Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 99, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 September 1934 — Page 7
SEPT. 4, 1934
Fickleness Legalized, But Risky Despite Ruling of Judge, Emotional Stability Will Continue. BY HELEN WELSHIMER hrilri Miff Wrtt*r EMOTIONAL stability, so me have ’ been taught, is an *nd greatly to be desired. But maybe not. maybe not! Maybe it is all naht to let our emotions run haywire in the moonlight and to change our heart interests with every brighter moon. Anyway. Judge Eugene O'Dunne legalized a
woman's right j to change her mind in the Baltimore circuit court. The women may think differently at any time the judgr said, without regard "of consequences snd ; without an y | sense of rest p o n s i b ility either to God. .
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Miss Welshimer
law or man. especially in all affairs of the heart.” Have you ever seen a woman in love. Judge O Dunne? Os course you have, but then you do see more who have tumbled out of love or been pushed out of love. A judge naturally would. But when a woman loves, really loves, though she may pray to be fickle, vacillating, changeable, varving. her affections are likely to remain adhesive where one man is concerned. It is not much fun. this letting one person matter so much that the moon mould fall dom-n if he left the emotional set-up. If only you were correct. Judge O'Dunne! It Isn’t the bride-elect mho hesitates that night before the medding. It is the man mho asked the brideelect to marry him. How They Would Work If a woman is entitled to change her mind then she has a right to shift responsibility whenever she pleases. If Billie Jones, whose trousers are patched and whose conveyance is a street car. has gained Mary's consent to a movie date. Billie shouldn’t feel hurt if Mary turns him dom-n because somebody with a roadster passes by. Woman’s privilege. Judge O'Dunne, woman’s privilege! The two sexes are pretty fairly divided mhen it comes to this matter of facing or evading issues. We are human beings, after all. before we are either men or women. For every instance of broken faith on the part of a woman there is a masculine incident to match it. When the economic depression brought hardships to many women whose husbands previously had provided them with luxuries, there were stories of the manner in m-hich some women revolted. A real woman mill stand by the man she loves, not because it is her duty—but duty
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A Day ’s Menu Breakfast — Tangerines, cereal cooked with dates, cream, crisp toast, milk, coffee. Luncheon — Scalloped macaroni and onions, cranberry salad. Boston brown bread, milk, tea. Dinner — Broiled fresh cod steaks, need potatoes with pimento. broccoli with easy Hollandaise sauce, pineapple and cheese ball salad, filled cup cakes, milk, coffee.
matters little when love is there—but because she wants to be with him and wouldn't be anywhere else for anything. Fair weather wives who won't stay on deck when storms come should be pushed overboard. We hear stones, too, of men whose wives have come up with | them through trial and tribulation. Sometimes the magic dies and the j men remain faithful. Sometimes j it dies and the men put their wives i in row boats and send them ashore j so the cruiser can take on newer, j gayer companions. For every worn- j an who deserts her husband dur- : ing his hour of need, there is a man who forgets to be gallant when devotion is needed. These persons who fail do not act this way because they are men and women. It is because they are lacking in certain fine qualities as human beings and good citizens. They can't keep faith, that is all. Analyze marital situations, though, and you'll see husbands often get what they ask for. The man mho marries a piece of fluff who can t grow into a woman when he needs her, deserves to be deserted. Anyway, he couldn’t miss such a woman long! The man who marries the woman mho won’t keep pace with him mentally and emotionally—who stops growing while he continues to grow —should have cast a prophetic eye down the roads of the future. It is not right that he should be bound. He can not be happy. Nor can the woman he marries. Yet it doesn’t se&m fair that the girl he chooses because she can laugh, mhen laughter was all he asked, should suffer. Judge ODunne made his sensational disclosure when he granted an annulment of a marriage contracted under the befuddled influence of cocktails. When the bride’s vision cleared she didn’t want her bridegroom. Certainly she should have been released. Two wrongs never add up to make a right. She should have married sanely, but since she didn't, m-hy should she live insanely? Just the same it is nice of you to accord us the privilege of changing our minds, Judge O'Dunne. Do you think you could help us all—men and women and puppy dogs—to know our minds? That would be a service! Mr. and Mrs. Chesteen Kendall of Virginia, are visiting Mrs. Kendall's parents, Mr. and Mrs. George A. Fisher. Mrs. M. D. Ham-kins is aboard the American export liner. Excambion, which sailed today for Mediterranean ports.
Bridge Fete Arranged for Bride-Elect Annabess Snodgrass to Wed Oct. 6, Will Be Honored. Parties celebrating the coming wedding of Miss Annabess Snodgrass and Frank Monroe Adams will begin with a bridge party, which Miss Eleanor Taylor and Miss Virginia Mowery mill give tomorrow night. Attending the party will be Miss Snodgrass’ mother, Mrs. W. A. Snodgrass; Mr. Adams’ mother, Mrs. Frank Adams; Miss Taylor's mother, Mrs. Bessie S. Taylor; Mesdame Paul Browning, Thomas McMahon. Robert Mohlman, Clark Rogie and Betty Puett. Others will be Misses Alice Carter. Betty Lee. Essa Phillips, Clara Norton. Florence Bell, Louise Jaeger, Dorothy Jane Hartman and Elizabeth Taylor. The marriage of Miss Snodgrass and Mr. Adams will take place on Oct. 6 at the Central Avenue M. E. church.
Manners and Morals BY JANE JORDAN
Pour out your troubles to Jane Jordan, who will help you pull yourself together and make a new start. Dear Jane Jordan—l’m just a young girl of 17 but I know as much of the world as any girl of 25. I used to live in a small town where
I fell in love with a boy two years older than I ajn. He mas the first boy I ever had a date with as I was then only 14. I was the youngest of three girls and my mother wanted to keep me “Baby” for a while. When she heard of my dates she had a fit. When I learned that
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Jane Jordan
at home I still was expected to play with dolls, I went to my sisters and asked them how i could go out with Joe without mother caring. They both jumped on me and one of them said he had the worst reputation in town. I saw that if happiness didn't come my way I would have to take it; so I began slipping out. I would go to my girl friend’s house and Joe and I would take long walks even in the coldest nights. So the moon and the stars on summer nights, or a barn when the snow lay inches deep, became my living room. Then came the night when I gave up everything, and people began to talk. Then we moved down here in Indianapolis and have been here a year. Now I can have dates at the house. I have done everything to forget, but that seems impossible. For almost four years I’ve loved Joe and can't stop. I wrote and asked him to come here. I haven’t anything to offer him but myself and that isn’t much. But I love him. weak spots and all. Please can you tell me who is to blame for the wreck I’ve made of my life? I don't think I'd ever marry. Why should I cheat some good, clean-cut young fellow of all he could have which I’ve already given up? I’m
THOUSANDS OF BOTTLES OF THE INDO-VIN BEING SOLD IN INDIANAPOLIS
New, Scientific Medicine Is a Sensation and Crowds Flock to Hook’s Drug Stores for It. Month after month, the new, scientific medicine containing 29 of Nature's Finest Health-Building Ingredients, known as Indo-Vin, continues to increase in SALES and DEMAND here in the city of Indianapolis and vicinity. Not a cureall, not a "patent” medicine, but a modern system-cleanser, now'being introduced to large crowds daily in Indianapolis by The Indo-Vin Man in person at Hook's Drug Store, Illinois and Washington Streets. It has become the sensation of the drug world of this entire vicinity and leading druggists are amazed at the demand and say that nothing like it has ever been seen here before. What Indo-Vin Is: An advanced medicinal formula of 29 separate medicines, and not one a habit-forming drug. It is taken after meals and mixes with the food in one's stomach, thus throwing off the poisons that foster ! stomach troubles and permitting I the kidneys and liver to function | p roperly. It acts within 10 minutes to stop gas and pains, sourness, bloat and belching. It will bring out awful impurities t frequently from the first dose) ! which may have been inside of you for a long time, causing you many days of misery with headaches, dizzy spells, skin eruptions and lazy, drowsy, tired feeling. It will cleanse s*our bowels (gradually_not drastic or severe) as they were NEVER CLEANSED BEFORE. Indo-Vin will relieve acid conditions and make the stomach and digestive organs sweet and clean. IT WILL give vou the greatest appetite you EVER HAD IN YOUR LIFE. Indo-Vin will act as a diuretic to sluggish kidneys and flush out quantities of impurity that may have become dammed up inside, causing BACKACHE, SHARP PAINS and RISING AT NIGHT. Relieves children from bed-wetting in a few days. It will make your liver more active; will work the old bile from the liver as black as ink, thus relieving spells of biliousness and sick headache. Strengthens the nerves by
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
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going through school and work and be someone. Otherwise, I think I will love Joe until death. STILL LOVING. Answer—To begin with, you haven’t made a wreck of your life, though that is more good luck than sense. Except for the gossiping of a few envious tongues which you have left behind you, nothing has happened which can ruin your future. “The accidental variation from a given social practice does not necessarily entail sin,” writes Theodore Dreiser, and I agree with him, although I certainly <lo not recommend the variation for a girl in her ’teens. If you repeat the experience several times more, you may succeed in wrecking your life after all. I do not wish to disparage the tender feeling you have for your young lover. Except for the deception you worked upon your family and friends it is difficult for me to look upon your budding love-life as vile. Nor do I see any reason why your future husband, provided you do not make a practice of offending the social order, is going to feel cheated. Ypu are no loose and trifling trollop, but a youngster who found love in the fields because the family residence was barred. Even while granting the sweetness of your dream, I am doubting its permanence. First love by no means is last love. I like your statement, “I'm going through school and work and be someone.”
WPS ’ ‘
MRS. JENNIE CARTWRIGHT
natural means, without harmful drugs. Relieves rheumatism and neuritis by driving out the mtabolic poisons that cause the awful aches and pains, giving quick relief. IT WILL put a stop to the skin eruptions that are caused by impurities in the organs, will overcome the sallowness or “muddiness” that is due to sluggish liver, and will put the ROSY GLOW OF HEALTH into your cheeks. The unfailing remedy for female complaints. Indo-Vin will make your stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels more active; build you up in general and make you LOOK, ACT and FEEL like a DIFFERENT MAN OR WOMAN, years younger than your real age. For instance, following are JUST A FEW testimonials, selected at random from among the HUNDREDS that are being re- ' ceived from this vicinity, praising | Indo-Vin, describing its action and : urging ALL WHO SUFFER to get it and take it. Read these stateI ments: Indianapolis Lady A Stomach “Victim” MRS. JENNIE CARTWRIGHT, of 14". Keisner Street, Indianapolis, said: (photo appea.-s above.) “Practically all my life I bad been a groat victim of stomach trouble. This finally pot so bad that everything I tried to eat would turn into gas and bloat inside of me and I was always in such misery with my stomach organs that 1 never knew what it was to sit down and eat a hearty meal like a normal person does, for my meals caused so much suffering all through me that I was almost afraid to eat. Was dreadfully nervons and didn't know what to do for myself in this awful condition because I had tried EVERYTHING. But finally I found Indo-Van and it has changed me entirely. I can hardly tell
This is not the cry of a defeated person, and if you carry out your resolution it will be the best safegard you have against other premature love experiences. nan Dear Jane Jordan —The boy I am going with went with Mary Helen for two years. They split up two weeks ago. He says he loves me and doesn’t care for her any more. Yesterday Mary Helen found out he has dates with me. She says she won’t go back to him if he has another date with me. Mary Helen and I never did get along with each other. Would it be the right thing for me to stop going with him? Although he says he loves me I think he loves her. After going with her for two years I know he couldn’t forget her that quick. SALLY. Answer—You would be surprised what short memories young men have, and how easily they take to new faces. If you stop having dates with him now it will be because your pride can’t stand the idea of his going back to the other girl. This shows you are lacking in self-confidence and courage. Why don’t you have a good time while you can without worrying about its permanence? Homecoming Set Naomi chapter, Order of Eastern Star, will hold a homecoming meeting Friday night at the Majonic temple, Illinois and North streets. Mrs. Gertrude M. Gray is worthy matron and William R. Gray, worthy patron.
Druggists All Over This Section Tell of Great Sales; Say It Has No Equal. I ever suffered. This medicine worked the stomach misery right out of me, and not I can eat three hearty meals a day without a touch of indigestion. I never have the awful gas bloating like I used to and my nerves are stronger and I have ten times the energy I had before. This is a real medicine for anyone to take and I endorse it to ALL. Indianapolis Man a “Wreck in Health” MR. ROSS HAYES, of S7O Pleasant Run Blvd., Indianapolis, said: "It stemed like all my food would turn right into acid within thirty minutes after I ate it. The terrible gas pains would crowd around my heart and sometimes I felt like I had a heavy weight inside of my stomach. Also, my kidneys were afflicted, causing me to get up 5 and fi times a night, and I was ALWAYS having sharp pains in my back. This trouble had been going on with me for years, and although I tried medicine after medicine, it seemed like nothing would help me, but finally I found the Indo-Vin. It proved to be what I HAD ALWAYS NEEDED and two bottles have worked the miserv FROM MY' SYSTEM. It acted on my stomach so that my food is digesting perfectly now. I never have the awful sour risings in my throat any more and the gas pains don't come like they used to. The heavy feeling in my stomach *s gone entirely. My kidney's are acting normal again and I never have to get up nights, and all the pains in my back are gone. It simply renovated and improved my WHOLE SYSTEM and I want to publicly endorse it to all poor suffering people.” All Who Suffer Can Easily Afford Indo-Vin This medicine is being shipped to 1 many communities in CARLOAD lots. Leading wholesale and retail, druggists are co-operating to bring this remarkable remedy to the pub- | lie. Great volume permits us to In- j troduce it at prices lower than oldtime ordinary medicines. It Co6ts only a FEW CENTS A DAY to take Indo-Vin. so if you are run-down, have tired, sleepy feelings, or headachy, sick and bilious, you certainly owe it to yourself to give this new. advanced medicine a trial. Now being introduced to large crowds daily here in Indianapolis by The Indo-Vin Man in person at the Hook Drug Store. Illinois and Washington streets. Also being sold in all the nearby towns by every good druggist throughout this whole Indianapolis section. Advertisement, „
President’s Event Will Open Season Zetathea Clubs to Study Women in Changing Civilization. “Women in a Changing Civilization” will be the theme of the year’s study of the Zetathea Club, which will open its season Sept. 26 with a president's day meeting. Mrs. R. H. Hollywood, retiring president, will present the gavel to Mrs. J. S. Bates. Among the discussion subjects will be “The Direct Impact of the Depression;” “Standards in Relief Administration,” and “Youth and the Industrial Slack;” “Secondary Effects of Unemployment.” “Exploiting the Employed” and “Peculiar Insecurities of Women as Workers,” “Planning Against Fluctuations,” “Unemployment Insurance” and “Supplementing Wages Through Social Insurance,” “The National Income; Who Gets It? Who Spends it?” and “Proposals for Redistribution,” Accumulated Buying Power,” “Should It Be Safe to Save” and “Banks, Custodians of Buying Power.” “Security Through Government,” “The Expanding Role of Government” and “Where the Danger of Corruption Lies,” “The Present Experiment.” “Industrial Planning, Its Promises and Dangers” and “What Wants Should Government Supply?” Other topics will be “The Taxpayer’s interest,” “Squaring In-
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come and Outgo” and “The Danger Line in Public Economy,” “Security Against Crime,” “Community Responsibility for Preventing Crime and International Aspects of Crime Prevention," “Education.” “Education. New Curents” and “The Crisis in School Finance.” The club's thirtieth anniversary will be celebrated on May 8. The annual Christmas party will be on Dec. 26, and on Feb. 27 Mrs. Russell V. Sigler will review a book. Officers will be elected on March 28 and the year will close with a covered dish luncheon on June 12. Guest days will be on Nov. 14 and May 22. On the program committee are Mesdames C. E. Crippin, A. J. Hueber and C. A. Sammis. Other officers are Mrs. Sigler, vice-president; Mrs. R. E. Stevenson, recording secretary; Mrs. O. E. Laughner, corresponding secretary: Mrs. Frederick Lumley, treasurer, and Mrs. H. D. Merrifield, historian. Misses Jane Keene and Loretta Bland spent the week-end in Chicago.
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GROTTO AUXILIARY ' HOLDS HOMECOMING Annual home-coming and birthday party of the women's auxilitary to Sahara Grotto was held this afternoon at the Grotto home, which was decorated with fall garden flowers. Mrs. Othneil Hitch, first president. gave the history of the organization. founded eleven years ago. A musical program, arranged bv Mrs. Emil Reinhardt and Mrs. Delbert O. Wilmeth. was presented. Taking part were Miss Alice Adelia Hite, pianist; Rosemary Wilmeth, violinist; Miss Hazel Madinger. vocalist, and a trio, composed of Bobby and Billy Wildman and Bobby Day. Club Partij Set Women's Lions Club will hold its regular luncheon and bridge party tomorrow at the Spink-Arms. Club Partii Scheduled Hillcrest Country Club will hold its women's auction bridge party at 1 Thursday with Mrs. Peter Lambertus and Mrs. James Miller as hostesses.
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