Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 114, Indianapolis, Marion County, 21 September 1932 — Page 7
SEPT. 21, 1932_
Mrs. Hueber Is Hostess to Oct-Dahl Mrs. A. J. Hueber. 2408 North New Jersey street, was to be hostess today for the president's day observance of the Oct-Dahl Club. Annual reports were to be presented by various officers. The meeting on Oct. 19 will be an anniversary party, celebrating the founding of the club on Oct. 26, 1926. Mrs. Fred F. Fox, 5406 North Delaware street, will be hostess. Other special meetings during the year will be a Christmas party Dec. 21, election on May 17, and a garden party, June 21. Mrs. B. F. Watson is president of the club. Assisting her will be Mrs. Don W. Warren, vice-president; Mrs. J. B. Shelby, recording secretary; Mrs. O. P. Bundy, treasurer, and Mrs. Peter C. Reilly, publicity. Mrs. Hueber and Mrs. E. E. Padgett are delegates to the Seventh district Federation of Clubs, and Mrs. May Brooks Miller and Mrs. Samuel B. Taylor to the Indianapolis Council of Women. Committee chairmen are as follows: Mrs. Hueber, ways and means; Mrs. Fox, membership; Mrs. Fred J. Schlegel, flowers; Mrs. A. C. Hawn, custodian; Mrs. Warren C. Harrell, Mrs. Charles Hogate and Mrs. Reilly, yearbook, and Mrs. Hogatc, parliamentarian. The Oct-Dahl Club now has twen-ty-seven active and two honorary members. The membership is limited to thirty active members. The club is not a literary organization, but spends time at its meetings socially, and carries on extensive welfare work among various civic and private enterprises.
MANNERS Pj lORMi,
DON’T nurse your troubles! Talk them out with Jane Jordan. Write freely, as you would to any other friend, and she will answer you in this column. Dear Jane Jordan—l am a woman of 30 and have been married twice. My first marriage was not for love, but four years later I did marry for iove But there is something making my husband very cold and indifferent toward pie. I am not bad looking, and I don't pay any attention to any one else. I am so lonesome at times that I almost afn tempted to try and find someone who could give me the kind of love I crave. I have a nice home and I am a good manager and a good cook. I do not go out very much, as my allowance will not permit it. For pastime I read, sew, and quilt I now want to make friends, but I don't know how to go about it. as for twelve years I have had other things to keep me busy. % X want to talk to my husband and all day I try to think of something nice to say. Then when he comes home I am lost for words to express myself. I am willing to go half wav, but he won't talk about anything. Tlease tell me how to solve my problems. LONESOME AND BLUE. Dear Lonesome and Blue—When a husband grows cold and indifferent, there is nothing you can do but pretend not to notice it. Love is one thing you can not get by begging for it. If husbands could will themselves to love their wives, most-of them would do so, for no decent person deliberately chooses to make another unhappy. Sometimes women read a deep dark reason in the indifference of a husband that does not exist. Once I knew a young married woman who was heartbroken over her husband’s formidable manner. She was sure he had ceased to love her. When I talked to the husband, I found that he was trying to give up cigarets on the doctor's orders, and the strain on nerves accustomed to nicotine made him Twas Only a temporary . , grouch, with a Craving for touch-me-not atCigarets have told me that at times when they are preoccupied with a business problem or worried about money, it is positive torture to be obliged to make love to an over-anxious wife. Women with the wisdom to remain neutral during an emotional slump on the part of a spouse usually live to enjoy its happy revival. It may be that there is something serious on your husband’s mind, but you can’t force him to tell you. Men seem to hate to “talk things out,” and interpret a woman’s vocal efforts at an understanding as nagging. In a questionnaire, sent out to wives, asking what they would change about their husbands if they could, the majority of women said they would like to have them talk Silence Is more. The hus- , bands complained Klessca that they talked , H all day in trans- ai nomc acting business, and when they got home at night, silence was blessed. About all you can do is to avoid antagonizing your husband until he snaps out of it. If his love for you is dead, you will find it out in time. Remember that very few husbands remain good lovers after they capture their heart's desire. If you changed him for another, the chances are you would have the same problem on your hands as soon as the new wore off. Stir up all the outside interests you can. It is easy to make friends. All you have to do is to show a
Daily Recipe CASSEROLE OF SPINACH 11-2 pounds of spinach 3 eggs 1 cup milk 2 tablespoons butter 2 tablespoons flour and bread crumbs Cook the eggs until hard. Remove roots and wilted leaves and wash spinach thoroughly until water is clear and no sand remains. Cook 5 minutes without additional waste. Drain, season with salt. Make white sauce of milk, butter and flour. Cut hard-cooked eggs into sixteenths and mix the spinach, white sauce and eggs together. Place in casserole, cover wtih crumbs and bake ten or fifteen minutes, or until crumbs are brown and the mixture is heated thoroughly.
Patterns PATTERN ORDER BLANK Pattern Department. Indianapolh Times. Indianapolis. Ind Enclose find 15 cents toi which send Pat- 701 tern No. / £* 1 Size Street - City Stata Name
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A Day’s Menu Breakfast — Sliced oranges, cereal cooked with dates, cream, even toast, milk, coffee. Luncheon — Cream of tomato soup, corn sticks, potato salad, toasted cheese sandwiches. ’ grapes, milk, tea. Dinner — Broiled halibut steak, mashed potatoes, onions stewed in milk, fresh pear salad, stuffed -antaloupe. milk, coffee.
genuine interest in people and their problems. Warmth reflects warmth and interest generates interest. >t b Dear Jane Jordan—l am 22 years old and am engaged to a 23-year-old boy. We love each other dearly. He is wonderful. But this is the thing that worries me. He is six foot one inch tall, weighs 170 pounds, end Is very handsome. I am considered beautiful, but that doesn't console me one bit. I feel so insignificant beside him. Do you think he wiir continue caring for me after we are married, despite mv size? WORRIED WIFE-TO-BE. Dear Worried Wife -to-Be seems to me you have all the luck if you are both little and pretty. There is nothing that charms a man more than the illusion that nis wife is just a little girl, unable to take care of herself without a big strong man to help her. Th? contrast of your frail femininity with his strong masculinity probably is one thing that has charmed him. Why, just think, you can sit in his lap without having him moan and groan about your weight! Many a wife has starved herself almost to death to achieve a figure that a man can hold on his knee. WHITE CROSS GROUP BOARD TO MEET Executive board of the White Cross center of the Methodist hospital will meet at 10 Friday morning in the nurses' home for the first meeting of the season. Plans will be made for the winter's activities, all of which center about the hospital and patients. Mrs. Felix T. McWhirter, president, will preside. Dr. John G Benson, general superintendent of the hospital, has invited the bbard members to be nis guests at luncheon following the meeting. Sigma Kappas to Meet „ Sigma Sigma Kappa sorority will meet tonight at the home of Mrs! Veldon Montgomery, 2423 East Twelfth street.
j 162 CITY NAMES ! IN NEW EDITION OF 'WHO'S WHO' 445 Hoosiers Are Listed; 1,039 of 30,545 Are Born in Indiana. | Indianapolis and the state lost j ground on the gridiron of fame this week when the issuance and ! publication of the seventeenth edition of “Who’s Who in America” showed both city and state thrown j for slight losses on noted persons residing therein. In the 1930-1931 edition of the j almanac of accomplishments the j city had 168 residents listed as be--1 ing worihy of acclaim fer useful | work while the new edition lists but 162 names. Indiana had 447 residents with their names in “Who’s Who” in the 1931 edition, while in this year’s! red book but 445 are shown. But the state made one appreciable gain and that is in that out of the 30,545 names listed in the book 1,039 were shown to be born in Hoosierdom, while in the sixI teenth edition but 1,015 gave their ! nativity as Indiana. Eleven New City Names Eleven new names appear in the 1 j city’s "Who’sers,” but due to drop- ! j ping of some names in the last bi- I ennial edition, the score for the j city’s prominent ones is kept at 162. The new citizens to enter the hall of fame, are: Lucius B. Andrus, president of Indiana Electric Corporation; the Rev. Isaac J. Cahill of the United Christian Missionary Society; Circuit Judge Harry O. Chamberlin, George C. Cole, superintendent of public instruction; Luther L. Dickerson, city librarian; I George C. Forrey Jr., banker; James jW. Noel, attorney; Kenosha Sessions, head of Indiana Girls’ school; Isabelle H. Stewart, educator; David E. Watson, attorney, and George M. Williams, manufacturer. But where “Who’s Who” declares that the nation’s average is one out of each 4,000 persons listed in the book for 1932-1933, the city of Indianapolis practically cuts that figure in one-half by having one person listed in it to each 2,248 persons in the city. Lists All Lines of Notables The rate for the years of 1930 and 1931 were practically the same as the present. The voluminous book with its 2,670 pages covers every field of endeavor except sporting lines. The Bambino of Swat, Babe -Ruth, is not listed. Sport fans will find no record of Jack Sharkey, Earl Sande or “Red” Grange within its agate pages. The exceptions that deal with sport are prominent athletic instructors as Fieldign H. Yost of Michigan and others. Clergymen, college professors, scientists, authors, artists, auditors, inventors, educators, lawyers, army and navy officers and financiers, form the bulk of the names in the book. Here Are Local “Chosen” The “Who’s Who” of Indianapolis in alphabetical order follow: Robert J. Aley, Albert B. Anderson, Lucius B. Andrus, Samuel Ashby, Walter S. Athearn, Louis J. Bailey, Robert C. Harry E. Barnard, John P Barnhill. Harry W. Bassett, Henry W Bennett. William P. Best, Edgar Blake, Willis S. Blatchley, Arthur V. Brown, Hilton U. Brown, Lee Burns. Amos W. Butler, Isaac J. Cahill, Solon J. Carter, Harry O. Chamberlin, David L. Chambers, Joseph Chartrand, Frank C. Clark, George H. A. Clowes, Willard N. Ciute, Charles E. Coffin, Charles F. offin, George C. Cole, Christopher B. Coleman, Stephen J. Corey, Abram E. Cory. Charles E. Cox, Robert F. Daggett, Frank Dailey, Test Daiton, Luther L. Dickerson, J. Ambrose Dunkel, Joseph R. Eastman, Bowman Elder. William L. Elder, 1 Homer Elliott, Horace Eliis, Ira H. Ellis, Charles P. Emerson, Louis B. Ewbank, William B. Farmer, Charles E. Ferguson, James W. Fesler, Herbert W. Foltz, George C. Forrey Jr., Wi.liam Forsyth. William Fortune, Henry H. Fout. Joseph M. Francis, Harry O. Garman, Willis D. Gatch, Fred C. Gause, Francis H. Gavisk, Arthur L. Gilliom, Irby J. Good, Pierre F. Goodrich, Boyd Gurley, William A. Guthrie, Elizabeth J. M. Hack, Matthias L. Haines, John S. Harrison. William C. Hartinger. Anna Hasselman, Frederic R. Henshaw. William Herschell. 1 John W. Holtzman. Thomas C. Howe, Louis Howland, Frank F. Hutchins, William H. Insley. Ed Jackson, Margaret W. Jackson, Charles W. Jewett, Emsley W. Johnson. Arthur Jordan, Frederick D. Kershner, Hugh McK. Landon, Benjamin F. Lawrence, Ulysses S. Lcsh, Harry G. Leslie, Ernest I. Lewis. Grant K. Lewis, John L. Lewis, Richard Lieber, Frank L. Littleton, Louis L. Ludlow. I Daniel B. Luten, Clarence R. Martin, Augustus L. Mason, Frederick E. Matson, Oscar R. McKay. Felix M. McWhirter, Luella F. S. McWhirter. John C. Mellett, Charles F. Miller, Dick Miller. Samuel D. Miller. Robert L. Moorhead. Carl H. Mote, Harry S. New, Meredith Nicholson. Thomas B. Noble, James W. Noel, James M. Ogden. Edgar W. Olive, William A. Pickens, Harry O. Pritchard. James W. Putnam, Kate M. Rabb, Edward B. Raub, Charles Rcmster, Charles F, Remy. Arthur R. Robinson. Frederick M. Rogers. Curtis H. Rotfeer. Frederick E. Schortemeier. Carrie E. Scott, Kenosha Sessions. Wililam A. Shullenberger, Charles D. Skinner. Lemuel E. Slack, former mayor; John W. Sluss. Mary A. Soink. Frank D. Stalraker, Paul C. Stetson. Isabelle H. Stewart, Elmer W. Stout. James A. Stuart. Reginald H. Sullivan, Russell Sullivan. Samuel B. Sutphin, Booth Tark-iu-rton, William M. Taylor, Charles N. Thompson. William H. Thompson. M. Bert Thurman. Daniel J, Tobin, Julius C. Travis, Robert | H. Tyndall. Frederick Van Nuvs, Wililam G. Wall. Albert Ward. William R. Warren, He'cn M. Warrum, David E. Watson. Emma E. White, Frank S. C. Wicks. George M. Williams. Irving Wililams, Benjamin M. Willoughb'-. Heim’ L. Wilson, Roy P. Wisehart, William N. Wishard, Evans Woollen Thomas N. Wynne. PA R KED CARS LOOTED E. P. Mooney Jr. Loses Seven Dozen Shirts Valued at SIOO. Thefts of clothing valued at $620 frem three parked automobiles were reported to police. E. P. Mooney Jr., 4819 East Washington street, apartment 10, notified police that two sample cases had been taken from his car. Seven dozen shirts, valued at SIOO, are missing. A suitcase containing clothing valued at S2O was taken from the automobile of Edward J. Bererer, Chicago, while the car was parked at New York and Illinois streets, he reported. A. H. Goldberg, Chicago, said clothing and other articles, valued at SSOO, were taken from his parked car at Washington street and Capitol avenue. thought She Would Die From Asthma I “I had asthma in severe form.” says ■ Mrs. M. t'jrn. HIT liuchanan St.. Indianapolis. "Two years asp I really thought I was going to die. I tried all kinds of treatments, but the bad attacks continued until 1 tried Xacor in April, T 930, I took two bottles and then found I needed no medicine whatever. The trouble has disappeared entirely, and I am feeling just fine. Am doing my housework again and am gaining back mv weight.” Kind out how thousands have found lasting relief. Their letters and other vital information will lie sent free. Writ • to Nacor Medicine Cos,. 406 State Life Bldg.. Indianapolis, Indiana.—Advertisement.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
TANGUAY DYNAMO RUNS DOWN
7 Don't Care * Song Brings Eva Fame, Then Ruins Her
At* begins to make inroads upon the seemingly indestructible vitality of j Eva Tanguay. This, the last article of j a series of three written for The Times, describes the later—and less fortunate— j years in the famous actress' colorful career. BY GILBERT SWAN NEA Service Writer NEW YORK, Sept. 21.—Stopping for breath after her long, spectacular climb to the top of the Broadway world, “the lady dynamo” began to have certain doubts and misgivings. The very term, “lady dynamo,” staring at Eva Tanguay in large black type from a newspaper page, was sufficient cause for disturbance. How much longer could the dynamo run at full speed? Time had gone sweeping by. And her 30s were at hand. What did she have? A mansion on “the Drive” that was the talk of the town; a summer place at Seabright, luxuriously furnished and linked with whisperings of lavish parties; a fine car and a chauffeur, daubles and a great reputation. But at what price? Scandalous stories going about, built largely around the capricious, hard-boiled personality created for the. theater; looked upon as a symbol of the daring and the mad on and off-stage; accepted as a sort of ! theatrical freak —and not so many years to go! , tt tt tt BRANDED the “I don't care” girl, she pleaded to escape from the shackles of a song. Eva Tanguay went from one manager to another. Always with the same result! Sure they would give her a contract! Sure—but it was to be understood that she would feature the “I Don’t Care” song. That was what the crowds wanted and expected. She was' passing thirty—with a Follies success and forty-two vaudeville engagements! But they wouldn’t let her change. There seemed nothing to do—she had to go on. One, two, three, four more years —she became 34. and still no escape. The old pep was going—but how was an audience to know that! Eva Tanguay made bitter and unhappy statements to reporters who pressed her with questions. “Yes, I’m supposed to be the irresponsible, careless exponent of the happy-go-lucky and the mercurial,” she sighed. “I have something of health—but what else? “Life becomes both wretched and dreary. Sometimes I yearn to be back in Holyoke again! It’s no New York—just a small town, but it was home. I’ve got cars and gems. But on the stage, I’ve become a curiosity; something of a freak! tt n “Cl F course I wanted to be an v-P artist. I think that it took an artist to create a figure which has become internationally known. Well, they won’t let me be an artist. Whereever I go—it’s always: ‘I don’t care!” “What’s worse, I hear it on all sides —hear that I’m crazy—that I’m this and I’m that. I hear it from the public. “Great heavens, they seem to think they’re going to see some sort of curiosity. “It has cost me my friends—and many of them have spread DEATH Cist ENDING Musician’s Fate Will Go to State Jury Today. By United Press PETERSBURG, Ind., Sept. 21. The case of Charles Miller, 26, Elberfield (Ind.) musician, on trial for first degree murder, was expected to be placed in the jury’s hands late today. Miller is charged with shooting Roscoe Allen, 34, also a musician, at a dance Feb. 10, 1932. Miller claimed when arrested that Allen was his “best friend.” Testifying in his own behalf yesterday, Miller declared that the shooting was accidental. “Someone struck my arm as I was firing into the air,” he told the jury. Both bullets struck Allen in the head. DISCUSS MILK PRICES Adjustment Committee Scheduled to Meet at Farm Bureau. A committee named to consider adjustment of prices paid milk producers was to meet today at the farm bureau headquarters. The committee, named by Gavin L. Payne, head of the Indianapolis area milk commission, organized to place the milk industry on a more profitable basis, is headed by Dr. H. E. Barnard. Several other committees to work out problems of milk producers and distributors are to be named oy Payne. FAMED DOCTOrITdEAD Frank Billings, 78, Was Celebrated for Research Organization. Bn U nited Press CHICAGO, Sept. 21.—Funeral services will be conducted Thursday for Dr. Frank Billings, 78, Internationally known physician and organizer of medical research institutions. who died Tuesday night. Dr. Billings encouraged wealthy men to donate mfVJons for the founding of medical institutes. For twenty years he was head of Rush Medical college.
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She was attempting valiantly “the champion comeback of all time,” was Eva Tanguay, when these pictures were taken of her. She had her face lifted —the result is shown lower left—and she sought to
the most scandalous and untrue stories about me. They’re resorted to every sort of invention, since some of their stories seem to fit a type of character. “The result is that I’m a thoroughly wretched person. I fight with managers and I’ve wrangled over salaries. It isn’t because that’s my nature. It’s because I’ve got to get mine while I can get it, if there is to be no out.” After 1912, the “dynamo” began to rundown! One night, the indestructible Tanguay collapsed back stage. Not so long afterward while on stage something happened to her voice. A doctor warned her that she would have to stop singing. She kept on trying. Finally, while the crowds were calling her back, the dapper medico stepped to the stage: “I shall not allow Miss Tanguay to continue,” he said bluntly. “That must be her last appearance.” THE dynamic one went up country for a rest. But came back. More years—and by 1923 she was selling at auction the luxuries that cluttered her summer home. The “Drive” place already had been abandoned. Someone said that to look like her old self she would have to have her face lifted. So she took the surgical route back to the illusion of youth. And all the time, the old refrain OFFICERS TRANSFERRED Lieutenant-Colonel Geere Assigned j Here for Recruiting Duty. Transfer of Lieutenant-Colonel Frank Geere, coast artillery corps, from Hawaii to Indianapolis for duty in connection with army recruiting service, at the close of his present tour of foreign service, was announced by the war department today. It also was announced that First Lieutenant Leo C. Clarke, now attached to Culver military academy, is being transferred to the Eleventh infantry, Ft. Benjamin Harrison. HONOR FIRE VETERAN Station Crew Presents Lieutenant Trimpe Ring for 25-Year Service. Lieutenant Edward Trimpe was honored Tuesday as he completed twenty-five years of service with the city fire department. Trimpe, stationed at engine house 26, at Raymond and Webb streets, was presented with a ring, the gift of the crew at tbe fire station.
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brighten her dimming fame in elaborate stage costumes like the one she is seen wearing at the right. Matrimony, too, lured her again, and she is pictured above during her brief marital career with Alex Bnoke, a pianist several years her iunior.
had to be repeated—“l don’t care ’ n Back stage they would say, “And put the old wallop in it, Eva! She reached 40. Then came the final tragedy. Her sight was failing. Cataracts were covering both pupils. When new lyrics were shown to her, the lettering was three inches in size. Even then the words blurred. In 1920 there was an operation. It helped some—but blindness slowly was appearing. tt tt it BUT on she wept—still With the “I don't care” defiance shouted raucuously from the stage and with no one upon whom she could lean. Two husbands were in the background: Johnny Ford, once a vaudeville partner. This lasted six weeks. . . . Then Roscoe Ails, another trouper. That marriage didn’t work, either. . . And more recently, Alex Booke, her young pianist, from whom she was soon separated. . . . Well, folks said, maybe she really didn’t care. ... Didn’t care for love or home life or anything. Six years ago—and Eva Tanguay was heralding herself as “the champion comeback of all time” at the Palace on Broadway ... 48, but doing the Charlston . . . then a night club engagement and a collapse back in the dressing room . . . Oh, well, she owned twelve houses near Los Angeles. The market crashed. Taxes began to devour the property.* tt u EVA TANGUAY appeared in a little Brooklyn night spot, along with the Billy Arnold Racketeers . . . How strange her song suddenly sounded:
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*‘l am lucky—l’m plucky—so I don’t care . . .” Plucky, yes! .. . Lucky? not exactly— Eva went west to her properties. She had passed 50. The dynamo had rusted . . . begun to fall apart . . , She neqded money . . , One more fling for the old lady . . . bring out the tights and the feathers and the strings of beads . . . there was life in the old girl yet . . . The curious new generation went to see what that “I Don’t Care” was all about. They came too late. Eva Tanguay needed care, needed it desperately. She needed food and a roof and medical attention. Perhaps the world will care now; perhaps it won’t! THE END.
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BRICK MAKERS URGE PRODUCT FORJIGHWAYS Purnell Leads Delegation in Appeal to State Road Board. Congressman Fred Purnell (Rep.), who seeks re-election in the new Fifth district, and a delegation of more than fifty brick manufacturers today pleaded with the highway commission for use of more brick in resurfacing state roads. Delegation spokesmen pointed out that it would aid greatly in the return of prosperity to towns where brick kilns are located. They cited Illinois as an example where an extensive brick paving program has been carried out to aid unemployment. Commissioners appeared weary of such a plan for Indiana. Chairman Albert J. Wedeking said that Paul V. McNutt, Democratic candidate for Governor, already was criticising them for awarding contracts to other than the lowest bidder and that would be necessary if brick is put into competition with concrete. Defenders of the brick pavement denied this if length of service was considered as a factor in determining the lowest and best bid. They advised the commissioners “to pay no attention to unfair criticism.” Another member of the delegation was Frank Singleton, former Republican public service commissioner, whose home is at Martinsville where brick plants are located.
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