Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 July 1943 — Page 12
WEDNESDAY, JULY 28, 1943
' UNFIT FOR STORAGE
“PAGE 12
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Al
In the Service— Mussolini a Bum ‘E18
Bl Homemaking—
Dairy Council Launches Service
Covering Meal Planning, Buying *
WE'VE BOUGHT RATIONED FOODS for five months now. At first it was exciting to “play the game and win” by serving good meals with few points. It still is a challenge to the housewife to allot her precious stamps for foods which she wants to serve her family. Too often, though, the game resuits in statements like this: “When my red stamps run short, I make a meal of spaghetti or noodles and favor with sauce or meat fryings.”| Mrs. Housewife has found a substi- ture and is released immediately tute for meat, but she has lost a following the ration changes which necessary nutrient for the daily diet ordinarily are announced by the —complete protein. | first of each month. =
” Menus Compiled COMPLETE PROTEINS are found in animal foods. Dairy products such as milk, cottage cheese, ! ’ : A American cheese and butter are| 10 Have Dinner sources. When you are substitut-| ihg for meat, fortify your menu the Central Indiana Optometric soWith sul Dees snd butter. 9 ciety, to be held tonight at the e ationa airy councii,| home of Dr. and Mrs. C. E. Frindel, working through the Dairy Coun-|pendlieton, wiil be Dr. and Mrs. ¢il of Indianapolis, has a new sheet! Ww. I. Van Osdol, Dr. and Mrs. of point-saver menus and recipes Roy Denny and Dr. and Mrs. Emerfor use as a marketing guide. It is|con J. Soland. designed to relieve the housewife] Reports will be made on the of much of the worry in trying 0 American Optometric association make ration stamps fit the appetites gejegate meeting held recently in of the family. | Chicago. It includes menus for an entire week's meals. One recipe featuring
dairy products is included for each Luncheon Tuesday
day and a plan is outlined for; A noon luncheon will be held next using red and blue stamps for the 1yecdav bv members of the Delta week. Wi
s | tributed by mail. |
Optometric Society
Point Cost Indicated THIS SERVICE demonstrates the Mrs. E. Carl Watson and Mrs. Everimportance of dairy products in ett Lett. planning menus, particularly when|
protein sources are scarce. ‘Guild Meeting
The menus are checked against : the standard set up by the com- Mrs. Haskel Blakeman will be in
mittee on foods and nutrition of charge of a meeting of St. Hilda's the National Research council, are guild of Christ Episcopal church, nutritionally adequate and consider from noon to 4 p. m. tomorrow at all the food essentials. the parish house. The hostess will The entire week's meals are be Mrs. Andrew Alburtis. planned to keep within the point} quota. In order to make the plan simple for women to follow, the points for
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| Mrs. Harry Crawford, 232 Berkley
Sorority to Meet
Mrs. Verna Coleman will be host-
each point-rationed food suggested|/ess at a business meeting of the
is given. Gamma Beta Chi sorority at 6:30 coin,
The new service is a monthly fea-!| o'clock tonight in the Hotel Lin
J or Arrived. A Complete Selection of
BUSTER BROWN
WHITE SHOES
For Infants and Children
Infants’ Shoes 83 to # Children’s Shoes 3.50 to 4.50
It's a wise mother who puts hér children in Buster Browns. These. famous shoes give more wear, greater value, and correct fit. They're styled with grown-up flair to please the youngest fash-
jon taste. Remember No. 18 coupon.
WASSON'S SHOE CENTER, THIRD FLOOR
The menus and recipes are dis-|
Attending a dinner meeting of
| Upsilon Wives’ club at the home of |
rd. The hostess will be assisted by!
Date Dress
LYONS MADE PETTY OFFICER
Indianapolis Man Enlisted In Navy in 1940 While Attending Butler.
George M. Lyons, son of Martin Lyons, 42 N. Jefferson ave. was recently promoted to 1-c petty officer. Petty Officer Lyons, a graduate of Technical high school and a former student of Butler university, en-
At the time of the disaster at Pearl harbor, he was in the midst of the battle. He is now stationed somewhere in the South Pacific.
‘Report at Enid
Three Indianapolis men have reported as members of the new aviation cadet class at Enid army air field, Okla. They are: Aviation cadets, Paul L. Breedlove, son of Mr. and Mrs. Paul L. Breedlove Sr., 1108 N. Dearborn st.; Lloyd G. Handy, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ellsworth Handv, 4800 E. 41st st.; and Roy F. Huls, son of Mr. and Mrs. Roy E. Huls, 3102 Ruckle st. = E. H. French, son of Mrs. Annabelle Ezell, 848 W. New York st., has | completed his primary flight trainWhat a hit this dress will make. ing as a naval aviation cadet at the naval air station, Livermore, Cal.,!
8481
10-20,
\
‘mi us -ce | Charming ite of oR~cenlet bubtons {and has been transferred to another and ruffiing. Ever so becoming.
: | station for intermediate training. Pattern 8481 is in sizes 10, 12, 14, He is a graduate of George Wash16, 18 and 20. Sizes 12 takes, with ington high school. short sleeves, 414 yards 35-inch material, 2'4 yards machine made | ruffling. | For this attractive pattern, send [16 cents in coins, with your name, addrses, pattern number and size to! The Indianapolis Times Pattern | Service, 214 W. Maryland st, In-|: dianapolis 9, Ind. Does your summer wardrobe need first aid? Send for the summer issue of Fashion, our complete pat-| 4 |tern catalog and sewing guide, li | which is just out. Shows over 100 H. Pfeiffer | new patterns, contains many help- : | ful fashion suggestions; 26 cents per | Word has been recelved by Mr. copy. and Mrs. Howard G. Pfeiffer Sr. that their son, Pfc. Howard G. PLEASE BE | Pfeiffer Jr., who was recently graduPATIENT! ated as airplane mechanic at Lin- ‘ : coln, Neb, has been promoted to Fh fhe Tole Set le pe corporal and has been transferred rs HE iL and With to specialist school on Rolls Royce summer pattern mail breaking ot fig Packard: plant, Des a Jars, i hore 2% nen Sgt. Merrill W. Rosenbaum, son som terns Naturally we of Mr. and Mrs. William C. Rosena nd w want our baum, 903 Tecumseh pl, and husTe A i i every- band of Eleanor Rosenbaum, was fea es ol RN ve 8 done , recently promoted to staff sergeant. ng ae > Dh Sgt. Rosenbaum, a graduate of ¢Epecive patier ¥e Technical high school, has seen service in many foreign fields. ” ”
Na 3
M. Rosenbaum
2
‘Graduated From 0CS
William E. Lynch, son of Mrs. Nellie, B. Lynch, 365 E. Morris st, was recently graduated from officers candidate school of the marine ‘corps and has been commissioned a second lieutenant. Lt. Lynch, a graduate of DePauw university, en= listed Feb. 2, 1943. ° : 2 ”
Robert W. Allen, son of Mrs. Lois Allen, 410 E. 14th st., has been graduated from the naval aviation trainBEDS fae: 3 6M010 Jos old and) oe school, Pensacola, Fla. Allen, | people say that I am fairly active.’ graduate of Broad Ripple high ‘My problem is that every time I gb school, has been commissioned a |out with a boy I am bored. I just second lieutenant. {do not enjoy his company in the 2 = = {least. All the boys are very nice.!| Pvt. Jacob J. Brandman, who has |Is it my fault or the boys’, or just! just returned from the southwest | what is it? D. S. |pacific area, is spending a well-de- $ 8 & |served furlough with his parents at | Answer—I do not know why you'Acton, Ind. | are bored with boys when the aver-| Pvt. Maurice E. Pebbles, son of lage girl of your age is so actively Mr. and Mrs. Myron Pebbles, 2017 interested in them. Your letter is Central ave, has been graduated | so short that it doesn’t give me the from the marine corps parachute | slightest clue. I only can list a few training school at Camp Gillespie, of the things that often cause girls|Cal. He was promoted to private to reject boys and you can decide first class along with the graduafor yourself whether any of them fit | tion. your case or not. | It is an old dodge to pretend to 'be bored with people when you doubt your ability to interest them.| pg Everrett J. Rogers, who spent /In other words you restore youwrimenths in the southwest Pacific | prestige in a spurious manner bY grea in combat with the Japs, is now the sour grapes method. If you say visiting his parents, Mr. and Mrs. | the boys are boring it implies they | Harold Rogers, 3645 W. 10th st. laren’t worth the time of a superior # | girl. The foregoing is but a scratch on | the surface so far as explaining your | reaction is concerned. Usually the trouble goes much deeper, harking back into childhood where it is found to be tied up with a girl's relationship to her parents. Sometimes she is secretly con-
DEAR JANE JORDAN—You help {so many people I do hope you can
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‘Home From Pacific
Theodore C. Davis, formerly of 6101 Burlington ave., was recently graduated as honor man of his company in recruit training at the naval station, Great Lakes, Ill. Davis had outstanding high marks in the aptitude tests given all recruits and led his’ group in all-
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Ed
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V-Mail Task |
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listed in the navy on Feb. 15, 1940. 3
; FMR a With eight brothers in the army or navy, WAC Catherine Strong of Iron Mountain, Mich, has a mountainous task in keep-
NDIANA STAGES SNEAK PREVIEW
‘Heaven Can Wait,’ Tale Of Elderly Casanova, Sparkles With Wit.
By VIRGINIA HATFIELD
When Henry Van Cleve died, he presented himself at the place where people had so often told him to go. And thereby hangs the tale of “Heaven Can Wait,” screened at the |
night. As Henry (Don Ameche) relates his story for the benefit of the devil |
—and the audience—he touches upon his most important birthdays
en in his life. His fondness for the fair sex, he believes is his passport to the lower depths. The Fifth Avenue Van Cleves spoiled him. He eloped with his cousin's fiancee, Gene Tierney, led her a merry life with his romantic escapades; was his son's chief worry in his old age, and died with a
ing up her V-mail correspondence. She's on her way to North Africa.
| | |
STILWELL MUST
ARM ALL CHINA
It’s Sophisticated
| get a little peace.” | Indiana theater's sneak preview last! .
South America, is covered with] dense forests, ranging from man-| groves up to the 70th, and upon the wom- | through tropical jungle trees on the (coasts and river lowlands, to oak, | {pine and walnut in the highlands. |
Basements with furnaces and {without separate storage rooms are itoo warm and dry for storage of | Victory crops that require cool, | moist storage conditions. | Nearby Southern Indiana Hill Country, | reached over good roads or by bus. For day's stay or relaxing vacation, Good
about his name. " . ' country food (famous Fried Chiken Dine For 20 years,” Musolino said |ners) and comfortable hotel living at
today, “I tella people my name | . she's not Mussoiin) she's Muso- The Nashville House lino. - le Ne —.w.-.-MHL-bair---A--.op -L “Now they come back again and ask me what happened to my friend Mussolini. He's a bum and | shudda dropped dead before he | started anything, Maybe now I |
To B. Musolino
NEW YORK, July 28 (U. P). Whatever the Italians in Italy think of Mussolini's ouster, B. Musolino, a New York Italian, hopes it will be the end of jokes
Superfluous Hair
The great worry of your life? Does it give you an inferiority complex and cause you to hide from people when in public? If so, see Whittleton, Inc, whose method was originated by a physician and which removes this unwelcome growth PERMANENTLY and PAINLESSLY. Consultation free. Cost moderate,
MWhittleton
of INDIANAPOLIS, INC. MA, 7965. 202 BIG FOUR BLDG. Meridian at Maryland. Fifteenth Year in Indianapolis.
COVERED WITH FOREST
More than half of Colombia,
on the Caribbean sea,
| Here is a sophisticated comedy of In taking that hot feeling out of sun(the Ernst Lubitsch variety. There's burn, heat rash and irritated chafed plenty of wit and satire. That the gkin, thousands are finding out how audience must remember. If viewed | to beat the heat with Mexsana, with tongue-in-cheek, the elderly| formerly Mexican Heat Powder. | Casanova with a “poochy” tummy | You, too, will enjoy the soothing can be excused as not too revolt-| pelief Mexsana brings as it cools
BEAT tHe HEAT
beautiful blond nurse holding his RELIEVE THE BURN AND HOT FEELING OF SUNBURN,
| hand.
HEAT RASH, INSECT BITES (NON-POISONOUS)
Mexsana works on the skin like millions of tiny sponges to absorb moisture which is often the cause of irritation—and which so frequently leads to heat rash with its itching, burning feeling. So just sprinkle this clean, cooling, medicated pow-
ing. Gene Tierney does a creditable
General Has the Longest
away from Kansas and from her
|job as the girl*who wants to get |
| these burning sensations. Mexsana | isthekind of medicated powder often recommended by specialists for just such skin miseries as these. Yet it
der well over the burning irritated skin. Use it as often as you need. It forms a medicated coat of protection between tender skin and
Supply Route of Global War.
CHUNGKING, July 29 (U. P.).—|
|Lt. Gen. Joseph W. Stilwell, eom'mander of U. S. forces in China, |
Burma and India, has a tough job ahead of him—equipping the Chi-| nese army, which has fought the | {Japenese for six years, and retain-| ling it so that offensive tactics may | |be utilized to the highest degree. | | To most, the task would appear | formidable. Stilwell faces the priority claims of Europe and the] southwest Pacific, China is at the end of the longest supply line in| the world and the Chinese army is probably the most ill-equipped in| the world. But Stilwell considers he holds one ace—he believes the Chinese is “the equal of any soldier in the world.” But he must be well trained, well fed, well equipped and | commanded by able officers before he will get a chance to prove Stilwell is right.
2 Uniforms a Year
The average Chinese soldier, if there is sufficient transportation and if the quartermaster has enough supplies, gets two uniforms a year. One is a faded blue cotton padded coat and pants for the winter and the other a suit of cotton shorts and a shirt for summer. He also gets one undershirt and a knapsack, but no shoes, canteen, blanket, long coat or towel. From his meager salary and allowances— which combined amount to about $3 | American per month—he must sup-| plement his daily ration of two pounds of rice per day and one] pound of salt per month. Two dollars and 50 cents Chinese | money is allowed him each month for shoes—but grass sandals cost $5 a pair. So he buys grass and weaves his own shoes.
Couldn't Stand Shoes
An attempt was made to outfit the Chinese army with American leather shoes, but ‘the soldiers couldn't stand the confinement and the idea was abandoned. Some of these Chinese’ troops) have marched thousands of miles| from one front to another, staying up all night frequently to dry:their clothes, since they had but one outfit. The Chinese army has no tents and in wet weather some of them are able to keep relatively dry by teaming up in the use of a raincoat captured from a Jap or donated by villagers.
round ability during preliminary training period. Prior to enlistment, he was employed at the Johns-Manville Co. as a construction engineer,
z Ld ”
meat - packing parents, Marjorie Main and Eugene Pallette, who are | on speaking terms about once al year. The scenes with this couple in their gaudy Kansas home are some of the best in the film. It would be fun to spend more time with them, There are a number of clever lines in the picture, with Charles Coburn, as Henry's grandfather, getting his share of them. Another high point is the tse of technicolor which does much for the lavish settings. All in all, this film, adapted from Lazlo Bus-Fekete's play, “Birthday,” is pretty fair light entertainment.
INDICTED TRAITOR FIRED AT WABASH
CRAWFORDSVILLE, Ind, July 28 (U. P.).—Wabash college records revealed today that Ezra Pound, 58-year-old modernist poet who with seven ofhers was indicted for treason at Washington Monday once taught poetry here, but was dismissed because of “his modernist views.” > Pound was charged in the indictment with having broadcast for the axis from Rome. The records showed that Pound, a graduate from the University of Pennsylvania in 1908 came to Wabash and taught for one semester before being dismissed by President George Lewis Mackintosh.
FREE GERMAN’ MOVE SURPRISE TO BRITAIN
LONDON, July 28 (U, P.).—~Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden told commons today that Britain was not informed inf advance of the establishment of the free German committee in Moscow and does not intend to recognize any similar committee in Britain.
‘
SUPPLIES TUNGSTEN
Tungsten is being mined in large quantities in the California Sierras 11,400 feet above sea level; molybdenum, copper, silver and a small amount of gold are obtained from the same mines.
costs little, and you make even greater savings when you buy one of the larger, more economical sizes.
clothing likely to chafe. Keep it handy for your whole family. To= day, be sure to demand Mexsana.
THE /; TOAST OF THE NATION |
=
AMERICAN FIGHTER... He cleans em up and comes out scrapping! He's the “Toast of the Nation.” When he gets home he’s going to eat a real American breakfast with stacks of Taystee Toast, the “Toast of the Nation.”
WWF
Two Indianapolis soldiers recently
the army air forces technical training command at Chanute field, Ill. They are: Pfcs. Robert L. Keene, son of Mrs. Nettie Keene, 1210 N. LaSalle st.,, and Chester R. Davis, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles A. Davis, 306 N. Jefferson ave.
vinced that her parents wanted a boy when she was born. In some cases this conviction has an extremely discouraging effect on a girl. It may make her disparage her own femininity, even repudiate it. She may feel that she was short changed when the sexes were given out and try toc compensate for her lack by identifying herself with boys. Such a girl may despise | housework and feminine pursuits, | interesting herself only in athletics, | earning money or in any of the | things in which men excell. Occasionally a girl doesn’t get on | with her father. She may not be lable to admire him and feels that 'her mother would be better off | without him. Sometimes in rejecting her father from her emotional life she rejects all men at the same time, Then again she may be disappointed in her mother and feel that she'd prefer not to be a woman at all rather than be like her. Such a re-| action may cause her to be wary of men for fear she would repeat her mother’s experience. I mention a few of the causes which sometimes cause girls to repress their normal, natural interest in men. I have no idea whether any of them explains your case or
4. A pure, white, greaseles stainless vanishing cream.
for being harmless to fabri Use Atrrid regularly.
at any store w
not. JANE JORDAN.
ah
+++Buy a jar today ...
sells toilet goods.
NEW...a CREAM DEODORANT
which safely
STOPS .uder.arn PERSPIRATION
1. Does not rot dresses or men's shirts. Does not irritate skin. 2. No waiting to dry. Can be used right after shaving.
3. Safely stops perspiration 1 to 3 days. Removes odors from perspiration, keeps armpits dry.
8. Arrid has been awarded the Approval Seal of The American Institute of Laundering
C.
RASH! OLgRIriny Gi by Good Housekeeping ry,” SLIICYVE 08 ans
Also in 10¢ and 59¢ jars
A)
hich
were graduated from the branch of |
Ar J A
lated to the war effort.
ORE Americans will travel more miles by railroad this year than ever before in our history. Those who must travel are going about your business. They include men and women in uniform, traveling in organized groups, to the number of two million a month. They include other uniformed millions traveling as individuals on regularly scheduled trains. And uncounted civilians whose travel is re-
On the Illinois Central alone, passenger traffi¢ is two and a half times what
ILLINOIS
“It’s just as important to save travel facilities as it is to save food. . . and other things needed for the war.” — Joseph B. Eastman, Director, Office of Defense Transportation.
Here's THE WAY IT IS WITH RAILROAD TRAVEL THESE DAYS:
1}
it was two years ago—five and a half times what it was ten years ago. There are only 6800 sleeping cars in the United States. More than half of them are assigned to military service. There are only 17,500 coaches. A third of these are no longer available for civilian use. And there will be no more until after the war, That is why —to our mutual regret— those who must travel find some sta. tions overtaxed, some trains overs crowded, and accommodations sometimes hard to get.
SYSTEM
Ss
CENTRAL
