Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 December 1943 — Page 23

te Field Marshal g's carefuiuy unter-offensive in

jon today, In many | 8 in the summer of on Hindenburg had ours of July 15 as r thousand-stringed tune on the new break through ihe Prench and Amery with the British, in Planders, ttle confidently. But len weren't as guod vere better. Cocky azed to find himself where he expected a lull, allied tanks | and bore down on ud to have Rheims, at * these battlefields = ad been forced back ° 8 armies, he staged ° . 8. Intended as a = was surprised and ° arted. It was then

eakness'

» political effects of ward acknowledged. | 4 could be regarded ssful but bold stroke On the other nand, d to all eyes as the . To fail in an atr from being van-

Gating

is commander, Field © n, it is believed, now Kiev. To fail now, 4 ast reverses, would = olitical consequences Balkans might wel: §

vers point out, Hit | ¥ . “For the Russians, ful. For the Nazis, the end. From Aug. 3 jonal swrender, was 1.

ly

NGTON, Dec. 17.— the President to ‘re-] ss on his conferences | numerous he doubt- ). The only question | whether his report’ re gesture, repeating 2s of the Tehran and niques, or a precise ' political commit-

no intelligent Amer-: ect the Commander itary plans on which 1 engaged. 3 cidions are in a difem of constitutional | by our esecutive to ding until confirmed 5, by both houses of | as well as Americans herefore anxious. that e Wilsoniah mistakes n of the settlements

sible. s mistakes were: His function with senate evén to himself, that allies during the war | fecisions’ of the later

nators, the Roosevelt | red the senate when executive-agreemenit | ceompll. In a lendpowers to make postnate. Joreign relations ; congress So took the leadership declaration for inter-

ship for the adminis-

ye public, through the is field. He tried to

: y bobby pins alone, it probably constitutes an illegal tie-in oe according to the office of

it ila

price | t. Complaints are coming from shoppers that combs with bows

Ta il

Fy 5

combination if he them that way in 1042, It is unlikely that such common rm as combs and pins were not sold separately. You can report such instances price pane), of your local ration board. They will investigate y to make an adjustment. 8 = = ~~ ® 8 =

Butter Quality Marks

So far there seéms to be no way the shopper can be sure whether or not she is buying low-grade, 89-score butter at the ceiling price of higher-score butter. Ceiling prices on butter are tied up to quality but there is no obligation to state the score on the label. Many large, quality dairies voluntarily mark their higher-score butter, ranging up “in the 90's, however, so you can look for that mark to be sure you are paying the appropriate price. A reported 195,776 pounds of low-grade, 89-score butter was landed in New York from Argentina, This drop-in-the-bucket of butter supply will probably never be seen in your market, according to the commodity credit corporation who handled it. It is more likely to go to industrial users. - » . . . »

Cottage Cheese ‘Free’ #. Cottage cheese has been whisked off rationing again to avoid spoilage. Now only cottage cheese containing more than 5 per cent butterfat is rationed, and there is very little of that, . .. Rayon bindings on blankets, normally averaging 6 inches in overall width, have been cut from their previous four-inch limitation to three inches. This is expected to save about two and a half million yards of precious rayon fabric.

+L

RATIONING DATES

MEAT

Brown L, M, N and P are good; RN becomes good Sunday. All expire an. 1. Brown R becomes good Dec. +8, Jan. 2, 1944; T, Jan. 9, and U, an. 16. All expire Jan. 29, 1944.

CANNED GOODS

Green stamps A, B and C in Book expire Monday, Green D, E and F re good through Jan. 20.

SHOES Stamp 18 in Book 1 good. No. 1 irplane” stamp in Book 3 good. TIRES

Next inspection due: farch 31, 1944; B’s and C's by Feb.

every six months or miles, whichever is first,

SUGAR

five pounds through Jan. 15, 1944.

GASOLINE

midnight Jan. 21.

used.

FUEL OIL

unit in all zones through Jan.

29, 1944, and commercial vehicles, every 5000]

| Parr, Carolyn Sanders, Elsie Stefan, “Thomas Bernhardt, Albert Levy and |. : Gene Vaughn. > | Seniors appearing on the list in|

| Freije, Artillus Kernodle, Edward

| Spurgeon,

| Schwicho, who will tell stories, | Betty Deckard, Mary Lou Karstedt,

Stamp 29 in Book 4 is good for |

Applications may be made for Kee Doris Prather, Kathleen Rothcanning sugar until Feb. 20, 1944. well, Willa Mae Bruhn, Betty Delks,

B-2 and C-2|

Stamp A-9 good for 3 gallons until Cohen.

| |

stamps good for five gallons until certificate.

Period 1 coupons for the new sea- | through March 13, 1944. All change-

A's - by [son are good now for 10 gallons per | making 3./ coupons are now good.

Ho With Straight For the Second - Grade Period.

Seven Manual high school students with straight A plus records Jead the honor roll for the second

grade period. : They are Lois Cambridge, Pauline

clude Betty Strols, Elsie Popplewell, Dorothy Reinacker, Wilma Rooker, Janice Mathews, Jean Maschmeyer, Ruth Johnson, Evelyn Snoddy and Opal Studebaker, Viola Woodard, Nelda Ann Carver, Betty Davis, Norma Zelner, Marilyn Chapman, Jane Turley, Patty Schutte, Elsa Stumpf, Laverne Zimmermann, William Lee, Raymond Baker, Gerald Tutterrow, Walter Mussmann, Jacob Kanter, Martin Hamer, Donald Miller, Harold Emmick, Carl Kenniinger, William Sisson, Morris Alboher, Robert Kirkman, Edward Reifeis, Max . Taylor, William

Parks, Bill Schumann, Robert Schwartz and Ted Critchfield. Appearing on the junior high school list are Joan May, Donna Heininger, Virginia Callis, Catherine Stevens, Carolyn Kuebler, Bernice Sowders, Lois Rednour, Leatha Asbury, Mildred Estes, Patricia Smith, James O'Nan, Walter Reinacker, Frederick Sears, George Stephen Baker, James Link, Daniel Reichner, Bill Hanson, Anton Holevas and Allen Glass. Fourteen English students will give ‘a Christmas program Tuesday at school 6. They are Fred Arnold, Thomas Bernhardt, Hildegard Bickel, Albert Chernin, Betty Davis, Harold Emmick, Hazel Estle, Phyllis Koehler, Juana Grifford, Edward Kerkhofl, Esther McKinney, Patricia Noehlman, Norma Ritter and Arvin and

Barbara Shortridge. and Laverne Zimmerman, who will give musical numbers. Typing certificates have been awarded to the following intermedi{ate students: ‘Betty Bruce, Karl Muff, Verne Chandler, Bonnie Mc-

| Gerry Glass, Helen Reidwek, Anna Karl, Doris Wilkins and Eleanor

Mary Fritsche received a master’s

1944, period 2 coupons good through Feb. 7, 1944; period 3 coupons good

Ns

coupons and reserve

Only

Person Who Invests His Life Enriches Himself

‘By HARRY EMERSON FOSDICK constanly runs upon self-focused, un-

aed lives, miserably striving to find happiness by attending to

themselves.

a wide hearing. Popularly it has meant:

In late years the gospel of self-expression has gained

Explode yourself; let your

self go; knock the bungs from your emotional barrels and let them gurgle! As a protest against petty, prohibitive moralims, this gospel

is easily explicable, and as a means ‘of release to some individuals, ted hand and food with senseless scrupulosities, it has had its value. The wise “counselor pleads not against self - expression but for it; he, too, uninhibited, outgoing life; but he wants self - expression to be under-

Or. Fosdick stood and practiced in accord with the realistic, psychological facts:

Merely exploding individual emotions for the sake of the momomentary self-centered thrill gets one nowhere. Like firecrackers they go off and nothing comes of it. In the end, the constant repetition of such emotional selfrelief disperses life, and leaves it more incoherent and aimless than it was before.

“Express Instincts”

Even in the sexual realm. this is true. Says onie of our eminent psychiatrists: “From the point of view of cure, the advice to go and ‘express your instincts’ is only one degree more foolish than the antiquated advice which used (Lo be given to every neurotic girl: ‘All you need is to get married’ In actual experience I have never known a true neurosis cured by marriage, still less by sexual libertinism. But I have personally known many neuroses precipitated by marriage; indeed, I am sometimes tempted to think that half my patients are neurotic because they are not married and the other half because they are!”

Adequale self-expression is a much deeper matter than selfexplosion. Its true exponent is not the libertine but the artist, the musician, the scientist, the fortunate mother absorbed in her family, the public-spirited businessman creatively doing something for his community, the philanthropist going all out for the sake of others in need, the teacher saying as Prof George H. Palmer did, “Harvard college pays me for doing what I would gladly pay it for allowing me to do.” Such personalities, in eminent or humble places, really express themselves, and their common quality is not ‘self-absorption but self-investment. Indeed, all durable happiness

BELIEVES STATE WILL WIN SUIT

'Emmert Says nt S. to Dis-

wants the |

partakes of this quality. One must lose oneself in music to enjoy it.

One must forget oneself in a game

to love it. One must go out to one's friends to know [riendship’s satisfactions. The egocentric person tries to pounce on happiness, but he always misses it,

‘Altogether Selfish’

To call human nature essentially .

and altogether selfish, obviously, is a misstatement. Human nature is so constituted that it never flowers out until it escapes from absorbing self-concern, Some of the direst perils that confront the world today spring not from egocentricity but from man's constitutional urge to overpass it, and from the attempted satisfaction of that urge in mistaken ways. The totalitarian state, for example, is made possible by men’s insistent desire to belong to something greater than themselves— a race or nation in loyalty to which they lost themselves, mands for self-devotion, even though we call them “pooled selfishness,” have this much sense in them—they recognize, as philosophies of individualistic license and libertinism do not, that man is essentially made not fof egocentricity but for self-investment, and can never be satisfied without it.

" When this deep-seated urge in |

human nature, highly used, achieves its. consummate exppession, it produces the world's savjors. ‘They live not so much in themselves as in other people with whom they identify themselves. As Jesus sald, What befalls anyone befalls them. Looked at from without, they seem to sacrifice themselves; from within, thelr experience is not so much self-sacrifice as self-expan-sion. Then enlarge the little ego into the extended personality. In them Jesus’ basic principle is shown to be not alone great ethics but sound psyhology—only he who loses lifé saves it, only he who expends life keeps it, only he who invests life- enriches it. of self-esteem.

MONDAY

0. E. 8. MEETS

Brightwood chapter 399, O. E. 8,

miss lllinois Charge of Pollution.

"Attorney General James A. Em-| mert said today that he believed the | {U. 8. supreme court would dismiss a’ complaint brought by the state of) Illinois to prevent four Indiana | cities from discharging sewage and] industrial waste into Lake Michi-| gan waters used by Chicago. Emmert, recently-returned from Washington where he was sdmifted! to plead before the supreme court, | said he believed the court would) base such action upon a similar case in a dispute between the states of Kansas and Arkansas which in-| volved the Arkunsas river, | The court had given Indiana and the four cities — Hammond, East Chicago, Gary and Whiting — until Dec. 20 toanswer the complaint, Emmert sald a petition asking dismissal of the complaint had been placed with the court chief clerk for filing, He said he was informed

All such de- |

the court probably would not an-| inounce a decision until late January or February. Cites Other Case In the Kansas-Arkansas case he sald the court ruled that the case could not be brought before them “until other means of settlement had been exhausted” and he sald] they had not been in the case “cf Indiana and Illinois. The complaint charged that un[treated sewage and waste discharged [into Lake Michigan by way of the grand Calumet river and the Indi{ana harbor ship canal had ‘“poi[soned, polluted and contaminated’ {water used by Chicago citizens for pur-

{drinking and other domestic

poses. Illinois asked for a writ of mnjunction to prevent further such | disposal unless the defendants took | measures to make them sanitary.

MAGAZINE PUBLISHES STORY BY ERNIE PYLE

“Good Neighbors” an article by Ernie Pyle, is included in the January issue of The Woman, monthly publication. | The world-famous columnist tells {what good neighbors mean to him {The story was inspired by the fact that neighbors from his community | greatly helped the Pyle family when [Ernie's mother was stricken paralysis. “To most. of us,

‘good nelghior”

will hold a meeting and Christmas has become a mere academic term,”

party at 8 p. m. Monday in Veritas Charlotte Hobson is worthy matron and Jack Kohl,

temple. © Mrs.

worthy patron.

he said. “We who live In cities have almost forgotten what a good neigh- | bor is. But the country know."

If your Christmas Eve is a girl with a sense of values, she'll en dose.

with |

people |

CARNATION PRINTS

8.98

Wear them under furs, these pretty prints, with silhouettes in color of enlarged carnaHons.

Red on Hunter's green, yellow on

Sizes 12 to 20.

black, or blue on brown,

BLOCK'S—Paragon Dresses, Fourth Floor

WITH THE LOOK OF MINK!

your choice of this hardy fur! Its wonderfully blended tones simu.

late fabulously expensive mink or sable, the lines are flowing and | 3;

fashionable, with deep turnback cuffs and lavish tuxedo fronts,

They're truly gift-worthy. Prices include the Government Tax.

Ea es aaa ae ed ee oe ar r= A ham ati SLE