Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 44, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 July 1934 — Page 5

JULY 2. 193

NR A Hours Don't Apply to Mothers Children Require Care Without Regard to ' New Deal. BY GRETTA PALMER linri Spf'tal Writer YORK. July 2— There Is one group of women that must greet all this talk of "What shall we do with our leisure?" with a wan If patient smile. For, no matter how much technological progress you boast or how many NRA codes you set up. you are not going to get

mothers on to a forty-hour week. Not mothers, that is, of children small enough to stand in constant danger of swallowing some alien and fatal object when vour back is tamed. Not mothers of infants who have to be fed and cared for on a schedule as exacting as a radio announcer's. Not mothers,

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Mia® Palmer

ahov. all, of creepers. There is probably no more tireless or adventurous explorer in the, world than the creeper. Everything j is new to him, and everything must j be tasted to be believed. A solemn student of child psy-; Thology once followed a child at j such an age and charted his activities throughout a twelve-hour day. '■ A mere reading of the forms of physical activity which it involved -r ill make the tennis-playing adult 1 feel like a piker. The old-fashioned mother doubt]c ; had her worries over the proirction of children in this first of all : dangerous ages. But she did not have hanging o'.er her the demands j of the physician and the psychiatrist j that every encounter with the child j must follow certain carefully de-1 ’ fined rules. Nor did she live in a mechanically complex city, where even a romp on the grass is apt to be paid for by a fine in court. Mothers Always Tired Well-to-do mothers have shamelessly admitted that they look toward the nurse’s day out as a grew- • son" and nerve-wracking ordeal. Their husbands have complained j that that on the evenings of such •days even so mild a divertissement as a game of backgammon is too much for their exhausted wives. What. then, do the mothers of small children do with nobody to \ * relieve them of their care for the six other days of the week? The question is rhetorical. They get nervous and tired and irritable lrom their efforts to combine the housework with the care of one or J more small and intensely active ! * tikes. They get drawn faces and forget to take the proper care with their appearance, and they suffer from a perennial sense of fatigue. Camp Offers Rest Vei L little has been done by society to lighten the burden of the woman who has the twenty-four - hour-a-day job of motherhood. But . a start —praise be!—has been made J in this direction by the Westchester , county recreation commission, which j has established a tired mother’s camp near Croton Point. Mothers who are lucky enough to ! * live In that county are permitted to j go to the camp, with as many chili dren under 6 years old as they may ! possess. These are promptly checked ! in the camp nursery, where attendants look after their formula feedings and all their other requirements. Mamma meanwhile leans back against a tree and has herself ! a time. The camp charges just enough to pay expenses and is on county property, And we should like to see a replica of it in every county of the j United States where babies continue to laugh out of court the idea of a j maternal week of less than 112 ex- j hausting hours. MISS RATHERT AND MINISTER TO WED William F Rathort. 653 Middle drive. Woodruff Place, announces the engagement of his daughter, Miss Eleanor Rathert, and the Rev. Rnnhard Krause. Marion, 111. The marriace will take place July 15 in the Zion Evangelical church. Miss Rathert is a Butler university graduate and member of Kappa , Delta sorority. MISS MARY MANY WED .4 T CA THE ORAL Mr. ar.d Mrs. Peter James were attendants at the wedding this morning at SS. Peter and Paul cathedral of Miss Mary Many, daughter of Mrs Nellie Many, and Walter Brackman, son of Mrs. Bcrnadine Brackman. The bride wore white and carried white roses and Mrs. James was gowned in yellow with yellow roses. A breakfast at the Many home followed the ceremony.

FOR A SAFE AND SANE FOURTH TRAVEL BY TRAIN Round Trip FARES REDUCED V/2 C A MILE IN COACHES To all point* vtM of and including Pittsburgh. Wheeling tad Parkersburg. • Go Tuesday July 3 and until noon Wednesday July 4 STAY UNTIL JULY 8 IF YOU WISH e Round Trip Ticket* Good in Puilmae 2c A MILE Btiwwn All Stattona Sleeping earcharge* reduced IS % GoTueeday, July J. and until NOON Wednesday. July l bray until laat train July sis you wiah e ' for further information consult am {Tlche* Agent or Passenger Representative JJ4 Monument Circle, PH. Lincoln 6404 Baltimore & Ohio

(j/ [ rJW/, 4 i \ \ make 'HuX, undi’tA N rr> I K )S> Jv % u ’4 2-8-n. Enclosed find 15 cents for which send me pattern No. 287. Size Name street Lity 5tate.................... HERE S a set of undies you'll enjoy making. The designs come for sizes 14 ot 20 and 32 to 42. Size 18 requires 1% yards of 39-inch fabric and 4*2 yards of I*2 -inch bias binding. io ootain a pattern ana simple sewing chart of this model, tear out the coupon and mail it to Julia Boyd, The Indianapolis Times, 214 West Maryland street. Indianapolis, together with 15 cents in coin.

A Woman's Viewpoint BY AIKS. VV ALL Est FERGUSON

WE advocate convenience and common sense in everything except our social customs. We smash the moralities, defy the decencies and break civil laws without a qualm. But it takes a good-sized revolution to change a parlor convention. Poor old Moses with his Ten Commandments is a back nura-

ber now. Mrs. Emily Post is our prophet and she also must write her mandates on tablets of stone, so impossible are they to erase. If it takes such drastic measures I wish somebody could induce her to set down anew one. Just a sim-

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slrs. Ferguson

pie, easy little rule which, if it were given official sanction, would lighten the burden of our days and bring cheer, joy, ease and freedom to millions of people. Here it is: No social or business calls ever should be made without previous telephone notice. Even men. who understand the inconvenience of the unexpected visit during office hours, are sometimes guilty, but the chief offenders of what should amount to a breach of manners are women. They just love to bestow these little surprises on their friends. So they show up at the most unexpected and inconvenient moments, right after you have finished putting up a crate of cherries or have decided not to vacuum the front room; when you’re ready to step into your bath, or while you are in the middle of a cosy cat nap, or having a good cry or a quarrel with your husband. Again, you all-may have had a hard day and decided after dinner

I . j • Daily Recipe j J Breakfast — j Strawberries, cereal, j cream, shirred eggs, toast, i | milk, coffee. I Luncheon — j 1 Scalloped new cabbage j | with tomatoes, brown f • bread and cheese sand- ) wiches, jelly roll, milk, { i tea. ' i T-,. i • Dinner — I ' Veal and ham pie, chard i I with lemon butter, cucum- ! ■ ber salad, raspberryr ice, | milk, coffee. j

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9x12 Lino-Tex _ Felt Base Rugs SB .95 Guaranteed Perfect Mm Quality. Special 11 " colors for nny room its th-' house. ™ United Rug & L noleum Cos. 139 W. Wash. OBP0 Xhe , tre ,in *

Hanning Bros. "P'n Si.miu V WS|R "mi lo •> i" rta'h. A t’rnn. >li > Kre*e Ride 1/ INDIANA'S UKiiLsi X I ' [X •IINTAI oroani/triON

to be lazy and comfortable and play second cousin to the Nudists. That, you may be sure, will be the very evening the Joneses decide to drop in. There seems to me no good reason why we should continue to suffer these humiliations. Mrs. Post so easily could come riding to our rescue on the trusty telephone. When men lived in castles they pulled up their drawbridges which spanned the surrounding moats. Now they live in apartments and contiguous cottages, their only protection from incessant contact with people is the belled gadget, which may invade but can also, if we will it, preserve our privacy.

mm Large Variety of Styles Scmdali! I We also carry the ®best of Aich Helper Health Shoes for men and women at moderate prices. TERMINAL SHOE STORE 104 N. ILLINOIS ST.

“My Mother Took It, Too ”

■ Wk Here’sStrengthfor Rundown Women *'My mother used to'take Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. After I grew up she gave it to me. I have been doing housework for eleven years. I felt weak and tired at certain times. Your medicine gave me more strength and built me up when I was rundown.”— Mn. Mary Gar ant, 415 Adams St., AT. £., Minneapolis, Minnesota. If you are weak, nervous b| R A and rundown give this medicine a chance to help you too. Your druggist sells it. LYDIA E. PINKHAM’S Vegetable Compound 98 out of 100 Women Report Benefit

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Professor Stout and Bride Take Trip to England Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Stout attended the wedding of Mr. Stout's brother, Hiram Miller Stout, Greencastle, and Miss Caroline Plugge, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Herman Plugge, in Washington Thursday at the Westminster Presbyterian church. Joseph Stout was best man. The bride is a niece of George Ade and Mrs. Warren McCray, Kentland, and cousin of Mrs. William P. Evans, Indianapolis. The couple sailed Friday for England, where they will spend the summer. Professor Stout, son of

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Dr. and Mrs. J. L. Stout, Pa oil, received an appointment from Harvard university to study the civil system of England. Professor Stout will return in the fall to resume teaching at De Pauw university. He received his Ph. D. degree from Harvard after being graduated from De Pauw. He also received a degree from Oxford university, England. The bride is a graduate of George Washington university and of Raddiffe college. Other attendants at the wedding were Mrs. John Ade Plugge, Miss Virginia Plugge, Mrs. Edgar Jay Brewer and Mrs. F. Clifton Toal, Winston-Salem, N. C. Ushers were Alvin John Rockwell, Boston; John Ade Plugge, Edgar Gay Brewer and George Dwight Mock. Mr. and Mrs. Carl McAllister have left on a motor trip to Atlantic City and New York.

Luncheon Given at Club Honors Miss Fulwiller Miss Beatrice Fulwiller, Tampa, j Fla., attended a luncheon today, given for her by Miss Martha Louise Boyd at the Indianapolis Athletic Club. Miss Fulwiller is visit -i ing Mrs. Paul McCord, 5251 Wash- ; ington boulevard, and her uncle, | Frank B. Flanner, Cold Springs road. Among the guests were Misses Jean Rau, Peggy Failing, Martha Collins, Ruth Duckwall, Helen Rig- ; gins, Jean St. Pierre. Helen McKee, | Martha Peek, Margaret Beeson, j Bessie Pendleton, Aileen Bailey and Wilmetta Warnock. Others were Misses Lois Morton,

Harriett Orr, Louise Brandt, Jane ! Cooling, Mary Katherine Sexton,! Frances Palmer and Margaret Reis. GIRL SCOUT CAMP FOR LEADERS ENDS A group of Girl Scout leaders have returned from a two weeks' camp, conducted at Camp Innisfree. sponsored by Detroit Scouts. Attending were Miss Ellen Hathaway, local director; Misses Mildred Jenkins, Sarah McMath. Louise Norris, Gladys McDonald. Dorothea Ross and Dema Kennedy, Lawrence. . A staff of fifteen instructed 120 Scout leaders from the Great Lakes section, including Indiana, Illinois, Michigan and Wisconsin. Each camper received a for completion of the course. Miss McDonald returned to Camp Dellwood to act as dietician.

PAGE 5

Club Will Meet Miss Rosemarie Shank, 2419 North New Jersey street, will be hostess for the meeting of the Samarang Club at 8 tomorrow night.

Rheumatics Praise Quick Pain Relief Here is a sale and fast war to get tehef from torturing pain without doping yourself with drastic drugs—because you caa now get Nurito. eminent Specialist’* prescription, at your drug store, i'uflerers from the cruel pain of neuritis, rheumatism, sciatica, lumbago, and neuralgia report amazingly quick relief. It works fast some claim N urito contains narcotic* or opiates. But it does not. is guaranteed safe and harmless. If you want to feet again the joy of relief from pain and avoid needless suffering that prevents sound sleep at night, try Nurito. Get a box it ora your druggist today. If the very first threa powders do not relieve the most intene pain, your money will be refunded.— Advertisement.