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Gazette News-Current from Xenia, Ohio • Page 9

Location:
Xenia, Ohio
Issue Date:
Page:
9
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Four THE GAZETTE, XENIA, OHIO FRIDAY, MAY 1936 THE GAZETTE Published morning and evening except Sunday at the Gazette Uulldiug, South Detroit Xenia. Ohio, by The Chew Publishing Company, Inc. Entered as second matter under act of March. 9, 1S79, at the Postoffice. Ohio.

TELEPHONES Advertising and Business Oftice Editorial Department Circulation Department Ill 70 800 "Member of Ohio Select List Daily Newspapers. John Cullen. National Auvtu-Udiiis Chicago office. No. 8 E.

Michigan New York office, 5U1 Fifth York City; Detroit of- General Motors Bldg. By Carrier in Xenia loc per week. Single Copy Threes Cents HOPKINS NOT BOTHERED BY HOUSE BROBE (Continued from Page One) SMALL-SCALE MODEL amples of "boondoggling' or he insisted was a good could say him nay. Hopkins went on farther to insist that in most instances even those- criticisms were unjustified. SUBSCRIPTION RATES 1 Mo.

3 Mo. 6 Mo. 1 Yr. In Greene County .50 $1.25 $2.00 $3.50 Hopkins Gives the Answers Zones 1 and 2 55 1.40 2.40 4.50 Defending the WPA white collar Zones 3, 4 and 5 GO 1.55 2.65 5.00 i program, he asserted that nearly 6 and 7 65 1.70 2.90 5.50 -all its projects had been sponsored 8 70 1.85 3.15 6.00 by communities, which in many cases were bearing a large part i.lio cost. He answered a number jof specific project criticisms as follows: The news thai Governor w-ilt not ran for re- complaint that $500.000 was al- election to a third term in York startles the political located to make bridle paths more world of the nation's state, but what the rest of us wan- attractive for horsemen in Bor- Path For Farley? der is whether this leaves the open for James A.

Farley. The it is generally has had ough of Queens, New York. Hopkins: Project was sponsored by New York and Long island park eye on Albany despite his o.f another term in authorities as detail of cabinet if the New again in November, Mr. needed park improvement program Parley has ept hi. finger oa the New York State politics in an attempt to hold control of tae Democratic ing spenl to grad6i draini and sur With the sudden -decision the governor not to seek I facy Oli mile of road, specified to another term, this apparently gives the postmaster-general I his chance.

The boss politician who swings the big stick and in Virginia." Hopkins: Project calls makes the important appointments for the New Deal has been for 5.7 miles of road serves as "under constant fire for his dual job in the cabinet and as chair- farm-to-market and school bus man of the national committee. This gives him 'a chance to escape criticism, and go after the position he has eyed for years, The star of Jim Farley is evidently rising today. important! The Middled Tax Bill Fossil Hunt Upheld Complaint that $23,630 was being spent on an arboretum a't Hyannis. Mass. Hopkins: Project is to provide an adequate athletic field for State Teachers' College, What do you know about the Administration's tax bill? i eliminate a swamp, create a land- 11 i i scaped park with 'tennis court.

Ii you can follow us smoky and devious course, then you re i running and walks lined with eligible for the title of Great Seen trees and shrubs, thereby greatly Slapped through the House in slipshod fashion in the increasing the institution's value to open expectation that the entire bill would be re-written in that project for om- the senate, the committee there turns it from its original te illustrated catalog of the purpose of corporation tax bill to an excise on incomes, and foraminifera fossils, involving! then grasps at every revenue straw that will cause the least I classification and cross-indexing rnr 'I of some 12,000 species in New york CUy wag Hopkins: All members of the committee are opposed to the drastic 1 Sponsored by New York Univer- measure passed by the House, that much is certain 1 sil department, this one will enable geologists to study A majority object to uia plan, as recom- sutasurfacp conditions more thor- mended by the President and embodied in the House bill, of loughly. will produce great bene- assessing all corporation taxes exclusively on the basis of fits or science, agriculture, and undistributed profits, industry, and will enable minmg, and petroleum industries to save i Ihe members of the committee are divided into several i millions of dollars. camps as to what form or taxation to substitute. A majority still is determined to enact a bill at this ses- Defends Rat Crusade sion to raise the full amount of permanent and temporary Complaint demanded by the President in his message. "boondoggling." Hop-i Senator Harrison said it xvas clear to him, however, that i kins: Cleveland Food and Drug! the question had boiled itself down to whether there would i Administration, sponsor, estimates be any undivided corporate profits tax at all in the bill as -'fL 16 30 J'- 0n nftralS hav 6 f- i j.

i-. i killed bv SoO.OOO bait.si finally presentee, to the oenate. i set by rp A workers Federal au-i "We were unable to agree on any he explained. thorities estimate each rat causes "Whether we can agree or whether the issue will be fought i average of $2 damage a year, mean- out on the floor of the Senate remains to be seen." i inE; the city is saved a te tial i -71--, damage of $200.000 at a iederal What can you make oi tile sorry situation? cost ss SG9 i that road costing Checking The Promoters WPA i 1 6 1 in-a a 11 IN NEW-YORK By GEORGE ROSS NEW YOPJK, May Portrait on a Mid-May Night: The carnival goes on nightly with the mazda glare, the sideshows, the exhibits in the air and the small drama on the curbs A baby 'blimp, sausage- shaped against the gaudy sky, flashes across its thick ribs in a tawdry red, a brief welcome to New York The darting ticker tape in electric bulbs at Times Square, tells in an amber- colored alphabet, of the Subway Murder A hurried throng mills by and the sides of the subway kiosh bulge with a hurried frenzied, homeward bound, pleasure-going flotsam and jetsam of humanity. Welcome, Visitors! A cop on mounted duty gallops down the block, in hot pursuit of a fugitive who has parked his car too long A mealy-mouthed, pale- faced, anemic, sly fellow distributes 'little coupons into the palms of passing male pedestrians.

He adds a sly an-d confidential wink. The coupon introduces its holder into a taxi-dance palace and no- questions asked Two matronish, ladies sit in a private, sightseeing car off Broadway, waiting for the machin to set out for "interesting points." They have been sitting there for hours, and for days, as decoys, to lure out other prospects on the guided tour. Await Cues in Vain looking solemn, gather at the Palace pavement, known among them as the "Beach" because of the sunburn to be gotten there Among them are vaudeville artists who have -seen better days, comics, hoofers, stooges, acrobats, ad-agio dancers and brazen frauds who have nothing better to do than lie about their exploits in "Big Time." An unkempt and bedraggled beggar shuffles over to mooch a dime. His eyes are almost moist with tears, his mouth artfully twisted in self-despair and his plea is that both, his mother and father ar dying. He has been telling that tale for three years and has panhandled enough to keep his near and distant relatives in comfort.

Stemwinding Observations A lonely sailor saunters down Broadway, looking stray and forlorn, having not much else to do ashore but stroll and gaze Prom the loudspeaker of th music shop, grinds the tune, "Melancholy Baby" High-powered movie lamps bathe the entrance of a movie house in a tawdry blue, drawing the crowds over, as moths surge to a flame The new chewing gum sign ignites the Rialto in, a blinding glare, the flying fish splashing in a flood of lights Chow Mein, 35 cents, reads the sign on an Oriental Cafe, and a little below. Dubonnet Cocktail Special, 25 cents 50 Beautiful Girls, No Cover Charge. Continuous Night Like flashily bedecked temptresses, the illumined marquees beckon in the throng. Lost Chords' Haven Tin Pan Alley, from Forty-sixth, to Forty-eighth, is the musician-s' Saxophone players, drummers, banjo strummers, violinists who were going to be great musicians when they grew up, swarm around the public mart of tune- jj smiths, fashionably dressed in smart wardrobes, but with little or no cash in their jeans Bumpers i collide in a din of clashing metal as two cab drivers fight for the corner spot, deliberately desopiling their 15 and 5 chariots The crowd moves slowly uptown, downtown and cross town, seemingly 1 without destination. Soon the tumult will cease and the clamor di and the lights will be dimmed on the world's busiest plays treet.

Broadway gets ready for the scru'blady at 3 a. pauses until 8 a. m. when the noise starts again. KITCHEN By Olive Roberts Expansion in home building i coming back, and that means the return of high-pressure promotion such as charac- one another andi terized the real estate business before 1929.

found the road too rough. Hop-J Particularly timely, therefore, is the suggestion of Tames kins: County board of super- rr i i-iuriT-c f.rmi rilintor) ST tn thiq Caitrey, Cievelana realtor, tnat some sort of a governing visors contributed to this project. Road serves large cattle, 1 I inUJcUL. JXUaU BCI C3 body be set up to regulate the promoters. It is Caffrey's con- goa t.

an mining districts, three elusion, from long expCA-lence in the business of home build- and subdividing, that real estate promoters should be examined and certified just as security salesmen are regulated. school districts, numerous farms. And So On and On i i Complaint that expenditure- of bacK on tne last ten years of real estate history to renovate books in Louis- inthis country. Caffrey declares: am certain that the sub- ville. libraries was diyision business, as formerly conducted, was one of the least doggling." Hopkins: This employs an average of seven women otherwise unemployable who in four months mended 4.245 Tjoo-ks.

made sound and was mainly responsible for bringing on the real estate depression, which started before the depression." Mr. Caff rey's proposal, of course, might not correct this 2.0S4 magazine covers, and per- But it is a step in the right direction. Certainly orated, pocketed, labeled, and for a repetition the Iast nation the Townsend movement continues, its old age pensions might be financed by taxing the transactions of its leaders. His point was that, even though administration is sometimes crit.5- cized, hardly anybody ever opposes a WPA project when it's in his own A dispatch says the Italbn oil Addis Ababa was a huge pic- nome town. "It- nic, but we dcufct it at the there was no report of an Eubiopian TMS CURIOUS WORLD CASLRJES A "POLE." AND "LURES?" WITH WHIC.M CATCHES.

OTHBR. FISH UNITED STATES OF AGRJCULTURE HALTS ABOUT DANGEROUS PLANTS AND INSBCTS ALONO THE U.S. BORDER'S AND rt-i 1936 BY NEA SERViCE. INC. fust Folks By Edgar A.

Qucs: TWO EMTI R.ELN' Dl THE FIRST I'S MADE FROM BERRJES OF THE PIMENTO TREE; THE LATTEK. fS A SPANISH HOUSE DESERTED It isn't pretty any more. The weather-beaten walls are gray. The weeds are rank about the door summer blossoms use-d to sway. The window sills with dust are thick.

The patch of grass is brown and bare. The house itself to death is sick. And no one now is left to cure. Time was with each returnin spring The tulips blossomed by row. 'A rap upon the door would bring The mistress, apron white snow, Her voice was like a silver bell, Her face with sweet contentment beamed.

1 "Who stopped to visit 'there could tell i Thar, life was lovely as it seemed. i The windows with their curtains white Proclaimed the charm of all wiih- in. The walls seemed radiant with de- light. The door that ushered callers in Had something of her youthful I grace; But all is different today death is hammering at the place Since she who loved 'it went away. BY MARY E.

DAGUE JN'EA Service Staff Writer HpHE ideal warm weather sert is easy and quick to If it follows a substantial main course it should be light. Butj after a vegetable plate, the ies-i sert should furnish actual nour-j ishment with milk and eggs. The dessert that can be prepared in the morning and tucked i into the ice box until wanted for dinner is popular with the cook and its chilled appetizing smoothness makes it all hunky-dory with the family. It's a good idea to use meat i once a day during the summer I think veal is onei of the best summer meats, only remember that it must be thoroughly 'ooked, never left rare or under-done. Probably careless! cooking is responsible for the tradition in this country that veal is difficult to digest.

Veal fricassee a close second to chicken fricassee. All the preliminary cooking can be donej the day before so that it makes a I good Sunday dinner dish or any dinner that you want to prepare in short order. Veal Fricassee Two pounds foreleg of veal, 41 cups water. 1 small onion, 1 blade of celery, 1 small carrot, bit of bayleaf, 1-2 teaspoon peppercorns, 2 teaspoons salt, flour. Peel but do no' slice onion.

Scrape carrot and cut in quarters. Cut celery in half inch pieces and put these vegetable? with bayleaf and peppercorns into a square of cheesecloth. Tie securely and' drop into water. Bring to the boiling point and add meat. Cook hard for ten minutes.

Then re-1 duce heat and simmer until ten- der, about three hours. Cool in the water. Remove meat from stock and cut in neat pieces serving. Remove cheesecloth bag I of seasonings from stock. Roll meat in flour and brown quickly 3 tablespoons flour in frying pan in which meat was browned, add-! ing more fat if necessary to make DAT we -flo -'-'things that-we krrow are-oirt of order, but they are so unimportant usually, we say to that it doesn't It is easier for dad to throw 'has on the chair whem he goes out than to lay it on a table.

"just this -once," mother uses blue tea towel, reserved for glasses, to finish off the pans. Between dawn and dark -orrr Jlittle lapses are legion. If conscience pricks at all, we stroke it and say "be i But this same conscience gets terribly busy when the children get the least bit careless. How responsible suddenly become if Lucy pulls the curtain crooked or Lance leaves his hat in the jhalL Viewed Differently These small every-day affairs are not important in themselves. Actually they are the stuff days are made of.

However, they show 'the difference between the two ends of the telescope. Adults minimize their own slips as officers and magnify those of their young irecruits. Children need to be told, trained, taught responsibility. They must absorb ideas of neatness, arrangement and fitness. Mistakes must frequently be mentioned and recurrences dealt with.

But "teg'ions of -stanl irritation that tends neither; improve them Ihera more thoughtful. Daddy at the office leeO "ft permissible to 'throw balls of crumpled paper the iloo-r "instead of 'into 'the Tsaskei 'beside him. Or Teawe looming cigaretl on his ash tray "to fall cxffl and' mar his 'dest. At home he Wiayj hit the if Lance lays a hand on the of "the screea or Lucy leav.es Parents JJOTO to "Why eroase ourselves just because we know better? Why get: all worked up when, half tha time, the offspring don't know better or else forget, as children wiD. Is it a feeling of over-responsibility for their training? Actually, no.

Short tempers and a lovar of exploding on. the slightest provocation are the we can say for ourselves much of the time, If we parents would the little story of the mote and: the beam might find a betterj route to management. Trainin" by temper and coun-i selling by complaint get poor re-' suits. They cease to impress. But however that may be, why don't we play fair and slap our own; hands occasionally? i Glamorous -Diva HORIZONTAL 1 Prima donna, who OB'ce iwas Answer to Previous Puzzle Tomorrow's Menu BREAKFAST: Grape juice, cereal, cream, soft cooked eggs, crisp toast, milk, coffee.

LUNCHEON: Vegetable hash, lettuce sandwiches, peanut cookies, chocolate egg shake. DINNER: Fricassee of veal, broad noodles, buttered asparagus, tomato and cheese ball salad, layered strawberry pie. milk, coffee. PIMENTO is a pungent, aromatic spice, prepared from the unripe berries of the pimento tree, and is used in cookery and in medicine. Pimiento is used in the manufacture of cheese, and as a stuffing, for olives.

Both names are derived from the Spanish word, pimento, meaning "pepper." NEXT: What has mcteorolozy to do with meteors? bouse is falling to decay. The aging of paint is i i bare; i i 'Tis day by i And no oue longer seems to care. Dull transients pass the creaking I door And never peem to sense or see How beautiful in days before That crumbling dwelling used to 1 be. 2 tablespoonfuls. Stir in stock in which meat was cooked and cook and stir until gravy boils.

Pour over meat, garnish with parsley and points of toast and serve. Layered Strawberry Pic One package strawberry flavored gelatin, 1 pint warm water, 4 tablespoons sugar, 1 cup sliced strawberries, 1 baked 9-inch pie i shell. Dissolve gelatin in warm water, i Add sugar to strawberries and combine with half gelatin mix- ture. Chill until slightly thick- end and turn into cold pie shell. Chill until firm.

Chill remain in gelatin mixture until cold and syrupy, place bowl in pan of i cracked ice or ice water and beat with a rotary beater until fluffy and thick like whipped cream. Pour over firm gelatin in pie shell! Serve broad noodles with the veal fricassee instead of potatoes. Buttered asparagu? makes a per- feet second vegetable and a salad of sliced tomatoes garnished with balls of cottage cheese mixed with minced chives is perfct, too. a great actress 14 Worshiper. 15 To excite.

16 Leered. 17 Humor. 19 Fine. 20 Dregs. 21 Loses color.

23 Fairy. 24 Vulgar fellow. 25 Moisture. 27 Courtesy title. 28 Either.

30 Thing. 32 To exist. 33 Indicated. 37 Vampire. 38 To scatter.

40 House cat. 41 Ventilating machine. 43 Exclamation. 45 Door rug. 47 Brooch.

48 Laughter sound. 49 Boy. 51 Iron basket. 54 Drone bee. 55 57 Large constellation.

5S Epilepsy symptom. 59 Madame Butterfly was one of her famous 60 She was a picture star. VERTICAL 1 jail. 2 Rim. 3 Part In a drama.

4 God of war. 5 Guided. 6 Doctor. 7 Spike. Musical note 9 Branch.

10 Poultry disease. 11 Laws. 12 Referred. 13 She Is now 17 Soft mass. 18 To scatter.

21 Peels. 22 Crystalline substance, 24 Salt water flsh 26 Tumor 29 Rhetorical. 31 Devi) 34 Frost bite 35 Encountered. 36 X. 39 Membranous bag 41 Appropriate.

42 Gem weight. 43 Singing voice, 44 Instrument. 46 To jog 47 Pig sties. IS Cornucopia. 50 To perish 02 Silkworm.

53 Therefore 54 Owed. 56 Pair 55 Dye By DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN Editor. Journal of the American Medical and of Hygeia, the Health Magazine There is a common, belief that a nursing mother should stuff herself with i or en beer, because it is felt that these substances will aid her in producing great quantities of good milk. The mother who follows this practice is likely to become unpleasantly fat, disgusted with the whole business of eating and nurs- and inclined to give up suckling the baby before she should.

If her diet contains three or four glasses of good milk every day, and if she drinks her usual supply of water she will get just about as much'milk for the baby as she will get by drinking great amounts of milk, cocoa, or beer. At the same time, the nursing mother should not encourage the loss of water from be-r body by- taking substances wti'rh will stimulate th flo fluid, such as doses of laxative salts, or substances winch stimulate kidney action. These should not be taker- in any event, unless the doctor directs. Actually the opportunity of influencing the quality or quantity of the mother's milk by manipulating her diet is very small. Illustrating this is a fact I have mentioned before.

During tbe siege of" Paris and during the blockade of Germany and Austria in the World War, babies of thos regions who were nursing got just as much from their mother's milk as babies GLORIFYING YOURSELF By Alicia Hart iTF you never wear a beach hai and insist upon playing golf riding in rumble seats without a hat all summer, you mighl well face the fact that, during September and October, you'll have to spend plenty of time and a good deal of money on reconditioning treatments. You simply can't subject your hair to hours of sunshine, dust and wind and expect it to remain soft and healthy. If you haven't had your summer permanent wave yet, you ought to plan to give your scalp several hot oil treatments before you make the appointment. The night before you intend to shampoo, part your hair in tiny sections and rub warm olive oil on 'every inch of the scalp. Massage it in with fingertips.

Leave on until, the next morning, then shampoo in the usual manner. Use half a cup of white vinegar 'or the juice of two fresh lemons the next-to-the-last rinsing water. i For golf, you ought to wear a small hat with a little brim. When you go to spend a day on the beach, take along a wide-brimmed one that will protect your eyes as well as your hair from the of the sun. Drying 79111 hair in the sunshine and going without a hat for twenty minutes and then are excellent ideas, but excessive bakings are not.

JHair and scalp need air. of course, certainly not scorchings. i If you are to spend your vacation at a mountain or country re- sort where it is most inconvenient to get to a beauty shop, better decide on a summer coiffure that 'you can wash and arrange yourself For straight and naturally curly locks, the old windblown effects are especially good. If you feel that you must have a permanent find a variety that requires a minimum of care. Or, better learn to set xvide, loose waves yourself.

It can be done, but it takes time and practice. NEXT: Beauty baths. elsewhere In the world wer getting from mothers were better fed. There is the superstition that a nursing mother should avoid foods that are sour, and likewise salads, cabbage, and raw fruit. This also is witho'ut foundation.

The substances mentioned are rich in vitamins and minerals, and there is no evidence to indicate that in any way they can harm tho 1 milk supply of the mother. If, however, the mother is sen- sitive to any particular food, and reacts to it with skin eruptions or digestive she ought to avoid that food. Por ordinary work, the average I woman requires from 1,500 to 2,000 calories a day. In addition, she must supply 600 calories to the baby. I She should, therefore, estimate the amount of calories takes in and be sure to get a minimum of 2,500 calories daily.

On that type of i diet, she should be able to nurse 'her baby satisfactonily, yet not gain weight unnecessarily. One of the most important things for a mother to remember is the well-established fact that the best flow of milk results from regular nursing of the baby, and that i milk flow will be regular and un; disturbed if she remains calm and quiet. I The diet of the nursing mother 'should contain butter, eggs. two green vegetables, and fresh fruit, including particularly toma- toes and oranges 'which provide vitamin Ci Butter helps to provide vitamins i A and so at least one ounce of jgood butter should be taken daily. i To provide a full supply of vii tamins A and she may also take cod liver oil.

or halibut liver oil, las her physician directs. 1 The milk which she takes daily need not be in the form, of liquid, jif she does not like to drink milk, but may be used as cocoa, ice cream or custard. A. pound of evap- orated' milk equals a quart of bottled milk. In general, a mother may eat i the food that she usually eats, in- eluding meat, potatoes.

cereals, or any other foods that she knows will not upset her digestion. Mothers sometimes worry about taking medicine, for fear that, I-will appear in the breast milk. Few drugs taken by mouth appear in i the milk in amounts sufficient to affect the baby. She will always do to ask her doctor before taking drugs of any kind. Twenty Years '16 Ago '36 C.

O. Miller has leased the site of the elevator which recently burned at Trebein and erected a new elevator which he will conduct in connection with his general store there. About 100,000 pounds of shells built originally for use by the Allies in the war are resting peacefully in a freight car in the Pennsy Railroad yards here. It is supposed shells failed to meet require ments of purchasing powers. Already ten members over the required number, Xenia's company will have no recruiting to do to comply with the adjutant general's order to increase all 0.

N. G. units of the Third Regiment to maximum strength. Juneau Police in Uniforms I JUNEAU, boasts jthe first uniformed city policeman in Alaska. The city council has purchased four dark green uni- forms for the police force.

The 1 quartet of officers average 220 i pounds each..

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About Gazette News-Current Archive

Pages Available:
206,315
Years Available:
1882-2017