Indianapolis Times, Volume 38, Number 335, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 May 1927 — Page 9

MAT 4, 1927

IF YOU’VE NOTHING ELSE TO GIVE, GIVE CHEERFULNESS

What Does World Need Most? Happy Folks, Happy Thoughts, Happy Greetings, and They Don’t Cost One Penny, Philosophy of This Man. By Martha Lee ~ ‘‘l wish I could do some good in the world!’' How many times we hear folks say that. Usually they’ll add that they don’t, because they haven’t any chance.

Few of us It’s true have opportunity to do the things the world calls big. Not many of us are heroes, or feel that we can add greatly to the world’s measure of happiness, but perhaps we can all agree With an old, old man, not far off from the century mark, who said the other day: “I used to regret that I was not going to leave the world some worthwhile memorial —something that would count and make the world know I had lived. Then this thought came to me. What does the world need most?—what’s Important to almost everybody we meet? Why cheerfulness. The world needs happy folks, happy thoughts, happy greetings. I can, without a cent in my pocket give that. “That realization has made the last fifty years of my life, most blessed.’’ Those who know the old man say that his life has meant much to them —that he’s scattered a world of inspiration and encouragement into hundreds of lives. So don’t feel that because you can’t go as a missionary to China or write a page in the world’s history, you haven’t had a chance to makb your count. Her Hopes Destroyed Dear Martha Lee: Sometimes I get •o discouraged I don't know what to do. I am an only daughter. I am 19 rears old. Two years ago my mother died. At the time I was just ready to go away to college, and even had my clothes ready. Mother’s death changed everything. I had to give lip all my plans as my father and brothers have needed me at home. I really don't mind doing for them, but F am so disappointed because it seems like 1 will never have a chance to do anything that amounts to anything. I cry almost every night, but I wouldn't let father know, nor my little brothers. ERNESTINE. Why Ernestine, you're doing something that amounts to a tremendous

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Beauty You Stop 4 To Look At If there is anything in this world lovelier than a head of silkeii-like hair, pronounced in its own color, and wavy, it is an abundance of it. It is just as easy to have hair like that as to have any at all. It is not always a gift of nature, that is true. But It IS always possible if you keep it clean by brushing it with a few dashes of Danderine. Shampooing alone can not remove the dandruff and that oily film which keeps it dull. Make it a habit to use a little Danderine on your brush every time you fix your hair, and you wilf always have soft, lovely, beautiful locks. A million women are doing it, and as fast as those who are still struggling with coarse, dull, lifeless hair, learn about the marvelous things Danderine Is doing, they can not keep back their enthusiasm. Just one thing to be sure t>f. Use a stiff brush and draw it through the hair with long, even strokes clear to the scalp so each strand becomes alive and glowing. It will help to keep in your waves. Danderine Is so Inexpensive, too. The 35c bottle contains enough to show you how wonderful it is. You can get it from your nearest store. Danderine £ * cMakes Qreanis of Hair ComeTru^

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lot right this very day. You’re a real little soldier and are having the biggest kind of chance to develop in mind and soul. Dear little girl, only those who have had similar disappointments, know what it means to lay aside hopes cherished for years. But here’s an odd and comforting fact, though. Many a person who’s life course has been deflected has found a, mine of joy and accomplishment in what he at first scorned. See if you can’t realize what a big, fine thing your present opportunity is—helping to mold the little brothers’ lives and comforting a lone and bereaved man. “James” is engaged to a girl who pleases him very much, only she is terribly extravagant, putting every cent that she makes on clothes. This worries James as he is not a highsalaried man. 'Well, James, a girl’s clothes are an investment to her, especially when she is dressing to please her possible mate. Ts the girl is sensible and agreeable and pleases you in every other way, this hardly seems a fault to hold up a wedding. With a home and others to take her interest, clothes may mean comparatively little to her after while. “Peggy’’ who is a young married woman lives with her husband's two sisters. They are not financially dependent upon her husband, but as they reared him, he feels that he can not leave them. "Peggy” wants a home of her own, and I think she is justified in renting a nice little apartment and telling the sisters and hubby afterwards. I believe he’d be delighted, only he can’t make the move and save his face to his sisters. “Rose M” Mho h&s been keeping company M’ith a young man she likes very much M'as dressed in knickerbockers one day recently and the young man made some severe remarks. They quarreled. He justified his remarks by saying that'she had dressed like a boy and shouldn’t expect a lady’s treatment. The young man went too far in his disapproval. Clothes are a personal matter, but when a girl puts on trousers, she rather lays herself open to missing the consideration naturally extended to the feminine sex. You can’t have your cake and eat it, Rose.

ANNUAL ROUND-UP OPENS AT PURDUE Attendance Between 3,000 and 4,000. Bn I'nitfd rrrm> LAFAYETTE, Ind„ May 4.—lndiana's boys’ and girls’ 4-H Club roundup opened here this morning with attendance of bettveen 1,500 and 2,000. Judging tty boys’ teams started Tuesday afternoon. Thirty-five teams in corn, 33 in dairy, 27 in livestock and 30 in poultry work entered this contest. The judging was started half a day early in order to give the boys more time to take part in the general program. Girls’ judging teams in canning, baking and clothing will start this morning and horse judging will also get under way. Examinations which will determine Indiana’s healthiest boy and girl will start, in charge of the State board of health and Dr. Harold Risk of Lafayette. Industrial and manual training groups will swell the attendance at the roundup Thursday. A special program has been arranged for these groups by the engineering extension department and the practical mechanics department. . Features of the entertainment program today were the Western Conference baseball game between Purdue and Michigan in the afternoon, at which the young visitors were guests of the Purdue Athletic Department, and the Purdue Livestock Review tonight, in charge of the Hoof and Horn Club and the animal industry department. This review will be held in the livestock judgment pavilion.

Cupid Marks Two Du Ponts

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Daughters of the wealthy and socially eminent Du Pont family upon whom Cupid recently has put his mark! Miss Yictorinc Du Pont upper), has announced her engagement to Elbert Dent of Chestnut Hill, Pa. After an elopement, Elizabeth Frances Du Pont (lower) has become Mrs. Richard D. Morgan. She is (he daughter of Philip Du Pont, and, like Yk-torine, hails from Wilmington, Del. Dent is a Social Registerite while Frances’ husband is a salaried employe of (lie Bell Telephone Company. JEWELED ORNAMENTS Jaunty spring , hats, with their pleated crowns of soft straw silk or felt, are sporting valuable jeweled pins with precious stones as ornaments.

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

BE HAPPY WHEN THEY ASK ‘WHERE’S MOTHER’? Women Who Really Live Are Those That Toil Beside Their Husbands and Cuddle Babies to Hearts.

By Mrs. Walter Ferguson Along about four o’clock In the afternoon do you hear the sudden slam of the front door and a shrill voice calling? Sometimes your nerves are all unstrung, you are tired and feel that you can’t stand the noise and the work and tlffe confusion for another *day. From father down to the littlest lad, the minute they hit the house comes the same cry, “Where’s mother?” But don’t complain. What matters it if your quiet is broken and your peace shattered, that you hurry from one task to another, that yours is the job of finding immediately what everybody wants. For, after all, what deeper thing can life hold for anybody than this? To know yourself the pivot about which all the home revolves. To realize that yours is the face that lights those rooms to which each person in the family comes with such a feeling of consummation. To be sure that you are needed desperately. For the years go swiftly, and the babies are groM’tt up all too soon. At night you tuck them into bed and kiss each rounded cheek and smooth the tangled hair. You can not see the subtle changes every morning brings. You think that you will alM'ays find them there, the same sweet troublesome ones. But somen-ay, they are snatched away from you. Even while you clasp them in your arms, suddenly and magically, they are gone. Their plutnp round bodies, become long and slim and one day they look at you with a strange glance and your heart is stabbed with the kncwledge that they are babies no longer. For this is the tragedy of motherhood. While we M’ork and struggle amid the noise and the wail of childish complaints, M-e do not always savor this our precious fruit of life. We are forever looking into the future, to some day M’hen we shall have noth-

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ing to do, when our children will be able to look after themselves, and we can settle down and enjoy life. And by and by when that day finally comes, only then do M’e understand that it is bitterest of our existence. For no matter how hard you may M’ork or how difficult seems your particular task, think upon the fact that only woman realy lives M’ho toils beside her husband and cuddles a baby to her heart. .The rest of them only play at life.

At The Colonial

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Harry Rason

Feelin’ very .much at home. Thank you. That's Harry Bason, pianist, now with the Royal Peacock Orchestra at the Colonial. Bason lives here.

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¥>ur Brains I wEjb All it takes to answer today’s list of questions is a good fund of general information. If any of them are too much for you, you’ll find the answers on page 14: 1. Give the line which follows, "Laugh and the world laughs with you.” 2. In what is the Massachusetts Institute of Technology? 3. Who Mas Eurlpedes? 4. Are the verbs "to occur” and “to transpire” synonymous in any sense? 5. In what sport did Glenna Collett gain fame? 6. Who is Alfred Noyes? 7. Who is credited with having introduced the tobacco habit into Europe? 8. From M-hat poems, by whom, are the following quotations: (a) “When I dipped into the future, far as human eye could see.” (b) "Bright star! would I were steadfast as thou art.” (c) “There is no death! What seems so is transition.” (and) “When lilacs last in the dooryard bloomed.” 9. Upon what subject did President Coolidge speak in his address in New York a Meek ago Monday night?' 10. The plane of what famous flyer crashed recently on the eve of his proposed attempt to fly from New York to Paris? 11. Name the Governor of Massachusetts upon whom now rests the fate of Sacco and Vanzetti. 12. Name four well-known public figures M’ho have been involved in formal debates oh the prohibition question within the last month. BLACK AND WHITE Striking combinations of black and white are bringing in a spring mode of dashing smartness.

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NORMAL WAISTLINE Belts creep nearer the normal waistline as the season progresses. Either regulation waistline or tight t Ilmt-S.vinflWay"'; j of Hitting ■ fog) (Oopyrljht 1927) flfiW For perfect tinting of dainty underwear, dresses, etc., the easiest May —and by far the best way—is the use of real dye. It tin(.s in cold water, you know; just dip the garment and it takes whatever tinge you wish to give it. A matter of minutes. Real dyes Mill get such smooth and even tones as shame the streaky, wishy-washy work of synthetic preparations for the purpose! Diamond dye in original powder form is only fifteen cents at the drug store. Do your own diluting. Then dip to tint —and you'll have an effect that’s beautiful. And if you want the tint permanent, just use boiling water! Diamond dyes do a perfect, “professional” job of dyeing, too; the druggist has sample shades and simple directions. For a book of endless suggestions, in full color, request a free copy of Color Craft of DIAMOND DYES, Dept. N32, Burlington, Vermont. Diamond Dyes Dip to TINT -Boil to DYE j

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PAGE 9

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