Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 50, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 July 1934 — Page 7
JULY 9, 1931.
Honesty in Love Gives Man Scare Remains Interested In Most Only When Kept Guessing. BV HELEN’ WELSHIMER M.A '■'mre Mid ttrilfr lOYF. v. as never a woman's cam*. -a Adam cot hero first and drew ' r uie . A woman takes her And nr soon as she * h p r score pors down. She may : coquette, play at romance and >r miss a heart beat. But as : a'; io\ comes in she might as ,1 put own her racquet and call love set. or hand the caddy her _ fa r c h r*
< *;*■>, i iji a ii i; won't make a clean drive down the lair aw a y again. Love is the one game in which a woman should not put her heart. Yet, incongruously, hearts are trumps. Men play the game with a lighter hand. They may stop playing for a week a month, a year, and continue w ith the same skill. Thev may keep a
1
Miss Wel'himer
n 'rh going on every available g. '<i, and every nearby court and i.r■ r mix the scores. Os course—n. .• be this isn't love. But it genes l!v passes for it, so what's the ciiff; rencc? Maybe it isn't love. . . . But little b . who have tickets to the mam c.r> us are still curious about the side show tents! There are few men and women, sii ‘r> ;y in love, who can afford to h- perfectly frank with one another. V. n would like to be. Men say tl. if they want the women to A \u man would like to be able to tell a man outright that he matters a lot and no other man matters much. But a woman shouldn't. Feed One With ( nurtesv There are certain important conclusions that can be drawn from tile rnent story of the girl who broke her engagement because her fiance left her alone too much while lie sought pleasure in which he didn't include her. It isn't fun to sit home hemming table cloths while the man of your heart flits luther and yon enjoying himself. Certainly two persons should have utter freedom. But there are certain courtesies which well-bred jv 'p’o do not disregard. I*, mg well known, the two young per ons in the case were asked to int on love and its subsidiaries. The man was surprised at the girl's action. He loved her. lie said. Very much! But after all he had things to do and she was always tlKre. so why in something or other did he know she wouldn't always lx he asked. Stupidity in Both Sexes Yes men. even the nicest of them, can be dumb. Rut women can be run dumber. After all, if a man knows that his umbrella is waiting behind tho door, why should he look at it when the sun is shining? However, if he knows that others occasionally borrow it he will be on his guard. The girl in the incident should have let herself be borrowed and then prayed fer a heavy shower. If she had been trying to disrupt the man's life, to interfere with any former loyalties, to make him sur-
STOMACH DISTRESS MORE SEVERE IN JULY AND AUGUST
Prevalent Symptoms Are (.as Pains, Shortness of Breath and Dizziness. New, Scientific Medicine Is Found That M orks With Our Food ( ailed lndo-Yin; Brings Relief in Minutes and Costs Only a Trille. Authorities agree that in hot weather, when body temperature rises food ferments more rapidly in the stomach organs, causing pain and misery. But there has been a notable discovery for the relief of store.. s . 'i dtstre.-s. Not a cure-all, not a ‘patent’ medicine, but anew. scientific formula that works with the sufferer's own food, known as Indo-Ym. now being introduced to crowds daily here in Indianapolis
_by The Indo-Ym "Man in person at * Hook's D.'uc Store. | lllinois at.dWashlington Sts. It was j first introduced in I Indianapolis a few weeks ago and has . become a comiplete sensation, land druggists and ■ public a ike state ■ that it :s helping ■people who had ■ never been really f helped before by IANY medicine, ■bringing relief in "some of the worst cases of stomach
G. H. Mosby
trouble found in this city. What It Is Ir.do-Vin is made from natural Plants, and taken shortly after meals it mixes with the food in ones stomach, thus throwing off the poi.'ons that fester stomach troubles and permitting the kidneys and liver to function properly. It acts within 10 minutes to stop acid risings, bloat and belching and will bring out awful gases and impurities frequently from the first dose> which may have been inside of you for a long time, contaminating your blood and inner-organs. Indo-Vin clears out old fermented substances, half-digested food and other impure “matter." Such impuntie# often half-fill the stomach and intestines and form a coating on the linings, thus causing stom-
Contract Bridge
Today’s Contract Problem South is playing the contract at three no trump. West opens the eight of spades. H n w should South proceed with the diamond suit? A5 3 o V A 10 6 ♦ KlO 0 2 AIS 7 3 a — Z — A v v (Blind) ‘ c E (Blind) ♦ D, V f A ■ * AK Q 6 ¥K Q 9 ♦A J 7 AA9 6 4 Solution in n°xt Issue. 2
Solution to Previous Contract Problem RV \V. E. M KENNEY Sfrrftiu Amrriran Bridge league IT is not difficult to teach the be- ■*- ginner at contract that an ace will take just one trick. True enough, sometimes it will help establish a suit—and is a handy thing to have around in a bridge game. But, as an ace will take only one trick, why will players rebid it? When you give your partner a certain raise or a certain bid and it takes a definite number of tricks to make that raise or bid, bear in mind on your future bidding not to reuse those values, or your partner will find that he will be short an ace or a king to make his contract. North's jump to two no-trump is a forcing bid. South's response of four spades is a slam try. North has a nice hand for two no-trump.
A Day’s Menu Breakfast — Stewed prunes, cereal, cream, rice omelet with bacon curls, crisp toast, milk, coflee. Luncheon — Jellied vegetable salad, graham bread and butter sandwiches. strawberry tapioca pudding, milk, tea. Din ncr — Fruit soup, fricassee of veal, creamed carrots, spinach and egg salad, chocolate cream jelly, milk, coffee.
render friendships, he could have taken exception. She had pledged her love to him, and having done so, she was rather lonesome since he put it in his pocket and went whistling down the street. To be something left over, something to satisfy an incidental hour, is to give one’s self a bargain table rating. If Juliet had lived on the first floor and Romeo had never had to climb the balcony, he might have looked elsewhere. He had a good porch climbing act and he needed a balcony for the scene. To be not entirely a free will offering is a wise precaution. The strange part of the whole thing is that a man will flee from an honest woman, who has no intrigue, but who lets him know she loves him sometimes, to one who never, never reveals it. He thinks the latter is safe. And all the time she is binding him fast with her apparent lack of claims.
in
The Stomach I.ining Is a Series of Small Pits. Impurity Clings Deep in These Pits. Often Causing Serious Disorders.
ach • trouble." Cleansing out these impure substances permits freer flow of the digestive juices, makes the digestive organs sweet and clean and gives complete relief from indigestion, heart palpitation from gas. shortness of breath, lump :n stomach and dyspepsia. Likewise, it has a great action upon the important organs. Kidneys. Liver and Bowels, and thus it cleanses and improves the whole system in general. This is no nure tablet or pill, and not a powder, syrup or capsule, and it does not contain alcohol or a single habit-forming drug, but it is a scientific LIQUID mixture from 21 Medicinal Plants, all blended into one remarkable compound. It is vastly different from any previously known formula, combining perhaps more iriferedients than three ordinary medicines put together. While it is being introduced in Indianapolis every suffering person can take it at the small cost of only a few cents a day. So if stomach affliction. or even some little digestive difficulty is bringing you misery it would certainly be a mistake not to try it. The Indo-Vin Man is now at Hook's Drug Store, Illinois and Washington Sts., daily meeting the public and introducing and explaining this great new formula of Nature's finest Health-Building ingredients.—Advertisement.
ar.ii when partner bids four spades he is entitled to try' for the slam. B B B IIfHEN the hand was played. W West opened the jack of hearts. I believe that an honor opening against a slam contract is a bad lead. Os course, the queen is played from dummy, East plays the king and South wins the trick with the ace. Now the only chance he has to make his contract is to find three diamonds to the queen-jack in the East hand, and the ten of hearts there also. Os course, that is exactly what he finds. He cashes the ace, king and queen of clubs and all his spades, getting himself down to the nine of hearts and the eight and four of diamonds, and leaving dummy with ace, king and ten of diamonds. East is squeezed. He can not hold the queen, jack and nine of diamonds and the ten of hearts—he must discard one. If he discards the ten of hearts, declarer's nine is good, while if he lets go a diamond, ?h° ace, king and ten of diamonds in dummy are good. (Copvrizht. 1934. by United Press)
AQ ? G ¥QG 5 3 4 A K 10 AQ 9 8 ASS 2 A 3 1 = , h 476532 w 4 A7 6 2 n S , , 4QJ9 p AJ 5 4 3 A AKJIO94 ¥ A 9 4 S 4 A A K 10 Duplicate—N. and S. vul. Opening lead—¥ J South West North East 1 a Buss 2N. T. Pass 4 a Bass 6 A Bass 7 A Bass Bass Pass > J
NEWLY WED COUPLE OPENS CITY HOME The marriage of Miss Evelyn Ruth Munday and George Evans Dougherty. son of Mr. and Mrs. George Dougherty, is announced by the bride’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Richard L. Munday. The ceremony took place June 9 at the home of the bride’s grandparents, the Rev. and Mrs. J. A. Bell in Mt. Vernon, 111. Mr. Bell read the service which was followed by a reception. Max E. Munday, brother of the bride, was best man and Miss Mildred Munday, sister of the bride, was maid of honor. The bride attended Butler university where she was a member of Alpha Delta Theta sorority. Mr. and Mrs. Dougherty are at home on East Forty-eighth street.
Corner Delaware and Washington Sts. CASH PURCHASE SALE!! TUESDAY BARGAINS—,C\ F3R TUESDAY ONLY, 221 PAIRS MORE OF > LADIES’ SUMMER Os? FOOTWEAR \ • Sandal. in linen., jH \ \ suede rlntli. • Ti ' ,s • S,ra i ,s Pi HP f§|f •'* x f r •• • -atT \l.arse sarlet.v es 1^5^883? sizes in lot. Repeat Sale! 151 Pair More CHILDREN’S LEATHERETTE sfndllsfl Oe SaWdal£ Oe Small Sizes JL Only -* •) to 11 LADIES’ WASH FROCKS Paste ft pc I - ■ ' stvles P&G Laundry Soap • • All sizes - ai *. , 5 Bars |2c ! •• ®1 ou can buy m \ \ several wash hjQ( y> frocks at this Glass TUMBLERS extremely low f m nj. price. g iOf yC /fjfilfc JOO JOIN'S WHITE DUCK W vQc CAPS VgTTySn j|B| w Odds and ends. Broken ■9® C .jSw SC sizes. Soiled from handling. Second qualI AGAIN IVE REPEAT BY POPULAR REQUEST L#'jnßOOF GARDEN Rf w organdubs \ Practically guaranteed , y . to make any young ftflg! M /yf man gasp. Made of kH imported “permanent ~%HBS " finish” organd' em- J Marteto ' P fTSyls~} broidered, printed, or sell for s§( cross *bar, each with a WH 53.98 !|3 bias w eighted rayon slip. Sizes 14 to 20.
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES .
City Group Leaves for Girls’ Camp Swimming, Tennis and Archery Offered at Kosciusko. A group of Indianapolis young women left yesterday for a summer of swimming, tennis, archery and ! recreational classes at the Winona ! lake camp for girls, Kosciusko. Several entered this summer for ! their first time while the majority have returned for the second, third ; and even fourth year. \ S. B. Lindley drove to Winona | yesterday with his daughter, Miss Sarah Lindley, who will spend her first vacation at the camp, and Miss Lois Mathieson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Mathieson, and Miss Susannah Keller, Corvdon. Miss Keller has been visiting Dr. and Mrs. Carleton Daniels ' the city. It will be Miss Keller's third summer and Miss Mathieson's fourth season at Kosciusko. Miss Jane Leasure enrolled for her first summer and Misses Emily Mac Nab. Rosalie Lurvey, Margaret Ann Driscoll, Elizabet' Kiger and Clara Patton will v pend their --- ond season in the camp. The girls live in a miniature lodge and take their meals in a main dining room. Miss Elizabeth Pa ft, Indianapolis, is girls supervi- j sor and Mrs. Ruth Gillespie, also from Indianapolis, is another of the leaders at the camp. When the first camp period ends July 22. another two weeks period will start. Misses Mathieson, Keller, Lurvey and Patton intend to remain for both periods.
Daily Recipe HAM AND EGGS 1 cup boiled chopped Ham -4 eggs i/ 2 cup rich milk /A teaspoon salt Pepper Paprika Beat the eggs lightly without separating yolks and whites. Add salt, a dash each of pepper and paprika, the ham, chopped very fine, and milk. Pour into buttered ramekins, set in a pan of hot water and bake in a s’ow oven. Garnish with a ring of pimento in the center of each.
iCefliP OUTLET SHOE STORES RfUftßt£ SHOES AT LOWEST PftKSS I NOW iS t. VVa.htnrton St —S— 203 W. Wa.hinrton Bt. STORES 100-111 S. 11l i noi. St
Kitchen Ceiling Lights SI.OO Complete, ready to attach. Have large, white glass globe. VONNEGUT'S Downtown. Irvington. West Sid. Fountain Square
ENGAGED
Wk * ■:
—Photo by Plowman-Piatt. Miss Eleanor Bader’s engagement to Walter E. Eisner, son of Mrs. Anna Eisner, has been announced by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Christian Bader.
MRS. THOMPSON TO BE PARTY HOSTESS Breakfast bridge party is scheduled by the Irvington Friendship Circle for 9 tomorrow morning at the home of Mrs. A. J. Thompson, 5736 Beechwood avenue. Arrangements are in charge of Mesdames E. J. Todd, J. E. Louden. G. C, Bender, H. J. Wanglin, A. W. Schmadeke and F. E. Dukes. Miss Kecly to Wed The marriage of Miss Mary Priscilla Keely and Omer Loyd Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Omer Loyd, 3022 Broadway, will take place this month in the McKee chapel of the Tabernacle Presbyterian church. The bride-elect is a sister of Mrs. Charles E. Nourse, 3845 Rockwood avenue.
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Miss Schneider Becomes Bride in Church Rite St. Mark's Lutheran church was the scene of the marriage of Miss Julia Marie Schneider and the Rev. Alfred G. Belles yesterday afternoon. Dr. R. H. Benting read the marriage ceremony for Miss Schneider, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Michael Schneider and Mr. Belles, son of Mrs. Emma Belles. Cathedral candles lighted the palm-banked chancel. Mrs. David Dunn, organist, played a series of bridal airs and accompanied Miss Ruth Ann Otte who sang "Because,” "I Love You Truly.” and ‘‘lch Liebe Dich.” The bride’s only attendant was her cousin, Miss Velma Mayer, who wore a peach sheer jacket dress and carried an arm bouquet of Talisman rases and garden flowers. The bride was gowned in hyacinth blue fashioned with a slight train and jacket. Her flowers were Johanna Hill roses and garden flowers. Paul Schrope, Louisville, Ky., was best man and Wilbur Roesener, head usher. After a supper for the wedding party and members of the immediate families, the couple left on a wedding trip. The bride wore a navy blue and white outfit for travel. They will make their home in Louisville. Both the Rev. and Mrs. Schneider were graduated from Wittenberg college, Springfield, 0., where the bride was a member of Kappa Delta sorority and the bridegroom was a member of Theta Kappa Nu. Miss Rahm Betrothed Mr. and Mrs. Emil J. Rahm announce the engagement of their daughter. Miss Charlotte M. Rahm. and William H. Frantzreb. son of Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Frantzreb. The marriage will take place in Christ Episcopal church Aug. 11.
A Woman's Viewpoint BY MK!>. YVALIEK FLKGL SUN
THE death of Mme. Marie Curie in Paris deprives the world of a superwoman. Scientist, scholar, teacher, writer, humanitarian, dutiful daughter, wise wife and tender mother, she exemplified the highest ieminine achievements. Few members of her sex have equaled her record as public bene-
factor and none ever excelled her in the art of remaining a simple h u man being through the years when fame was hers. What f o r ces went into the creation of such a person? We can safely leave the question to her fellow-scientists. I
m W) jMi
Mrs. Ferguson
only wish to call your attention to the two individuals who did most to shape her destinty. Both were male—an intelligent father and an intelligent husband. Her father, a professor in Warsaw university, did not believe that girls, merely because they were females, should be trained only in the domestic arts. He gave her the same scientific education he would have given a son. Her sex never stood in the way of her opportunity. Fortunate in such a parent, the young Marie was doubly fortunate in marrying a man who did not subjugate feminine talents to the narrow confines of kitchen and nursery. From the beginning of their life together Piere and Marie Curie worked side by side. The result is known to every educated person. What might have been humanity’s loss if Marie Sklodowska had had a less wise father or a more
PAGE 7
selfish husband, it is easy to imagine. A century earlier her genius, no doubt, never would havs been given a chance to blossom. That her indomitable heart began to beat in a later era should be a cause of gratitude from the people of all races. Those who fear that woman's immemorial gifts will languish if her newer talents are developed will find their theory refuted in every act of Marie Curie's remarkable life. Our world needs the genius of its women, but such genius never can flower to maturity until men are ready to give it sincere encouragement. It is the Dr. Sklodowskas and the Pierre Curies who present civilization with its greatest women.
Wife Wins Freedom from Neuritis Pain
Thousands have discovered that NURITO quicklv relieves the pain of neurikis. rheumatism, sciatica, lumbago and neuralgia. Strange as it may seem, this quick-acting prescription—developed hv an eminent specialist contains no opiates or narcotics. It is harmless. Why suffer a single hour of unnecessary pain? Let your druggist tell you about this famous Nurito. that eases torturing pain and enables you to work in peace. Delay only causes you suffering. So confident are we that you'll get results, we offer Nurito on the ironclad guarantee—that if the very first three doses of Nurito do not relieve the pain, your money will be refunded without question. TrvNurito today. All druggists. —Advertisement.
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