Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 92, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 August 1934 — Page 5
AUG. 27, 1934.
Two Suffer for Trying to Aid Needy W riter Asks Whether Generosity Is Illegal. BY HELEN WEI.SIIIMER , Tim.* Sprnti Writer NEW YORK. Aug 27 —Nearly two thousand years ago a Great Teacher remarked that we should render unto Caesar what Is Caesar sand unto God what is God s. Well—maybe the Romans had a way of knowing what belonged In the state treasury and what went on the offering plates in the temples. But today the distinguishing mark Is difficult to trace. In New York City. lor instance, a milkman sold milk for 8 cents a quart. He made only 1 cent profit on each bottle instead of the 3 cents which the state board of milk control ordered. The man felt sorry* for his poor neighbors. He couldn’t conscientiously accept their dimes. He impoverished himself by the sacrifice so much that he had to borrow money to pay the fine imposed for his violation of the law. Os course, the man broke an important law. Os course, punishment was necessary as a protective measure. More Red Tape Not long ago the girl supervisor of a lunchroom in a Brooklyn school was dismissed for feeding hungry children who did not hold tickets entitling them to share the public feast! To receive food a child must hold a cardboard passport. These children had been examined by physicians, declared undernourished and in need of food, but had not received their tickets as yet. But appetites are strange things—they won’t wait for the machinery of the law to function. The boys and girls grew hungry The supervisor couldn't resist their pleas for food. She fed them. The board of education told her she shouldn't have. No, she was told, she wasn't the type of person to put in charge of feeding children. She had been insubordinate. So she was fired. Violation t'nintentional Nobody really intended to be unkind or unlawful. But sometimes the letter of the law contradicts the spirit that prompted it. It is necessary to have a standard milk price, to protect both seller and consumer, and it is important to have a systematic arrangement for feeding hungry children. It is not selfishness or greed that promoted either misdemeanor. Misplaced generosity caused a milkman to give every customer a two-cent rebate and a teacher to let children —hungry, very hungry children—have food to which they weren't entitled for a few more days. After all, a wise adjustment and application of a law is sometimes more important than the mechanics of that law. Those who have judiciary powers can not always see through the looking-glass. What Is Safe Course There is the matter of conscience, too. It makes cowards of us all even when legal protection bucks us. The milkman and the supervisor couldn't be happy knowing that a service had gone unrendered. So they broke laws. But the lawmakers passed those certain rules of conduct as the best solution of general problems. Those who broke the laws aren’t sinners. At least, not great sinners. They strained their mercy beyond legal permit, that's all. A divine court would understand. So would an intensely human one. The same great teacher who asked that Caesar receive his complete tax also remarked that there was a penalty for those who encountered the thirsty and gave them no drink, who saw the hungry and fed them not. Just where is the middle road and the safe road? What should the milkman and the supervisor have done? tCopvrieht. 1934. NEA Service. Inc.l MISS FLYXX WEDS IX HOME SERVICE Miss Marie Flynn, daughter of Mrs. Mary Flynn, became the bride of Harold Bennett, son of Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Bennett, in a ceremony Saturday afternoon at the future home of the couple. 1322 North Chester street. The Rev. Russell Taylor read the service. Miss Fern Johnson, maid of honor, wore ashes of roses satin with a shoulder corsage of Johanna Hill rases and delphinium and the bride was gowned in turquoise blue satin with a corsage of Briarcliff roses. Theodore Junker was best man A reception followed the ceremony.
PIMPLES AND BLEMISHES I NEVER BOTHER ME ANV- 'JBMk MORE BECAUSE I COT AT THE TROUBLE FROM THE v r jHH INSIDE WITH THORS... V VIM IMg VITAMIN B COMPOUND A PPI^ Think of it! A Smooth, healthy | & j tm free from pimples. black- I heads, sallow ness and other \ t blemishes! The dream of every # / woman, regardless of age. ~ Countless numbers of women ?o\rrL 'ir-x^ lOR s YTTAMIN B rected without purgatives. Energy COMPOUND gives them a ra- and nerve force returns. All in a diantlv smooth complexion, bring- remarkably short time. You may ?. war ? l ; glow to the now have a clear skin and firm cheeks and Ups and putting firm, flesh. „ fle j; h on skinny bones. Get a bottle of THOR S \TTAS MIN B COMPOUND, only 60c. MIN B COMPOL ND corrects the from your druggist. Surprise yourtrouble at its source— the blood, self and your friends your The blood is purified. The sys- rapidly improved condition. If tern cleansed of impurities that not satisfied after taking one botcause pimples. Constipation cor- tie, ask for your money back. TUfID’C VITAMIN-B inVJiVO COMPOUND
% \ . ~vrr\ J zb* J(Jm i W f .7/ QovnJ '-THa'ini'riQ I j/\ ill m \ a XJKfJiF / :/ 9 urtL&- eolilu Kui* / / i /~r"V\ iatLetaot, and Lk / ] j Cool and CnmiohJaJWe-./ , j Qi<ru, can make. / ,7 j j j j t\xl' ctsL like. Enclosed find 15 cents, for which send me Pattern No. 321. Size Name Street City State
USING either seersucker or percale, you'll have a fine time making this flattering house frock. It is designed in sizes 34 to 44. Size 38 requires 3 2-3 yards of 35-inch fabric. The fall pattern book, with a complete selection of Julia Boyd designs, now is ready. It's 15 cents when purchased separately. Or, if you want to order it with the pattern above, send just an additional 10 cents with the coupon. To ontain a pattern and simple sewing chart ot 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.
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Speaks in Kentucky Mrs. Forrest L. Hackley. president of the Central Birth Control League, returned today from Henderson. Ky., where she addressed the Henderson chapter of the league on Needs of Motherhood." Mrs. Hackley was accompanied by Miss Ruth Russell, league secretary-treasurer.
NEWLYWEDS WILL LIVE ON LAST SIDE After Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Francis Hopper will be at home at 844 North Hamilton avenue. The marriage of Miss Faye Pittman, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Baxter, Lebanon, and Mr. Hopper, son of Mrs. Sara Hopper, took place Saturday morning at St. Joan of Arc church. The Rev. Maurice O’Connor officiated. Mrs. Harry Slagle. Lebanon, sister of the bride, wore blue chiffon and carried an arm bouquet of cream colored roses. Charles Hopper. brother of the bridegroom, was best man. The bride chose white taffeta and carried an arm bouquet of white roses and baby breath. Mrs. Baxter wore rust crepe with a corsage of sweet peas and roses and Mrs. Hopper was gowned in white crepe with a rose corsage. A breakfast followed the ceremony. Miss Annabess Snodgrass and her house guest. Miss Leah Millner. Urbana. 0.. spent the week-end at Lake Wawasee.
MOTION riCTVRES
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TrSfES
Horse Show Heralded by Festivities Social Events Given for Visitors Interested in State Fair Display. % Heralding the 1934 Indiana state fair horse show are luncheons, dinners and house parties in honor of prominent exhibitors and visiting notables. This year's show includes events for colts, saddle horses and ponies. Among the prominent exhibitors will be Mr. and Mrs. E. P. Cassell and Miss Audrey Thomas, Providence, R. I.; Mr. and Mrs. Charles T. Fisher and daughter, Miss Mary Fisher. Detroit; Miss Clara S. Peck. New York; Mr. and Mrs. Ed Ballard and Miss Mary Ballard. West Baden; Mrs. Loula Long Combs, Lees Summit, Mo.; Mrs. Elizabeth Bryce, South Shaftsbury, Vt.; Mrs. Frank Shields, Martinsville; Frederick G. Stroop and J. F. Ballaher, Dayton, O.; Miss Virginia Penfield, Columbus, O.; George Godfrey Moore, Topeka, Kan.. Harley Heyl and Miss lone Heyl, Washington, 111.; W. F. and C. E. Sayville, Dayton; Sterling P. Owen, Cynthiana, Ky.; Miss Elsie Caldwell, Nashville, Tenn.; Eli Long, Columbus. O.; A. C. Thompson, Elmhurst, 111.; Wil- . liam Buchsbam, Spring Lake, N. J. The judges will be H. Christian | Barham, Milan, Tenn., a noted breeder, dealer and judge of saddle horses; Charles Barrie, Teaneck,| N. J., a prominent eastern horseman; Tom Wilson, Bowling Green. Ky„ an authority and judge of sad- i die horses.
A Woman’s Viewpoint
BY MRS. WALTER FERGLSON’ \ JUBILANT gentleman writes me we are to have anew deal for men in America. Europe, he says, is showing us the trend by putting women in their proper places, and I suppose you have heard the proper place for women is at home. Well, we shall see what we shall see. The one thing I should like most to know, and the queslion I have put most often to masculine brag- Iffißßil gam, is this: From what au- B^ijlllllljP thoritv do they || obtain the in- Hi formation that women should ||g|§||k fill inferior po- ||l|§g* Jljl sitions in every JmM society? What pgy is it that makes §§£ jJI; male superior? Certainly not Mrs. Ferguson his general behavior. Because it is an undeniable fact that women, as a class, have made amazingly rapid progress in self-development during the last fifty years. Their advance constitutes the most remarkable change that ever has occurred in human history within such a short period of time. Moreover, experiments in freedom have been confined almost exclusively to the female in this country—which is something else for the gentlemen to think over. In these experiments man necessarily has been dragged along, but he has come reluctantly and under pi-otest. The facts speak foi? themselvec. In most instances men are mental reactionaries. They invent great machines, build magnificent edifices and make innumerable gadgets, but they are standpatters just the same when it comes to fundamental changes in thinking. Within fifty years they have not altered the style of their dress to any appreciable extent. Their political systems are remodeled, not after intelligent study, but at the point of the bayonet. Only the pressure of inevitable progress prods them an. One may say safely that the average American man still thinks might makes right, that business should never concern itself with politics or religion; that the affairs of the world can be agreeably arranged by shooting, and that women were created to occupy an inferior position. Man has. in fact, graduated from the duel to murder with the hand grenade; from the surprise attack with bow* and arrow to the surprise attack with the submarine. from cannibalism to trench warfare, and from infanticide to bombing babies in noncombatant territory.
Hos the Indiana’s smash parade of the world's finest motion picture successes I ING CROSBY lIRIAM HOPKINS ITTY CARLISLE • Mie loves Roby Keeler bs vjkv fcib Me Not* . the Nineties - ’ I Delores Del Rio ■MT >°'°"°Rel
Light Trimmings Absent on Frocks
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This brown and white wool street dress is trimmed with buttons and tie of self material. The almond shaped dots are used to cover the buttons.
NEW YORK. Aug. 27.—There's a marked absence of light -trimmings on many of the bright wools and the dark but interesting heavy crepe frocks that smart women are buying right now. And this piece of fashion new*s should make every one happy. Even though white touches generally are quite flattering, it’s certainly not much fun to spend a good part of one’s new leisure washing collars and cuffs. The new* models are decorated with collars and bow*s of selfmaterial and the silk numbers are finished in like manner or else with dark taffeta bow*s that don’t show the dirt. Lame and metal cloth touches are important, too. Some of the tunic dresses have gorgeous lame vestees with matching cuffs. Others have tailored bows, perched square across the chest. Speaking of bow*s, you’re going to see a great many of them. But they’ll be small so as not to cover up interesting details that are used on the front of bodices.
MOTION PICTURES ii Op HW’f now 25c to F I It A CONSTANCE FRKORIC BENNETT MARCH •‘AFFAIRS OF CKIXIXI"
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A frock of red, speckled crepe has a wide neckline bow* and belt of he same fabric.
Some are extensions of tiny standup collars. Other separate ones are worn in soft loops at the point of necklines. One American designer w*ho always has used a profusion of white trimmings on her creations, has omitted them this fall. She uses amusing buttons and buckles to take the place of feminine ruffles, jabots and the like. And so do many other designers. For instance, the two dresses,
GROUP-2. \ eu ATT civrc 3to 5. There are 100 pairs 9X*IAIjL SJMLfEiSP""of larger sizes. /j Narrow 'Widths— fifwSiL*"™:." 4 ik m I ■[4 styles- Straps, pumps, oxfords and ties in all Jm G Blacks, browns, blonds and white kid ; Jm Hi Also patent leathers and satins. y 'iH pairs, if you have small I feet here is the chance of' 1 Women With kww Small Feet- Kg ]gn You can not afford to miss wsj@mßßSF/ this tomorrow. Be here 9HH 'W/ - when our doors open at 8:30 x ' and get a year’s supply. ■ - *&
sketched here, carry out the vogue for self-trimming. On the left is a handsome wool model w*ith al-mond-shaped dots on a dark brown background. It’s trimmed w*ith buttons that are covered with the dots, a brown belt with amusing silver buckle and a flattering little collar that ends in a small bow. Note the interesting raglan sleeves, the slit pockets and the kick pleat in the front of the skirt.
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AlphaChiOmega jßushees Will Be Alumnae Guests Rushees of Alpha Chi Omega sorority chapters at Indiana, Purdue and De Pauw universities will be guests of the Beta Beta Alumnae chapter Wednesday at a luncheon bridge party at Hillcrcst Country Club. Assisting Mrs. Herman Hubbard, chairman of the party, will be Mesdames Joseph J. Coffin and Robert Mason; Misses Norma Davidson, Gladys Mower and Thelma Hohlt, j Indiana university rush captain. Miss Mildred Blacklidge, national secretary of the sorority, will attend the party. Post Chiefs to Meet Mrs. Lydia C. Hunt. 2021 Ruckle street, will be hostess Thursday for the Past Chiefs’ Association of Myrtle Temple, Pythian Sisters. Assistant hostesses will be Mrs. Hattie A. Ryder, Mrs. Ada L. Bass and Mrs. May Mann. Mrs. Audrey G. Brown is association president.
“Four Bottles Helped Me”
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Feels Fine... Never Tired! **My four children were born closei together. I lived on a farm with lots) of work to do and 1 got all rundown so I could hardly go. Four bottles of your Vegetable Compound helpedl me wonderfully. Twice since then I! had to take several bottles to regulate l and strengthen me. I take care of ray house and children, do all my laundry and do home work for a garment factory, and I fee} fine and never gee tired. I have also used the Sanative Wash and it relieved my yn a trouble.”—Afrr. Chas. S. Pittinger, 55 Conklin Ave.. Brooklyn, N. Y, LYDIA E. PINKHAM’S Vegetable Compound The Medicine Grandmother Used
