Indianapolis Times, Volume 42, Number 76, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 August 1930 — Page 9
AUG. ?, 1930.
Haris Come Easily in Childhood BY MARTHA LEE Childhood is such an Important time. Its happinesses and sorrows perhaps are the most profound we know in our whole lives, and yet when we grow up. we somehow forget all the little things that meant so much to us when we were children In childhood, things are divided into two classifications: Those things which are t' emendously important and those things which do not count at all. In youth one so seldom hits upon a happy medium. That is one of the things which comes with maturity, if it is to come at all. Parents, whose childhoods had been unhappy for very poignant reasons completely forget those reasons and subject their own children to the same unhappiness because they have forgotten what it means to be hurt when one is young. Means Much to Child It means so much for a child to have clothes like other children wear. Nothing makes a child more miserable, uncomfortable and selfconscious than to look different from the other children with whom he associates. And nothing makes other children so ruthless in their criticism than to have a youngster in their midst who doesn't "belong.” If his clothes are different, he is set apart as not one of them. If his manners are different, he's a total stranger. Some children do not mind this, but most of them are utterly miserable when anything like this occurs. You can not blame children entirely for this attitude. They see their mothers and fathers weighing the value of their acquaintances by what they have and w f ear and spend. Children naturally are imitators. They want everything to be exactly like other children's. Never In Youth When children are very young is no time to demand that they show some individuality. A parent only will succeed in making his child miserable if he does that. If the child really is unusual, he will be different without any coaching from the side lines. I once heard a woman say that her entire career as a student came very near being ruined because she did not have the things other girls in the school had. She thought because she did not look like them, she could not do the things they did. It stunted her ambition and gave her an inferiority complex that was difficult for her to overcome. It caused her to underestimate her own value. Uniforms Are Good That is one of the reasons why women should band together and demand that school children wear uniforms to school. It starts all the youngsters out on an even basis. To grown-ups all this will sound very foolish. But it is of paramount importance to children. It means estimate the causes of unhappiness in so many cases. It is unfair of adults to under? estimate the causes of hunhapiness to children. They make their own children ashamed to tell them why they are unhappy. They alienate their own children from them by being unsympathetic and misunderstanding enough to laugh when the children are telling them what makes them cryPlan Program for Friends Meet Bv Timet Special NOBLESVILLE, Ind.. Aug. 7. The program for the order of business for the seventy-third annual Western Yearly Meeting of Friends to be held at Plainfield. Aug. 18-24, has been made public here.
VACATION AT HOME FOUND ENJOYABLE
Travel Books Take Woman Around World: Give Mental Rest. “Around the world in a rocking chair” might be the title of a vacation letter which came today to The Times Vacation Contest editor. For thoughts can hurdle the seas, scale mountain peaks and penetrate the jungles in the winking of an eye if a good book is the stimulus. 7ROM MRS. E. L. CLAGHORN, F R. 11, Box 380, came this ant vr to the question: “Why I think .iy vacation was best from the standpoint of mental and physical benefits I derived:” NOT being financially able to take a prolonged trip. I spent for books and magazines and three hours daily for three weeks read aloud. Thus my children and I traveled around the world on boats, horses, autos and walking. We jaw U-autiful America first, scenes more beautiful than we ever dreamed our dear old U. S. A. held.
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Patterns PATTERN ORDER BLANK Pattern Department, Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Ind. Enclosed find 15 cents for which send Pat- f3 A tern No. Size Street City Name State
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From the battlefields of France to the mountains in Switzerland we went, ana from Alaska to South America, pretending we were really there. It was fun, and after each reading we were really rested in both mind and body and felt our vacation was a huge success. a a r FROM MRS. DELLA M. BEHYMER, 4070 Byram avenue: IHAVE just returned from a vacation by automobile to the Golden West. I am a housewife and feel it just as essential to take a vacation as the business man or woman, as it instills new life into our beings, rests our tired nerves and makes us broader and better when we see the beauties of God’s creation. After climbing the Rockies, looking with wonderment on the Grand Canyon, or taking a dip in the pacific and watching the beautiful sunsets of California or Colorado, I can return to my daily duties much improved in health and spirits. a a a FROM MRS. MARY E. JOHNSON, 269 North Pershing avenue: MY family having departed on vacatons I am left to dc? as I please. First I engaged a nice cool room, with private bath, at a good downtown hotel where I could rest, read, do some choice needle work, attend some good shows and concerts and come and go as I pleased. I even ate at a place other than the hotel at whatever time I cared to and from prepared dishes not of my own cooking. After a week or ten days of this I returned to my home duties and my children greatly refreshed in mind and body. a a a PROM MRS. CLARA ARNELLO, 333 South East street: THIS is my vacation. I get up each day at 5 a. m.; get out on the front porch: get all the fresh air I can breathe, walk a few blocks. Then feed the cats and pet dog. two birds, one a poly parrot. Then I get breakfast for three. Then do up all the housework, take a sunbath in the yard. This I find is a good everyday vacation, helpful both mentally and physically to me. I don’t have to leave home to do all this. This is tire last of the vacation letter contest. Friday night is the deadline. Winner of the $5 prize for the best letter published this week will be announced next Monday. ,
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BEGIN HEBE TODAY Through 4 letter tht he receives from a friena in New York. DAN RORIMER. Hollywood scenario writer and former New York newspaper man. meets ANNE WINTER, who has come from .Tulsa. Okla. to try to get extra work ,ln the ra Dn*' finds her chtnnin* and takes a deep interest in her. She learns from him that he works at Continental Pictures. She has worked only one day as an extra herself, having bee:, there but a short time, but a few days after their meeting she gets extra work at Grand United. . , Her first dav there she meets a girl named MONA MORRISON, and Immediately likes her. Mona Is living with EVA HARLEY, and Anne lives alone, and Mona suggests that the three occupy a bungalow that she and Eva have seen. They do this. When Dan calls on Anne there one evening he learns from Mona that GARRY SLOAN, the famous director, actually has noticed Anne, ana she msv be given a ■•bit.” , Dan. not liking Sloan, although he has never actually met him. Is a bit apprehensive. NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY CHAPTER NINE THERE flashed through Rorimer’s mind the picture of Garry Sloan and Sylvia Patterson sealed at a restaurant table; and Johnny Riddle saying: “Sylvia's a swell girl, but Sylvia’s ambitious — and she can be diplomatic.” And Dan wondered if Sylvia Patterson would be starring with Grand United if she had chosen not to be diplomatic to Sloan. Perhaps the thought was not exactly fair to Sylvia, though; the girl had undeniable talent, and rare, or-chid-like beauty, and her fan mail, Riddle had said, was among the largest in Hollywood. Perhaps, Sloan or no Sloan, she would have gone far. And yet remembering how she had sat there smiling at him with eyes and lips, listening with flattering attentiveness as the brawny director smoked and talked, Dan found it easy to think that perhaps Sylvia Patterson felt it was less to her choice than to her interests to feed Garry ! Sloan’s vanity. | And Dan resented him. Anne Winter said, “I may be doj ing a bit in this picture yet. It j sounds almost too good to be true, I I know; but Mr. Sloan himself talked ; to me today and they may give me ; a few lines.” ‘‘Atta girl;” Dan said encouragingly. “Didn’t I tell you you’d knock ’em dead if you got a chance?” Rather abruptly he asked, “What do you think of Sloan?” “He's rather wonderful, Dan,” Anne got up from her chair and took a few nervous steps toward one of the front windows. There she stood, gazing into night and nothingness for a minute or two, and Dan perceived, when she turned her face toward him again, that she was highly agitated. He said, “I’m nothing but a clumsy idiot to be staying when you should be resting. Tomorrow may mean a tremendous lot to you, and I'm keeping you from bed. You’re a little nervous; you ought to have some hot milk and go right to sleep.” Aime said, “Oh, Dan, you talk as if I were a baby. I’m going to have sandwiches and coffee, and so are you. “I’m—l'm just a little silly, I suppose. Only, it does mean a tremendous lot to me; you were right. And it shouldn’t, of course; a bit is only a bit, after all—l’m only fooling myself if I think it means any more. “A week from now I suppose I shall be looking for any kind of extra work and thinking myself lucky if I get it.” tt ft it RORIMER smiled. “I wish Dick Charles could hear you talk, Anne. I’m sure he'd be surprised at your humility. He isn’t used to it. “Dick says: ‘Give an extra a bit and he automatically thinks he's a bit player and doesn’t want to do extra work again.’ And I suppose he knows as much about it as any casting director in Hollywood.” He went over to her and took her hand in his and patted it. “You’re going to go over, Anne; I know it. There’s nothing can stop you, because—well, because you’ve got more ability right now than nine-tenths of them. Wait till they hear you sing. Have you sung for them yet, Anne?” Anne said, “If course not, silly,” and she laughed. “Why, I'd be frightened to death to sing for Garry Sloan.” s “You sang for me,” Dan reminded her. “I know, but I’ve such a tiny little voice, Dan.” He told her that she did not have to shout over the microphone. “Is there any chorus singing in the picture?” he asked. Anne said there was not, and she proceeded to tell him the story of the picture. Its working title, she informed him, was “Married in May.” “Sylvia Patterson has several songs, and Raymond Marbury. And Pat Stanton and Mary Ellis have one or two. But there's no chorus singing. Mr. Sloan, though, has a wonderful male quartet in it. And he’s building up one of the scenes—just before the quartet comes on. It’s one of the house-party sequences—where we all wear sport clothes. You know? And he wants to give some lines to one or two of the unimportant guests. And that’s where I come in.” Mona's cheerful voice from the kitchen announced loudly that coffee and sandwiches were on the way, and she and Eva followed a moment later with trays. “Anne can pour the coffee,” Mona said, and she dropped gratefully and noisily into a chair. “No sugar for me, Anne, dear—and I love it so, too,” she sighed. She turned to Dan and said, “Wouldn’t it be wonderful to have a figure like Anne or Eva? They can eat as much as they want and never add an ounce. But me!—gosh, Dan, it’s awful!” Eva Harley, passing sandwiches to Dan, smiled. “How is your picture coming along, Mr. Rorimer?” she asked politely. an tt DAN was a little surprised at the question. It was the first time he had heard Eva express curiosity about anything. Mona said, “What's the idea of the Mr. Rorimer, Eva? His r.r.me is Dan.” “Well, Dan, then,” said Eva. “That sounds a lot better,” Dan said. The picture, he informed them, was proceeding satisfactorily enough. “But it’s nothing to rave about. I saw some rushes today, and Collins seemed to be, satisfied. ’ “And what kind of a newspapei reporter is Frederick Atwood?’ Anne wanted to know. P.'rimer grinned. “Just too nice lor words. ‘ he said. Mona said, “That doesn't sound so hot,” and Dan admitted that per-
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haps he was damning Atwood with faint praise. “He s a good actor and a good fellow,” he said, “but every time Atwood talks he sounds as though he has just had his voice manicured. He’s that correct and precise.” And police reporters, he went on to say, didn’t talk like actors. “They talk like police reporters.” “I like that crack,” Mona said, “about the manicured voice. . . . And what will you do after this picture is finished—write another one?” Rorimer said he supposed so. “I’ve got a little more than five months to go before they can fire men,” he said, and he laughed. “That’s a great break,” said Mona. “How would you like to shop around for jobs by the day? . . . How do you think it would feel, Eva, to have a steady job—for a month, even?” And to Dan she added: “We get our checks at the end of the day—when we’re working. And if there’s a job tomorrow you’re in luck.” Eva Harley said “And how!” She said it unsmilingly and, Rorimer thought, a little bitterly. He made his excuses a few minutes later and departed; and when he got back to his hotel he felt strangely at war with himself; the evening, despite Mona’s attempts to put him at his ease, had not contributed to his peace of mind. He tried to tell himself that Anne Winter’s welcome had been as warm as usual, but he thought: “The girl wants to be left alone.” The prospect of bed was singularly imcheering, so he sat for a while in one of the lobby divans, his hat and coat in his lap, and watched the party-goers drift past him to the dancing room, the women, expensively wrapped and coifed, chattering animatedly; the men following more quietly in dinner suits like uniforms. One of the Roosevelt’s “dress nights,” Rorimer idly supposed, and brought his gaze to rest on the entrance to the Blossom room, where young women in black, and in bright colors, and in pastels, waited for their escorts and smoked cigarets and swayed their shoulders gently with the dance rhythmtt tt it RORIMER thought he recognized one or two among them as movie actresses, but he was not certain. He thought: “But they’d all like to be mistaken for movie actresses;” and, remembering an old English race track quotation, that “On tfffe turf, or under the turf, all men are equal,” he felt that there was something equally democratic and leveling about the scene before him. He went upstairs presently, and took a book with him, and read himself to sleep. His bed-side lamp was burning and the book was beside him on the covers when martial strains from the Hollywood High School band, almost beneath his window, roused him in the morning. In his bath he told himself determinedly that there would be no more visits to the bungalow without a direct invitation. To prove to Anne that he was interested in the outcome of the day at Grand United, and to satisfy his own curiosity, he called her up that evening, and learned that she had been given the greatly-coveted “bit.” But he said nothing about seeing her. Another ten days passed, during which he heard nothing from her at all; and then one day, in the restaurant on the Continental lot, he ran into Eva Harley.
(To Be Continued) WRECKERS TRY HAND ON FELLOW WORKERS Fists Fly as Loca! Members Meet Cut Price Competitors. Bu United Prett NEW YORK, Aug. 7.—Like the postman who spent his day off taking a long walk in the country, wreckers of Local 95 celebrated a vacation by attempting to wreck members of the House Wreckers Brotherhood of Greater New York, Annoyed to think that Brotherhood members accepted work at sl.lO an hour, making it hard for members of Local 95—who will not work for less than $1.25 an hour—to get a job, the latter group met the former at a subway exit when the Brotherhood wreckers were on their way to work, and fists began to fly. Police intervened and arrested four. Ambulance surgeons treated three for injuries. COUNTY PICNIC IS“ SET 1,000 Employes, Families to Attend Outing Aug. 19 at Park. Annual outing of about 1.000 county employes and their families will be held Aug. 19 at Broad Ripple park, county commissioners announced today. Games and contests, with a chicken dinner and refreshments at noon, will be in charge of committees of officials appointed Wednesday. Wayne County Farmer Dies Bu Times Special DUBLIN, Ind.. Aug. 7.—Clarence Raper, 50, a farmer, is dead in the southeastern part of Wayne county. He was a large land owner. Death followed a long illness. He leaves the widow, Grace; one daughter, Myra; one brother, Charles; two sons, Robert and Raymond, and two sisters, Mrs. Martha Miller, Richmond, and Mrs. Della McClure, south of Richmond.
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NEGRO HATCHET SUSPECT FAILS IN JAIL-BREAK Turnkey, Cop Wounded in Desperate Effort to Gain Freedom. Bu United Preaa GARY, Ind., Aug. 7.—Two Gary policemen were injured, several shots were fired, and the city jail was thrown Into an uproar when Louis Hood, 36-year-old Richmond Negro, held here as a siispect in sev-
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eral hatchet slayings, made a desperate attempt to escape. Hood felled Louis Manlan, turnkey, with an improvised blackjack, made by tying his belt to a broken water faucet end. Manlan fell dazed, but fired two shots at the fleeing Negro, and forced him to turn back. Patrol Sergeant A- H. Johnstone heard the shots and rushed into the jail. He slammed the cell door on Hood just as the Negro made a vicious swing at him with the weapon. Several other patrolmen then joined Manlan and Johnstone. Hood bit Victor Presco, patrolman, on the arm, inflicting a deep wound. Both he and Manlan were given medical attention. Hood, a friend of Ulysses Mack, condemned to die for an ax murder, was taken to Gary as a suspect in several fiendish attacks. He also was suspected of hatchet slayings in Omaha, Neb.> in 1928.
FOREST FIRES PROBE STIBS SHERIFF'S IRE Jeffersonville Head Denies Moonshiners Started State Blazes. si Timee Special JEFFERSONVILLE, Ind., Aug. 7. —“We can run this county without the help of Attorney-General James M. Ogden,” Sheriff Hal K. Hughes of Clark couny declared today, denying that moonshiners’ warfare had been responsible for forest
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fires in the county which have burned over 1,000 acres. “Ogden can do as he pleases,” was the sheriff’s comment to news dispatches that the attorney-general would send investigators into tha county to check up on moonshiners* activities. “You can drop a match, a cigareH or any fire any place in southern Indiana and have a fire,” the sheriffl asserted. "Our hunting season for squirrels opens Aug. 1. and it has been sinca that time we have had so many fires. We have had hundreds of grass, brush and small timber fires over the county. “That story about a moonshiner feud In which one faction fires the timber to burn out stills of another group is just someone talking. Ralph F. Wilcox, state forester, asked the attorney-general to send investigators into the county to check activities of liquor law violators.
