state:

No tabulation has been made of

LETS DEAL NEEDED TO OPERATE CITIES |

ow

ae

Sloan Educator Lays Mus

nicipal Ills to Retention of Obsolete Methods. Times Special

DENVER, Colo, Jan. 15.—The chief defect of U. S. local governs

ments is not corruption, but the

prevalence of obsolete methods and customs, . in the opinion of Dr, A. D. H. Raplan of the University

of Denver, head of the Alfred P, Sloan fellowship project to educate young men and women as construc tive critics of government. The pioneer Sloan class of 10 young men will be graduated March 1 after an 18-month course in the theory and practice of government.

Find Complex Systems

For several months the students, in pairs, have been living with, analyzing and auditing various city and county governments in

the West. They are now preparing

theses, .

“They have found some intereste

ing things,” said Dr. Kaplan. “They

have found, rather than any large .

amount of corrupt or politics-ridden methods, a weary acceptance of a weary routine by local officials who are just overwhelmed by the come plexity of their jobs and the ine adequacy of their tools. :

Jobs Await Graduates

“Our studies indicate a new start is néeded. Students have been un-

able in all cases to get at the facts *

of local government: because the accounting and reporting methods have become not only old and ine adequate, but positively misleading.” Members of the pioneer Sloan class will be graduated with the de=

gree of master of science in gove

ernment. Already many inquiries have been received from taxpayers’ associations and other prospective employers. :

RURAL CHURCH TOPIC FOR Y. W. C. A. FORUM

The future of the rural church was discussed during an open forum sponsored by the Indiana Rural Life Conference at the Y, W. C. A. today. Dr. Edward R. Bartlett of Dee Pauw University, Members of the discussion panel included Mrs. Calvin Perdue, Acton; the Rev. B. K. Johnson, Milan; Larry Brandon, Auburn; Dr. T. A. Tripp, rural church secretary of the Congregational-Christian Church; Dr. Rapking, town and country secretary of the Methodist Church, and Dr. H. S. Rahdolph, rural secretary of the Board of National Missions of the Presbyterian Church. : Dr. Mark Dawber, Home Missions

Council executive secretary, spoke-

on the Rural Sunday School.

the other jobs filled by the youths, but a number returned to positions with former employers, Mr. Correll

~ RETIREMENT PLAN

An old age. retirement plan, coupled with savings for unemployment, will be adopted soon by the Internationall Harvester. Co., Sydney G. McAllister, president, announced today. In a letter mailed to reach all employees within a day or two, Mr. McAllister said the plan would commence with and apply to the company’s 1940 fiscal year, which began last Nov. 1, Details of the plan will be completed and made public before March 31, Mr. McAllister said. The plan, he said, made possible by profit-sharing and savings features, will cover nearly 60,000 employees in all divisions of the business, both in the United States and Canada, including the Indianapolis plant.

The local players defeated Cincin- i

nati, 12% to 10%, in a December |}

match.

Spring's Coming! Women's Shoes Convention Topic

The first harbingers of spring to arrive in Indianapolis this year were delegates to the Indiana Shoe Travelers Association, meeting in the Claypool Hotel today. They made the following predictions for women: First choice this spring will be

black patent leather; second, blue calfskin or alligator; third, salmon beige; fourth, dark brown, and fifth, some sort of a dark horse. : The trend

toes will again be the order of Wedges this year will be 2% an

2 inches ‘high in dress shoes, but|}

some buyers are estimating that 55 per cent of the volume will be done in new play shoes for summer with about an 1% wedge.

More than 100 lines are being shown on three floors of the hotel

and there will be a banquet and style show tonight. The entire day tomorrow will be devoted to shoe

said.

At each of the 29 CCC camps in

the State, an education cofmittee composed of the company commander, project superintendent and educational adviser has been conducting an intensive drive to train enrollees and to place them in private jobs after their discharge,

Urged to Write Letters Enrollees have been urged to write

letters’ and visit prospective employers. also have written and visited preospective employers and have furnished them with complete records of enrollees’ qualifications.

Members of the committee

In the Fifth Corps Area, Which

includes Indiana, Kentucky, West Virginia and Ohio, 1043 discharged CCC boys found jobs during the six-week period, ‘Mr. Correll said. In the nation, 8464 found jobs.

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