Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 February 1940 — Page 7

MONDAY, FEB. 26, 1940 FOOD

YOU BEGIN WITH PLAIN baked beans, Use them from cans

or else buy pea or small white beans, and bake them in a crock the way our grandmothers did. Be sure you use plenty of molasses, lots of salt pork and some mustard when you set out on a home baking

A luncheon, or even a dinner, of baked beans in small pots, '

‘broiled ham garnished with broiled fruits, a large bowl of green salad and a fluffy dessert is a worthy suggestion. Down Long Island > in East Hampton, the local ladies put their heads. together recently and turned out a cook book. - It was published by the town’s ‘Ladies’

Improvement Society. Here's how the East Hampton experts like -

TH

Baked Bean Casserole by Betty Lynch 6 tablespoons minced green 3 peeled and - peppers toes : 2 cups sliced peeled onions 3; teaspoon salt - 4 tablespoons butter 2 tablespoons brown sugar -. 2% cups baked beans : Saute peppers and onion in butter until tender. Arrange with ‘beans and tomatoes in alternate layers in greased casserole. Sprinkle each layer with a little of the brown sugar and with salt. Bake in moderate oven (350 degrees F.) until browned, about 45 minutes.

‘Texas Bean Pie : A Texas bean pie, via Mrs. David Edwards of East Hampton, ‘Long Island, used dried kidney beans. It’s a masterful dish. ° ‘3 pound dried kidney 1 tablespoon each of chili ° beans : = powder and Worcester1 pound lean beef, fat shire sauce, water 1 onion 1 large can tomatoes 1 clove garlic 1; cup yellow cornmeal 1 teaspoon salt 1 medium can ripe olives . 1 cup grated American cheese ~~ Soak beans in water overnight. Heat fat in saucepan, saute beef ‘cut in ;-inch cubes. Turn frequently, then add beans, onion (sliced), ‘garlic, salt, chili powder, Worcestershire and water enough to cover. Simmer until the meat and beans are tender. Add tomatoes and “yellow cornmeal moistened with a little water. Cook until thick and moist. Then add sliced ripe olives.

sliced toma-

By OLIVE BARTON

CHILDREN

DEAR MRS. TRUE: °

There are several reasons for lying, but most lies are founded on :

fear of some kind. I don’t mean fear of horrible things, but simply fear of being thought dumb, or even poor. Children are so sensitive about their pride they learn to lie to cover up. Take yourself, for instance, You will say to Mrs. Brown, “I cannot go to the tea because I am not well,” when all the time you know that it is because you haven’t much to wear. Children are like that. We must never lose sight of the fact that child conduct is exactly like our own. : Your son lies about so many things, you say. Well, then, ex“amine his pride. He may be trying to camouflage the facts of the family struggle to get along. Or he may also be fibbing to make ‘people think he is braver than he'is, or less stupid, as he thinks, or fess sensitive. I have discovered that many children lie to add to their own sense of importance. Johnny says he has made an airplane that will sail by itself. Jimmy says he has licked the street bully. Sally says she has been to the fair, when she has never been near it. Children make mistakes and lack the moral courage to stand up and tell. Children get into hot water and lack the starch to give out the facts. So db we. i. 8 nN 8 8 8

. THE BEST WAY TO GET under all this prevarication; is to find out the cause. You know your boy. Is he reacting naturally to his temperament? He must be. He is too sensitive, too inferiority-rid- ~ den, too slow; perhaps,.too jealous of someone he knows. Bs

Or is he afraid that you won’t understand and will punish too

harshly for the slightest infraction? : The big question is, is it better to let a child go without punishment or have him learn to tell the truth?" Weighed in the balance,

I believe, myself, that truth at any cost is best. It gives you some-"

thing to work on. The cure is then possible. Otherwise you will for‘ever be in the dark. Do anything to break the habit of lying. ; Yours sincerely, : : OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON.

JANE JORDAN

DEAR JANE JORDAN—I am a girl of 20. I love a young man of 26. We have known each other for years but really discovered each other last summer. My visits to my home town where he lives

are short and seldom, but we spent two lovely afternoons together, -

“one at his home where I met his mother who likes me.

When I returned last fall I could tell he was glad to see me again. . He invited me to his home for dinner and his mother had missed me, too. All this in spite of the fact that my uncle tried to turn him against me. He said he liked to form his own opinions of people and ‘described my relatives as jealous. My, folks do not approve of him, either, and talk against him to me because he is of another faith, and they call him a foreigner. They try to make me think he doesn’t care for me because he doesn’t write and come to see me when we are several hundred miles apart. I know he is busy working. I have a great-aunt who says I sam old enough to know my own mind and she thinks we were made for each other. She lives near him and has known him since childhood ” [54

She has invited me to come.and stay a few months with her starting in May. I want to-go and there is nothing to stop me. What shall I do? What do you think of it all? UNDECIDED.

i; Answer—I doubt if the young man is as much in love with you #8s you are with him. A man in love always can find time to write i the girl and the greater the obstacles in the way of seeing her, e more determined he is to bat them down. He may like you well enough when you are on the scene, but his interest cools down when you're away. ~ ; , I suppose the only thing for you to do is to visit your aunt. Otherwise you never will know whether your friendship might have developed into love or not. A stay with your aunt will determine the facts one way or another and give you a chance to find out whether Jou like him as well as you think or not. . 7 As it is, your family is fanning the flame of your desire by talking against the young man. At your age a girl is struggling to escape ‘the domination of her family anyway and she is inclined to go conrary to their views on most occasions. Watch out for this tendency. Be: sure you like the young man for himself alone and not because he gives you an opportunity to defy the judgment of your family. JANE JORDAN.

Put your problems in a letter to Jane Jordan who will answer : vour questions in this column daily. :

By MRS. GAYNOR MADDOX

way,

Poul into baking -dish and sprinkle top with grated cheese. Brown in oven until cheese melts,

Clan

PATTERN 998

¥. MATRON STYLE IS I” DEEPLY YOKED

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Mrs. Siva Vv. Reineking Virginia Shirley Becomes Bride

Times Special GREENCASTLE, Feb. 26—Miss Virginia Jeanne Shirley, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Shirley, and Richard V. Reineking, Bloomington, were married here Saturday at the First Christian Church. Mr. Reineking is the son of Mrs. Victor H. Reineking of Madison, Wis. “The Rev. Cecil Fellers officiated at

|the service. Dean Van Denman 1Thompson of the DePauw Univer- ‘| sity School of Music, played organ

selections. Mrs. Herman Berg was matron of honor and Miss Nanett Hollowell and Miss Juanna ‘Donohue were Miss Shirley’s bridesmaids. George T. Burrill of Madison, Wis., was best man, and Prof. Paul H. Wagner of Indiana University and George Simmons Jr. of Madison, Wis., were ushers. Miss Shirley was graduated from DePauw University and is a member of Delta Theta Tau Sorority. Mr. Reineking is an alumnus of the University of Wisconsin and is a member of Delta Sigma Pi, social fraternity.

Riding School Awards Made

Miss Ann Aufderheide won first prize in the horsemanship for adults class yesterday in the intra-mural horsemanship events held at the DeVietien Riding School at the State Fair Grounds. Miss Lucy Kantz was second; Kenneth Herron, third, and Miss Vivian Young, fourth. : * "Winners in the marshmallow eating - race for children were Ann Kish, first; Howard Stout, second; Helen Jacobsen, third; Jane Osburn, fourth. In the equipment removing relay for children, the winninng team was composed of Ann Kish, Benny Barth, David Welsh. : In the class horsemanship for aclults, Miss Martha Currie won first; Charles Smith, second; Miss Martha Chapman, ‘third; Jacob Barth, fourth; Miss Lilly Burres, fifth; Miss. Mae Rodenburg, sixth. Awards in pair horsemanship for adults went to Jacob Barth and Miss Esther Kantz, winning team; Miss Martha Chapman and Miss Lilly Burres, second. Other results were: Ring throwing game, Walter Berg, first place; Miss Mary Ellen Sherman, second; Miss Marietta Burgett, third; Miss Vivian Young, fourth. Balloon breaking, Miss Teena Postma, first; George Meno, second; Miss i Mary Ellen Sherman, third; George Barton, fourth. : Horsemanship for children, Benny | Barth, first; Nancy Fettig, second; Sheila Welsh, third; Ann Kish, fourth; Natalie Moore, fifth; Judy Slattery, sixth. Open jumping, Miss Lucy Kantz, first; Charles Hendricksen, second; Kenneth Herron, third; Esther Kantz, fourth. | . Glen C. Caldwell judged horse-

{manship events and Max Bonham, | jumping. The second event was an | exhibition of formation riding by ( the Butler Equiteers. ‘Pupils who

competed are members of classes from the Y. W. and Y. M. C. A. and commercial organizations. Girl and Boy Scouts working for horsemanship merit badges took part in the children’s events. ;

County P.-T. A.

{Poll March 25

Officers of the Marion County Council of Parent-Teacher Association will be elected at tiie next council meeting March 25 in the Severin Hotel. Mrs. Earl Barnhart, Wayne Towiiship, has been nomintaed for president. Other nominees chosen hy a nominating committee include Mrs. Harry Wiest, Decatur Township, first vice president; Mrs. Fred Myers, Washington Township, second vice president; Mrs. P. E. Cannady, Warren Township, recording secretary; Mrs. Harold L. Emmett, Perry Township, corresponding secretary, and Mrs. Claude Risley, Wayne Township, treasurer. Three members of an executive committee to be elected at the meeting also have been nominated. They include Mrs. A. H. Hartman, retiring president, Warren Township; Mrs. Fern Grady, Franklin Township, and Mrs. Hugh Gray, Lawrence Township. Nominations may be made from the floor. Members of the nominating committee include Mesdames John B. Lewis, Cannady, Grady, R. C. Soots and Harvey E. Coons, chairman.

bAdsocintion of Women Will Meet Tonight

The National Association of Women will hear a talk on “Voice Communications”- by E. C. Belzer tonight at a dinner meeting at the Hotel Washington. The chorus of the Seventh District Federation of Clubs will sing. ° . Mrs. J. Francis: Huffman, who attended a recent convention of the Midwest Business and Professional

_—._- THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES ——

They Put the Order Into

SALON EXHIBITS

Attend Dinner and Preview At Block’s.

About 300 Indiana artists and art patrons gathered Saturday at the Wm. H. Block Co. auditorium for what Frederick Polley, master of

cerernonies, called “the most inspiring” of the four Indianapolis Hoosier Salons. . The Salon dinner and preview was sponsored by the Woman’s De-

exhibit opened today and will be operi. to the public through March 8. Of the 150 pieces exhibited at the Hoosier Art Salon at Chicago, 187 by 129 artists are being shown. here. Many of the others were sold or are out on approval. The dinner guests were told by Mrs. Edward C. Twells, Chicago, Hoosier Salon representative there, that 26 paintings already had been sold for almost $4000.

Wide Range Shown

Paintings on display range from the almost cartoon-like quality of “Riveria at Rappallo” by: Clifford Jones, to the popular portrait of E. H. Kemper McComb, Manual Training High School principal, by Marie Goth, which won a prize at the Chicago- exhibit. Tt Also displayed were Walt Louderback’s “Morning Concert, Aix les Thermes,” another Chicago prize winner, and Edmund Brucker’s “Chinese Art Student,” first prize winner at Chicago. Attracting unusual attention were a series of three studies in shadow, shading and proportion by Mahrea Cramer Lehman called “Gold,” “Silver,” and “The Shadow,” and a stilllife reminiscent of Cezanne called “Sung and Sumurai,” by Francis J. Hanley, - inf Landscape Studies

Joe Spurgeon showed three Brown County landscape studies and Grace Leslie Motz aroused favorable discussion with her figure of “My Boy.” ‘The speaker of the evening was S. B. Walker, Block company controller. Speaking from announced lay point of view, he said he felt there was always room ‘for lay criticism and he made a plea fo a more complete titling of pictures. He also announced the continuation of the Amelia Block Memorial Prize for the most popular oil and most popular water color selected by popular vote. The vote is taken through the showing here. The prize is $150 for the oil and $50 for the water color.

Pose for Motion Pictures

Throughout the affair most of the artists and guests posed for motion pictures taken by Randolph Coats, Indianapolis artist. They will con=constitute a sequence in Mr. Coats’ riew movie, “One Hundred Years of Art and Artists in Indiana.” Those at the speakers’ table included Mrs. Paul T. Rochford, Woman’s Department Club art department chairman; Mr. and Mrs. Walker; Mrs. Othniel Hitch, | Woman's Department Club; Mrs. Twells; Mrs. ¢. J. Finch, Art Department vice chairman, who presided; Mrs. Arthur Wright, Chicago, lay member of the Chicago Hoosier Art Salon Jury; Mrs. Leonidas Smith, Indiana counsellor for the Hoosier Salon; Mrs. W. D. Keenan, Indiana Federation of Clubs second vice president, and Mrs. Frank Symmes, Seventh District Federation of Clubs first vice president. Other artists shown who were introduced at the dinner were Simon T, Baux, Betty Foster, Genevieve Goth Graf, Carl C. Graf, Clara M. Hamilton, Georges LaChance, Elizabeth Getz McCullom, Mrs. Paul T. Payne, Alma L. Steinmetz, Charles G. Yeager and Eva May Yoder.

FR. COUGHLIN FEARS TREND TO DICTATOR

DETROIT, Feb. 26 (U. P.).—The Rev. Charles E, Coughlin expressed fear in his Sunday sermon of a trend in this nation toward dictatorship and toward United States’ involvement in the European war. He told Americans [to “arouse

yourselves to action” to bring reacceptance of George Washington's principles advocating national unity, freedom from foreign alliances, and respect for the Constitution. He said he feared that lack of widespread observance of Washington's birth anniversary Thursday ‘points to the passing of the principles associated with that name.”

Brazil to Be Topic Of Travel Chapter

Four talks on Brazil will be features of a meeting of the Multnomah Chapter of the International Travel Study Club tomorrow at the home of Mrs. Arnold Settle, 5679 N. Delaware St. Speakers will be Mesdames Cornelius Helwig, Hugo Wuelfing, B. BE. Clatworthy and Wendell Smith. New members who will be initiated include the Mesdames Marvin Cochrane, Wuelfing, | Clatworthy, Jake Delker and Peter Miller.

There are a lot of wives in the Fleming Gardens community who are glad that the Rev. Eldred Gore

Christian Church is going to preach on “The Happy Marriage” next Sunday. But “nagging wives” were no more uncomfortable last night than “henpecked husbands” when the Rev. Mr, Aubrey, who said he was himself the victim of “22 years of henpecked life,” spoke on “Henpecked Husbands and Foolish Wives.” The pastor found good Biblical precedent for his: martyrs’ condition; Adam, Samson and Ahab of the Old ‘Testament were all “henpecked,” the preacher declared. As he expressed his “appreciation for the dauntless courage” of 31

Women’s Clubs, will report on the conference Mrs. Forrest Hackley

ir

| 300 Chaftsmen and Patrons

partinent Club of Indianapolis. The|

Times Special = , BLOOMINGTON, Feb. 26.—Thirty Hoosier cities to date have submitted thelr ordinances to the Indiana University department of government for codification, Prof. Ford P. Hall, department head, said:today. In codifying a city’s laws, the Government Department project, made possible by WPA assistance, goes through the city’s bunglesome mass of accumulated * ordinances and “boils it down” into a concise,

workable code. Indiana is one of five states conducting such a project, according to Prof. Hall. The service has been in operation a year and already complete codifications have been returned to 13 cities, he said. The average codification represents about one-fourth of the pile or ordinances sent by a city to the department.

40,000 Laws Examined

“The other three-fourths, composed mostly of obsolete temporary. and multiple ordinances, is weeded out,” the department director explained. The department has examined more than 40,00 separate ordinances to date. : i 2 When a codification is completed, it is sent to the city officials with a recommendation that all ordinances on the books be repealed, thus clearing out “the old brush and dead timber,” and then that the ordinances retained in the code be reenacted. “A. great deal of work naturally is involved in this projects,” Prof. Hall said, “but it is in keeping with President Well’s new policy of carrying the services of the university out to the state. “Even after we have completed the codification program we shall be able to be of service. We are filing copies of every ordinance sent to us, and in the future when some city wishes to create an ordinance on some technical matter, the officials may consult us as to the best ordinances on the subject written by another city in the past.”

Cites General Service

The far-reaching applications of the codifying work may be perceived, according to . Prof. Hall, when it is noted that the 30 cities whose ordinances are being “streamlined” represent an urban popu-

Indianapolis. The codifications, in. which ordinances are arranged in chapters and sections according to subject matter, will be of special service to lawyers and private citizens as well .as officials, he pointed out. . “When a citizen seeks an ordi-

PLEADS FOR ‘LESS BUNK, MORE ACTION’

«The shadow of the dictator already has fallen across America,” Walter F. Bossert, Liberty, Ind. manufacturer and attorney, said in a political address here yesterday. Mr. Bossers, who was a candidate two years ago for the Republican nomination for U. S. Senator, dso spoke in Terre Haute last night. “Americans have been on the verge of sacrificing political freedom for economic security, or rather what they thought to be economic security,” he said, “and have now found to be nothing but a snare and delusion. “1 honestly beiieve that what this country needs is less professional humanitarians, and more humanity; less political security plans and

'Henpecked' Hubbies Hear Pastor Laud Nagging Wives

Aubrey of the Fleming Gardens

men who sat down under a printed |

space reserved for foolish wives. Nagging wives even got a word of commendation, “No man amounts to anything unless he has a good nagger for a wife,” the Rev. Mr. Aubrey said. “Many a man, if he only will admit it, will say he wouldn’t have amounted to much if his wife hadn’t kept after him.” : The. “foolish wives,” it turned out, were the childless ones. “There are mighty few good mothers left anymore,” he said. “All the younger: generation seems to

ination:

lation of half the state, discounting| c

NOBLESVILLE, Ind., Feb. 26.—|

more security, or, in -a few words,| less bunk and more action.” k

want is a pay check, a two or three-| room furnished apartment and a

Prof. Ford P. Hall (left), Prof. Emeritus Frank Bates (center) and Robert J. Parrish of the Indiana University Government Department .. « » cut the pile by three-fourths. = : og ;

La 8

I. U. Process Streamlines ~~ Musty Laws for 30 Cities

nance affecting his business or welfare in the usual chronological pile of ordinances, he faces an all-day job and then may have to give up, discouraged,” he said. “Using ordinances arranged in the codification system, he can find the desired material in five minutes or less.” Cities to which completed codifications, with recommendation for their re-enactment, have been returned are Sullivan, Mishawaka, Boonville, Clinton, Terre Haute, Linton, Lebanon, Angola, Peru, Bluffton, Washington, Brazil and Bedford.

Old Laws Amusing

The job is not all seriousness for Department workers culling through the masses of ordinances, each of which they must read carefully, word for word. Occasionally they are afforded a chuckle and even a good round laugh by humorous laws still in effect on some city statute books... For example: Musicians. | will appreciate .one

| city’s. ordinance fixing the salary of

the “swing man” at the sewage dumping plant. . In another town it is unlawful to play a mouth organ on the streets. Another makes it unlawful for hogs to sleep under the Court House steps. . : The legality. of this one might. be challenged on the basis of discrim“An Ordinance in- Relation Hogs and: What Hogs are ‘to Run at Large.” An ordinance authorizing the issuance of bonds “for the purpose of -fudging a part of the indebtedness of said city.” Typographical error?

Cemetery Protected An ordinance appropriating $42,431 for the use of the Department of Public Safety to cover the expenses incurred by the Police Department in connection with the extradition of John Dillinger from Tucson, Ariz. Not so funny, perhaps. An ordinance warning the town “toughies” a . sentence and fine awaits “any person who shall bruise any monument or other structure in any cemetery.” ; Ordinances requiring that front doors of saloons be kept closed on Sundays, preventing the spinning of

all kinds of marathons, including gum chewing, talking and rocking-

ir. Pod And this resolution: “A Resolution—on Motion of. Mr. Weir — Resolved: That the Doorkeeper be instructed to have the coal belonging to the City brought into the Council Chamber, so that

tops on sidewalks, and forbiddingj

it may not disappear so fast. Adopted.”

piest days of wedded life days when there are children

signed- saying, “Reserved for Hen«|

Ordinances

‘FLAME-PROOF LIQUID SHOWN

New Solution to Be Featured At Fire School Here This Week.

A new “flame proofing” chemical, the latest discovery in fire prevention, is to be demonstrated to Indiana school fire inspectors here Wednesday and Thursday. The demonstration is to. feature the two-day annual inspectors’ school at the Indiana State Fair Grounds held under sponsorship of the State Fire Marshal's office and Purdue University. The new chemical is to be demonstrated by Prof. A. R. Douglas of the Fire Service Training School at Oklahoma A. & M. College where the process was discovered. The process consists of spraying a cheap chemical powder mixed with water over inflammable materials such as cotton and straw rendering them fire proof to *flash fires.” - Approximately 300 inspectors from all departments of the state as well as chiefs of small fire departments and ‘inspectors of rural electrification organizations, will attend.

STATE ASKS BIDS ON ROADS AND, BRIDGES

Bids will be received tomorrow by the State Highway Commission for the construction of 15 new bridges

and paving of two highways at a

cost of $800,000. Bids were submitted on the projects at previous lettings but they were all higher than the engineer’s estimates and were rejected, the Commission stated.

PAGE 7

I. . CLIPPERS AVOID BERMUDA ON TRIPS EAST

| Friction With Britain Over

- Seizure of: American - Mail Is Eased. WASHINGTON, Feb. 26 (U. P)—

.| Abandonment of the Bermuda stop on Pan-American Airways’ transe

Atlantic route removed today a source of friction between the United States and Great Britin.. The controversy over British seizure of ‘U. S. mail reached a high point last week when it was reported

"|=—but denied at Washington, Ber=

muda and London—that mail -had been taken off a Clipper at Bermuda by. force of arms. * Last night Pan-American Airways announced that after March 15 it would omit the Bermuda stop in flights from the United States to Europe. The announcement made no mention of the Bermuda mail in-

. | spection and said elimination of the

stop had been made possible by the decision of the United States Gove ernment to station two vessels in

' | mid-Atlantic for weather reporting,

Pan American Airways announced in New York that its Trans-Atlantic planes would omit the Bermuda stop only on eastbound flights, and would, still contihue to use the Brie tish colony as a base on flights from Europe. 3 Company officials made the ane nouncement to clarify the change in -schedule, - On the westbound flight, they said, the planes have to fight headwinds and thus require an intermediate base. State Department officials ‘said they had had no previous knowledge of Pan-Americans’ decision, cone tending that it had been made by the company without prompting. However, officials here had known for weeks that the company was considering eliminating Bermuda.

British Doubt Censorship

Of Mail Caused Change

LONDON, Feb. 26 (U. P.).—News= papers referring to Pan-American Airways’ decision to avoid Bermuda in its trans-Atlantic flights, said today that censorship wa sa “source of the irritation” although official circles doubted that censorship had inspired the change. Officials declined comment. It was understood that an intimation of the change had. been received from the United States Government,

MELLON AWARD GOES PITTSBURGH, Feb. 26 .(U. P.) .— The first A. W. Mellon Award for distinguished reportorial work in Pittsburgh was held today by two reporters of the Pittsburgh Press— Richard Lamb and Gilbert Love. Announcement of the award was made Saturday night at the second annual dinner - of the Pittsburgh section of the American Press Soe ciety. , Mr. Lamb and Mr. Love each ree ceived $100 as ‘a prize for their see ries of stories syrveying the high cost of building in Pittsburgh. These articles preceded a Federal Grand Jury investigation of building costs, resulting in indictment of more than 100 defendants.

* J ee * no ENERGY?

Eyestrain may be ‘the

cause. Save your

eyes examined and glasses fitted — today !

WHC Fenbuck

Registered Optometrist—Otfice at

h 4

,