Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 212, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 January 1933 — Page 5
JAN. 13, 1933
9 LEISURE CLUB ! MEETINGS SET : FOR TONIGHT Variety of Entertainment on Programs Throughout City. TONIGHT p * rk •■'immunity houne. ;*■ Wayne and Walnut. School IB School .tt. Municipal Gardens Club. School 75. Oak Hill Club. School 22. School ZB. Christian park community house j will have a program furnished by j the Indianapolis Federation of; C vic Clubs young peopis orches-j ha, under the direction of Leslie! C. Troutman tonight. The program will include pupils; of Miss Ruth Burns in readings; Jesse Hall and Merle Calvert, whistling; Sue Caroiyn, WFBM singer, and her pupils; Ellen Marie Ruddle, blues singer; Collins, the magician; Junior Stevens, WLW singer; Robert Rothman, selections on the piano accordion, and Georgia and Rosemary Douglas, pianist ancl | singer. Community singing, led by Kenneth Hughes, and accompanied by j Miss Mildred Beard, will be sea- j Lured at the program of the Ft. j Wayne and Walnut Club, in the gymnasium of Central Christian church, tonight. Miss Beard will give comedy readings. Philip Parsons will give a dancing and singing act. A black-face band will complete the program. Municipal Gardens will hold a spelling bee tonight, with Mrs. Iva Shumate calling tne words, and Miss June McKee acting as judge. Mrs. Shumate and Miss McKee are teachers in School 75, which is cooperating with the Municipal Gardens Leisure Hour Club. A program of jokes and songs will bp given by Charles Lines, formerly on Keith's circuit. Music will be given by the Hilo Hawaiian trio, the Hoosier-Land Silver String band, composed of Edward Wolfiey, Roy Gibson, Charles and Guy Padgett, and Kenneth Jolly, and by Steiner's String Harmonists and Steiner’s Junior Howaiians. Persons under 20 will not be admitted to the meeting of the Oak Hill club tonight, unless accompanied by their parents. Th® program will include tap and acrobatic dancing by Miss Marjorie Strickland, comedy songs by Walter Nash, and music on the guitar and harp by James Weaver. Sam Raborn will lead eommuniy singing at, the meeting of School 16. at. 1402 West Market, street. A ot t-act play, "Dress Suits,” will be presented by Melvin Berryman's play acting class. Members of the cast are Max Engle and Everett Jones, and Misses Mildred Arbuckle and Ruth Rugh. Music will be furnished by Steiner’s Junior Hawaiians. School 22 will have a safety program by Sergeant Frank Owen. Music will be furnished by George L. Stork’s accordion band. Specialty dance numbers will be given by Noble Pcarcy and Jean Ludwik, and Lydia Ellen and Irwin McCray will sing. School 34 will have a three act play, "Adventures of Grandpa,” by the Garfield Players. Members of the cast are Misses Ruth Clings, Ruth May, Alma Quieser, Marjorie and Muriel Williams, and Bill Spackey, Rudolph Clinke, Kenneth Click and Arthur D. Barnett. Mr. Barnett is director of the players. A musical program will be furnished by the Southside Melody Boys, an instrumental trio, and Perry’s Knothole Band. School 26 will have a meeting and program tonight also. Indiana Co-Eds Schedule Debates By Time* Special BLOOMINGTON, Ind., Jan. 13. Indiana university co-ed debaters will meet the girls’ debating squad rs Ohio State university here, Feb. 16. Donald E. Bowen, debate coach, announces a debate with the University of Cincinnati. March 15, also has been scheduled for the I. U. coed forensic team. Both debates will be held here.
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ms ho T-J. M.rk W W USP* Os ANOTHER HI-HO arithmetic ‘ x problem—taking 4 from 7 to leave nothing! Cut out the seven mystic puzzle pieces and see if you can rearrange them to form the number 4. You may turn the pieces over if you wish. —Tn, N.nkn , . Vagabonds do try one's patience, don’t they? What success did you have forming the silhouette of the vagabond in the last puzzle? Here’s the solution. 9K
NEW COURTJSTYLE FAILS Seattle Girl Wears Rubber Boots During Trial. By l ailcfl Press SEATTLE, Jan. 13.—A new style for court wear was started here recently when Miss Helen Thompson walked into trial wearing rubber boots. She appeared with her sister in an unsuccessful effort to regain S6O from her brother that she loaned when he became married.
“T (H 1m working and Omoking overtime— * jgM a v- smß SBBiiFsp * r j9fl "T 1 THEN I work hard, l usually smoke Hf % m ▼ ▼ more; and when I smoke more, v ' &m%&, I usually work harder—and that’s why B s -i ' j I want a cigarette that’s milder.” J|| We use in Chesterfield Cigarettes |j|^W* mild, ripe Domestic and Turkish tobac- J m I i JBBSk - , jK j> E H'jpr" cos which have been aged and re-aged. J&V p ' : Wm I 1 ■ % yMmm y ¥ 4 Mm These good tobaccos in Chesterfield Jggr JTB are used in the right proportions—that’s JBl -■ a very important matter. m Jm These good tobaccos in Chesterfield K are blended and cross-blended—weld- *' ; ' ' ed together; that, too, helps to make a jNEHHPr ; milder cigarette with better taste. " < **** > - © 1933. Ltccrrr* Myers Tobacco Cos.
MOOR MURDER CASE MAY GO TO JURY TODAY Final Arguments Being Made in Trial at Marshall, 111. ■ (Continued From Page One) morning when the body of his wife was found in their automobile on a i road near here with two bullet wounds near the heart. Moor sobbed on the stand as he related a story of unhappiness with a wife who was “so busy teaching other people's children she never had time to have any of her own.” Moor told of frequent quarrels over his wife’s housekeeping; of buying a revolver and driving his automobile into the country several times before selecting a place to kill her. “God told me to do it,” he sobbed. "I killed her. I shot her to death, j I had to. I picked out the spot, j Some unseen power kept me from ! passing it. We stopped. I told her again how unhappy her untidy housekeeping made me. We quar- ; reled. I killed her. I had to. I ' had to.” He spoke at first in a voice so faint jurors leaned forward in their chairs to hear what he was saying. Slowly, as though he were lecturing to a class of students, he told of events leading up to the night last August when he ran to a farmhouse and told that his wife had been killed by holdup men while they were returning to Robinson, 111., after visiting her parents in Indiana. i "Sometimes teachers or pupils
wanted to come to my home,” he said. “I was ashamed to invite them. I got to where I even thought up excuses to keep them from coming. “The house was cleaned once a month, and then she had a woman Ido it. It looked like people camped j there. I talked to Marjorie about it. ! But she didn't seem to be bothered. | She ran around to women’s clubs ! and was too busy teaching othzr people’s children to have any of her own. "People came to the house and stared at the sink full of dirty j dishes. They went away and talked.”
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Let’s Explore Your Mind BY DR. ALBERT EDWARD WIGGAM, D. Sc.
b £ PEOPLE TO .X. 4' BREAK. DOWN (A -|| \ 3 PHYSICALLY? jk ' ESSENTIAL Slin YS6 O'. NO HOJ COPYO.IOMT • ; / . •’/ ' j;v; . ; „f;/ r / I |
AUTHOR’S NOTE—These answers are given from the scientific point ot view. Not all moral questions can be answered with absolute scientific accuracy, but no decision as to what is right conduct or sound morals is possible without science. Science puts the rights of organized society above the rights of individuals.
1. It was a more all-inclusive experience and meant her whole future world. The married woman of today expects to do more in life than merely feed her husband, mend his socks, keep his house, see he gets hot biscuits three times a day (and indigestion), and bear and rear his children. They both get a lot more fun out of marriage for that reason, because the wife brings her husband a larger, more interesting life of her own. 2. No. Hollingworth, psychologist, showed mental breakdown is due chiefly to three things poor learning ability, poor logical memory, and poor ability to judge facts of our own experience accurately.
He showed the majority of soldiers suffering with shell shock below average in one or more of these three mental abilities; also, more insane patients below than above average in both education and intelligence. 3. No, provided one is above the necessity line. No one can be happy in utter poverty and without a job, but Dr. Goodwin Watson, Columbia psychologist, by elaborate scientific methods found that above the necessity line poor folks are just as hnppy as rich folks. The two things most essential to happiness are love and security. Usually, the rich man is less secure (this can be proved) than the poor man, and he certainly has no more love.
57-YEAR-OLD ‘GIRL’ ADOPTED BY CITY MAN Becomes Daughter of Old Friend, 81: Serves as Housekeeper. (Continued From Page One) house were her future father then , resided. Since those days, Mrs. | Hichtshue always has been a friend I of the Pruetts. j Mrs. Hightshue. happy with the new arrangement of her life, still works in an Indianapolis shirt sac- | : tory. She has been “working for a liv- ; iner so many years, it's hard to quit.” | i "I told her to keep her job.” her i 81-year-old father said. "I want her j to be happy. Besides, there isn't much work around the house." Mrs. Hightshue for many years ' had been struggling to pay for a | small home. Now she will become ! the heir to seven pieces of property owned by Pruett. Mrs. Hightshue’s husband died in 1913., There were no children, but she has an invalid sister. The adoption was handled for' I Pruett through his attorney. James E. Rocap and is said to be only the ! second time in the history of the i county that such a court order has ; been issued. Under the law. the only requirement for adoption of an adult is consent in open court. OPTOMETRISTS TO MEET 36th Annual Convention to Be Held Here Three Days. Thirty-sixth annual convention of the Indiana Association of Optome- j trists will be held in the Severin I for three days beginning Sunday. Election of officers will be held at | the Monday session. The annual j : banquet will take place at 6:30; ! Monday night.
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