Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 November 1943 — Page 7

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er. | SECOND SECON” = = SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1043

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WIN Adolescents Need Dad's Con

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nT IES While Mother Knows, BE MAPPED Firmer Hand Required "eatouonn || IF Father Is Drafted

Allies. : a This is the last of three articles dealing with the problems of moth. . »| ers whose family responsibilities will be doubled when their hus- So

By WILLIAM PHILIP SIMMS Bais are drafted into the armed services. ..

E Seripps-Howard Foreign Editer ; : By RUTH MILLETT WASHINGTON, Nov. 13.—The — Times Special Weiler =z oat = [situation In” Nigoslavia 5 raplaty[~ = TODAY'S juvenile-delinquency reports are enough-to developing into a mess which, un-{ scare any mother faced with the prospect of being both less cleared. up soon; will cast dis-{“ mother and father to an adolescent child while her hus-— » credit, if not disgrace, on the allled! hand goes to war."

t| cause. It isn't a simple thing for a woman to guide 4 son or

Partisans of Gen. Josip (Tit0)| gayohter through adolescence without the help of the *| Brozovich in this country are con- father, - .

vinced that the government-in- . 4 ' exile of King Peter II is on the way But she will get along all Jaspauaitisiey for holding the Sunt out and that recognition by the big| Tight if she is willing t0 “the way Dad would like” If a Sl dirt and small : "And my- father feels pretty much the same WaY:|nowers af Tito’s revolutionaries in| Make the child's welfare mother can make her child feel . It’s the little things that count. “I do think he's sort | Jugoslavia is near her No. 1 job. responsible for doing well at ghout the gruelling vh through the stovepipe hole.. It of pleased at the way things have gone, but he never ir ei , 4. chool and helping out at “home —. : w ¥ to a flying start took from- early: morning till suppertime to get the mentions it. ©* '4 The. immediate reason for this) The one thing she must guard. ypile the head of the family is The adolescent child needs firm guldance while his father is away lo sew up th fitular hollow chimney filled ‘up almost level with the flue. "1 brought him one of my books when I came past, belief was the amazingly blunt| against is being an “easy mark” away, she, of course, won't have .4 war, says Ruth Millett. But more than anything else, he wants ip the ive “We haven't tried the stove since then, but as Aunt ahd a little ivory kangaroo I'd bought in Khartoum. Warning by Gen. Sir Henry Mait-| for the adolescent son or daugh- any real problems on her hands sympathetic understanding, ” = Mary says, “Maybe it won't work, but it didn't work They're both on_ the table beside his hospital bed. I'land Wilson, allied commander-it- | ter, so that she says, “Well, all If possible, the adolescent should the other way either, so all I could lose was a day's notice he shows visitors the kangaroo first, and says chief in the Middle East, "to “cer-| right, go ahead,” when she knows StAY on in the same town and in work.” ‘ ; proudly, “See what Ernest brought me from Egypt.” tain men dishonoring the name of | h | id -~ the same school, rather than being his uniformed dad wrote him the ~ We have a new base-burner in the front Yoom. The book is dedicated to my father on the flyleat,| Chetnik.” Some Chetniks,” he| she should say “NO. - uprooted. One small town girl, not **™%. might kindof letter. ) Rather it isn't new, but a second-hand one a neigh- but he hasn't noticed it yet, and I haven't said anys charged in - a radio broadcast. to| Fathers are usually firmer In especially attractive, but who had ' ag yo ether oF not. dhe - ever Ria “bor Sold us, “IVS & great big thing, Fut it-doesn’t seem thing to him about tt; (Jugoslavid, were aiding the Nazis| ping down a parental foot than worked hard to make a place for a SEE TO AN SE " Ea against “patriotic elements” within 0 W000 oho surrender ‘easily herself in her high school, was son may have to get some help 40-Bai:ore,- i" on I - hild’ that country. Unless they ceased, Co miserable and-almost terrified over from a man relative or friend of keep in touch wi ler child's

Inside Indianapolis By Lowel l Nussbaum he saa; they would be regarded as| to the over-worked plea -of the prospect, of being taken to a teachérs—not In a way that wiil

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best thing Is to avoid uprooting ah unusually headstrong boy who him unless it is absolutely neces. wonld continue to cut classes it

adolescent: “All the other kids are large city where her -mother the family if fhe boy is head umbarrass the child—but through

w ; ; . The significant thing is that Sir| ot Xo Bhar sensor thai thought life would be more pleas Strong and going through a stage P.-T. i a and seemingly : ; s ' | | Henry did not include all Jugoslavs J ant for the duration. The girl when he doesn't think. women Casual contacis. : ~.. PROFILE OF THE WEEK: John Dwight Peterson, There's a lot of idealism in his makeup, but he's in his ultimatum. He specified the mothers of her child's friends ro. 04 that she never would be know anything about men's af- And, she should try to under-

practical ugh when it comes to business. He be- may feel very much as she does : : tand h dol t ehild—reall president of the City Securities Corp., an elder in the ct enough w \ ] “Chetniks,” the name by which able to make friends in a large stand her adolescent ¢ really + lleves in and practices religion, often gives the Deity ' ’ about pastimes or companions, \ ow fairs—such as his bright idea that derstand him, even If it means Tabernacle Presbyterian church, a, trustee of I. U., 0 wren something in which he's interested turns Gen. Draja Mihailovich's guerrillas) WF BFR Ct to get to 1001, that she never would ge

own. ) into the plays and on the school he will quit school and get a fob. following his favorite comic strips, : 3 stand trustee of Sema tn Ime , Pe out right... - Soars dts Tetervupted Bis studies a0 Ano, aac a, Ae A Rr SToas salt, . and. be Tyg No mather wants 10. omy her listening to his favorite Es fics of the state war finance committe and, because of his = “Born in Decatur, Ind, hie interrup “studies * hn SE stiggest “wo set 0 Which 811° 'g501dn't ask her for dates. "soldier husband about her” trou-" getting acquainted with his favors" seum where the recognized financial ability, a’ di- at I. U, to enter the army in world war I. He served lied, Mihailovich- is minister of| “ould agree to enforce. : Telling an adolescent that such bles with the children, but if they ite radio comedians. She doesn't ou didn't know) ] rector of more business corpora- as a second lieutenant. After the war he was grad- war in the ¢ lav government- oo ew» fears are silly: doesn't help a bit. are important she should tell film, have to talk his language —but she : : » 3 tions than probably any other: uated -from I. U.- He-came- here and went to work in-exile. He oy King Peter's com- AN ADOLESCENT in the house- If he confesses that he is upset 80 that he can. write to them = should be able to understand it if ends of the local g ; man -in- town. - In fact, he once in the securities business, later forming his present mander-in-chiet in the field. With| hold should be made to feel some over the prospect of a change, the about their problems. It would be she wants to understand her child, which could be : estimated he was on the board of firm. He was treasurer of the Citizens school com- the king of the British and| — ners RE : a . ANC. —

at least 50 firms, including the mittee in the last campaign. , ) street railway and radio station Besides his daughter, Patty, he has two other Americans, King Peter's govern

Somer et $ oN . the regency of ps’ new playing WIRE. children, Sally, a junior at Shortridge; and Little Red | ent overthrew PLANS PROBE OF ianapolis mentor BN He's youngish looking for a (John Dwight Jr.) who's 10, and in school 66. Prince Paul and joined the allies. OUR TOWN: * : & man of so many responsibilities,

: Sang in the Glee Club the hill ard. began "0 organize re. a | LIQUOR : DROUGHT t-te sven aa , manages to keep young spiritually { P e U sistance against the axis. He has ‘Hoosier City,’ The Review of o Book | W..

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4 and mentally through his. associa=- MR. PETERSON (his friends call him Pete) is ; host, Mr. Miller, 4 “tion; with young folks at I U. and devoutly loyal to I U., and he's never been known |" om his place. as-An..allied leader,

. : ich is a Croatian, a in Sigma Chi His friends SaY to entertain the least doubt that the school was going | Orr Dronicveh = @ :

: ; A “ v i ” Are - - ; ’ av - f ) i . 3 | : i ag tat ve mean when Jl hen “never gon out of 1. U7 Ever since ie Gad to win every game it pase. Ho got up before dan iC” Bieri rvouon and. te ~ That Makes Us Proud of Indianapolis | Senate Committee to Find

10ckey on the Indie uation he’s been adviser to the I. U: chapter of Sigma 0 ” | - ‘ y or es.b e p ig * last Saturday and took his young son over to Colum Spanish civil war. As & Communist | If Shortage Is Real or ! : %

ng -to illustrate my Chi ai : : - bus to see the I. U.-Ohio game, The e home Alexander: : sparkling play this [ll "And his big home, lochfed in a Woods at 42d and with the team and Pote saw to it that Little Red ha | “CAnizer. against. King A wis TE ee Se kn Se hee i asses at Jl Pennsylvania, is more like & fraternity house than 8 -gutographs of ail the players. ~~ ° TE peters fusier be 00k the seme} © ©. By ANTON SCHERRER when It became necessary to have | Artificial — : Ww His Not CpeiGite: sasidinca, - Wiienever Rimi Chi¥ JENA Ii." His idea-of asgosd-vasabion ds 1 gobi i far dik ol TH SR A eT ERIUBS BREL... corks aac are nie ee ce iment te 8 IMESEhIS aa time when Where | aan Toms hi Sedo pou OWI Sicy Jsustly Aor pe Li and bs peacetime) and take a long trip. He Ay rn err Bow Rowing a ean Lh — te ean -Nafe” ROIS NL A ah at SR mathematic { T, » 8 r at IU; frequently where in the COUntry evoept the Far —He 5 : vr ; ‘ i “®brand | : ae PE ? Sg . aut. gs pon Soar yh BE a rorcit By where In the country eveept the Far West, He eats the powerful backing of Moscow. 50, in this second year of the war, to come across brand new book i om { : , .everything except broccoli and spinach. He was crazy | 7 dealing with the past—in this case a history of Indianapolis complete

And what about our murders? today planned to investigate the his J knows how many guests he’s going to have for dinner: about chicken until rationing came along and he got| - Civil War Exists "| enough to embracé practically everything up to and intiuding the Ours were lioneys compared with | liquor shortage. . ¢ A es ——— A AAA SING RA A

Po . : : ‘ what Edmund Pearson thought.| Chairman Frederick VanNuys (D. - Considerate of Others try e—T ly Between fliese two groips, the) Christmas of 1013: good enough to preserve for pos- | Ind.) said he would ask a sub-

: ls ; : : good at golf but doesn't let it interfere... Partisans. “there| _ « : ‘fl }- Santa place oh Oct. 8, 1821 (as “adver : ow . and changing bis [ll DWIGHT PETERSON 1s 4, healthy looking and_ith business He's criay about. bowing, seldom uy Long orange Bea ah rn ofl ro Sr ug Ras: SLL IRC oy RRR Prop Bo A og 4 i" an athletic pug. Te hax pe ‘id 6" age Sf RASA a Sess conc “Wit aes he” "Serv Fi eliib,” Averages | 2 2 A i Ah NS AR AW hy CL SOTA tte th to ~ maintain), or of Oct. 10°’ date ™ proved thin = Be > ot ks oe a si although he doesn’t bother about either diet or exer- around 180. He's & good swimmer, like to fish occa- And no oth Sve bean Relving he a Tang I IY Utewied by Betry Su) ~ 04 AYUDA. Zsr0._ most. of . the shartage Is rel, — leially cise. He's just lucky. About 5 feet 10 or 11, he sionally, cares little for the movies, likes quis Pro-| po ticans would be attacking the . before him on grove), Come to think of it, Mrs. Ea, Jurors ere 5. somaon a aapaLf rv ni weighs 165. He has sparkling, brown eyes; thick, dark grams and the Hour of Charm on the radio. He loves ~,.iniks and at others, no doubt, uy | the pavement, Nolan's way may be right. The wo ng Sure ha: nee, . ip up by the big distilleries until it aps : hair with a fresh streak of gray in front; a dark good music and stage shows, sang in the glee club at}, ike and axis forces would be as if the heav- important thing, after all, is the A ian llows—to han " at one | pears there may be a monopoly.” complexion, squarish face and chin, and a full voice. I U., and was treasurer of the Indianapolis Symphony | ;iiocking the Partisans. | ens had opened fact that both Mr. Pogue and Mr. 0 “'t ¥ iid 5s only |he sald, “Unless something is dole _ He's good humored, optimistic, considerate of oth- several years.. : The time is rapidly approaching and rained McCormick had the luck to land they didn't was beca about it the increased prices “wre 13, and highly enthusiastic about anything he under- He's fond of dogs, and has 4 pet collie—Sandy—| ye; tne United States, Britain down a neat here. at the vers last minute. two up. |going to make millions for some = ia i. WALES MANY Save personal friends. A that he wouldn't trade for a couple dozen director-|,,4 the Soviet Union must .agree arrangement of Occasionally, Mrs. Nolan hits & gtarts in the law business=-Alfred |body.” An grea T, he can take it, too. mn ships. ; on a joint Jugoslav policy. , This silver. .-. . pace a little too fast for me t0 Potts and John L. Griffith- by | Senator James G. Scrugham (D. should be one of the first jobs ‘Dimes!’ _cried keep up with. On page 43, for In- name—got the governor to corr |NeV) proposed the investigation

3 Cn To : : 1 \ Nas J Sa a GRE ey eens tackled by the European advisory) M canta. Claus, stance, she leads me 10 believe mute the sentence of their client. [YeSterday, charging that large : ashington By Raymond Clapper commission at London. Until re- ‘For The Indi- that Alexander Ralston allocated Which didn't help the two re. |duantities of ~ whisky “are being : . ; 3 cently Washington and London: "S anapolis Times a site between Pennsylvania and...maining murderers. It was the |hoarded for profiteering purposes,

: = 3 - | backed King Peter while Moscow ; Clothe-A- Child Meridian sts, for “an educational first double feature ever shown |He Mlso-declared that public health WASHINGTON, Nov. 13.—Here in the political the politicians at Philadelphia to break down and backed Tito, Of late, however, for Jeanette Nolan |." porember “institution which probably would in I ndianapolis; ; is menaced. because of widespread gapital of the country, the announcement that Gov- take Willkie, : reasons of expediency or otherwise, the boys and girls, Dimes!” The be Indiana's state university.” As Mrs. Nolan's deliberate suppres- tampering with the content of thal Jif ernor Bricker of Ohio would be a candidate for the You say that was a drive organized by corporation London has been moving toward| .....iion is cribbed cold from _ far back as I can push my mem- . gion of murders can't be account. being sold, - Republican presidential nomination was an inci- and utility lawyers and phony telegrams? Something|the Partisans and Sir Henry's . this side of ory. nothing like that ever hap- ed for ate T “Evade Rel .+ Prior tothe dental inside story in-three of the four Washington more than that went into it—including undoubtedly | Warning to the “Chetniks” indicated Page I, Cs pretty 400d poued Tho only sites alloc oon ht Scots thet she Erne Exe) op ohnny Lujack who : ‘newspapers. - a widespread recognition that Willkie was a man of [closer relations still. At least, that She ent t on Bish oe iF the for p ecific buildin > n ~ re wanted lo Write & nice 1ady-ke | He said present prices are & clear ually did just that, “But Washington's lack of inter- big size and courage and with considerable under- | is the impression among Tito's sup- Jot ta ne Re. 30e * inal oT plan fo Indianapolis Sir, na I first thought. Not at | evasion of office of price adminis- , Lujack was issued : est in the Bricker candidacy may standing of the crisis through which the nation was | Porters here and the impression fs| “*V "TOUE™ IAL (ET Pan ro anapols all When she tackles the was. |yation regulations ot Bert but which had not .be # reliable index of the passing. doing allied prestige little good. aw = ET Em Ll a Sacre 3 Pendleton (page TH and | - “This liquor scarcity qu : vernor’s chances. In 1920, Hard- : ugges come to 1e00g- riticiits- Cron ; . : e period of the Civil war |jargely .a matter of 3 .early candidacy was widely _— of Ses obey a JR na- C ts de A Grand Success : ons oe a Bushs; De Sor & involving Morgan's Raiders (page | chology,” he stated. “T ignored while all attention was tion In the world is a big Job, needing the most] he smaller of the! PERHAPS IT'S a §00d 88H por pare tl EO en I 138), she wades knee-deep in |yp the price 1 : ted 10 the big figures of the capable men obtainable. No party figured will do, | uriced nations feel that if expedi- book as this appears = Ee uses (the other -blood. © Apparently, Mrs. Nolan |io create the day, Lowden ‘of Illinois, "Gen. You cam't run U.S. Steel, of Pan-American airways {¢06Y: 15:10: be. the: yardstick, - then {0A% Such © 20 C halt oon Wes of the Atrih side of Mar. draws a definite line betwee 5 . . * Dole . ys the Atlantic. Charter and: all the 8% this time. “There ‘is a half- ket gt, between Missouri and civillan murders, no matter how other democratic pronouncements baked notion, all too common t0- West gts), ahd anized for the

A Hs . " - SA Rr i . y Ri buy a lot of rot-gut;. Just so much window dressing |98¥.-that-the aly NAE_t0- Far ea TT Ae y al t-gut; tl Miss’ Ruth Mitchell, sister of-the antee the future of the wor (three weeks to the day after oat purpose . ESE ; late Gen. Billy Mitchell snd an| to forget its past ait jtewess Ralstor's a weisie: Tidy Mind is a popular governor of Ohio, and evidently a com- honorary “Chetnik,” telegraphs something So be ad po 3 3 ture got a Soutien thinking about idy Min . _petent one, an. uninspired man but a tidy public peace? ; : Feeling as io count anvils 6 ‘an educational stitution.” On THE WAR chaptefs. by the : ery s Has Said Nothing lin"the first world war, she ¢ or otherwise; tends to crack this pou GO heV deCieied The MAE yay, are among the best in the |D! ; i , . | untenable theory. In his néopects Strangely enough, or maybe not book and 1 Mrs. Nolan's tidy 1108 ULE D0Hiea. POSSIBLY Governor Bricker has large capacity |. ) Hoosier City” is ¥ Sra Soe, at all, the act toa mind. axitlioritative but Foad- : SERVICE MEN MEN : Yn e try-| Its author, Jeancite Overs FOF tract for the sick and insane. Por able writer, she knows how to be 80 S BIC A oo pth," that purpose they set aside the detailed without being pedantic, (TO DANCE TOMORROW ApOLS = To square bounded by Alabama, New how to simplify witholt condens- MANUEL WIE The publisher's blurb classifies ew plity Nolan's 14th book as “Nota croey, Vermont and New York ing or omitting too much, In- |. Eighty service men, ue X, not a history, but the sts. It served as a haven for the deed, Mrs. Nolan's sense of struc- |at a Thanksgiving

: engrossing quick paced story of a , . great city.” There is much to be : : : py sult In strengthening anti-demo-| said for such a point of view and book. 1t will appeal to a public— 7 _. |cratic forces everywhere.” : approach. History, like human « 8 =» of which I count myself a part—

T hen Skip Roosevelt nature, is vastly complex. There First Jail Neglected tat wate # bistory. og read 1o-

2 key to an und . U. S. ASSIGNS ‘AID IN BE sconomics, culture, MY ONLY REASON for going _ ‘Hoosler City” is considerably

WAR FR religion, society, politics and what so thoroughly into this today is enhanced by a set of illustrations AUD TRIAL not, all play their parts. Striking to point out that Indianapolis not done by George Jo Mess. 3 a nice balance between the things only had warped people from the ou own George. Executed in that go fo make history the com- start, but that it did something hs manner Woodeuts, the 41 plicated thing it is. for them right away. Mrs, Nolan ustrations _revea only Mrs. Nolan carries her fascinat- also neglects our first jail. Indi- George's mastery of the graphic ing tale from the uncertain be- anapolis was only 15 months old - arts, but they do something ginnings of a town in the wilder- . -

w to what was prac- HOESEL HEADS GROUP 8 IN HOSPITAL SURVEY

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. © "146 or $8 a quart for it.”

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And No Controversy