Indianapolis Times, Volume 42, Number 11, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 May 1930 — Page 19

MAY 23, 1930.

Child Needs Benefits of Family Life BY MARTHA LEE Responsibility for the waywardness of a boy or girl rests with parents and home training, in the opinion of a majority of men and women who devote all their time and energy to cases of juvenile delinquency. Problems with young boys and girls, which sometimes end in serious crime, begin with improper home training. I am not one of those who cry aloud against the rising generations, as they come along. Fundamentally, young boys and girls are as sound as ever. In a lot of ways they are improved. They are more sane in their outlook upon life and sex. Their attitude is not as highly colored. They are more honest with themselves. But there are changes that very often are responsible' for the slipups in these youngsters. One of them is the almost total disappearance of family social life. Os course, modern inventions have extended the four walls that used to comprise “home” inimitably. Interests which used to be composed of husband, wife, family and business, have become so diversified that something had to be crowded out. So, just at a time when children need all the parental attention that could possibly be given them, because of the increase of temptations and distractions, they are left to their own devises. And when something goes wrong, the pessimists shake their heads and say it must be the movies they see, the things they read or that young folks now-a-days arc just plain bad. Dear Miss Lee—What will become of the present generation? I have no children of my own. but most of my intimate friends have young boys and girls. And the way they act is a fright. It is enough to make man glad he is a bachelor and doesn't have children to worry and Jret over these days. My friends' children go out on “dates” when they are hardly old enough to be allowed to stay up after dusk. They fly around In automobiles and stay out till all hours dancing and drinking. What sort of mothers will such girls be? And who would want such women for their wives? I am a middle aged bachelor. In my time. I have seen women change radically. But this last crop is the worst. If I could find a girl like my mother was. I would take a chance, but I never have. OLD FASHIONED.No you wouldn’t at all. Old Fashioned. In the first place if you had married when you were young, you wouldn't have all these fancy ideas about young folks. You would have grown right up with them and become accustomed to their ideas. I have a sneaking feeling that you are doing your looking for this g.rl like your mother among the latest 1930 models. Os course you won’t find one, and if you did you wouldn’t want her. Not that ycur mother

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ARRANGES DANCE

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Miss Helen Kreber

Chi Sigma national sorority will give a dance Saturday night at the Pleasant Run Golf and Country Club. Members of the committee in charge are Miss Helen Kreber, Miss Kathryn Reidy, Miss Mildred Saffrell, Miss Mary Agnes Griffin and Miss Charlotte Grossman.

wasn’t a fine woman and all that, but unconsciously your taste in women has changed. You have learned to like, grudgingly if you will, the snappy conversation of the moderns. You like the companions that wives may be to their husbands in these emancipated days. Getting back to the children. When they are “wild” as you term them, it usually is because they are not getting the proper attention at home. If these friends of yours would think less about other interests and exert some of their social energy making their own home attractive for their children things might be different. Parenthood brings with it responsibility. It is as important to watch over the mental and spiritual development of a child as it is to provide for his* physical development. And so it is not the youngsters who need a good shaking, but the parents. Not the coming generation but the generation in power, so to speak, your own generation who need theif ears boxed. MONDAY GUILD TO ATTEND LUNCHEON Monday Guild of the Community Welfare department of the Woman’s Department Club will meet at 1 Monday at the club house for the annual May luncheon. A discussion and business meeting will follow the luncheon, closing the program for the year. Mrs. Othneil Hitch and Mrs. Robert Shingler are co-chairmen.

Party Held in Honor of Mrs. Dant Miss Mary Jane Wilcox entertained Thursday night at her home 402 East Twenty-eighth street, with a formal bridge party and linen shower in honor of Mrs. Hale Dant, who before her marriage last Saturday, was Miss Anne Kelley. The hostess was assisted by her mother, Mrs. R. A. Wilcox, and her aunt, Mrs. H. E. Wiicox. Decorations carried out coral and blue, the bridal colors. The bridge tables at serving time were covered with coral linen, and lighted by blue tapers. The house was decorated with coral and blue sweet peas and spring flowers. Guests with the bride and her mother, Mrs. John Kelley, were Mrs John Kelley Jr., Mrs. Leonard Meisberger, Mrs. Russell Hottel, and Misses Eloise Myers, Mary Lou Kern, Betty Carnell, Mildred Keever, Virginia Quigley, Mary Kelley, Josephine Keller. Marjorie Wilcox, Margaret Kelley, Mary Florence Fletcher, Marie Chevrolet, Nina Beaver, Ann Ryan, Inez Keller, and Dorothy Cutshaw.

Musicale Tea Event Is Held by Alpha Club Mrs. T. P. Woodson, pianist, and Mrs. Charles A. Breece, vocalist, gave the program for the guest day musicale tea of Alpha club of Kappa Alpha Theta today at the home of Mrs. R. J. Anderson, 4816 Pleasant Run parkway, north drive. Mrs. Charles Farmer was program chairman. Mrs. Harold S. Sutherlin, president, and Mrs. Leon Zerfas, presided at the tea table which was centered with pink and white peonies and lighted by pink tapers. Mrs. Farmer, Mrs. Roy Coats and Mrs. J. C. Daugherty assisted. Among the guests were Mrs. Roy Natzer, Kokomo; Mrs. Bruce Haycock. Greentown; Mrs. James Limle, Mrs. Clyde Bowman and Miss Florence Colclesser, of Portland.

BREAKFAST BRIDGE IS SCHEDULED AT CLUB

An unusual party will be given Wednesday, June 4, at the Indianapolis Athletic Club when members and their guests will be entertained with a breakfast bridge party. The affair will open with a swim in the pool at 8:30. Breakfast will be served at tables around the border of the pool, at 9:15. The women will play bridge afterward.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

DANCE CHAIRMAN

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Miss Pauline Ballinger

Zeta Rho sorority will give a dance at the Knights of Columbus auditorium, Thirteenth and Delaware streets, Tuesday night. Miss Ballinger, Miss Frances, Smith and Miss Mary Mabey are in charge of the affair.

WOMEN REPUBLICANS IN LUNCHEON MEETING

Indiana Woman's Republican Club will entertain with a luncheon at 12:30 Thur.-uay at the. Columbia Club. Mrs. Elizabeth Atkinson, president, will preside. - Archibald Hall, successful candidate for congress, will talk on “Party Loyalty.” Miss Isaphine M. Richie, Frankfort, soloist, will present a program, accompanied by Mrs. Effie McGrew. Reservations for luncheon may be made with Mrs. Byron L. Daugherty, Hu. 5036, and Mrs. Frank Cones, Washington 0246.

DINNER DANCE HELD AT COUNTRY CLUB

Mr. and Mrs. John James Cooper and Paul C. Martin entertained Thursday night at the Woodstock Club with a dinner dance in honor of Mr. and Mrs. Fritz Remshardt, Heilbronn, Germany, and Miss Evelyn Barnes and her fiance, Jeremiah L. Cadick, whose marriage will take place June 7. Mr. and Mrs. Clifton Hinds, South Bend, who are visiting Mr. and Mrs. Cooper, were among the guests. The dinner table was T-shaped, and decorated with long baskets of roses, daisies and delphinium. Between the baskets were silver candelabrae with lighted ivory tapers. Covers were laid for sixty guests.

May Queen Crowned by Y. W. Girls

High school Girl Reserves and the industrial girls of the Indianapolis Y. W. C. A. held their annual spring banquets on Thursday night in social and Hollenbeck halls at the central building. The Girl Reserves crowned the May queen, Miss Elizabeth Hughes, and presented seal rings to the following members who were voted upon by members of the various clubs to receive the token of Girl Reserves ideals; Mrs. L. C. Litten. Mrs. Walter Begnston, Mrs. Walter Reynolds, Mrs. Ina Gaul, Mrs. L. G. Hughes, Miss Anna Rahe, Miss Dorothy Perkins, Miss Alberta Seybold and Miss Marylin Bay, advisors; Miss Teena Postuma, Miss Burnelle Bailey, Miss Katherine Wasson and Miss Frances Garrison, Beech Grove high school; Miss Virginia Miller, Miss Eulalah Anse and Miss Sarah Base, Washington high school; Miss Dorothy Schneid, Miss Josephine Byrne, Miss Marga-, ret Davis, Miss Betty Hale, Miss* Louise Waterson and Miss Evelyn Shively, Shortridge high school; Miss Ethel Braysacher and Miss Versie Newcomer, Technical high school, and Miss Adelaide Woerner, Miss Nellie Truitt and Miss Dorothy Esaman, Manual Training high school. Mrs. Litten gave a toast to the

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daughters, and Miss Miller gave one to the mothers. Miss Mary Frances Litten, president of the inter-club council of the reserves, presided. Covers were paid for 150 guests. • Members of the industrial department, composed of girls from the Real Silk Hosiery Mills, Beech Arthur, paper products company; Wcolworth, and a club of domestic workers were entertained in Hollenbeck hall. There were approximately two hundred present. Table decorations represented various occupations, and a cup, awarded to the be£t. was presented to the Beech & Arthur group. Mrs. L. A. Woodward, president of the board of directors of the Ft. Wayne Y. W. C. A., addressed the group, and Miss Blanches Forrester, president of the department, presided. Miss Anne Wittenbraker, secretary of the department, was chairman of arrangements. Hold Last Meeting Southern club will entertain tordght with a card party at the Pfpylaeum. It will be the last meeting of the year. Approximately one hundred members will attend. Mrs. L. D. Belden is chairman of arrangements. Hold Called Meeting Members of Delta Tau sorority will attend a called meeting at the Severin at 6:30 Monday night. Gives Bridge Party Mrs. Herman Creager entertained with a luncheon bridge party today at her home, 446 North Lasalle street. Covers were laid for Mrs.

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What Do You Know About CHIROPRACTIC? HAY FEVER Sufferers from HAY FEVER know that there are certain kinds of plants which give off an INVISIBLE MATERIAL which is IRRITATING to the MUCOUS MEMBRANE of the NOSE. They SNEEZE, the MEMBRANES become highly INFLAMED; even the TINY DUCTS which normally drain fluid from the eyes into nasal cavities become CONGESTED, SWOLLEN and OBSTRUCTED. Thus the fluid from the eyes, unable to escape in the normal way, ACCUMULATES on the SURFACE of the EYES. Hence the unpleasant condi tion of WATERING EYES. I In the mind of the hay fever victim it is the poison from plants which causes him to have hay fever. But what about the thousands of others who are equally exposed? Why should they be free from its effects. The difference lies ii “SUSCEPTIBILITY.” But why is one susceptible while the other is not? Where is the difference between them? The CHIROPRACTOR can tell you. He knows, because he has REPEATEDLY DEMONSTRATED that in the hay fever victim the NASAL MEMBRANES are not receiving their quota of vital force through the nerves. He knows further that by CORRECTING this condition he will restore normal resistance and the patient will recover. Many people do not realize that CHIROPRACTIC is successful in a wide variety of cases. This “Foremost Drugless Health System” has gained such astounding public favor because its BENEFITS ARE NOT confined to NERVOUS DISORDERS and SPINAL CURVATURES, We reprint below a PARTIAL LIST of the more common ailment in which it is effective. Space will* not permit our covering the entire list. If the reader is interested in some condition not listed here, • he should consult his CHIROPRACTOR for additional information. Common ailments reached by CHIROPRACTIC: Acme Diabetes Influenza Paralysis Anemia Epilepsy Kidney Trouble Pneumonia Appendictis Eye Trouble Low Blood Pressure Rheumatism Arthritis ' Gastric Ulcer Lumbago St. Vitus Dance Asthma Gastritis Lung Trouble Sciatica Bright’s Disease Goitre Nervousness Skin Eruptions Bronchitis Headaches Nephritis Stomach Trouble Catarrh Heart Trouble Neuralgia Tonsllitls Constipation High Blood Pressure Neuritis Throat Trouble

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Mrs. Homer A. Fleener, Mrs. W. F. Reimer and Miss Elva Olsen.