Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 208, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 January 1935 — Page 4

PAGE 4

Collection of Books on Medical Historv Claims •/ Attention of City Couple Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Russo Start New Group After Disposing- of Another to Indiana State Library. BY BEATRICE BI RGAN Time. Woman'. Pace Editor ANEW collection of first editions has been started by Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Rus-o. That is significant because when they begin con- • are sure to gather a set of books covering the subject comprehersiveiy. Mr. and Mrs. Russo are interesting book dealers because they don't collect first editions aimlessly; of course, sometimes they find a first edition which they won't pass by, but so far as their efforts are directed, they seek books on one certain subject. This new collection is concerned with the history’ of medicine. The

last one. sold to the state for its new library, dealt with Robert Dale Owen and the New Harmony settlement. The adventure of seeking and finding a coveted book is only one of the joys of book collecting, both Mr. and Mrs. Russo say. “There is so much human interest in the circumstances of the publication, discovery of the book or sometimes even the condition of the book,” Mrs. Russo remarked. She brought out one of the books which they found recently to add to the medical history collection. The book. 'Trialr of a Public Benefactor," as illustrated in the discussion of etherization by Dr. Nathan P. Rice, has em its flyleaf the penned inscription of greeting by Dr. William T. G. Morton, the discoverer, to William H. Eddy, his attorney, who was assisting him in the legal

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Miss Rurgan

details of patenting his discovery. A Dr. Long, dentist, in Danielsville, Ga., had used ether for anaesthesia before Dr, Morton, but Dr. Morton moved to action by a Dr. Jackson had presented his discovery 10 the Nation’s attention with the hope of making a great deal of money.

It resulted in the course of the verification of ethers new found use that Dr. Morton's and Mr. Eddy’s dreams of becoming wealthy failed to materialize. The book, detailing Dr. Morton's work apparently served as a solaee to Mr. Eddy, for at the page where mention is made of the possibility of making a great deal of money from the discovery, the binding is broken as if the book had been opened there many times. The passage in the text mentions Mr Eddy; Dr. Rice wrote, “He (Dr Morton) mentioned that he had been informed by Mr. Eddy (the patent solicitor) that a patent foie the discovery was about to be taken out, from which a great deal of money would be made.” Holmes Suggested Name In the book also is the reproduction of the letter in which Oliver Wendell Holmes suggested the word anaesthesia as the proper term for the new’ discovery. We were delighted with Mr. Russo's story of the dedication of Lew Wallace's first edition of "Ben Hur." After readers observed the dedication, “To the Wife of My Youth,” he received numerous letters of condolence and sympathy. His wife wasn’t dead and had, in fact, sug-j gested the dedication, but to reconcile his readers, in the next edition he changed the dedication to read “To the Wife of My Youth Who Still Abides With Me.” The Russos have contacts with dealers and buyers in Europe and; in all parts of the United States 1 Recently they sent a book to a Swiss collector who is assembling volumes dealing with all Swiss who i .emigrated to America. Settled in Indiana One of these early emigrants, named Dufour, settled in Switzerland County, Indiana, where he was the first to grow grapes on a large scale. Dufour wrote a book “Vine Dresser’s Guide," which the Russos discovered in a shop in Indiana, and sent it to the collector in Switzerland. “Os course we must read many; books about books to know where we may find certain editions.” Mrs Russo explained. “But at the same time we must read the books themselves to discover their particular | interest.” A book’s title may not reveal that it makes mention of some particular • topic, which may be the theme of a collector's goal. Many collectors are interested, in the merest mention of the subject in which they are dealing, and the book containing the reference will serve to make their collection more representative. Mr. and Mrs. Russo started their own personal book collecting when they lived in New York. It became ' their business with the depression, and after a few years in a shop, i they decided to devote their time to building up collections to sell as a whole. With this decision, they ■ transferred their books to their home where they carry on their business.

ADay s Menu Breakfast — Baked apples filled with cooked cereal. cream, creamed dried beef, crisp toast, milk, coffee. Luncheon — Cream of tomato soup, toast sticks, fruit salad, rye bread with caraway seeds, chocolate bread pudding, milk, tea. Dinner — Breaded veal cutlets, browned parsnips, creamed carrots, salad of shredded cabbage with celery seeds and lemon juice, fruit tapioca pudding, milk, coffee.

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Butler Chapter of Spurs Wins National Award Mi>s Dorothy Dunbar, president of Spurs, sophomore honorary organization for women at Butler University. has been notified that the local chapter has received the national cup for maintaining the best chapter record for the past school year. The award is based on the number of activities in which each unit of the organization participates and will be passed on to winning chapters each year. This is the first year for the award. The local unit was founded in 1933. MISS WILDING TO WED NEXT MONTH At a bridge party given Monday night by Mrs. F. O. Ellis. Miss Edna Wilding's engagement to Charles Frady. Las Angeles, was announced. Miss wilding, also of Los Angeles, will return there on Jan. 21 for the wedding to be Feb. 1. Mrs. Ellis, sister of the bride-to-be, was assisted by her mother, Mrs. C. J. Wilding. Guests included Mesdames Orville Robinette, Raymond Coss, Albert Deaney, Frank Anderson, Max Herrell, Ernest Jones, Claude Frenzel and Miss Alice Rudbeck. Mrs. Jones entertained at a luncheon and bridge party yesterday for Miss Wilding. CLUB MEMBERS TO ATTEND LUNCHEON Members of the Cheer Broadcasters Club will attend a covered-dish luncheon meeting at 12:30 Friday at the home of Mrs. Everett L. Hays. 2607 Manker-st. Mrs. Otis Carmichael will preside at a business] meeting called for 1:30. Assistant hostesses will be Mesdames C. V. Sorenson. Russell Hatt, William Birk and Alex Goodwin.

Sororities

Muss Betty Piper, 3050 N. Dela-ware-st, will entertain members of Beta chapter. Omega Kappa sorority. at 8 tonight at her home. Alpha chapter. Omega Nu Tau sorority, will meet at 8 tonight at the Lincoln to arrange for a card party to be held Jan. 18 at the Antlers under the sponsorship of Alpha Gamma and Lambda chapters. Discussion will be held of the bridge tournament to be sponsored in February. Kappa Gamma Alpha sorority will meet at 8 tonight with Miss Margaret Sullivan, 1923 N. Meridian-st. Alpha Tau chapter. Alpha Zeta Beta sorority, will meet at 8 tonight at the Lincoln. Theater Party Set Mrs. Jake Leffler will entertain members of Fa-Wa-Si Club at a theater party and dinner tomorrow night. Members of the club to attend will include Mesdames Dola Antrobus, Helena Amos, Walter Bailey, Mary Cooley, Harry Glass, Nelda Guyon. Loyd Link. Florence Rumpke, Dorothy Tutterow, Vivian Schoner and R. B. Greenlee. Auxiliary to Meet Mrs. O. G. McKcever will entertain members of the Central Indiana Chiropractors’ Association Auxiliary and their husbands at dinner at her home. 417 E. 21st-st, tomorrow. A play, "Call the Doctor.’’ will be presented. Plans will be made for a meeting of the state auxiliary to be held in Indianapolis, Jan. 20. Luncheon Scheduled Mrs. Theodore L. Locke will entertain the Mothers’ Club of Boy Scout Troop 72 at a 1 o'clock luncheon Friday. Assisting her will be Mesdames John Buehler, Don Brewer, Charles E. Stevens, Elmer Ostermeyer and Elizabeth M. Hancock.

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Manners and Morals BY JANE JORDAN

Let this column he your channel of self-expression. Put your problems, opinoins, thoughts and questions in a letter to Jane Jordan today. Dear Jane Jordan —For one reason or another I stayed disgustingly sober New Year’s Eve and didn't have a date. I dropped in a little

inn, popular with Butler and Shortridge students about 1 o’clock and ordered a beer. Every one around me was in a more or less drunken condition. I was the only sober one in the place I whose reputation as a drunk is the talk of mothers who fear for the safety of their

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Jane Jordan

“datters” when I have a date with them. I'm not quite 22, but I never have been drunk on a date. I’ll admit I used to get paralyzed, but I was stagging it when I got that way. To get back to my story, I stopped at the bar and watched the boys and girls come and go. They ranged in age from 14 to 21 or 122. Some were in formals and I presume they looked fairly presentable early in the evening, but at 2 a. m. they were a sight! The fellows' ties were a-slant and the girls’ dresses were disarranged. If they knew what a sober fellow thought of them as they stood on shaky pins, eyes rolling aimlessly, muttering and mumbling drunken prattle, they wouldn't drink anything stronger than beer. I noticed a 15-year-old girl of mv acquaintance surrounded by a group of punks in different stages of intoxication. She looked like she needed help so I stepped up and pulled her away and boy was she a sight! Her coat collar was ripped completely off and her dress wasn’t in much better condition. It was the usual story. The sight of that 15-year-old kid made me sick. I don't know just how to remedy this thing of kids who should still be in bloomers getting pie-eyed but some one should find one. I don’t know 1 if you see any sense in this letter or not. It's just my thoughts and ideas of that night. , Answer—ls there is anything more depressing than a sober person's view of a bunch of drunks. I do not know what it is. Probably if any one of the group you watched had been sober, his reactions would have been the same as yours. I have no doubt. that all these young people were as decent as you are, and just as puritanical in their convictions. Otherwise, they would not have felt the necessity to paralyze their inhibitions with alcohol in order to defy their conscious beliefs. Now that you are in a thoughtful mood about the modern scene, perhaps you can figure out why these young people seek to divest themselves of all personal lesponsibility through inebriation. Why do they feel unequal to the load of consciousness they carry? What are the' social causes of wholesale drinking? I do not think there is any particular cause for congratulation on the fact that you drink only when alone. It merely means that you have a different type of inhibition to paralyze. At bottom it is not so much respect for the girls that deters you so much as the fact that you have less to struggle against in their presence than you have when alone. You figure it out, and if you (or other readers) come to any interesting conclusions, put them in a letter. a u a Dear Jane Jordan—As a sophomore in college, 18- years old, I seem 1 to fall for every pretty face I see. 1

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

go with a girl for a couple of weeks or a month, then leave her flat for someone else. Then I met the only girl for me. I thought I loved the others, but that passed away. I suppose you will say at my age this will blow over, but I don’t think so. About a week ago I told her that she didn’t mean any more than the others I had met. I don’t know why I said this. I didn’t believe it when I said it and I’ve regretted it. I miss her terribly. I learned from friends that she is hurt and angry. We planned to marry as!soon as I graduated from college. I love her; I need her; I must have' her. How can I get her back? UNHAPPY. Answer—Tell her what you have told me. She’ll eat it up and believe every word of it. I imagine that you are scared to death of letting one person become too important in your life; hence your impulsive attempt to convince her that she didn't amount to so much in your estimation after all. Your fear of tying yourself to one not of your family group may account for your fickleness, too. Not that I think this girl is necessarily the one and only love of your life. • I am only trying to account for the behavior which got you into hot water with her. You can patch it- up if you can get over the shakes at the idea that you are growing up and will be required to face more responsible relationships with the girls you know.

CO-CHAIRMAN

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Miss Bernice Waters

Young Ladies Sodality and Young Men's Club of Holy Cross Church will sponsor a skating party Friday. Miss Bernice Waters and Richard Hickey are co-chairm°n.

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Antiques to Be Displayed at Club Tea Irvington Union Sponsors Event Scheduled for Jan. 18. From the many old families of Irvington, the Irvington Union of Club members will collect antiques, which will be lent to the club for its tea and exhibit at 2 Friday, Jan. 18, at the Irvington Masonic Temple. Hostesses in gowns worn many years ago will preside over the display, and young women, dressed as models in Godey’s fashion books, will sell candles. Mrs. R. M. Beem is general chairman of the party and will be assisted by the following chairmen of committees: Mrs. E. C. Johnson, display; Mrs. Theodore Layman, arrangements; Mrs. C. E. Donnell, tea table; Mrs. Edwin G. Bruck, candy, and Mrs. P. T. MacDonald, tickets. The profit from the project will be added to a fund maintained by the union for a permanent clubhouse. Any person interested in exhibiting is requested to call Mrs. Johnson. NEEDLEWORK GUILD GROUP WILL MEET Mrs. R. Hartley Sherwood, president of Indianapolis Branch, Needlework Guild of America, will entertain members of the executive committee .at luncheon tomorrow. Guests will be Mesdames Frank S. Fishbacfc, Charles A. Garrard, George B. Elliott, Cecil Calvert, E. L. Shaver. John R. Sentney, Peter C. Reilly, E. I. Wagner, Ray T. Fatout, John S. Tarkington and Oscar L. pond; Misses Juliette Bryan, Lillian Taggart, Gertrude Baker and Elizabeth Bertermann. PARTY ARRANGED AT SPIVEY HOME Members of the Delta Upsilon auxiliary will go to Mrs. Russell J. Spivey’s home, 5336 Washingtonblvd, Friday, for a covered dish luncheon and bridge party. Mrs. Edwin Aspinall is chairman of the committee, also composed of Mrs. Harry Hooley and Mrs. Robert Neale. TWO WILL SPEAK AT CLUB MEETING Mrs. L. D. Bibler and Mrs. William Dell will discuss “Health Code of Children" at a meeting of the Clifton Kindergarten Mothers’ Club of the Indianapolis Free Kindergarten Society at 2 tomorrow afternoon at the kindergarten rooms. Hostesses for the afternoon include Mrs. Worley Hensley, Mrs. William Bartlett and Mrs. Paul Hodges. Club Meeting Set Mrs. Harry W. Dragoo will be hostess to the Magazine Club Saturday when Mrs. Demarchus Brown will talk on Richard Harding Davis. Mrs. Dragoo will be assisted by Mesdames Mary E. Perine, W. H. Link, Fred H. Rosebrock and Miss Corrine Ryan. Mrs. John Kelly, president, will preside. Book Review Set More Light Guild of All Souls •Unitarian Church wall sponsor Mrs. Kathryn Turney Garten in a book review Friday night. Mrs. Garten will review “The Forty Days of Muas Dagh" by Werfel and “While Rome Burns” by Woollcott. • Cartoonist Entertains Chalk talks were given today at the Lions Club at the Washington and at the Ben Davis High School Parent-Teacher Association by Russell O. Berg, cartoonist of The Indianapolis Times.

STATE GROUP MEETS WITH MRS, WHITE

Mrs. Charles R. white entertained members of the Indiana Society of Colonial Dames of America at her home, 4433 Broadway, today, assisted by Miss Belle Dean and members of her social committee. Mrs. Benjamin S D. Hitz, society president, poured. Miss Sophie Pearce Casey, member of the Pennsylvania Society of Colonial Dames of America, gave an illustrated talk on "Guatemala and Her Indians.” From out of town were Mrs. Wallace Patterson, Evanston, 111.; Mrs. Nelson Oliphant, Trenton, N. J.; Mrs. Edmund Ball. Muncie, and Miss Anne Griffith Walker, Evansville.

Daily Recipe VEGETABLE DISH 2 to 3 cups diced cooked potatoes 1 to 2 cups diced cooked carrots 1 to 2 cups peas 1 to 2 medium onions, finely diced Put vegetables in buttered baking dish, cover with cheese sauce made from 2 cups medium cream sauce and 1 i pound cheese. Heat thoroughly in a moderate oven.

NEW YEAR BRIDE

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Photo by Payton. Mrs. Howard R. Bailey Before her marriage New Year’s Day, Mrs. Howard R. Bailey was Miss Gene Boettcher, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Carl Boettcher. Mr. Bailey’s parents are Mr. and Mrs. Lex Bailey.

Contract Bridge

Today’s Contract Problem If your contract in South position were three no trump and you got a heart opening, would you be satisfied with making just three, or four? 4QB 5 V A J 10 3 ♦9B 7 2 A K 3 4J 9 4 fj 4k AlO 2 y 9 2 W E * 8 7 6 ’ 5 1106 5 3 c ♦ K J * 652 0.. W 1* 10874 4k K 7 6 3 VK Q 4 4A Q 4 4k A. J 9 Solution in next issue. 2

Solution to Previous Contract Problem BY W. E. M’KENNEY Secretary American Bridge League AMONG the experts who recently competed in the national championship tournament of the American Bridge League, there is no finer student of the game than Waldemar Von Zedtwitz of New York. Here is a hand in which Von Zedtwitz made an unusual opening bid, which resulted in his playing

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the hand at the only possible game contract, and then proceeded to make his contract by some very fine card reading. After two passes, North’s normal opening bid would be one heart, but Mr. Von Zedtwitz feared a no trump response by his partner, and he knew the opening lead must be made up to his hand. South’s free bid of two spades after East’s diamond overcall was encouraging and Von Zedtwitz sensed that nothing could be gained by showing his heart suit. a u EAST opened with the jack of diamonds, which North won with the queen. North then played three rounds of hearts, West winning the third round with the queen. West knocked out North’s ace of diamonds and North played his two good hearts. East discarded two Clubs and West, a spade. Mr. Von Zedtwitz now counted East for a spade singleton and took the spade finesse the right way, making four heart tricks, two diamond tricks, and three spade tricks for a top on the board. Os course, a club opening would have set the contract and Mr. Von Zedtwitz would have been up against a club opening if he had bid his heart suit to begin with. By keeping his five-card heart suit under cover, he completely hid the distribution of his hand and yet got a correct count on the hand of his opponent in the East position. (Copyright. 1935, NEA Service. Inc.) Luncheon Arranged Mrs. J. J. Cole of the Marott will be hostess at a 1 o’clock luncheon tomorrow with members of the Veronica Club as guests.

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EVANS

Youth of Today Expects Decorum and Dignity to Mark Elders’ Behavior Boy or Girl Willing to Endure Frowns on Own Unconventional Acts, But Rebel Against Parents Who Imitate. BY GRETTA PALMER Times Special Writer ••npHE young of today,” said the young college professor, “are a hideA bound and narow-minded lot.” He was very angry. The difficulty, it seemed, arose when he appeared in his freshman English class, nonchalantly canning a copy of “Ulysses” under his arm, and undertook to discuss its contents with the students. They had severely refused to let out a peep on the subject of the book which has only recently escaped from censorship. “Yet I know,” said the chagrined young man, “that at least half of

them have devoured the book and shown no false modesty in discussing it among themselves." And that, one gathered, was the real cause of the professor's unbecoming warmth. For all his comparative youth he was in the position of an official member of the older generation. And the young of today, and of every other day, are stern in their demands that their elders shall behave with a becoming dignity. Much of the lack of understanding that prevails between the generations nowadays may be traced to the fact that parents refuse to accept their appointed role as conservative pillars of society. The mother who punctuates her conversation with the latest flapper slang, the father who asks to be treated like one of the boys—these characters are essentially shocking to the young, who have a strong sense of decorum under it all. It is one thing

for a college sophomore to lose his year’s allowance at roulette—that, he feels, is among the privileges becoming to his age. It is quite another thing for his father to condone the affair or to imitate it. And for his mother to pawn her pearls after a fling at the gambling tables is a painfully disillusioning s,ght to the young man. a Resent Being Cheated of Fun THE boy who has had too much to drink expects to take off his shoes at the front door and sneak up to bed without arousing the family. He even prefers that his parents should make this necessary by their proper disapproval of his behavior. The young girl who goes on a party chaperoned by one of her mother's friends expects that friend to act as a chaperon, not as a rival for the'attention of the young men present. To conduct a flirtation under the very eyes of a strait-laced dowager is one of the immemorial’ joys of the young. They resent being cheated of the fun by too outspoken a tolerance on the part of their elders. It is hard for the modem parents, who are eager to hang onto their own youth, to prevent themselves from aping the manners of the young. It is difficult for them to admit the gap between the generations and to realize that the last thing their children ask of them is that they play the role of conspirators in their mischief. Yet the dancing grandmother is far less shocking to her contemporaries than to the youngsters whom she is trying, so very pitifully and unwisely, to put at their ease. a a a a a a Expect Standards of Older Folk T’HE giddiest and wildest young man will wince a little if he hears a preacher tell a really dirty story—as a few misguided chaplains discovered in. the war. The girl whose flirtatiousness is the scandal of the neighborhood will still prefer that her mother refrain from hennaed hair and decollete. She may cast off conventional standards so far as her own behavior is concerned in the blithest manner in the world. But that does not, by any means, mean that she will indorse loose behavior in her grandmother. The modern parent has a hard problem to face, a hard course to steer between the intolerant tyranny of the Wimpole Street father and the condonation of his children’s naughtier conduct. Yet he can save his youngsters embarrassment only if he recognizes their wish that he should hold some of their actions in a proper parental disapproval. He must give them the right to perform a few of their antics behind his back.

Snails Appear Today on Menu at Indianapolis Athletic Club

A bit of southern France will be introduced on the menu at the Indianapolis Athletic Club today as “Escargots Bourguignone.” And if you’re not up on your French, “escargots" are nothing more than snails—not the common variety one sees around these parts, but nice, large juicy ones imported from one of the largest snail packing houses in France. In France, according to August Souchon, who is the club’s Americanized French chef, snail meat is considered v<fry fine, and inexPHI DELTA THETA MOTHERS TO MEET A card party will follow a business meeting of the Phi Delta Theta Mothers’ Club at 1:30 tomorrow in the Butler University active chapter house. The ways and means committee will be in charge of the meeting.. On this committee are Mesdames A. H. Worsham, A. L. Taylor, R. L. Lowther, Jack Moore, E. H. Pflumm and J. F. Hoopingamer. Chi Delta Chi sorority will meet tonight with Mrs. Charles Gisler 1535 N. Riley-av.

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JAN. 9, 1935

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Gretta Palmer

pensive food, indeed. After hard rains in France, one naturally expects a snail dinner. The mollusks come out in “droves" and farmers collect them in baskets, much the same as we Amricans gather mushrooms. The French boil them in highly seasoned water, although the delicacy at the Athletic Club will be baked and served eight to an order in the shell, on a chafing dish and with a special “escargot" sauce. The savor of snail is something between that of clam and oyster. Snail meat is served with all kinds of wines and champagne, but red wine is not recommended. Purely Vegetable Laxative Thcdford's Black-Draught is one of the most popular laxatives sold today because it is made of the leaves and roots of medicinal plants, and bcchuse it brings refreshing relief from constipation troubles. “Black-Draught helped me when I was bilious, constipated, feeling sluggish, dizzy, or had a bad taste in my mouth,” writes Mrs. W. M. Bullock, Waynesburg, Ky. “I haven’t found any medicine I like better than Black-Draught.” It’s the favorite laxative of thousands of others. Have you tried it? TIIEDFORD'S BLACK-DRAUGHT —Advertisement.