Indianapolis Times, Volume 38, Number 245, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 January 1927 — Page 7

JAN. 18, 1927

HERE’S A TIP FOR THE EMPLOYER OF THE WORKING GIRL

Is There Something Missing in Your Organization? Maybe It’s Because You Haven’t Placed Your Employe in the Work She Loves Best. * By Martha Lee Are you au employer?—and is there something missing in your organization? That intangible thing we call cooperation, perhaps; a certain lack of “pep” and spring in the employes, which you know should be there if best results are to be obtained.

It would disturb you to know that are probably looking on your >wn handiwork. That your lack of 'iscermnent has put the wrong emiloyps in the wrong place—has node them square pegs in round iolch and visa versa. You know what would happen if on hitched a race horse to a plow hare? At first, the horse, full of •icp and vigor, restive, ready to uound away, would be alert with ■very muscle vibrating and showing ; hrough his silky coat. You’d see a change after a time. His feet would seem heavier. The miscles under that coat —(a little less diiny now) would not quiver with ilertness and the joy of trigger action. As time went on, you’d see icss of the race horse and more of Uie plodding old Held worker. Race horses can’t stand the plow share and remain race horses. All of which is to say: Don’t put the round pegs of your organization into square holes. \ Changer Her Employment? Dear Martha Dee: I have a problem i hat I would liko some advice about. I have been In the business world three years, and about nine months ago went into an agency which promised much advance for me I liked the work just fine tnd was making big strides when one ol lie employes got typhoid fever and was nit of the office for many weeks. I was iut in her place. I detested the work, but thought it only 'emporary. Much to my surprise and resentment they have accepted me as satisactory in this clerical work, which I

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hate, and it looks as ts I’m to kept in it permanently. J am very dissatisfied. What would you advise? MISS M. C. 1 should go frankly to my employer and tell him the facts. If he is a wise employer, he will recognize the importance of giving you work that you will have real interest in. Recently I read in Henry Ford’s new book “Today and Tomorrow” that it is the policy of the Ford Company to occasionally change men’s occupations in the plant and any employee who feels that he can do one kind of work better than another Is given consideration and if possible, changed into that. Daughter Will Primp Dear Martha Lpp: I am the mother of daughters who have beautiful pale skins, but they insist upon powdering and rougelnp, in spite of my telling them that thpy will ruin their complexions. I have thrown away the skin preparations that I have found in the dresser drawers, but they only buy more. What shall 1 do? MOTHER OF TWO. The young are experimental and at the same time, they want to do the same things that all their friends are doing. Your girls undoubtedly want to be painted for the simple reason that their girl friends are likewise decorated. However, from the standpoint of good looks, the cosmetics won’t seriously injure your daughters’ skins if you see that the powder and rouge are cleansed from their faces every night before they retire. Shall He Marry? Dear Martha Dee: I am a young man in my last year at college. I am crazy about a girl two years younger than myself. I've gotten to the point where I can't keep my mind on my studies from thinking about her. Wouldn't it be more sensible for me to get married now. instead of waiting until I am graduated and have a job? MORRIS. No, it wouldn’t. A man is not wise who marries before he can support a girl. Tjy and calm yourself and get back to your studies, remembering the fact that the better educated you are, the more chance there Is for your getting a salary that will enable you to marry soon. IOE PENNED IS FOLLIES STAR (Continued From Page 4) meaning at first but toward the end of the act he seems to forget that he should try to be a comedian. The woman at the piano is a convincing player. Lane and Byron may be explained by one of their own jokes. One of the men remarks as follow r s: “His father is so lazy that he married a woman with five children.’’ This explains the standard of their jokes. Clemons Belling Company brings the spirit of the circus before a unique drop which tells the story even before things start on the stage. The act is called “Circus Pastimes.” The bill includes the Serlany Troupe and Georgia Howard. At the Lyric all week. THE WELDER SISTERS TOP EVENTS AT PALACE The Welder sisters and company, a dance act with two women and four men, head the bill at the Palace this week with “several examples of fast and peppy dancing and some song numbers by the women. The feminine part of the act is best in the musical numbers, when the girls come out in good looking costumes and offer numbers on the banjo and violin. Outstanding in the dancing offers is a solo by one of the young men in the form of a very fast tap dance. Harrington Reynolds, in company with Patsy Daly and Ranee Gray, has an amusing offering in which a young Englishman is trying to run

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Boots and Her Buddies

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a small shop. A more complete lack of intelligence we have never seen before, that is the characterization of it. The act changes a bit toward the last and some comedy is extracted from a few verses of poetry which these three put together in a rather humorous way. A customs officer and his duties are the things Curtis and Lawrence use in thier comedy act. They have some bright stuff at times and the act is pleasing enough. Burr and Elaine are two women, one of them very stout, whose personal remarks serve as a groundwork for their comedy. Also offered are a couple of dances by one of the women. De Wit, Burns and Torrence open the bill with an act that should have a great appeal to the youngsters. The toys of the nursery come to life and parade around the stage doing the things a child might imagine them doing. Included on ti e bill Is a photoplay, “Stepping Along,” with Johnny Hines, and a news reel. At the Palace the first half. (By the Observer.) Other theaters today offer: “The Kid Brother,” at the Apollo: "Summer Bachelors,” at the Ohio: “The Silent Lover,” at the Circle; “Finger Prints,” at the Colonial: “Rose of the Tenements,” at the Isis; “Sunny Side Up,” at the Uptown, and burlesque at the Mutual. ACT TO SAVE TREES TORONTO, Jan. 18.—As a means of protecting Canada’s timber wealth the Canadian Forestry Association is advocating laws requiring that travelers through forests obtain licenses.

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

.FLAPPER-FANNY SAYS: V—im m v mtmhc*. me. ~ The handwriting on the wall means that baby can creep. CITY HAS WATER AGAIN Bu Times Special MICHIGAN CITY, Ind., Jan. 18.— Michigan City without water since Sunday afternoon when the intake pipes of the water works were clogged with ice, began receiving a normal supply today. After nearly twenty hours of work, a diver succeeded in opening the intake. Schools and some factories were closed because of the water famine.

—By Martin

RELIGION LEADS REVOLT Mexican Archbishop Directs Move Against talles. Bu United Press MEXICO CITY, Jan. IS.—The scattered insurrection prevailing in twelve Mexican states today took its most ominous turn as the Mexican government prepared to crush the revolt which it charged was being organized by Archbishop Francisco Orozco Y. Jimenez. For the first time since the Catholic church voiced its opposition to the religious laws, the banner of religion has been raised over insurrectionists, the government has charged. The labor* newspaper, El Sol, said that, after uniting more than two hundred men under his banner, "Long Live Christ. Our King.” Arehibishop Jiminez, one of the most beloved prelates in Mexico, declared a revolt against the Calles government. FRIGHTENED BY BLAZE Apartment Residents Prepare to Escape Fur Store Fire. Residents in the Stout building, 332 Vi Massachusetts Ave., prepared to leave their apartments hurriedly at 2 a. m. today when fire broke out in the H. H. Reiner fur store, 336 Massachusetts Ave. Firemen explained it was only a warning, and that the blaze was under control. Reiner and firemen could not establish an origin of the blaze that started in a storeroom. Mrs. Reiner said today that the loss was small. ,

Saint and fc-r Sinner

Wealthy RALPH CLUNY. 68. was murdered just before he was to have married frivolous CHERRY LANE. 18. Immediately Cherry disappears leavins a note for her sister. FAITH, sayinsr she could not ro on with the wedding:. Cherry s elopement with CHRIS WILEY becomes known. News of the murder is kept from Cherry’s invalid mother, but she knows of Cherry’s marriage. Cherry has been encased several times Once she tried to run away with ALBERT ETTKLSON. a murried traveling salesman, and was rescued by her sister and BOR HATHAWAY. Faith's finance and nephew of Cluny. Cherry admits that Cluny attempted to force the marriage, but protests her innocence. Faith suspects Chris Wiley, thinking e knew that Cluny had willed much money to Cherry. Charles Reilly Neff, who drew up the will testifies that Cluny made Cherry his chief beneficiarv whether or not she married him. The coroner’s jury releases Cherry, but immediately she and her husband are arrested by DEVLIN, deputy district attorney. Faith is furious when Hob tells her ATTORNEY STEPHEN CHURCHILL, whom he employed, thinks circumstances arr againßt Cherry and suggests a plea of self-defense as the best chance of her freedom. Peculiar footprints and a bit of torn strap suggest that the murderer might be a cripple. Faith and Bob spent a determinedly cheerful evening that Sunday, while Jim Lane sat in the kitchen, his small, stooped figure almost conealed behind a pile of Sun day papers from all over the State. When he came upon some especially sentimental word-picture of Cherry, he waded through the drift of papers to show his find to Faith and Bob. “I don’t want to read what the papers say, dear,” Faith told him at last. “I can’t stand it. Now, please don’t be hurt,” she pleaded as his mouth quivered under what he took to be a rebuke. “One member of the family at least ought to keep up with what the papers say, so that we shall know how public sentiment lies,” she soothed him. Mollified, even a little pleased, he went back to his grisly task. Junior and Fay Allen, warmly wrapped against the November cold, sat on the porch and kept reporters from knocking at the door. “Long” enjoyed his tilts with the gentlemen of the press in much the same way that Jim Lane enjoyed reading of his daughter's sudden notoriety. With shades tightly drawn. Bob and Faith sat on the old, brokenspringed davenport, hand in hand, trying to talk of other things titan the tragedy and Cherry's possible fate. But again and again they came back to it. “If the grand jury does Indict, Bob,” Faith asked suddenly, "what will the procedure be? I know so little about such things.” “Why,” Bob cleared his throat and tried to speak in a matter-of-fact voice, “then Cherry will be—be held on a charge of —of murder, and they won’t allow bail. The case wilt be set for trial, by one of the district judges of the county court—” “Soon?” Faith’s hand rose to conceal the beating noise in her throat. “1 can’t bear to think of her in jail for months and months, awaiting trial. It isn't fair. Bob! She’ll with-

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er and die, like a transplanted flower.” “Let’s don’t .speculate any more,” Bob begged her with tender insistence. “We’d better plan about tomorrow. Junior and your father and you have received summonses to appear before the grand jury, of course?” "YeA” Faith nodded, her face going very white. “So have I, of course. I’ll call for all of you In my car. Now. darling, go to bed and try to sleep. And don’t be afraid of tomorrow. You only have to tell the truth. Try to tell your story exactly as you told it to the coroner’s jury. Nothing you say can hurt Cherry, remember?” He took her face between his hands, stooped to kiss her eyes, then said in a low voice, vibrant with love: “May the Lord watch over thee and keep thee.” “I didn’t know you were—religious. Bob.” Faith whispered, in a shaken voice. “I wasn’t, or didn't know I was,” | Bob took hpr hands. “But you have | made me believe in God, because He j made you. And in a time like this, j there is a need for a God. Good- | night, dear heart.” It was a different Bob who sprang from his car the next morning at 9 o’clock. A brisk, cheerful Bob, whose blue eyes were almost gay, whose smile flashed upon the reporti ers, already on the scene to gather any scraps of drama that might fall their way. as the Lane family prepared to go before the grand jury whicn was meeting that day to decide whether or not Cherry Lane Wiley should be indicted for the murder of Ralph Cluny, or allowed to go free. “You look as if you were going on a picnic,” Faith accused him as she opened the door to let him in. NEXT: The blow falls. (Copyright, 1927, NEA Service, Inc.)

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PAGE 7

Literary Test This test is concerned with questions on literature. White your answers to the questions and compare them with the correct list on page 12: 1 — Who wrote the play, “As You Like It”? 2 From which of Tennyson’s poems is this taken: “Cannon to the right of them: Cannon to the left of them Cannon in front of them.” 3 Who is author of "The WociJ of William Clissold”? 4 For what poem is Omar Khayyam best known? 5 Who wrote “The Mauve Decade”? 6 Who is author of “Harmer John”? 7ln what novel is Micawber a character? 8 — Who is author of “Preface to a Life”? 9 What poet wrote “The Song of Hiawatha”? 10— Who is author of the novel, “Galahad”? v OHIO ORGANIST COMING John Gordon Seely, organist and choirmaster of Trinity Church, Toledo, Ohio, will give an organ recital at 8 p. m., Wednesday at Christ Church on Monument Circle. A silver offering will be taken. Seely is well known In the East, where he has given many recitals. He is a composer of note, both for organ and voice. He will play on the regular noon-day program at the church. Wednesday. 1,200 AT CONVENTION FRENCH LICK, Ind., Jan. 17. More than 1,200 delegates are attending the annual convention of the National Association of Dyers and Cleaners in session here. First business session was held Monday afternoon.