Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 July 1940 — Page 15

WEDNESDAY, JULY 17, 1946

JANE JORDAN

DEAR JANE JORDAN—I am 34 years old and have been mareried 13 years. My husband is 52 and we have no living children. Now here is my problem: My husband is a good provider, but he drinks, and when he does, he mistreats me. I love my home, but I am Wretchedly unhappy. My husband says he loves me, but he has truck me many times. Do you think a man would strike a woman

if he had any love for her at all? He is always sincerely sorry after= ward. M. M.

” » 8 ”

Answer—The fact that your husband strikes you when he is drunk is not proof that he does not love you. It is simply proof that When he is drinking he undergoes certain personality changes which endanger your marriage. It Is ruite presible to feel both attraction and repulsion toward the same Person. As a matter of fact most of us have two attitudes toward our intimates Namely, love and hate. Take yourself for example. 1s it nor true that when your husband is sober you love him and that when he is drinking you hate him? Perhaps you believe that these changes in your attitude are brought about solely by your husband's behavior. When he is himself you are attracted to him and when he is not himself you are repelled by him. Of course there is a great deal of truth in this, The thing you may not have faced is that at least part of your husband's vacillations between love and hate may be brought about by subtler changes in your own attitude toward him. He may respond to you when you are affectionate and approving and drink When you are upset and disapproving. In general it has been found that a person who drinks usually is one who has an over-weaning need for affection. Such a person craves more love and encouragement than any one individual is destined to receive in this, our life. Each healthy adult has to learn how to forego some of the lavish love which he received from his parents 8S a child. I wonder if your husband's mother was over-indulgent in her attitude toward her son, thus bringing him up to expect too much from other people? Could it be that his father was somewhat harsh, and that the contrast between parental attitudes caused him to feel insecure in any love situation? I mention these things because they are common factors in a drinker's psychology. If you could maintain a calm and consistent attitude toward your husband, showering him with praise and approval when sober, and withdrawing your approval when he drinks, it might cut down the number of sprees, although it is too simple a device to affect a cure. To interest him in the cause of his drinking and arouse in him a desire for cure is a better method. A psychiatrist could help him. JANE JORDAN.

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

FOOD

PEACHES and cream-—that's about the last word in fruit perfaction. But for a change now and then, try peaches in some other way. For breakfast, try them and serve with crisp bacon and rolls. Use firm but ripe peaches. Cut in half and remove pits. Sprinkle lightly with salt and then roll in brown sugar. Fry them gently in hot bacon drippings. That's a new brand of breakfast surprise. For luncheon, serve them baked. Use large peaches. Peel, cut in half, remove pits. Into each cavity, place a little butter, about 1 deaspoon sugar, 4 teaspoon lemon juice and a shake of cinnamon. Bake in moderate oven (350 degrees F.) for about 15 or 20 minutes. Serve hot with cold cream. Peach ice cream is rated as one of the best of all frozen desserts. Here are two recipes, one for the automatic refrigerator, one for the old-fashioned and ever popular hand freezer,

By MRS. GAYNOR MADDOX

Peach Ice Cream for Refrigerator Tray 1% cups fresh peach pulp 1 tablespoon lemon juice v 3 cup (or more to taste) 1 cup heavy cream, } granulated sugar whipped 1% teaspoon salt 134 cup evaporated milk Sprinkle sugar over peach pulp and stand 10 minutes. Then add galt and lemon juice. Stir and stand five minutes, Combine gently the whipped cream and undiluted evaporated milk. Add to peach pulp mixtnure. Freeze in refrigerator tray until mushy. Remove from tray and scrape bottom and sides until smooth. Return to tray freeze for three hours more. Peach Ice Cream for Hand Freezer 3 cups fresh peach pulp 1; teaspoon almond extract 1; teaspoon salt 1 quart heavy cream 13% cups granulated sugar 113 tablespoons lemon juice Add salt to peach pulp. Sprinkle pulp with sugar, lemon juice and almond extract, Stand for about 10 minutes, stirring several times. Chill, then add cream (do not whip the cream). Freeze in hand freezer, using three parts ice to one part salt. Remove dasher, then pack for two hours in four parts ice and one part salt, This will ripen the ice cream and give it a smoother texture.

BEAUTY

YOUR feet—the way vou hold them when you are sitting, the way they look when you walk and what you wear on them-—tell the world more about your age and what sort of person you are than your coiffure or the most carefully applied makeup. Shoes can be comfortable without being so sensible-100king that they detract from the charm of dress or suit above th Wear low-heeled shoes by all means if you like, but see that “they are smart, trim low-heeled shoes—not squat, dumpy ones. TO wear with your best silk dresses, for occasions where no walking is required, have at least one pair with slightly higher heels and a not-so-sensible last, Watch the stocking situation. It's a good idea tO wear not-so-sheer ones for sports and during working hours, of course, but every woman needs sheer, filmy ones for dancing and dress-up occasions. hey make ankles and legs seem younger as well as slimmer. You put yourself in the I'm-too-old-to-care class the moment you think the time it takes to keep legs free from superfluous hair is time wasted. You just aren't at your perfectly groomed best unless your legs are smooth and free from hair. = o 5 »

well

"na QQ

By ALICIA HART

ew NO chic woman ever tolerates crooked or run-over heels. She

has new lifts put on her shoes the moment they begin to show signs of wear on the edges.

‘Gallup Poll Reveals Business

|those voters who think Mr. Willkie | would good President |

MRS. SCHENSUL DIES IN DETROIT

Formerly Connected With Legion Office Here, Later With Hospital.

Mrs. Leah Schatz Schensul, Kalamazoo, Mich. former secretary aj the American Legion national headquarters and the United States Veterans Administration Hospital here, | ied yesterday at Detroit. | Mrs. Schatz, who was 33, was visiting in Detroit when she died. [Seven years ago she was employed 'at the Legion and four years ago at the hospital. She was born at | Rushville. Her husband, Sam; her mother, | Mrs. Hattie Schatz; three sisters, | Dorothy and Libby, of Indianapolis, and Frieda, Greensburg; and two brothers, Harry, Rushville, and Aaron, Houston, Tex. survive her. | Services will be at 8 p. m. Friday lat the Aaron-Ruben Funeral Home. |Rabbie Elias Charry will officiate. | Burial will be at Shara Tefilla Cem|etery.

Carmon A. Bell

Services for Carmon A. Bell, who died Sunday, were to be held at 2 p. m. today at the Jordan Funeral home. Burial was to be at Washington Park. Mr. Bell, who was 33, lived at 432 N. East St. He had been a resident of the city for 18 years. Before he became ill 18 months ago, he was employed by the New York Central Railroad. He is survived by his wife, | Springs Colo, W \ s (Frances; a son, Robert Ray Bell; a Rr, ou Wire Wes daughter, Marjorie Ann Bell; hl parents, Mr. and Robert Bell; three sisters, Mrs. Jennie Martin, Mrs. Effie Perry and Mrs. Marjorie Barns, |and four brothers, Charles, Odie,

WILLKIE RECORD i TERMED ASSE John E. McCray

Times-Acme Telephoto. Getting the lowdown on any high jinks that might bob up in the Democratic convention, Republican Nominee Wendell Willkie, listens to a broadcast at Colo-

John E. McCray, former resident | of Indianapolis, died yesterday at | the home of his daughter, Mrs. Albert Furman, 2165 N. Harding St. | after a three months’ illness. Mr. McCray, who was 80, moved to Cadiz, O., 10 years ago. He fis survived by his widow, Mrs. Emma McCray; four daughters, Mrs. Elmer D. Cox, Mrs. James Pedlow, Mrs | George Cases and Mrs. Furman, and | three sons, Winfield, Robert and

Ability, Personality Chief Factors.

By DR. GEORGE GALLUP

Director, Institute of Public Opinion PRINCETON, N. J, July 17—To shed light on the meteoric rise of | Emmett. Wendell Willkie in national popular- | Services will be held at 2 p. m. ity, the American Institute has just | tomorrow at the Royster & Askin | completed a survey in which voters | Funeral Home with burial at Crown | were asked whether they thougnt | Hill. he would make a good President Those who thought he would and those who thought he would not

Mrs. Daisy Martin |

were asked why they felt so. { Mrs. Daisy Martin, 140 W. 44th | Their reasons are particularly re- St, died yesterday at Methodist | vealing because they show that the Hospital. She was 66. feeling against big business which| An Indianapolis resident for 23 was current five or six years years, Mrs. Martin was born at Col-| ago has been altered substan- burn and previously had lived at tially. In fact. over half of Lafayette. She was a member of the y Fairview Presbyterian Church. Her son, Charles A, and a brother, William E. Smock, Chicago, survive,

GEORGE HOFMANN S DEAD HERE AT 67

reason cited is “lack of experience| George Hofmann, who had been in politics,” rather than his con- |i the favors and notion business

‘ % . ¢ | i s almos If a cennections with big business in Wallin Indianapolis almost ha Street 3 tury, died yesterday at St. Francis

¥ " . Hospital. He was 67. Neck-and-Neck Last Week Mr. Hofmann came directly to In an Institute survey conducted 0

‘ Indianapolis from his birthplace in after the Republican convention but P P

: yi 3. ie st job was before the Democratic convention, | ermeny in 1888. Ths ig Co He Mr. Willkie ran a close race in a | on > oi “trial heat” against President | Ate formta DD Ne elSeh Roosevelt. The results, as reported | >: WV! 1 ' wa ee % last week, showed 53 per cent {plovees and served as president of

of | . 3 4 voters polled favoring Mr. Roosevelt, that firm. He was also With the 47 per cent favoring Mr. Willkie. |

Kipp Bros. Co. 10 years, This represented a sharp rise in| Mr, Hofmann was a member of Mr. Willkie's popularity, for in an

the SS. Peter and Paul Cathedral earlier “trial heat” conducted 8nd of the Filks,

Services will be about two weeks before the Repub-|Neld at 9 a. m. Friday at the Calican convention nominated Mr

make a say it is because “he has been a successful businessman and a good executive.” Moreover, even among those vote rs who oppose him, the chief

|thedral and burial will be at Crown Willkie, Mr. Roosevelt polled 63 er | Hill. cent, Mr. Willkie only 3 per cor | Survivors are a niece, Mrs. Rose Mr. Willkie's phenomenal rise in H. Beck, with whom Mr. Hofmann popularity took place in the short| lived at 2402 N. Delaware St, and space of three months. In March, two sisters, Miss Barbara Hofmann when the Institute asked Republican Of Indianapolis and Mrs. Fannie voters in a survey what candidate Kleitz of Wilmington, Del.

And pumps are her old stand-bys. She may go in for novelty | shoes--platform soles, wedge heels and such now and then, but she | sticks mainly to pumps. | She has dressy high-heeled ones in black patent leather or kidskin or white buck for summer and in black or brown suede for | winter. And low-heeled ones in appropriate materials for casual, davtime occasions in all seasons. She may dance in sandals and walk in oxfords, but she lives in pumps—ultra simple ones.

——————

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model send 15¢ in coin, your name, | address, style, number and Size t0| Pattern Department, Indianapolis’ Times, 214 W. Maryland St. Sew what? Sew the lovely clothes you'll find designs for in| our new Summer Fashion Book, just | © out and full of thrills for clever gals | ¢ who like to wield shears and needle. 4 Not that you need to be so clever | at it, either, The step-by-step sew a chart, included with each pattern, | makes the making very easy! | Pattern, 15¢; Pattern Book, 15¢. One Pattern and Pattern Book dered together, 250.

in his political thinking, was no-

they wanted for President, less than 1 per cent named Mr. Willkie. Just| Albert C. Shinn

before the opening of the Repub- | lican convention, the Willkie per- Albert C. Shinn, 1234 Harlan Ave, centage had reached 29. died today after a short illness. He was 74. Three brothers, Walter,

Tops Other Candidates ’ » In de ort few days of the con- Joseph and Ernest survive him.

vention, before thie nomination was | . actually made, Mr. Willkie topped Margaret J. Francis all other Republican candidates in| ly : popularity with the rank and file] Mrs. Margaret J. Francis, 1015 W. of G. O. P. voters, polling 44 per|30th St, died today at her home. | cent in a nation-wide survey, against] She is survived by five children, | 20 per cent for Thomas E. Dewey | Adalyn Doyle and Robert, Lucille, and 13 per cent for Senator Robert | Joseph and Thomas Francis, and a| A. Taft 'R. 0). | sister, Anna Wright. Such a rise furnishes striking| Services will be at 8:30 a. m. Fri- | evidence of a growing respect| day at the Feeney & Feeney Fu-| throughout the country for prac-| neral Home and 9 a. m. at the Holy | tical businessmen as national lead- Angels Church. Burial will be at ers. { Holy Cross Cemetery, | Oddly enough, the statement! AR made by several Democratic leaders the day after Mr. Willkie's nomina- | tion suggesting “foreign influence”

where reflected in the poll. Only a tiny fraction of 1 per cent said they | feared possible Fascist leanings in| the Republican candidate,

Two Chief Factors Equally interesting is the fact that only a handful of voters said they were for Mr. Willkie because | he might be able, through his busi- | ness experience, to re-arm the country faster than the New| Dealers, | Mr. Willkie's two chief points of popular appeal, as analyzed in the thousands of comments gathered by | the survey, are his business ability | and his personality. Among those | Democrats who think he would | make a good President, nearly two- | thirds cite his business record, while among Republicans about half name his business achievement and the rest his personality or other | factors. Those who oppose him cite, in about equal proportions, his “political inexperience” and his connec- | tions with Wall Street and the util- | ity industry. |

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Three Miners Who Crawled to Safety

1. Does not rot dresses, does

SRY

These three men were among the few miners to reach safety in the Portage, Pa. disaster. right: Conrad Burnett, 40; Alvin Pendleton, 32; Chester Burnett, 22, son of Conrad Burnett. crawled through a waterway—‘about a mile,” according to Mr. Pendleton—to the mine entrance,

Hoosier Goings On

By HARRY

AND SO TO BED

Goshen Man Goes There After Dog Plays Rough——Reward Burning Bedford Question

MORRISON

LIFE ON THE farm is getting more and more dangerous every

day.

Take George Redpath, the Goshen hotelman.

He was indulging

in a little playful business with his dog, minding his own business—

and he ran into an earthquake (or The earthquake was sudden on his farm, throwing a ball to his dog, an undersized Great Dane

which weighs a mere 165 pounds. |

The dog was retireving it This time Mi. Redpath stooped nonchalantly to adjust a trouser

cuff and he didn't notice the re- |

trieving was faster than usual. The dog romped into him headon

several days.

” ”

THERE'S A FIREBUG in cus- |

tody in Bedford this week and in addition to that, three minions of the law claim he made individual, gold-plated, leather-bound confesisons to each of them. As if that isn't enough worry the City Council, who must

come to some decision about the

thing, the reward is $200 and there are some who claim it used to be $250 and really ought to be that, now, The alleged firebug is Harry Flynn and he is accused of having set some 20 fires in and around Bedford in the past few years. His last was a big bonfire of creosoted railroad ties. Sheriff Johnny Peyton and Deputy Claude Gerkin say they have a signed confession. Harry McPike, Deputy County Auditor, says Flynn came to him and told him all about it and then went with him to the top of the stairs leading to the sheriff's ‘office, before he made his confession, There's also a Monon Railroad detective who savs he talked to Flynn twice the night he held his Jast bonfire and that Flynn made a special visit to the Monon Station to confess his guilt, Fire away, boys!

® 2 8

The Gary police have a sneaking admiration for a burglar who has demonstrated aplomb and forthrightness. The burglar ransacked Paul Adair’s apartment, He eschewed the usual passkeys, jimmies and other burglary paraphernalia and just knocked a big hole in Mr. Adair’s door with an axe. ” 5 o

FRANK EDMONDSON of Washington is strictly a humanitarian and bears the world no malice, but he wishes the scientists would think up some new experiments on diseases, known or otherwise. : Mr. Edmondson raises guinea pigs and he says the bottom has fallen out of the guinea pig marsket. Not only that, the guinea pigs haven't been told and they are multiplving like everything. Experiments are at a low right now and he isn't selling any pigs. At the same time the stork is bringing from 300 to 400 babies a week to the Edmonson establishment ” ” We don’t suppose Mr. Willkie really has anything to do with it, but he ought to be told right away that Rush County's hog valuation has slipped a cool $280,000 under the 1939 figure, Mr. Willkie owns 1047 acres of

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Mr. Redpath went to bed for |

to |

vice versa)! and

land around Rushville in five farms. His best crop has always been hogs. That's the way it is with tarmers. They make a little money and then they go gallivanting off, running some utility like the Commonwealth & Southern or running for the Presidency of the United States and look what happens to the hog market! ® ® @ THERE was a fist fight Sunday as an added atiraction at the auto races at Franklin. A bill | collector received no money but had his glasses broken instead. | He was trying to repossess one of the cars in the race. ” » n

| week from a Linton newspaper:

‘DEMOCRATIC PARTY OPENS CONVENTION;

F. D. R. IS MENTIONED ters to handle emergency needs of |

Make that cat quit stomping his

| feet!

STRIKE AT ADAMS

REPORTED SETTLED

| ‘City Hall officials today

S. Belmont Ave. has been settled

upsetting. Mr. Redpath was

And here is the headline of the

an- compensation and insurance woul (nounced that the strike. called May be paid survivors of the victims. 23 at the J. D. Adams Mfg. Co, 217]

PAGE 15

DREXLER RITES SET TOMORROW

Woman Who Was Native of Indianapolis Dies Here At 45.

Services for Mrs. Marguerite G. Drexler, 5056 W. 14th St., who died Monday at the Methodist Hospital, will be held at 2 p. m. tomorrow at the Speaks & Finn Funeral Home.

Burial will be at Crown Hill, Mrs. Drexler, who was 45, had | been ill for six months. She was | born in Indianapolis and was a | member of the Carrollton Avenue Evangelical and Reformed Church. Survivors are her husband, Wil« liam; four sisters, Mrs. Harry Link and Mrs. Fred Schoeneman of Indianapolis and Mrs. Ralph Rockhill and Mrs. Herman Rockhill of Ft. Wayne, and a brother, Herbert | Gruntz.

‘Mrs. Rose C. Schaub

Mrs. Rose C. Schaub, an Indian= apolis resident 30 years, died yesters= day at her home, 837 N. Rural St, She was a member of St. Philip Neri Catholic Church and the church's Altar Society Survivors are her husband, George C., her mother, Mrs. Johanna De= mer, Hamilton, O.; two daughters, Rita Mae and Anna Marie; three

» 3 % [ sons, Joseph Herman, George E. and | [Charles A.; two sisters, Mrs. Her= | bert Conlon, Hamilton and Mrs, Richard McNamara, and a brother, BLAST MAPPED Funeral services will be held at

Left to The men

Joseph Demer, Hamilton. 18:30 a. m. Friday at the Grinsteiner [Funeral Home and at 9 a. m. at the St. Philip Neri Church. Burial will May be at St. Joseph's Cemetery,

‘Spark From Motor | Have Set Off Gas Pocket, | : Services for Clarence W Ty Observers Believe. an Indianapolis resident until ve

| vears ago when he moved to Hams y Y Poe PORTAGE, Pa., July 17 (U. P)). | mond, will be held at 1 p. m. Friday

| A four-way investigation will open |a.t the G. H. Herrmann Funeral today into the cause of the Sonman| Home. Burial will be at Seymour. Shaft Coal Co. mine disaster, in| Mr. Wampner, who was 41, died which 63 miners died. yesterday at Hammond. He was a Separate investigations will pe | Member of the St. Paul's Lutheran made by State and Federal mine | Church at Hammond and was em-

| " “ in s, the Koppers Coal Co.,| ployed by the Ford Motor Co ispectors Obl Survivors are his wife, Mrs, Verna

mine operators, and the Cambria| Sounty Coroner. Wampner; his father, John H, The blast, which tore through! Wampner: two sisters, Miss Mars three entries of the slope section of | guerite Wampner and Miss Elsa the mine Monday morning, is at- | Wampner; and three brothers, Nor tributed unofficially to a pocket of Man, Edwin, San Francisco, and % i . | Herbert, Terre Haute gas set off by a spark from a motor. | ’ All the bodies were removed by

rescue workers within 24 hours, ‘Mrs. Mary Brooks

Meanwhile, kinsfolk claimed the Services for Mrs. Mary Brooks,

podies of the victims at the tempo- | rary morgue set up in the borough (1137 Park Ave, will be held at 10 hall here and the Jamestown and|a. m. tomorrow at the Conkle Fu= Portage locals of the United Mine neral Home. Burial will be at Glen Workers demanded that they be Haven. The Rev, George Kimsey represented on the State's Board of Will officiate mquiry. Mys. Brooks, who was 78, had

The locals demanded a prompt lived lived in Indianapolis for 27 and thorough investigation. [vears. She died Monday at City HOs=

The union established headquar- Pital following a fall May 17. She is survived by a son, Labe Brooks, a city fireman; a daughtes,

[families who lost their breadwinners ‘ in the tragedy. Approximately $12, Mrs Bessie Minton, Henderson, Ky.; I Dr 4, ; [two sisters, Mrs. Lola Barnett, Hens

[000 in death benefits will be paid by |" VC dd BL the union while Thomas E. Light. | derson, and Mrs. Siba Armstrong, | foot, director of accident prevention Evansville; two brothers, Lee Cozart, and compensation for the Koppers | Evansville, and William Coza.t, Tenn, and 18 grand=

'0.. sai "AN tely $500.000 in Nashville, Co., said approximately $5 1d | children,

Clarence Wampner

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An agreement between the com-| Mrs. Florence Wade reported to pany and representatives of the | police that as she entered her bed- | [Steel Workers Organizing Commit | room at 3127 N. New Jersey St., last [tee union was to be reached today night, a sneak thief knocked her to and the factory reopened tomorrow, | the floor and escaped with one silofficials said. [ver dollar.

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