Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 16 May 1946 — Page 5
ru DRER CASEssor EAGER MOTHERS Ficber Wi Head PRICE CONTROL [5 S255 Zari
“a r . 2k OCHESTER, N. Y, May 16 Safety Council "B11 PF Mr. Stallones sald the way to get ritating? l TE tHIenE. y : : joa ‘H Y rid of butter black market 1s t0| = yuites Press Staft Correspondent ' loose false Papin 2 Dn | Howard W. Pleber, head of Fisher remove butter price controls and| WASHINGTON, May 16.— The abbiing when orge Briggs Collins, professor of : & Reilly, insurance and real estate ; subsidies. Re new world bank plans to borrow st sprinkle » ysics at the University of Notre firm, yesterday was appointed gen- : We ned Riis production, not {money from private investors and piates. This + Bille, as chairman of the Univer-| Researcher Observes Parent eral chairman of the Inaianapous| Farmer Derides Ceilings on me of + tis hooey.” bo said. |lend i to forelgn governments as vbr hoiaing | EO CO ee vesterany| As Offspring PI safety council by C. E. Whitehill, Dairy Goods list of complaints, She Wisi al6P 3 4 Joe Tabee peo. mmy, gooey, les, was ced yesterday pring - riays. usitlent of. thé Indisnavolis oh . gram to encourage direct lending. It's alkaline President Alan Valentine. = president of Lhe po am- Objects to Officials Three steps are involved in the
ber of commerce.| WASHINGTON, May 16 (U. P)— Lorosras: He succeeds|B. E. Stallones, “a plain-talking For one thing, he sald, govern-|P
i ONE: Before the end of this year, Wallace 0. “Lee, dairy farmer from Tomball, Tex., ment officials “with nasty looks on : oh 2 who served a. |told the senate agriculture commit. [their faces” come around trying to Ee eee general chairman |tee yesterday he has just about con- | tells the facts of dairy-farming life . of the councilcluded he'd do better raising pear |,, ¢omers who grew up in the
ollins succeeds Dr. Lee A. Du- By Science Service dge, who has resigned to become Mothers over-anxious“ to have sident of California Institute of | their 3- and 4-year-olds do well are Boology. The new lversity of [inclined to boss them around so ester professor, a key leader in |, , - national def 105ERTEA GOUT they don't have a chance to do any
at any drug
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since its organ-|Duts.
ls radiation laborgtory at-Massa- thing on their own, Barbara Merrill |}
asetts Institute of - Technology, his new duties next Sep-
_|nished for the child.
of the Iowa Child Welfare Research Station found. . Miss Merrill asked 30 mothers to spend a half-hour with their children at the research station. Each mother was alone with her child in the room, but a one-way vision screen made it possible for unseen observers to watch everything that happened. - Although the mothers believed it was child's play that was of interest, the mother herself was the one being watched. In the room a chair and magazines were available for the mother. Sand, water .with floating toys, building blocks, dolls, tools and other play equipment were fur-
ization in 1941, and who will remain as a mem- . ¥ ber of the council _ executive ° comH. W. Fieber ‘mittee. A graduate of Indiana university, Mr, Fieber served three years in England, Africa and Italy during world war II He is vice president of the Indianapolis real estate board, and a member of the Rotary club, Beta Theta Pi fraternity and the board of deacons, Second Presbyterian church.
Mr. Fieber is married and lives
at 4360 Carrollton ave.
On peanuts, he said, he stands a fair chance of making money, while from milk, he is just getting headaches. The trouble, he told ‘the senators, stems directly from government policies, price ceilings and subsidies on dairy products. “I don’t think. if old Solomon, himself, came back on earth in all of his wisdom he could straighten things out of the mess they're in now,” Mr. Stallones said. Producers Federation, = estimated that from 60 fo 80 per cent of all butter sold today is black market. He took the witness stand after
Charles W, Holman, secretary of
the National Co-operative Milk He said the estimate was based
business and “whose daddies did, too.” * er Mr, Stallones also complained the only oats he can buy for feed is the expensive type used for race horses. As for cottonseed meal, he sald, 1t costs $83 a ton In Texas, when you can get it, but you can't get it. What you can get, he told the committee, is “cottonseed slab cake from Mexico at $90 a ton, andl we have no doubt the cake is sent over there to Mexico (from the U, 8.) and sent back so they can get a higher price.” Mr, Stallones is manager of the South Texas Producers Association, Inc.
private investors, with the world bank guaranteeing the bonds. These bonds will draw interest at the rate of about 4 per cent, depending upon the market. If the borrowing country defaulted, the bank would make good the repayment from its reserve fund or capitalization,
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Some ‘Show Off’ — —— pC
Sometimes the mother seemed chiefly concerned with “showing oft” the abilities of the child, mak-| ing him spell his name or “build something pretty for mother.” She might be constantly interfering. | “No, don’t put that sand in the ; ; fe water—did you hear what mother Govt. + FEEDS said!” Some couldn't be bothered | { ] j with the child’s—juvenile interests:
TE
A SE mom enrages
. : erving | 111 “I don't know—Mother is busy 3 Since ff LEY reading.” ; i : 4 Other mothers used the oppor-| , 3 tunity to give instruction as it R WAR a seemed to be wanted by the child: | ONDS ; “This is a duck and that is a 8 |swan—swans ‘have longer, thinner| RAL 2 il |necks than do -ducks.” N ASS'N. g 11K Some gave the child considerable | 1111 freedom to do what he wanted to, LIL 1471 3 § yr but was ready to give help or to| 3 play companionably when this was ——— | desired. One mother would swing rapidly! ryone l from a “playful relationship with her child to annoyed interference:
“Now stop that! I said NOI” | Mothers Return f
All the- mothers were asked to { return with their children two days {to a week later. Half were told it| | was to study the child when he was| {more familiar with the surround. | ings. The others were led to believe the child didn't do well the first time and was being offered another chance. The hint that the child was not! “getting a good grade” changed) the mother's behavior markedly. Interfering mothers became more dictatorial. Even those who usually waited for the children to show they needed help tended to boss them around, Miss Merrill reports In the Journal of Abnormal and Social Psychology. Many tried to urge their children toward the kind of play they
° thought would meet with approval . steering them away from splashing So in the water and encouraging the building of impressive structures peel with the blocks. BP ——
SE | MODEL “T’ PRICE SEEN BOOSTED BY WAR
CORVALLIS, Ore. (U. P.).—The| city of Corvallis collected a total of $1950 for two model T Fords at an auction of abandoned prop- | erty which attracted more than 40 bidders. Municipal Judge Ralph] Schindler said the prewar bid on| this type of vehicle seldom ex-| ceeded $1.
. » etd
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