Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 297, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 April 1934 — Page 8

PAGE 8

MEMORIAL DAY PLANS MADE BY CITY GROUPS More Than 1,700 Graves of Soldiers Will Be Decorated. Plans for the observance of Memorial Day will be made at a meeting of the General Memorial Association at Ft. Friendly. 512 North Illinois street. Thursday. Officers will be elected, and arrangements for the decoration of soldiers' graves will be made. More than 1,700 graves in the soldiers plot will be decorated, in addition to those in family lots, at Crown Hill, which is a national military cemetery, since the soldiers’ plot is owned by the government. The General Memorial Association of Indianapolis was instituted and incorporated by the Grand Army of the Republic and other soldier organizations in 1915. Most of the members of these organizations no longer are able to take part in the decoration of graves. Efforts are being made to interest other organizations in taking up this work. • Organizations co-operating in the work are the G. A. R„ Women’s Relief Corps, Ladies of the Grand Army, Sons of Union Veterans, Daughters of Union Veterans, United Spanish War Veterans. Veterans of Foreign Wars, and auxiliary, American Legion and auxiliary. Daughters of the Union, Civic Branch First Ward Republican Club, Knights of Columbus, Boy Scouts, Girl Scouts, Girl Reserves, American War Mothers. Junior Clubs, W. R. C. and the Womens Overseas League. COMMUNITY GARDENERS WILL GET FREE RIDES Street Car Company to Provide Cars to Butler Tract. Arrangements have been made with Indianapolis Railways for free transportation of community gardeners to the eighty-acre Butler university tract, starting today. Gardeners may carry hoes and rakes and even small plows on the special street cars. The cars will leave the Louisiana street car barns at 8:26 a. m; Illinois and Sixteenth streets, 8:35 a. m.; McLean Place, 8:38 a. m., and Illinois and Thirty-fourth streets, 8:34 a. m. Returning, cars will leave at 4:13 p. m. Ground has been plowed and harrowed for relief gardeners to start work in the community garden tract donated to the community garden center by the Indianapolis Water Company. The tract is just west of Perry stadium. Free seed applications still are being received at 154 North Alabama street.

HOW TO STOP FALSE TEETH from SLIPPING

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Proper Foundation Planting Will Give Impression That House ‘Grew’

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Th* wrong way, left, and the right way of “foundation planting” to make your home look as though it “grew” out of the ground. The planting at the right does the trick. The method at left looks like ar. afterthought, and not a very good one at that.

Landscaping Will Impart Individuality to Even Ordinary Home. Tbi<s Is the fourth of a series of articles bv Donald Gray, famous landscape consultant, on how to make a beautiful garden of sour back vard. BY DONALD GRAY NEA Landscape Consultant \ HOUSE is not a home until it is planted, but the way it is planted tells the story of the kind ot persons who live within. Much of the foundation of -a house is better unplanted than to be covered with the wrong kind of plants. The idea of planting a house is not to .hide its foundation walls, but to make the house appear as if it grew out. of the ground. It is better to plant only a part of the foundation suid leave some of it clear than to*give the appearance that a piece of architecture is resting on a mass ot foliage. Unfortunately, much of our architecture is commonplace and similar to our neighbors'. By planting the surroundings with taste and in a different manner from every one else’s on the street, the house, regardless of its looks, will take on individuality.

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LET us consider, for example. the typical American small house with a front porch raised several steps off the surrounding grade. Many owner? of such homes make the mistake of planting a row of some dwarf evergreen or low growing shrubs. The house becomes formal and monotonous to look at. and the plantings serve no purpose. The planting usually represents the gardener as one who never raises his eyes very far off the ground. He never sees his entire house, but just a blank space under the porch floor. There is little advancement in this sort of planting from the day when a row of cannas and elephant ears constituted the last word in the right thing to do. n a a /\N the other hand, the same type of home can be made more beautiful by sensible planting. First, you can start with a frame for the house by planting two trees. These will give shade and soften the outlines. Next some vines for over the porch. Such vines will take the place of awnings and give a pleasing effect. The shrubs should be varieties that will grow high enough to

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

j screen a person sitting on the porch. Keep the type of plants simple and ones that will grow together so as to form a mass of j foilage. Flowering varieties are of less importance in the front planting ■ than in the garden. If you can : have good foilage plus bloom, then see that the bloom harmonizes with the color of the house. Use white with red brick; red, pink or yellow with a white house. Study the type of house you live in, frame it first, then plant shrubs in a simple way and the i results will be effective. Next—Formal and informal gardens.

*3 * estate owner.

MONEY GROUP FRAMES POLICY State-Wide, Nonpolitical Campaign Promised. A state-wide educational sound money campaign on a nonpolitical basis was the policy adopted today by the Indiana sound money committee. The committee, a newly formed organization headed by John T. Beasley, Terre Haute attorney, adopted plans providing for the organization of subcommittees in each of the state's twelve congressional districts. ”We believe dess unination of in- | formation on the subject of currency will aid the people and their representatives in congress to solVe the 1 nuestion of sound money in a manner that will insure permanent prosperity and the well-being of our citizens of all classes,” Mr, Beasley declared. Kirschbaum Lecture Slated Samuel Almozov. New York, writer and lecturer, will speas on ”BiroBidjan and Palestine” at 8 tomorrow night at Kirshbaum center under the auspices of the local Icor I branch.

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Indiana Eastern Star to Hold 60th Yearly Session

Scottish Rite Cathedral to House Conference Wednesday. Sixtieth annual session of the Indiana grand chapter. Order of Eastern Star, will be held at the Scottish Rite cathedral. North and Meridian streets, Wednesday and Thursday. Mrs. Rose L. Malcolm will preside at the sessions which will close Thursday night with the Nettie Ransford Memorial ball in the cathedral. A preliminary session will be in charge of Mrs. Abbie Hanson. Hammond. past grand matron, and Dr. Herbert C. Sears, Danville, past grand patron. Credentials committee will meet delegates at 1 Tuesday in the Lincoln and at 7:30 Wednesday morning at the cathedral. Mrs. Sarah Baker, past worthy matron of Queen Esther chapter, will act as chairman of the committee, other members of which are Mrs. Goldie Carden, Naomi chapter; Mrs. Merle Kester, Corinthian chapter; Mrs. Mary Konecke, Indianapolis chapter, and Mrs.

Marguerite Shea. Beech Grove chapter. All are past worthy matrons. Delegates will be greeted by Governor Paul V. McNutt; by Frank G. Laird, most worshipful grand master of the Indiana grand lodge, for state Freemasonry, and by Fae Patrick. thrice potent master of the Scottish Rite, for that organization. Mrs. Gladys Williams, worthy matron of North Park chapter, in behalf of the subordinate chapters of the Eleventh district, will respond to a greeting by Mrs. Malcolm. State district deputies will be represented by Mrs. Ollie Gardner. Lawrenceburg, while Mrs. May Reeves, past worthy grand matron, will speak for past grand officers. Invocation will be offered by Frank Moore, present grand chaplain.

blood will tell

ONE of the mysteries of life Is how much care a man will take of thoroughbred animals noting when they are ‘‘off” ... and toning them back to the “pink of condition” to increase their daily usefulness—yet will shamefully his own run-down condition. Certainly, thej-e is h pardonable pride in an animal's healthy appearance ... but human beings are more important than animals. Yet some people just hope when “run-down" that they will “come around." It is just good “horse-sense" to reflect and reason that your so-called “tired feeling” may come from lowered red-blood-cell count and the hemo-glo-bin in these cells. There is a Temedy specially designed to bring back strength to weakened blood ... and no one can he strong, healthy, happy, and full of vitality when in a run-down condition. S.S.S. Blood Tonic is a time-tested remedy for restoring deficient red-blood-’cells and a. low hemo-glo-bin content. If you suspect an organic disease consult your physician ... if you feel weak... lack a keen appetite ... if your skin is pale and off-color ... try S.S.S. as a part of your regular daily diet. Take it just before meals. Unless your case is exceptional, you should soon notice, a pick-up in your appetite . . . your color and skin

APRIL 23,1934

'AUXILIARY president 1 PAYS OFFICIAL VISIT

Spanish War Group's Chief Guest of Ft. Friendly. Mrs. Elizabeth La Grange. Evansville. department president of Major Harold C. McGrew auxiliary 3, United Spanish War Veterans, will be entertained tonight at Ft. Friendly. 512 North Illinois street. ‘ Mrs. La Grange will be house guest of Mrs. Libbie Everett. 155 North Kealing avenue, present senior vice-president, and indorsed by the auxiliary for president next year. The department encampment of the Spanish War Veterans and their auxiliaries will be held in Bloomington the week of June 17. While in Indianapolis, Mrs. La Grange will inspect the work of the auxiliary.

should improve with increased strength and energy. S.S.S. is not just a so-called tonic hut a tonic specially designed to stimulate gastric secretions, and also having the mineral elements so very, very necessary in rebuilding the oxygen-carrying hemo-glo-bin of the blood to enable you to “carry on'* without exhaustion as you should naturally. S.S.S. value has been proven by generations of use, as well es by modern scientific appraisal. It is truly a blood and body tonic. You will find it at all drug stores in two convenient sizes ... the larger size is more economical. @ Th S.S S. c.