Indianapolis Times, Volume 42, Number 49, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 July 1930 — Page 7

ICJLY 7, 1930.

*LAfe Is Not as Drab as Youth Feels BY MARTHA LEE "What 1 hate nxwt of all about life,” says a worldly young man of 32 In a letter today, “is the deadly monotony of it. Every day Is a dull gray counterpart of the day before. “All the people one meets say the same things, thick the same thoughts, act the same way. I'm so bored with it all. and I'm only 22. with prospects of a long life filled with the same maddening repetition to be lived through.” Life does look dull and monotonous and hardly worth living to 22-year-olds every once in a while. They have had lots of leisure, in which they have stuffed all the experience they possibly can get. They have, they reel, read, seen and done everything that is worth while. And there doesn't seem to be anything very much left. That's just part of being 22. It’s part of the depression that comes when the mind sheds its swaddling clothes and dons the apparel of grown-ups. It’s a transition period. A time when we are casting off old ideas and taking on new ones. When we I re-evaluate life and people in gen- j era! It s the sort of mental and | spiritual growing pains that must! be gone through in order to have mature understanding, the same as we must have a certain siege of growing pains in order to develop physically. Not Really Serious It really is not a serious condition. Merely tragic for the person going through it and annoying <or amusing; to those associated with the person who is stretching out. Our grandmothers and grandfathers, and even their predecessors underwent the same phenomenon. Even when life was a simple process of going fr cm day to day without ever knowing when the Indians were going to start a massacre, young pioneers fcund life unbearably monotonous. The monotony is a reflection of the incapability of a person to assimilate all the exciting, stimulating things that are going on about us constantly. Life is more romantic today than tt has ever been in any period of history. Our chances for escaping the sameness of surroundings, people, ideas, conversations and all the rest of it are even greater than ever before. More Pert of Youth Boing bored belongs to the very young or the very old. And it Is more apt to be a part of yr more than of age. If I were very young and had a feeling that life was useless, I should hie myself out every morning about 6 or earlier for a long walk. 'Djere is a whole week of glory and renewed interest to be gained by one lovely sunrise. And nobody ever was gloomy long on a full stomach. Walking fixes that little item up quickly enough. I should readjust my mental capacity through philosophy and a little sane hmkinar so that I could take it on the chin without goings down for the court. I should make’ myself realize that all the romance and excitement I was going to get out of life would be through my own ability to see those things in the daily happenings. Needs Mental Shaking If I were 22 and bored with living, I would give myself a mental shaking for still believing, as I did when I was 11, that the - ’v exciting thrilling things that ever happen in this life belong to the explorers and scientists and adventurersAnd I should find something better to do with my time than sit and mope because I was foolish enough to think that I had seen done and experienced everything there was to see, do and experience In life. If one lives to be a thousand, it still is a fallacy that there is nothing new in the world. Insane Man Divorced /> v Timet Soecial VINCENNES. Ind., July 7.—Despite a law that insanity is not a good ground for divorce. Mrs. Margaret O'Ferrell was granted a decree from Oscar O’Ferrell, now’ an asylum Inmate. She alleged cruelty prior to insanity as a ground.

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Patterns PATTERN ORDER ELANK Pattern Department. Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Ind. Enclosed And 15 cents for which send Pat- mm n. r\ tern No. 7 0 0 Size Street City Name State .

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Brother and Sister of Carol Also Star in Wild Escapades

lleana Has Love Affairs; Nicholas Often Is cn Scandal Verge. This Is the ilxtb and lait of a series of stories on the life and loves of King Carol II and the history of Rumania's remarkable royal family. BY MINOTT SAUNDERS NEA Service Writer PARIS, July 7.—The gay and romantic escapades of King Carol II have set Rumanian tongues w agging on more than one occasion—and so have the love affairs of his royal brother and sister. Prince Nicholas and tUe beautiful Princess lleana. Moreover, the long friendship between their mother, Queen Marie, and Prince Babu Stirbey—a powerful and mysterious figure at the Rumanian court for many years—has been the subject of renewed gossip in European circles since Stirbey went into “voluntary exile” upon Carol’s return as king a short time ago. Carol’s dislike for Stirbey goes back many years; he is said to have struck the latter in the face when he encountered him in one of the palaces shortly before he left Rumania with Mme. Lupescu in 1925. He long had been known as a “court favorite,” even before the death of the queen’s husband, King Ferdinand. When Carol returned to Rumania and to. power one of his first acts, it is said, was to order the private telephone line between Queen Marie’s apartments and I*frince Stirbey’s palace ripped out.

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Then the Stirbey palace was searched and it is claimed a number of state secrets and official codes were found. And so Carol “allowed” Stirbey to depart. ana ASIDE from King Carol, two of her children—Princess lleana and Prince Nicholas—have been much in the public eye in recent years. The mystery surrounding the sudden breaking of the recent engagement of the beautiful lleana, 21, to Count Alexander of Hochburg, 30, a German, never has been cleared. Royal announcement of the engagement was issued, almost as quickly canceled, and Queen Marie departed with lleana on a trip to Egypt—to forget. Religious differences were first blamed for the break—the Rumanian royal family is orthodox Catholic—but Count Alexander set these at rest when he announced he was willing to yield his faith for his bride. Just what really happened never has been revealed. nan THE charming and vivacious lleana is said to have had trouble with her heart before. A few years ago there was current in Rumania —true or untrue—a story to the effect that she had attempted to elope to Constantinople with Commander Paius, a handsome Rumanian naval officer several years older than herself who was married and had a family. lleana lightly dismissed this report by saying that she had merely gone for a short auto ride with the

commander, a close friend of her brother, Prince Nicholas, and thus the wild rumors had started. The affair became somewhat of a national sensation and in some way love letters that the princess was purported to have written to Paius were made public. Faked or genuine, the letters contained paragraphs in which lleana urged that the naval officer should not consider his wife and children when “love called.” a a a LIKE his royal brother Carol, Nicholas has also lost his heart to a fair charmer outside of royalty. She was a Madame Dumitrescu Tahon, with whom Nicholas eloped to Paris to join Carol, who then was living there with Mme. Lupescu. Queen Marie, indignant, ordered him back to Bucharest. He came . . . and the brief romance ended for the time being, but more recent reports rumor that it has been revived. Nicholas has been the subject of bitter atteks in some sections of the Rumanian press. One fiery editor, Marcea Damian, once assailed him as “a boor and a drunkard,” after a particularly wild escapade. In this incident, which caused a furore in Rumania, Prince Nicholas beat into insensibility a chaffeur with whose truck Nicholas’ royal auto collided one day. The victim of the prince’s rage went to a hospital for several weeks. a a a YOUNG Nicholas also is reported at one time to have made many frequent airplane trips to

England In furtherance of a love affair with a beautiful young American actress who then was famous in a London music hall. Telling of his earlier life, Princess Marthe Bibescoe, in her memoirs of the Rumanian court, intimates that Nicholas has always had a streak of savagery In him. She tells, for instance, how when a small boy he used to cut .the hair off his sister, Marie, the present queen of Yugoslavia, and keep it in a bureau draw’er. He was also in the habit, it is said, of pinching his nurse. And so, as the wheel of Balkan politics turns once more and a prodigal king returns to wrest the throne from his 9-year-old son, one todav looks back on the many loves in Rumania's royal household and wonders what the next turn In thin incredible royal family will bring. The End

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school principal at Flora, has been chosen as principal here. He is a graduate of Indiana university.