Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 August 1945 — Page 21

"THURSDAY, 1 AUG. 9, 1945 “Sloppy Joe’ Leaves the Campus

A COUPLE OF sentences from Kathleen Aston, MidWest editor of Vogue and Glamour magazines, summed up the picture of college fashions presented vesterday afternoon at Block's. Speaking after the” store's “fashion faclilty” < had = zipped through a 45-minute style parade on ‘the second floor, Miss Aston said, “College. LBirls are going ta have a new, feminine look this year. They're going to leave

‘sloppy Joe’ clothes to their little

high school sisters.” All' of the costumes shown (every one of them chosen by the 21-girl “faculty”) bore her out. Even the most éasual outfits had a trim look—as, neatly rolled-up jeans with striped blazer or rodeo shirt; slim frontier pants and leather jacket Whittled waistlines and fuller skirts; higher necklines; more wrist-length than bracelet-length sleeves for classroom wear; more cap sleéves for date dresses; twocolor or two-fabric combinations; more neutral shades, winter white and young black clothes were high spots of the show.

» n n BELTED MODELS, full or tunic length, stole the honors among coats. Most were untrimmed and the others: had only restrained touches of leopard, nutria or Persian lamb. Two princess styles were included. Suede-finished fabrics and plain colors predominated. Fleece fabrics appeared in white for a threequarter length coat with black-and-white checked facings and for an indigo belted tunic. In daytime dresses the newest look came with those having bloused uppers in battle-jacket style. Neutral tones were brightened with contrasting stitching or metallic touches. Glitter sprinkles did the same thing for daté frocks. Dress-up frocks included combinations of dark crepe skirts with lace ‘or glitter-trimmed tops. Velveteen, crepe, satin, faille and moire were the most popular fabrics. ” ” n AMONG EVENING frocks it was bouffant styles three to one over slim crepe models, with net or plaid taffeta being used for the full-skirted - designs. In suit or jacket-and-skirt outfits, blazer and cardigan styles got the nod from the college girls, although these had some

THE INDIANA

* The blazer influence in a Pretti design from Block’s college shop. Dark green or red jackets are bound with the plaid of the pleated skirt.

competition from fitted, belted tunic and lumberjacket tops. One box jacket was shown— black-and-white check lined with red. (It seems that checks are fighting it out with plaids for campus favor.) A tricky taupe suit had a high surplice closing. Fur coats suggested for the coed ranged from leopard-sten-cilled Japin to nutria, with “mutatioh” muskrat, blended muskrat and muskrat au naturel occupying a big space in between. For after-curfew hours, styles included night shirts of printed flannelette as well as elongated pajama tops, broad-striped and polka-dotted pajamas, and robes —plain, polka-dotted and quilted. (By L. F)

Wartime Eating 4 Meta Given

SUNDAY MENUS Breakfast

Sliced peaches. Ready-to-eat cereal. Crumb pancakes and sirup Dinner Fruit cocktail. Baked chicken with cel (see recipe). Parsley potatoes. - Buttered spinach: Sliced tomatoes. Rosettes.

Ming

Supper

Tomato and cucumber aspic with potato and pea salad, watercress

garnish. Deviled eggs.

Crusty rolls, Fresh pears. u ” n | Cereal Flake Stuffing: Six ec. of corn or wheat flakes, 3 tbsps. chopped onion, 3.thsps. minced parsley, 1 tsp. |salt, 5 tsp. crumbled sage leaves, | 4 tsp. poultry seasoning, 1% tsp. pepper, 1 c¢. hot water, 1 bouillon] cube, 4 c. melted butter or margarine, 2 eggs beaten. Crumble corn flakes slightly, and add onion, parsley and seasonings. Add bouillon cube and butter to the hot water. When bouillon cube is | dissolved and butter melted, stir and add to the corn flake mixture. Add the eggs. Mix well, Stuff fowl and bake. Makes 21 c. stuffing,

lenough for a 3-1b. chicken.”

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Judging Ends

< Carolyn Bolander,

In County

4-H Show

Annual Exhibit Closes After 4-Day Display

The final list of winners in the Marion county 4-H exhibit held in Ipal®o hall was chosen yestel:

today. ‘The award winners announced yesterday were: Fourth Division Clothing—Ann Woosley, Ann Goold, Norma Shimmel and Betty Lou Mowry, blue ribbons. Fifth Division Clothing—Uldene Christenberry, Iva Monger, garet Schuh, Jani Augustine and Patty Murphy, purple ribbons; Maja Peters, Mary Ella Echols, Joan Gluesenkamp, Leta Cunningham, Jani Augustine, Betty Lou Haymaker, Joy Abney, Grace Dorrell, Patty .Murphy, Jane Yorger and Delores Meyers, blue ribbons.

Food Awards

Food Preparation—Barbara Kent, Ann Abbott, Lorraine Kettleson, Rosemary Fuller, Betty Bogue, Beth Minnick, Jani Augustine, Betty Lou Haymaker, Margaret Schuh and Dorothy Murphy, purple ribbons; Jacqueline Hanneman, Dorothy Murphy, Jean Ann Kennedy, Betty Jo Neal, Elizabeth Vogel, Shirley West, Dorothy Maxwell, Donald Haymaker, Elizabeth Meyer, Joan Gluesenkamp, Carol Ann Atkinson, Dorothy Cummins, Betty Engle, Madeline Zaring, Jane Zaiser, Barbara Sponsgel, Juanita Harris, Annabelle Leonard, Magjorie Holderfield, Sandraha Kloess, Ann fWoosley, Lenora Hanna, Martha Miller, Phyllis Ferrell, Joanne Archer. Janice Curtiss, Barbara Baker,

Doris Mitchell, Patricia Kafoure, Janet White, Rosemarie Bockes, Joann Mithoefer, Martha Ann Bosner, Opal Dorrell, Sally Brown, Jeanne Alexander, Lois Kieffer, Doris Prange, Ruth Robertson, Ann Goold, Patricia Murphy, Doris Duncan and Uldene Christenberry, blue ribbons.

Victory Project Victory Project—Myrtle Barnhart, Mary Ann Garrison, Carolyn Zapp, Uldene Christenberry, Ruth Robertson, Margaret Schuh, Koopman, purple ribbons, Blue ribbon winners in the victory - project were June Brown, Catherine Garrison, Janet Haviland, Wanda Lewellen, Joyce VanDeman, Rosemarie Bockes, Catherine MecCoy, Patty Brown, Barta Hapgood, Margaret McQueeney, Janet Hoffmark, Marilyn Phillips, Betty Jo Fisher, William and Alfred Shipley, Margaret Davis, Kitty Echols, Shirley Sherrick, Bertha Huber, Jacqueline Hanneman, Paul Toms, Patty Latimer, Mary Ella Echols, Charles and Bernard Butcher, Barbara Sponsel. Betty Hurley, Barbara Kinne, Marie Robertson, Barbara Clark, Jeanne Alexander, Martha Miller, Carolyn Yorger, Dorothy Murphy, Roberta Yorger Marianne Miller, Ann Berlin, Ann Woosley, Jean Gentry, Lenora Hanna and Joan Hurley. Canning — Janice Curtiss, Ann Goold, Ruth Gardner and Jani Augustine, purple ribbons; ® Barbara Phillips, Judy Helms, Elizabeth Ferguson, Jean Ann Kennedy, Myrtle Barnhart, Janice Curtiss, Good, Joan Dinkle, June Mitchell, Ann Goold, Ann Woosley, Mary Ella and Kitty Lou Echols, . Barbara Sponsel, Jerry Mitchell, Virginia and Dorothy Murphy, Ruth Gardner. Joan Gluesenkamp, Margaret Schuh, Margaret Reilly, Betty Lou Haymaker and Jani Augustine, blue ribbons.

W. C. T. U. Session

The Zerelda Wallace W.C.T.U. will meet at 11 a. m. Tuesday in the home of Mrs. T. R. Ratcliff, 6171 Carrollton ave. Mrs. Ezra S. Kinney will read a paper on “Food vs. Alcoholic Beverages.” Devotions will be

day before the show opened to the’ public. The four-day exhibit ended | ',

Mar- |

By. WILLIAM A. O'BRIEN, M. D. SERVICEMEN infected with malaria which has not yet run. its course should not be led to believe the disease is incurable. Relapses in malaria can be avoided or suppressed by taking an anti- .~ malarial drug such as atabrine, By using modern treatment it is possible to keep nearly all malaria patients in such a good state: of health that they can perform their regular military dyties. : : The variety in Dr. O'Brien ghich spells of chills, fever and sweat occlir every second day is known as benign tertian malaria. Patients may have relapses for two or three years after their last infection. , The relapses tend to be less severe and to occur at longer intervals as body -defenses are developed against the parasite.

POLIS TIMES

| THE DOCTOR SAYS: Easy, Soldier; It' s Just a Matter of Vimo

Hope for Malaria Victims

indi- | ter of Kunming, capital of Tunnan |

WHEN relapses occur, medical treatment should be started promptly, as symptoms are usually relieved within 48 hours. The medical department of the United States army reports the reduction in hospital stay for malar~ jal patients from 50 days in the past to 7 days at present. Deaths from this disease are now rare, associated with some other disease or the inability to treat the disease promptly and effectively because of a special situation. Zz o 8 =» . EVEN though infected with malaria, patients are not a menace to their associates, their families, or their community, provided they secure medical treatment when symptoms recur, Malaria is spred by anophelese mosquitoes, and general mosquito control measures are usually adequate to prevent its dissemination. Benign tertian malaria is the only variety which has relapses. Atabrine actually cures the malignant variety so that few if any relapses occur. :

and nearly all have been.

RELAPSES in infected

AFTER CHENNAULT

CHUNGKING, Aug. 9 (U. Poa) street in the crowded shopping cen-

CHINA STREET NAMED [protection Lt. Gen. Claire L. Chene

ult afforded the city from air raids since 1942. Chennault, former commander of the U.S. 14th air force in China, | nas just completed a 3000-mile tour of China. He will return to his

viduals usually occur when they do|Province, has been- named Chen-| Louisiana home for what his friends not take. their medicine, and with |nault road in appreciation of the] sald would be a temporary r

some forms of physical activity. « Those who take proper treatment are not even subject to relapses while undergoing strenuous activity

for malaria." Though atabrine may cause a yellowish discoloration of thé skin, this is not jaundice. Atabrine is a yellow drug-and is deposited as such in the skin. The yellowness disappears after the drug is discontinued. # o o MANY infected servicemen believe that once infected with malaria, they will have attacks the rest of their lives. This is untrue. Impairment of physical health which arises from malarial attacks responds to simple ‘measures in a short time. Even in those individuals in whom a large number of attacks have occured, the effects on the body have been slight. The severity decreases and the ineffectiveness of treatment increases

as time goes on.

4 MEN TO JUDGE ACCUSED NAZIS

Agree to Try Major Cases

By ROSETTE HARGROVE \ NEA Staff Writer PARIS, Aug. 9.—Vacation-starved Parisians are enduring terrible ordeals in their efforts to escape from

At Nuernberg.

LONDON, Aug. 9 (U, P,). — The four - power representatives an- | nounced yesterday they had agreed on the establishment of an international military, tribunal before which major war criminals of the European axis would be tried. The major Nazi war criminals “whose offenses have no particular geographical location” will be brought before the tribunal Nuernburg. The agreement was signed ‘by Justice Robert Jackson, for the United States: Lord Chancellor Sir William Jowitt, for Great Britain;

at

| Robert Falco, for the French proMarjorie | and Patricia Murphy, |

visional government; I. T. Nikit-| chenko and A. N. Trainin, for] Soviet Russia. ,The tribunal will consist of four members, each with an alternate. One member and one alternate will be named by each of the signatory governments,

Types of Crime

The tribunal has jurisdiction over

|erimes against peace, violations of

laws or customs of war, and crimes

{against humanity.

The Charter guiding the tribunal states that the “official position of defendants, whether as heads of states or as responsible officials in government departments, shall not be considered as freeing them from responsibility or mitigating punishment.” The tribunal is authorized to ad-

'iminister the death penalty or any

other type of punishment including the confiscation of stolen property. There is no provision for appeal from its decisions. The Charter provides “that the first trial will be held at Nuernburg with subsequent trials “held at such

{places as the tribunal may decide.” Laura |

'PINCERS TO SQUEEZE

JAPS—MACARTHUR

MANILA, Aug. 9 (U. P.).—Gen. Douglas MacArthur, commander of American forces in the Pacific, said today that Russia's war declaration against Japan “will make possible a great pincer movement which cannot fail to end in the destruction of the enemy.” MacArthur said he was delighted with the news, and added: “In Europe, Russia was on the eastern front, the allies on the west. Now the allies are on the east and Russia on the west, but the result will be the same.”

{ make their reservations,

+

the city’s burning pavements. Most people go through something something ‘akin to purgatory to get to whatever

lhaven they have

chosen for their first “free” vacation since the occupation of France.

They wait line 18, 24,

in and

{even 36 hours just {to secure a travel

permit which in turn will give We ? them the right— Miss Hargrove four days later—to buy their railroad tickets and make reservations on a train.® But it happens time and again that when they go to the quota is already full. That means another trip to the station. Families “sweat out” reservations in relays, but there are hundreds of travelers who have no family to fall back on. They have to do it themselves or pay somebody to do it for them, Make Money Waiting This has led to a new racket— standing in train lines, for a consideration. The charge for a day's waiting is $5, double that amount for 24 hours. Old war pensioners,

{ unemployed men and women, and

even old ladies have been raking in a tidy sum of money at the game. The scene outside the principal Paris railway stations is picturesque to say the least. Most 24-hour “waiters” bring folding chairs or stools as well as food and drink. Some play cards. The older women knit or mend until the light fades. Hawkers come around with sandwiches, fruit, and soft drinks, which they sell at top prices. « Fifty cents |= the minimum price for anything and they do a brisk trade. “Priority” card holders, such as disabled veterans of both world wars and blind people, can make good money outside stations. Their cards enable them to move to the top of any line, whether it is for a bus, food or tickets. As was to be expected, sharpwitted compatriots were ready to make use of them. Obviously the “priority” travelers could only visit one station a day. But there are four major Parisian terminals, and at $10 a ticket the game is worth while. Moveover, a blind person, for example, can claim a second ticket for the person accompanying him or her.

led by Mrs. Roy Heishman.

Exquisite Stockings for Exquisite Legs!

Parisians Endure Ordeals. In Vacation Travel Efforts

£|to stand in line, and for last-min-

§| France's railways are working at a

The vacationist's trials are not over when and if he acquires the precious ticket which will take him to his awn particular Eden. Trains now operating in France usually seat about 800. Seven hundred of these places can be booked. The remainder are left for the wounded, the halt, the lame and the blind, for prisoners and deportees unable

ute passengers to whom it is a iife-or-death matter to make that train Railroads Burdened As in every other country, fifth of their prewar capacity. Heavy military needs still have to be met. Many bridges are still under repair, How to cope with the passenger problem is something the railway managements are practically unable to solve. “Never in the history of the railways have so many French people wanted to travel,” declared a high official. Thousands of prewar motorists now have to use trains. In the first two weeks of July, 103,000 vacationers left the Gare de Lyon in 157 trains, as against 103,000 in 683 trains in 1939. Trains with seating room for 800 leave with Bon ble that number. It is evident, however, that the cost. in physical and nervous exhaustion which Parisians have to pay in -order to spend their first “free” vacations away from the city must be worth it, as evidenced by the long, patient lines outside the stations.

SOAP SCULPTORS WIN TIPTON, Aug. 9 (U. P.).—Winning third place in a national soap sculpturing contest today brought a $75 prize to 15 Tipton high school students. Their work will be shown nationally in art museums next

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