Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 October 1948 — Page 15

{ere r, Terre Haute, ran Craggs, tion; Thomas polis, charters; shville, mileage; lianapolis, eligie ce, Marion, dis« d T. Schroeder, rial.

principal convention Livert, Bloomington, , Edward C. Harde xt chiel of records; Ibany, great keeper Edleman, AMderyony

She

anapolis great the

will ~preside at

t Pocahontas taking are: Sue Reynolds, rahontas; Alice Baronah; Magy Frances at Minnehaha: Desreat prophetess, and ticello, great keeper

Rausch, Evansville, yum; Bertha Strain, ctress;, Doris Davis Indianapolis, great Anderson; Maude Bess Smith, Indie tees; Nana nedy, Terre Haule anapolis, board of Reelsville; Berniece Bess Levi, Rushville, {aze! Buchanan, Ine infrey, Linton, and Terre Haute, bynapolis, press: Alice Zella DeLashmitt, Addie Duling, Faire mns:.- Bertha Dovla, and reception; Nele Haute memorial, Ft. Wayne, installae

i pth

RIC:

[ool

ine

ORS: rown, reen, eige,

lo 20

Diggs, .

_

. the - SAecess: or

“men

Navy,

win. great part to bum intelligence. from “one Englishman -whe-.

Inside Indianapolis

“THE WAY TO a man’ . stomach” § heart is through his

The way ior a Food fat argument with no salad dressing barred is to get a group of dietitians together to decide on a few Wiens. “Ladies, remember the basic seven.” “Girls, what do you think” of banana ice cream with liver and onions?”. “I'd like a little discussion on those green beans.” : (If by any chance you are reading .this from a bea in one of the hospitals of the Indiana University Medical Center, you may be interested in knowing that the cole slaw you had today was argued over for 15 minutes. You almost had head lettuce. A Waldorf salad was in the making, too, Democratic procedure, however, decreed colesslaw, With vinegar and vegetable oil.) I have heard people complain about hospital food. Mostly the ‘complainants were individuals who have never spent more than 15 minutes in a hospital and that was with grouchy Aunt Matilda. Hospital food, according to such old wives’ tales, is under-cooked, over-cooked but never cooked right, Well, there's room for argument.

Don’t Overlook Dietitians

WHEN YOU speak of arguments about hospital féod, never overlook the dietitians’ meeting. I had the pleasure of attending a weekly contest at the TU Medical Center. Once a week, dietitians, the people who know all about food, settle menus for the coming two weeks. These menus include the cafeteria where doctors, nurses and employees eat. Student dietitians make up the menus and the

FOOD FOR.THOUGHT~—Iima Pinedo,

cfudent aietitian at Center manu to the exer

the Indiana Univérsity Medical

A ' . q presente her suggestions tor-a two-week

ts who sit while Irma wonders,

By Ed Sovolal

Wallace, Times Staff Photographer. : 2 a

By Robert

|

‘The L 1 Signapells | Times 4 on them. Before a menu is sent to the kitchens, = Tn picked to the last bone. selections. This was a menu for the adult patients 3 again? We just had hamburger last week." : 3 ; which makes the job that much tougher. Only director of tHe dietary department and assistant assistant directof” and administrative dietitian; economics; Pauline E. Hart, instructor of employee garet Reusenberg Mrs, Ruth Davidson, Ada VanPinson and Ann Me(alla. Bursley were in the same kettle of fish with Miss feeling she shouldn't have too much trouble findThey'd move green heans from Monday to apneal stomach apreal, all kinds of appeal. Peas from the original time schedvled, ally that meals were high spots in a patients’ day. “the pers vou are eating come to vou after 23

staff puts its stamp of approval or’ disapproval ~ j li “SECOND SECTION iE . MONDAY, . OCTOBER 11, 1048 : > > PAGE 18 dietitians have come to an agreement. while =~ a seven student dietitians have. had their labors Trma Pinedo, graduate of the University of \Ng ler S rv Philippines, was the first one up to bat for her to cover three meals a day for two weeks. Those ; 9” of you who have very little contact with kitchens ‘a , 3 or the art of planning meals can’t quite appreciate : 7 her problem. Neither can those of you who come f ; » 7 : home in the evening and yell, “What! Hamburger ' Y : Miss Pinedo had these people to convince. Get a load of this list and notice they're all women. one of the 18 ladies is married. How much significance that has, I don’t know. Lute Martha Troutt, professor of home economics, headed the list. Then there were: Bettve Popnpenseaker. acting Louise Irwin, assistant’ director and therapeutic dietitian; Ruth Mary Yakel, instructor in home: training and assistants; Mildred Wurtman, 3etty Jean Jackson. Martha Irvin, Wilma Wyble, MarHess, Mary McLaughlin, Judith Nooney, Clara Zempel, Ruth Zempe!, Ruth ‘McDannold, Frances *Fi'ther Reed... Marv Maurer, Mary Jedlicks, Betty Jean Greer. Janelle Cole and Lorraine Pinedo. They were student dietitians. , As Miss Pinedo read the menus, T had the ing the way to a man’s heart someday. The board of exnerts, however, had different ideas. Fridav. take lentil soup. hold it for, a few days and substitute tomato soun. They consideted eye might be kicked off a luncheon, nut on a dinner and finally wind up on a luncheon four days High Soots in Patients’ Day MISS TROUTT reminded the ladies periodicJust for laughs I suggested they have little cards printed with each meal telling the patients that minutes of diseuscion.” Might make the meal interesting. The experts didn’t go for the

more idea. I came to the rescue during a heated discussion over a Sunday dessert hut to no avail, Miss Troutt said flatly: “No cigars or heer.” They

finally settled on lemon milk sherbet and a cookie, Vow. Tmagine that stuff being more healthful than a good cigar and a cold bottle of beer? All were the best of friends when the meeting ended. Surprised me.’ Can't ever figure women. The best one was when a dietitian said to another (hoth vere anite got a fn thar diagnegion) . “Those were excellent menus this week. weren't they?’ I'd hate to be in the room when the menus are punk.

CHAMPION . . . ALSO—Runnerup for top honors was Frank WOMEN'S CHAMP—Best of the women anglers of the day wes

- ~

Sabotin Jr., 737 Haugh St., who caught the second largest fish of the ~~ Mrs. Lenora Emery; 1442 Herschel St., because she caught more fish

Hell Under Water _

-There is no unintere here in.

NORFOLi., Va.. Oct 11--esting portion.of the Navy's ersatz ‘war,

thee Little Creek amphibious training base. but 1

have fined down my examples to underwater deand amphibious intelligence. these highly specialized components, failure of a single operation or a That's tn gay a dozen and a couple of could make or the floating

molition Around

whole war énuld be draped. who can't even swim fast, eveglassed, skinny technicians break the effort of the Air Force, the Marines and the Army. The mighty chore of Mmodern-wariarehas he come so intricate =o dependent bn team precision, that one force. faction or individual might almost the mass effort of industry and manpower:

Sway It i= a truism that some of the cocktail party admirals and generals who .infcst Washington

desks have hot vet fully assimilated.

Intelligence at Tarawa

THF, GREAT LOSS of life at Tarawa was due The data on Tarawa was gleane knew the place. Information on tides, reefs, shore configuration was sketchy and inaccurate. Those were the days before we had LCVT's— boats with tractor treads. The Americans came in at low. tide, ripped the guts out of their craft on coral reefs, and the troops walked hundreds of vards through a driving slect of steel before thev found the beach.

Modern amphibious intelligence. as taught here. is the slim spine of total effort... On the temper of the native the shape of the. soil, the water supply, the installations, the climate, ‘the minerals. the rainfall, the diseases — juat evervthing --rests the net of combined striving by ar-

tillerv, naval bombardment, submarine recon, air spotting. troop transport‘, bombing. strafing, supply movement and head-to-head combat by ground troopg. The task "here is to perfect an overall

+ around the foe's front vard. with a wet-proof pad

than any other feminine angler . . . four bass with a total weight. i 69

day. Here he holds the $45 Hurd rod and built-in reel he earned for ounces. Here she holds her Pole-N-Rod prize. *

coming in second with a 2-pound, é-ounce smallmouth bass. ~~ -

By Robert C. Roark

intelligence in erder that there be no more! Tarawas., Underwater demolition is a tiny facet of the. aggregate, It is a part of intelligedice as well as’ a part of offensive action ‘against an enemy. It| is compnsed of men who are braver than I am. UDT was mighty hush-hvsh during the fading dave of World War II Even with the hush, I think we lost 70 per cent off Omaha Beach. And it wasn't exactly picnicky at Iwo and Okinawa. All these boys do is swim for a living. equipped with such things as knives, high explosives, rubber lungs, shark repellant. note pads, rubber feet fins. And. oxvgen tanks which send them into epileptic ‘convuls jon If thev prolong their-sub= surface time! They blow up beach fortifications. | under the enemy guns, a few hours before in-

vasion time,

We!-Proof Pad Strapped to Knee eg

THEY COMPILE last-minute data. at night, a | couple of days before dog-day, by swimming

strapped to a knee. For that they are silently decanted. from’ rubber Boats. For daylight demolition, they are hurled. from speedifig tandingicraft, while the off-shore support and the upstairs planes lay down a blighting cover of whining steel. Anybody who gets home gets a stout swill of] brandy, in defiance of the late Josephus Daniels’ | lofty standards of seagoing abstinence. It is assumad they have earned a snort. ° ; { UDT-men get no extra pay. But they add tremendously important intelligence to last-minute surveys of an objective. and they provide the final emphasis to. pre-invasions.destruction—ex-plode mines, destrov tank traps. blow up shipsnags. And their future function is classified secret, The UDT-men at Little Creek. Va.. and all] their collaborating brothers. provide me with the hunch that the United States will win the next war, when and if it comes.

What Price Support? By Frederick C. Othman

‘MAMMA'S CATCH' —. Little Charles Emery proudly holdi one of ‘the catches of "mamma," Mrs, Lenora Emerv, who earned one of the top prizes.

FIRST IN—The first of the 1500 ators to weigh in a catch was Sonny Craig of Lebanon. Here he is at the official weighing scales with Game Warden’ William Thomas of the Avoca state fish hatchery.

WASHINGTON, Oct. 11-—-With three pieces of non price supported fish (which could have heen better) for lunch, the National Press Club lured a trio of agricultural big-wigs to answer whether it was true their multi-million dollar price support program was responsible for the high cost of eating, } They said it wasn't. Also. said they, it is doggone funny that shoe prices haven't dropped in the last few weeks. And also bread. As a fellow who has written more than his share of pieces about the incredible bumbles of the government in supporting the prices of potatoes, eggs and chickens, I bought a piece of that fish, myself, price $1.25. peas and apple pie included. There are twa sides to every question. I always say, and 1 hasten herewith to present the other side: . : Secretary of Agriculture Charles F. Brannon, who spends the money to hold up the price of food; Vermont's Sen. George D. Aiken, who wrote the law, and Allen B.. Kline, Farm Bureau Federation president, who knows about pigs from personal experience, ‘agreed that. Price supports were “A ARE - —

Credit Is Claimed

THE. BIG, bald Mr. Brannon said the Denmocrats took full credit for (hem. Sen. “Xtkem ad justed his bright red bow tie and said, that if it hadri't been for the. Republicans there would be no price supports. Farmer Kline said he didn't care who got the praise, so long as he got the erop guarantees; weer OSO. gentlemen hardly had got A ‘good ‘start

in their oratory before a reporter with a minimum

of awe for high authority, asked: “Will meat prices keep oh going down from now until elec tion? And if so, please explain’ “Uh.” began the Secretary, of Agriculture. “3 just hope you'll check the local butchers on how genuine this peice reduction is. Perhaps it can be regarded as the campaign contribution of the big

The Quiz Master

Q-—Which verse In ithe Bible contains all the letters of the alphabet? A~The 21st verse of the Tth Chapter of the Rook of Ezra contains all the letters of the al-

phabet with the exception of the letter “J”

which was not included in early Sighubeta

’ meat packers. But there is no justification for a decline in meat prices today.”

1500 Anglers Applaud First Annual Times Fishing Rodeo

As for price supports. sald Messrs Brannon . 69 | James Totten, 24 since Anna Mae Pich. who caught the 4283 W. Washington St. Maréld Doushe - Aiken and Kline. they stimulated production and J. R."Crockett Named Winner; Plans (% Sisices, an Te or is Siggest ane had received the prize in| gr, ay RS In ndianapelis, Richard Hae A . * =. t y ennsylvania ohn Gate if it hadn't been for them. the cost of eating Already Being Made for Next Event [brought in four bass weighing 8 - Crappies—No entries voda, 7118 N. Haugh (3): Bbtriey Tree might have been even higher. Look at fish, said By ART WRIGHT [total of 58 ounees. BOYS’ DIVISION r by Coburn St. 2); Jimmy Lyn they (staring at the bones on their plates). No © ’ | Biggest Bass—Gene Ciiass, 9 of 158 8 : LA rs

A contestant who won a prize gpencer 8t,, 20 ounces Bluegills—No entries. Craphles ~-No entries, Catfsh--No entry N Alabam i GIRLS’ DIVISION Michigan Bt: Baward Volpp.

More than 1500 anglers who applauded The Times Fishing 18's inches

Rodeo Saturday looked today toward the second annual contest. - Those who planned the week-end event are already : midst of plans for the 1949 rodeo. |contest rules. Biggest Bass'— Geraldine Henry, 8, of Randsipn 8. Kathryn Lofts, 61 N, ) 1332 College Ave. 12 ounces, 12% inches. Tem vest same? They've gone up. . Men, women and children appeared early on the banks of| Here are the other divisional Ng entries in other classes. Tabor “And.” agreed the .Senator from Vermont. Bryant's Creek Lake in Morgan-Monroe State Forest, and by the, winners.

: Hatding : Here's the complete list of oth- he Kaiser, R “Jower prices for hides now are general. But Ime John Nigh, head of the In- MEN'S DIVISION } Ind.; Cecil Hayworth, 233 8. Rarer Sti haven't noticed any drop in the cost of shoes. And “=. 8 De er entrants who caught tagged

price supports on it. Yet it has gone up more probably than beefsteaks. Take the price of.wheat, said Farmer Kline. In the last few weeks it has dropped a full dollar

per bushel. Tractors that the farmers use to har-

in one division was disqualified from receiving a duplicate award in the in another division under the

epi La ncisan Raverts, an . ley,

Conservation

H C. Kaiser. R. R 2, #':-inch biue-

1408 8. Tibbs *

The this class

(est tagged fish—-was J. R. Croc

Woman Pedestrian ~Injured.. by. Auto

Biggest Mass—Ed Arnovd RR 9 Indie oo 8. Springer, 1823 » Epner 8t.; Mrs, lower w prices should bring down the cost Co. ' Irvin Turley, 330 8. Lynhurst e heat pric Eg officially opened the ] fm outh bass Bass Sonny Craig Lebanon: Don Lovada Officer, 4436 Vandalia St: Mrs, Runnerup to the champion was ,, Bissest Bluecill Greene, 518 8. Oakland 8t.; Eddie Hay-| Wilms Stylcher, 1335 N. Holmes Ave. He certainly hadn't, said Farmer Kline, While contest at $ a. m,, the shore line pony sabotin, 737 N. Haugh 8 ~ Morgantown, a 10%;-ounce, or Rs co nal a 737 au t.. t as ; vin alley, ve. vin Dick! e wheat's been coming down. breads been going up. was crowded. & |” Crappies- Irvin Dickison Harding St. (2) nald Smith, 1027 Pelix Smer del, “Via N i an | Are farmers and their price supports responsible BIX-"Ave, 24 ounces. 13's 1 Adams 8t. (2). Albert Plots Jr. 302 Har- V m, 813° Hiatt St; The champion fisherman of the ounce smallmouth bass. He won! Catfish only entry in D 10 Milik Eo Boul Pl ¢ . day because he caught the larg- a $45 Hurd rod and built- in reel, |was the champion cateh of J. R Crockett e. ores on kan Ja ouiersrd Ml 2; hoa Where Is Profit? k- 2 gift of Vonnegut Hardware C o.| WOMEN'S DIVISION es Her bert Bader, 3748 English Ave. | he rodeo was staged. by The a ho % 12), Dennis E. Miller Sr, #25 K I Times ALONG CAME another callous correspondent ett, 415 Exeter St. He pulled out (0. t14o most tagged fish honots) Rockwood Av fs atv be 8 Robert Bchremaes, 2254 N Dearborn. 'State In co-operation with the to ask where was the profit in the government a four pound, four ounce channel duri fied from this ‘division because she © : : Indianapo during the day. Sharing lis: Gene Glass, 153 8 . y ~The..cha D.8...0rize bracket was Mrs. Lenora Emer [caught a bass 22 ounces, 14'a in hes Vornehm, 812 Hiatt 8 )| Prizes were. furnished by Indi. mpio ) m2 nn ba che p Tia dozen eggs at 37 cents per doz. when eggs are was a $65 plywood boat donated 1442 Herschel St, who canghiT- mt WHERE Xr Bote Mn eben 883... Indianapolis; Thomas. Posnight Jr anapolis sporting goods firms and . selling in the. groceries at 75 cents? by Em- Roe Sporting Goods Co, four bass with a total weight . Harding St 10 ounces, 8's. inches Columbus A ¢.. Anderson, Miw Geraidine pn of. Ashing... t {enr) 32 College Ave. Jack _Moore ernment a Tew -mithons—but_it_ had stimulated . : the production of eggs when meat was short and Local Student Minister to Address. Sef Probation : Troopers Attend hence was a good deal. Better than his potatoe pro- . 4 | Bible Club of YMCA “3 sop —— Gets Beauty Title Post Exam Dare

| ing a trophy from L. Strauss. & an A No-pound, one-ounce smal. Mildred Dyson, 606 E. Minnesots 8t.; Mrs. of bread. but. as yet I have seen no evidence of it.” partment, Mo worth, 235 8. Rural St: m Stabler,| Cra -Cirant’ Smith, 3944 N. Ca who caught a two-pound, ny i t h m an St. ine ortville; for that?’ Bosart Ave.; H. L. Bears, 3324 N There was a tie for Biggest Bass Anna Mae Fish Carl ® Warrenburs, 220 Trowhridee 8t.| {Louis McCarty, R Conservation Department. s st spending miTGHE or dotarsto-—buy--86.000.000. cat fish. this ou winner in the biggest catch eroup. FJ Nos Rebs ARR. WAL ME.. SLopDEN... 2203, Mr. Brannon said this may have cost the gov- ree of | _Crappies—N6 award made in this group wherein he had to buy mountains Firearms. Course

gram, he said. The. Nev. Edwin L. McClain of potatoes a‘ high prices and almost, literally 2 ER BR x Q “Mrs, Helen Crabtree 82, 8s i Semi- ¥ xami- . 1 Live Ahem. away. Sometimes he had to hand them “ Miss og Sudehalier, avin; Baptist. Church. o the Et nations AB Si others wit, 2009 Meredith Ave. ‘was taken i” A firearms retraining school, - teroof Mess Mary Studebaker, a ( r probation offi back to the same farmers “who grew them. Pp General. Hospital with, possible. set up recently’ in Camp . Atter«

he, s7 . “Laymen in Christian ‘Education’ he Ww UF i - 18321, I y # ‘held Dec. 2 “THIS wast he fauitode.said if. those Bepub- 1 Central Ave. recently was "g's "1 ‘Wednesday in the Cen-

licans in Congress had passed a more flexible ote class beaufV By Nerviwss: X House, Mrs. Eleanor ‘tral YMCA WHEN the YMCA Bible: ew, he-Wouldwi have been caught in such a hor- M mates at Ala- 1,oestigation Club. meets for a grass, state director 81" probation; That's about all the experts said. T listened hima Salts, bean and chili supper. {announced today. Washington and Rural Sts. today.| carefully and I hate to say it, but I'm still con- major in public Clarence Dupree, general man- Adults desiring to enter proba- pajice said the vehicle driven|to a‘tend fused about why it costs so much to eat a decent speaking ’ ager of the J. L. Keach Commis. tion work may fle application 10 py Albers Delong, 39, of 1774 Ed Ge Of a HO I a meal. pes i" rduate of sion House, member of Kirst Bap-|take examinations and may ob- poosevelt Ave, struck Mrs. Crab. day sessions, Col, Robert Rossow, Shortridge High Ho Church. wil Speak oh ‘Chris- Li forms ron the dchabimeps: tree while turning left on Wash. State Police superintendent, sald’ an Lavmen efore e group a e deadline for returning pre- jnofon St. It w y reguldtion 2 Bannol Missy week later. Jmihary applications will be al St. 8 gems south) They | WHE. Yeyiew. ia ore LB. Hall, principal of School Nov. 3. Hospital firearms equipment, including

3 1A REO 413. State y concussion, abrasions on the tert bury “for-State- Police personnel:

B.. 8nod- ; Jeg. and a eut on the head. after \® scheduled to continue to HOC BBs a

being struck by an automobile &tY . Hoosier patrolmen are required

-

27? Test Your Skill ???

authorities. described |

mer Prine Mgt No. 16, will speak on .‘Religion| Mrs, Snodgrass urged courts to her condition as fair. submachine guns, repeating shot.’ i Bradstreet Ine, and Life” Oct. 27 before the enroll personnel in the cousse. essbinmo sci estes. guns, high-powered rifles, 38 . BL hi 2 J \ group there. . She pointed out that the need for {paliber revolvers, tear and Q How long did the state of California remain Fs Test building. in qualified probation officers is Army Officer to Speak also hand-to-hand ih pa

She soon will ap-

an independent republic? | Mins Studebaker pear in the Ala- PHOTO CLUB TO MEET great. Last year Indiana's or Col. Arthur Pulsifer, 24° Army ~ Federal Bureau of In

A~A group of Americans set up the “Cals | The Indianapolis Indorsers of officers cared for 10,350 offenders agen bh © “ signal officer, of Ft. Meade, Md. tion ts H. Al Wornia Republic” on June 14, 1846; it only last- | Bmipa otiegy. production of “A Photo Plays will’ meet at 10 a. m. at the cost of 11 cents per day. will speak to Indiana Reserve [Little and Robert ed, wader its own fing decorated with grizely | Midsummer Night's. Dream,” In tomorrow in the Meridian Room against institutional costs of $1.57 officers at 8 p. m. tomorrow in the of Indianapolis, wi, ihe.4 r- and star, until July 7, 1346. | + ballet role. of the Colopial Furniture Co. 'per day, she said. / (World War Memorial thé instructors. -

| -