Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 December 1943 — Page 3
EN BA eX he EE go 2 LE : ’ eb { “ J ha, Kyi ia 4 ia i a A eae TU tml lod Bi den nh ep TELS
, big laugh out of our antics, but worked swell, kept fairly. reasonable time out &f “Col.
Re r "by , Rati nH ead Baptist Missionary . : wool sweaters, rolled the yarn [it kept from sitting around| “Funny thing was most of those y bunch of tin cans, Don't ask me ep ieve y ion in Chicago will speak ut & meeting] Into balls, covered them with leath- brooding: he S2id. Englishmen didn't know anything how he did it, my mind doesn't er from ‘their flying jackets and-| Case, who said he couldn't reveal about baseball, so we taught them | run that way, but it worked.” : By ANN STEVICK of women of the Emerson Avenue 3a Lt | details A § : Re : ; Ba church Dee. 15. presto—they had baseballs, t of his escape from the Ger-| how to play. After we'd chosen up| Others, he sald, divided into a : 2: 7, Nimes Spatiah Wey i Beginning with & prayer period Ernie Case of the army air forces mans, was shot down in a twin- teams—English vs. . American—wé study groups. Case sald he went a il MAY TON, Dec. 8.~The life of shoe stamp 18 probably | | "10.45 a. m. the rogram will|Tevealed today. ~ |engined plane and parachuted on'to | played our own world series. |through courses in mathematics, Boulton. a { Loe indefinitely, according to W. W. Stephenson, head | include a ‘business session at 11:15 Case, a former University of Cal-|Cagliari in Sardinia. Later he was| “You guessed it. After teach- engineering and philosophy. The| Indiana is one of 13 states in of shoe rationing. He sees no 1~ ison for terminating it even when | | "0 “0 ‘myma Katfau will have ifornia at Los Angeles football | transfefred to the Italian main-|ing them the game, ithe British professors ‘were English prisoners. |Fordney's command. veteran
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{players beat us two games out of | “We didn't have books. Those|the last war, he has been with the
8 second stamp in Book TV becomes valid, unless a quantity of | | Choice or the luncheon at 12:15 player, is home on a rest sfter
{Grmepeg “counterfeit stamps 2 ook as Lamb will from the Germans when “There were a lot of Brit - ree rocuremen 4 : p. m. and Mrs. Leslie b V e. of British pris- the th for the series, world {profs just sat there and taught |central t There are 25 million shoes for Shildren in stock. In spite of speak on “Fountain of Hope” dur. |the Nazis moved him from an Ital- [oners with us. They were exceed- | series, I guess.” | trom memory. It was marvelous.” | last July: His daughter was roe {frenzied cries from mothers, N. ing the afternoon meeting begin- ian prison camp. Lis ingly resourceful. We made the | The pilot said all the prisoners Case received the purple heart for | cently commissioned a second’ lYeue
ning at 1:30 p. m.
“Man, you sho have-seen those! baseballs and they thought up the ' studied, played and invented to injuries he received in combat. I tenant in the marines,
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STRAUSS SAYS—IT'S ONE DAY NEARER VICTORY
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. | now very short. : Over-all stocks of ration-type shoes are down fo 213 million pairs as of Nov. 1, instead of a normal inventory of around 300 million. With the optimistic hope of producing shoes at the rate of 25 million pairs a month, everyone could have at least two pairs - a year. from this surplus,” 2 : 1
Ration Ragout
A DUTCH housewife, with tongue-in- cheek and apparently very little in her pantry, wrote out this recipe for what she called a “first-rate meal”: Take your meat ration card, roll it in your flour coupons and put both inside your fat card. Broil it on your coal. order to a gentle brown.. Next, take your potato card and put it in your butter. card, bringing the potatoes to a simmer on your petroleum coupon. Afterward, take your coffee ersatz card, add. milk and sugar coupons and dip your bread card in it. Then wipe your mouth with your pedigree card, wash your hands with your soap coupons and dry them with your textile card.
Odds and Ends
BARRING unforeseeri obstacles to a supply of rayon yarn, production of women’s rayon hosiery during the first quarter of next year should keep up to present levels, announces the war production board. But it isn't the Peaduction most women worry about keeping up, it's the stockings. . . . Hotels now are being “scoured ~for scrap metal-and wastepaper.-. Net a fine figure about. women are the statistics showing that one woman is still’ quitting for everyone going to work in war industries.
‘50 0’
a
p————————0On Being a Real Person Don't Let Limitations ‘Become Your Humiliation
By HARRY EMERSON FOSDICK . Self-acceptance with the accompanying substitution of a positive Ce for a negative attitude, is often desperately difficult. To achjeve it a Cm - man needs alike all the practical good sense he can ‘muster and all ‘ the spritual resources he can bring to his help. Many people are humiliated by situations that need aot be humiliations at all. To be lame, to be blind, to have what Ko-Ko called “a rr caricature of a face,” to nd desired ability, to be economically | all creative realms, _ Beethoven restricted—such things are limita- | had a dreadful time not simply tions, but if they | with his deafness, as is familiarly become humili- | advertised, but with his stormy, ations Ss be- | neurotic temperament, so that \ cause inwardly | once, seeing a sleeping coachman . we make them | comfortably snoring, he exclaimed, | 50, _|-“I wish I were -as stupid as that Lo 3 a Even Napole- | fellow.” The symphonies and con- . MR. DAROFF y Si -on-Bad “to ace | -certos, however; came from" no| . To — Et eh iho OO i MO - . co > cept himself — | sleeping coachman. ce : - so - ia } oe . : © SR : Pp five feet two and | Case of Red Hair : . WILL ol You Co ’ oo oe ’ « Cr . ’ ES one-fourth in- | " | . - . . ’ 3 ches tall, and | This problem continually con43d in his class | fronts us. Physical lacks, tem- . PL7ASE TAKE Dr. Fosdick at the Ecole Milg, peramental quirks, intellectual in- - : _itaire. He never liked himself that adequacies, social inferiorities, . ° * } nL + * . # } . ' are Re De Le tm | circumstantial restrictions — such - A PUBLIC BOW! This is a great forward step—in the Field of Fine Suits! ; bitions, his diminutive stature was elements enter into every life. ’ ] - ’ : « ga limitation, but had he made of They are in themselves natural ( {t and of his scholastic mediocrity TUpOdn nie dnd the mele. ob- ‘ F , Co , d , f “. Nl d f A “oN | a # humiliation, he probably never a Th m Is ex- or a grea many years WwW a po Life is a landscaping job. We » - fine clothes. ] ’ . § are handed a ste, ample or smal, | School. for the Blind, “Obstacle His name, among clothing together with results that are new to the clothing industry! rugged or flat, picturesque or We, however, can so morbidly merchants, is one of the ; . toe x ; z “commonplace, whose general out- b 00d over es that what bo best known and most - lines and contours are largely de- | , le aes Han esteemed in the business! ’ Pd termined for us. Both limitation ! 4 * og on op lt BE toarity toe valved Tn | VAIY opportunity. aud partly in But he always preferred— BOTANY supplies the Suiting—"The Soul of the Suit every site, and the most unfore- Se os * ome a Sheet u to hide his public light . - . seeable results ensue from the | | o.oo. That result Sova an undef a bushel— . : handling—some grand opportuni= | 4ouo ¥ our own - Lbiiuging his name, I h n . th " «yr. h : ties are muffed, and some utterly ” eriving deep satisfactions : — a One man had curly hai ts are muted, nd some W171 | “Oe man had curly baie of an | | ferving deep safistock ~ DAROFF supplies the tailoring e “expression” in the Suit. notable. a of 5, children gathered ‘round : good Hothes jt Armaica’s Basic Elements him and laughed at him, and a_ } op-ranking clothiers in , . The basic elements in any per- | [ERATE P08 COL A to oon ackord wih sista Niky THE SUITING is a pure Worsted—the Botany people have sonal site are bound to appear in that his hair made him queer n Hk ied who makes - ’ the end no matter what is done | fell from one humiliating mood ted P ’ H i : — wih them, as & landscape stl | into another, and became An aw lrated Privatouns given it everything—rare, costly yarn—a 2-ply weave— reveals its size and its major smehed, distrustful, = inhibited . : ; | : 4 shapes and contours, whatever Py Tho lucy in business } } : ’ the landscape ‘architect may do. A : Lo o . s » ofog EE ene Tapttens |, Some siustions, sspinially thbee : SY THER HAND: (It is then London Mellowed for added enrichment—and pliability.) are to be accepted, .never as | ,., huriliatin Silire: and Swill ON THE OTH HA 0— y i _ humiliations, commonly as limita- problem a ou Healoulatly ISA HOUSEHOLD ; SF he © nd een eines | eine ebm short ow | Wa! al THE TAILORING is masterly done—with a wealth of hand work New York rejoices in, Centra | "lean “handicaps and natural | IVs one of the largest is masterly. done—with a wealth of hand wor e limitations, which call not for ‘Woolen Mills in the world Ce ’ . : ledges, there originally, are there | morifcation bu for good. land: © "and one of the best wisely applied—every detail done under Laboratory control. pe scaping. The same kind of situa- : known names in the : - “made a park not so much despite . } } them as by means of them. As tion that one man construes in : World of Woolens! , B Walter Rathenau puts it, “A man Jerms oF dugrin Fp an sa Millions and Millions know . RE h co : hi mit bo ing ugh 0 MO | ager remember as Ber: | Botamy—it has been __ lt wouldn't be reasonable to expect any other clothing value the peculiarity of his imperfec- | “ i! on sponsored for generations : 5 ‘ } * Sons tno the petecion of hi | signed to" you, and you cannot : GA icles of appted | to touch the "Botany Daroff." hy J * arns To be neurotic, for example, is ope Wo much oe dare Sop muss : ' find yo imprint have given , a limitation. Yet, in a sense, the TOMORROW: The great work iN magnificent service to ® > : neurotics. make the world go | of the world is not done by shin. } ’ coun i of round, Ludo fre v:/ lag gealuan, | | aeons ort It can be created only by such an alliance of mill and manufacturer
Sebi and retailer—who combine their Skills and Facilities and their
_RATIONING DATES iY: soTAwY onEATED— i Wills—in a concentrated endeavor. | ‘ 2 :
A MARVELOUS
3 : Ean i . Pn gr for 3 gallons chs | . WORSTED SUITING, ns Brown ber must written on the face of : : It's the No. 500. Rea . : : . P becomes good Sunday; Q, Dec. 19.| od o. 50 ally . " " P heme god Sunda G. oc 15. wc coupe metic upon 0 debi icf Pe | The Botany "500" Worsted Suits by Daroff are comes good Dec. 26; 8, Jan. 2, 1944; {now contain fewer coupons but : ” sought a manufacturer . Bets oe pi ! T, Jan. 9, and U, Jan, 16. All ex-|each coupon will be good for §| who would treat this fabric . pire Jan. 20, 1944. | gallons. No increase in amount of in a fitting manner—w : gasoline allowed is involved. : had the ideals and the * CANNED GOODS | : ; resources and the A SINGLE AND Green stamps A, B and © in Book| - FUEL OIL a connections—to bring the DOUBLE-BREASYED ars ood through dan. 20 Period 1 coupons for the new sea- | - : Botany Worsted. Suits to ) . hiough: Jan, 20, Yom 3% #008 Bow for 10 gallons per eerie Sor} Jarge and ALL BUILDS unit in zones through Jan. 8,|- : B D SUGAR 104%, and should be used with defl- Pl And—so—the as BE FITTED | Stamp 29 in Book 4 is good for nite value coupons for filling tanks. |. we Dre vos login five pounds through Jan. 15; 1944. |All change-making coupons and re- a almost a foregone } - Applications may be made for serve coupons are now good. z nclusi so Mr. 2 ; Ra SORBIN ugar Nath Feb. 4, 1044 Go? Daroff a : ; : : Fh ate . SHOES | TIRES A TT Dow meks ur 3) ; 3 5, , : Next inspection due: A's by] : i .
