Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 93, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 August 1934 — Page 5
AUG. 2?, 1934_
Slim Figure Is Demanded by Romance Men Have Set Standard for Love on Basis of Weight. BY HELEN WELSHIMLR MA Staff Writer It doesn't hurt men to reduce. But alas and alack. lew men want to reduce. They know that nobody cares what their flesh and blood poundage is They know that women will love them, anyway. A duplication of chins and a multiplicity of pounds arc minor obstacles in the path of a womans love. In fact, there have been vampires who have favored hefty men! But with a woman! As soon as she notices the hip spread she must rearrange % e calory count. She has been led to believe—and men did the teaching —that her desirability depreciates as her weight comes up. Therefore she stretches and rolls and turns and stoops for exercise. She removes fattening foods from her menu. And what does it get her? A nice stomach ache, if you please* Dieting Causes Acidosis For she sacrifices her health to J her silhouette. At least this is the report which Professor H. J. Deuel ' of the University of Southern Cali- ! forma medical school gave to the American Association for the Advancement of Science the other day. Women develop a much more pronounced acidosis during the week’s fasting than do men, he said. Now if life were as well regulated as the public school system or a big department store, this unfortunate condition wouldn’t exist. Since women stay in romantic circulation longer when they are slim —and men are wanted any way—the fair division would accord men the physical inconvenience which accompanies reduction, and women the comfort and the case. But Eve, you know, arrived the ' day after Adam Therefore she ' must choose between a slender fig- ] ure or acidosis if she discovers that; she can t have both. Lewis' Novel C’ited Life, according to Fran Dodswortti, who makes life as uncomfortable as any woman could make it for her patient, humble husband in Sinclair Lewis’ book and play •’Dodsworth.” begins when persons have made their money, slipped out j from under their responsibilities, | and gone abroad to play. Life, to the middle-aged, childish Fran, meant the acquisition of a row of lovers as important as the group that came marching to Barbara Hutton’s golden court before the heiress married. But Fran couldn’t hope for much in the way of hand-kissing and passionate endearments unless she kept young, she knew. She had to re- ! tain her slimness. .Must Grow Mentally After all. the men who took Fran for a current heart interest knew she was middle-aged. Secretly theyj laughed because she wouldn’t ac- j knowledge her mental age. Os course, every* woman longs to stay in a perennial garden of physical youth. But if she tarries in a spiritual and mental yard of adolescent roses she will grow boring. If she looks wholly to fleshly things, she ran not hope for abiding emotional security. Men and women, and men, not boys and girls, plan for it. Sam Dodsworth is grown up in the play. Values matter. Loyal tv and decency are respected by him as the eternai verities that they are.
HORIZONTAL Answer to Previous Puzzle correspondent 1. 14 Who was ni HH— Bl in I ’ s ’ A ’ Ihe war time tMiA g> LiEl during the diplomat in the E ggC ' Var ’ picture? OV E. DMA QLNIABE RQ|O 23 Demigoddesa 7 Toward ,e. WP’ E T .< *a.e, 11 Bone i- 24 Crane spar 17 nr,. E aARK - 16 Social insect. pr rQj r L ' L PLn 25 To lhrob 17 Wing part of & oAbLc. 26 He was a a seed A leader at the 14 \ nimble NjONi-PL-U S>||D,EyMlQlLjS, Versailles ir. Seroni note ,n X MIED t■ J inference scale aJI ADMEITI Ml PEnONIE 27 To jog ; ‘ McX\ ■O.Nn& l cTu'pklsl 28 Sooty matter. 30 Warning cry 21 Neuter pro- in noiin 41 Third note. 2 Sea eagle. ® ' n , • L-,]n 31 Type standard. 22 Mohammedan 4- To attitudinize •’ I n 32 Vent of a judges 43 Destiny * volcano. .. n . . M , 5 r riistea cake. _ . 23 Chaos. 44 Play on words .. ~ , . .. 33 Cavity . j 6 Bed laths. _ 24 Restaurant car 4. A defile -Firm ->f ‘he ” 3a Lariat. 25 Genua of cattle 46 To peel ‘ ' , ' 37 Person under 26 Paving stone 4. Game played 0 .. .. age. 24 Withered on horseback c'a„~t ii- 39 Pillar 29 Bad <8 He was a prac- n s imp ie f on 40 To refer so 3° He was a tiring 12 To overspread somethi "K 34 To be sick. tpl > as with tint. repeatedly 3a W eaver * , He was 41 Hybrid. frame hl . Pmin rv ITde olr 42 Moocasinl OI ni> COlinirV 1- Trpp ponne >36 State of cot- jn ,j>ot>-09 and 1 ** Fourth note ’ fused flight 1917-20 „ A nus ‘ 44 Taro paste. 35 Court _ f* art a 45 Italian river 39 Portion ' ERTI4 AL wainscot 4C Postscript 40 Dm* 1 Trappings 22 He was war 47 Afternoon. S — _ —-~ — kr *l# i fH4I nl-j-l Wl 11-
Cuticura for Live Healthy Hair Maamgo the aralp with Cut Ir nr a Ointment to remove the dandruff. Then aham[*r>o with a auds of 4'ntlenrn Scap to cleanse the hair and restore its natural glo** and vigor. Rinse tharoughlr. This will keep your seal* • healthy condition, and a healthy scalp is essential to good hair. Otatasset 2Se and SOe. Soap 3a. fnsretan: Porter Drug ft (.hanksl
McGuffeyites Will Have Exhibit at State Fair
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BY MRS. C. O. ROBINSON Times Hobbs Editor THE Indiana McGufTey Club. organized for the* purpose of collecting and preserving the school books written by William H. McGufTey, and keeping alive the memories of the "Little red school house,” is the recipient of a signal honor. The Indiana State Fair Association proffered a cottage, immediately north of the building which houses the automobile show, so that the McGuffeyites might display their beloved readers amid pioneer surroundings for the entertainment and instruction of visitors to the fair. The cottage will be divided into rooms furnished to represent the kitchen, bedroom and parlor of an early Indiana home and many of the articles, loaned by Indianapolis families, will be of local or historic interest. A quilting bee will be in progress in the home and Mrs. Elizabeth Runyan. Mrs. Wilna Morse and Mrs. Emma Strobel in costumes of the period, will act as hostesses. To the west of the cottage in a log cabin built to portray a pioneer school house, old time school will be held and on an adjacent open air stage a different entertainment will be enacted each day of the fair, from 3:30 to 5 and 6 to 730 p. m. The program is as follows: Sunday, Sept. 3. singing school, C. M. Cannada.v director; Monday, old time dance, J. H. Newlin, director; Tuesday, quilting bee, Mrs. W. A. Myers, manager: Wednesday, spelling bee, T. M. Nuzum. director; Thursday, husking bee and contest. H. M. Chadwich, Morristown, manager; rnday. 3:30 to 5, old-fashioned school exhibition, Mrsr M. E. Bishop, chairman; Friday, 6 to 7:30. last day of school, Henry F. Bond, chairman. Dr. D. S. Gobel who supervised and arranged the furnishing of the cottage, will act as school master. Under the able presidency of S. B. Prater the McGufTey Club has grown from a membership of
ATTEND.ANTS FOR WEDDING CHOSEN Miss Mary Paulyne Stark, daughter of Paul G. Stark, has chosen attendants for her wedding on Sept. 15 to William True Lewis, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Lewis. Miss Margaret Stark, her sister, will be bridesmaid, and Mr. Lewis' best man. will be Walker Knotts. Dr. J. Ambrose Dunkel will officiate at the ceremony, to be held at 10 Saturday morning, m the McKee chapel, Tabernacle Presbyterian i church.
Have a Hobby
60 to 220 in less than a year, and its enthusiastic members and officers are very much elated by the courtesy and recognition of the fair board, as also are all persons who are interested in the i history and background of the middle w*est. n a A GROUP of amateur garden enthusiasts will display their season s efforts in a flower show sponsored by the Haw’thorne Garden Club at the Hawthorne Service House, 2440 West Ohio stret, on Sept. 8 and 9, from 2 to 9 p. m. Any amateur gardener wishing to compete may send entries regardless of size or variety to the show manager, J. E. Dean, 226 North Belle Vieu place, or the club president, R. M. Manring, 2502 West Washington street. There are no entry fees or admission charge. The object of the show is to foster friendly rivalry and to encourage flower lovers in their interest in gardening as a hobby. u n a THE 1,2, 3 and 5-cent values of the National park series of United States postage stamps now I are on sale at the local postoffice, and the dates for the first day sale of the other six denominations have been announced. As some of the park postoffices close in the early fall, the series has not been issued in sequence. This is confusing to collectors and necessitates careful attention to dates and values. The schedule for the remaining values is as follows: Glacier Park. 9-eent, Aug. 27. at Glacier Park, Mont.; Crater Lake Park, 6-cent. Sept. 5, Crater Lake, Ore.; Zion Park, 8-cent, Sept. 18, Zion Park. Utah; Mesa Verda Park, 4-eent. Sept. 25. Mesa Verde Park, Colo.; Arcadia Park. 7-cent, Oct. 2. Bar Harbor, Me., and Smoky Mountain, 1-cent, Gatlinburg, Tenn. Each of the six values also will be placed on sale at Washington, D. c., on the corresponding dates as listed. The usual rules for first day cancellations apply at all postoffices. Addressed covers, not to exceed ten with cash or money order to cover cost of stamps required for affixing shall be sent to postmasters of the offices given. Covers to be sent in as soon as possible. The color of the new* 16-cent airmail special delivery stamp has been announced as steel blue. The first day of sale will be in Chicago, Aug. 3, and in Washington, Aug 31. The special souvenir sheet of Mt. Rainier 3-cent stamps for the A. P. s. will be sold at the branch philatelic agency at Atlantic City, N. J.. Aug. 28, and in the agency in Washington on sept. 4. No first day cover service will be provided. outiH Scheduled Young Peoples’ League of the Broadway Evangelical church will hold an outing and wiener roast Friday night at the former Girl Scout Reservation on Williams Creek. Miss June Dunham, chairman. will be assisted by Herb Wasson, Don Alberty and John Egger. Misses Lou Mehring and Betty Collier have returned to their homes after spending a week at the summer home of Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Esterline. Grand Haven, Mich.
A Day ’s Menu Breakfast — Orange juice, cereal cream, crisp bacon, whole wheat bread toasted, milk coffee. Luncheon — Lamb broth with vegetables. potato salad, berries with chilled custard milk. tea. Dinner — Cream of celery soup, salmon and green pea salad assorted sandwiches and rolls, cottage cheese strawberry preserves peach cabinet pudding milk, coffee.
? WARNING! fi Be Sure the Name on Bottle and Cap H • are the Same Hi In O . A H L i S DISTRIBUTORS Puiie muk
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Two Will Entertain for Bride Mrs. Frank Riggs to Be Honored Tonight With Shower. Misses Martha Heller and Frances Wvsong will entertain tonight at j the former’s home, 1423 Pleasant | street, with a crystal shower in honor of Mrs. Frank Riggs Jr., who was Miss Marie Shaner before her marriage last Saturday. Guests will : include members of the bride's ' sorority, Zeta Tau Alpha of Butler university. Gifts will be presented in a shower umbrella of turquoise blue and steel gray, colors of the sorority. Indi- * vidual nut cups of the same colors will be given as favors. Those attending the shower will be Misses Rosemary Ford, Geraldine Kuntz, Agnes Postma, Ellen Irene Kroger, Margaret Schoen, Virginia Landgraf. Hortense Hornaday, Dorothea Craft, Winifred Andrews, j Marjorie Ziegler and Mrs. Evelyn Snider. The hostesses will be assisted by their mothers, Mrs. Merwyn He.ler, and Mrs. Benjamin G. Wvsong. Other parties which will be given in the bride’s honor will be a personal shower Friday with Miss Agnes Postma, hostess; the bride’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. L. A. Shaner, will give a reception Saturday night. A linen shower on Thursday, Sept. 6. will be given by Miss Marjorie Ziegler and a reception by the bridegroom's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Riggs Sr., on Saturday, Sept. 8.
DINNER TENDERED ENGAGED COUPLE Friends of Miss Helen Elizabeth Farrell and her fiance, Edward James Troy, attended a dinner Sun- | day night as guests of Mr. and Mrs. John L. Cox and Mr. and Mrs. Ar- : thur J. Padgett at the Cox home, : 4322 Guilford avenue. The marriage j of Miss Farrell, daughter of Mr. and | Mrs. James S. Farrell, and Mr. ! Troy will take place tomorrow in St. Philip Neri Catholic church. Guests included Mr. and Mrs. Farrell, Mrs. Martin Farrell, and Messrs, and Mesdames Charles Olinick, Otto Frenk. Clifford Voges, Arthur Foltzenlogle and Henry Bischoff and Mrs* Alma Ford; Misses Mary Molloy, Margaret Farrell, Elizabeth Lahrmann, Mary Far- j rell, Mary Carr, Hazel Deering, Rosemary Ford, Elinore McCambridge, Helen Tarpey, Joan Bischoff and Messrs. Francis Troy, James Tarpey, Vincent Frenk, John Dwyer, John Shackelford, James Farrell, John Farrell, Thomas Farrell, Fred Hazel and John Tarpey.
PROGRAM AID
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Miss Helen Dippel
Alpha Tau chapter, Alpha Zeta Beta sorority, will celebrate founders day with a garden party tomorrow at 1533 Spruce street. With Miss Helen Dippel, others on the program committee, are Misses Dorothy Trager, Mary and Violet Hurt, Evelyn Ross. Louise Gunther and Marie Lueth; Mrs. Mildred Laxin and Mrs. Irene Pletts.
BROKEN PLATES REPAIRED Ad and ■3L j, s? your broken f 50c yl plates away* p.Tv.rcc I without tirstß I lettins us se e m EXTRACTION M them. We % M. may be able ctuv money Gold Crowns s•> Bridgework per tooth s.') Artificial Teeth ... $lO Fillings .... SI and up
TODAY pr FAMILY WASH PER FOUND . PROGRESS Sdt Hater I-a a ndry Riley 7373
-Mr min MM STORE WIDE CLEARANCE SALE ■■■BBBNMMI ~~~ j INFANTS' f Oke Store of Grt.etLUr 1 /alutA. \ i\FAXTS i j S (THE FAIR),Ilf nWlfll'iWMr/lli SHARING 1 BOYS’ LEATHERETTE COUPON mS? El SHEEP ATO rM /MK7-UOOZ.I /jfV lined COATS 1 BLANKETS j fmm\ ,xSks 29 1 *2.15• jjg. jjfro V sheep-lined coats Mm ■ ww ft 1 K j with lari:* worn- | Heavy |> 1i• 1 not l o ** 'l' 3o 8 sfjM WOMEN'S ORIGINALLY 53.98 I G ' rd^ rSe,S White Waffle COATS I s,r I SlKf & 3-Pc. BIKE SUITS m\ I H masses I roadcloth | Ks J 1 H Your Choice I Cull-Fashioned MERS p | edntsday || S,L^ ISE j ■ | Infants’ Flannelette I 1 Clean Up Women's i | HOYS' NAINSOOK | I §1 FOOTWEfIR If onion suits I. 12c 11. 50c || 29c I sharing j£ sharing Sjj i^Oy^i^pßoi n sharing I [ MEN'S 50% WOOL | MEN’S QUALITY ]| | r SANITARY PADS *1 I SWEATERS pi Shirts,Shorts J |Q e J j 77c 11 12}ic | j BOYS’GOLF HOSE I EOfff | SHARING | SHARING VTS’ WOOL | | Men s Pastel Color || GIRLS' SCHOOL ■| | WOMEN'S KNIT EATERS I 25c SOX 1 SHOES 1 | UNION SUITS | )9c | 10c | 79c 11 29c 1 ■■|l I' r I r , 1 . wit Ifir. j 5 'pi-ill'. In - I '' ~r 1 RECEIVING | MEN S RIUHEII ij| | HOYS' ZIPPER 11 If/iOl >S' VAT I)\EI) || BLANKETS 1 f UNION SUITS j| | SWEATERS 11 Shorts or Shirts | 2|:c- L|g|J 97c 1 15c Infanlx' Rubber || HO} S' USED '| | Beach Cloth ill HOYS’ SCHOOL I PANTS li KNICKERS || LONGIES il SHOES I 47c J 79 c El I FALL i| | LUMBER-JAG’S 1 1 TOPCOATS | | FABRIC GLOVES | *1.44 || *l.oo£ p 19c 1 E 8 8 ; SMART PLAID I COTTAGE SETS ‘llf CHILDREN’S I SUITING | orCURTAiNS || ANKLETS j J" Fine r for school | ; n T good 1 lookiaK !B | £££&* “liTwanted jSfion- U
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