Indianapolis Times, Volume 47, Number 227, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 November 1935 — Page 4
PAGE 4
Guests Here to Brighten City Parties Special Efforts Made for Entertainments This Week-End. BY BEATRICE BURGAN Society Editor New faces are to liven many of the parties this week-end. Visitors with thetr different outlooks on usual conversation topics will brighten up the table talk. Hosts and hoste.Svses are making special efforts to provide variety to the entertainment.
Mr. and Mrs. W. T. Kegley's guests from Kansas City, Mr. and Mrs. Forrest Wells, are to be in a party at the Meridian Hills Country Club dinner and bridge party tonight. Also with Mr. and Mrs. Kegley, are to be Mr. and Mrs. L. V. Sheridan, Mr. and Mrs.
Miss Burgan
George Olive, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Scott and Mr. and Mrs. Richard Habbe. Mr. and Mrs. Charlton Carter are j to have Mr. Carter's sister, Miss Bertha Carter, Oak Park, 111., at their table with Mr. and Mrs. Birney D. Spradling whom Miss Carter is visiting, and Mr. and Mrs. George M. Weaver. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph J. Weins, Benton Harbor, Mich., who came j to be with Mr. and Mrs. Fred Shumaker for Thanksgiving are to be guests at the Indianapolis Athletic Club “Top Hat’’ dance tonight. Mrs. 5 Ruth Baker is to be hostess at a cocktail party before the club dance. Entertain at Home Last night Mr. and Mrs. Shumaker had Mr. and Mrs. Otto Meyer, Mrs. Baker and Paul Davis at their home for dinner with Mr. and Mrs. Weins as the honor guests. The Shumakers and Weins had Thank, giving day dinner with Mrs. Shumaker’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. R. Treat. Mr. and Mrs. T. M. Rybolt are to be at Meridian Hills with Mr. and Mrs. Claud Best. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph W. Showalter and Mr. and Mrs. Harley W. Rhodehamel are to attend together. Mr. and Mrs. John H. Waldo and Dr. and Mrs. William S. Tomlin also are to join the party. a a a Mr. and Mrs. Dudley R. Gallahue's pre-holiday activities are concentrated on the rehearsals for “The Lambs’ Follies” to be given as entertainment at next Lambs’ Club party Dec. 14 at the Indianapolis Athletic Club. # it a Fred Sharp and Miss Martha Wheeler have taken Big Canada j and The Niece. Mr. Sharp’s jump- ! ers, and Safe Home, Dr. P. O. Bon- | ham’s jumper, to Chicago to participate in the nineteen hunter and jumping classes in the International Horse Show. The show opens today and is to continue through next Saturday. nnti Last night at the Columbia Club Scholastic Junior dance the peak of excitement was reached when three yell leaders from Butler Universtiy led cheers during the orchestra intermission. The vacationing college and high school students joined in the yelling in the ballroom. decorated with streamers of pennants of numerous schools. As the leaders led the pep session, they gyrated through their antics. Sweater after sweater they pulled over their heads to be costumed appropriately for the cheers. SHOWER HONORS PROSPECTIVE BRIDE Friends of Miss Jean Mildred Mac Kay. a bride-to-be. were invited to a kitchen shower and bridge party which Mrs. Eugene Foley gave at her home, 3255 Washington-blvd, last rught. Miss Mac Kay, daughter of Mrs. Grace F. Mac Kay, is to become the bride of Dr. Robert P. Boesinger in a ceremony Dec. 14. Dr. Boesinger is the son of Mr. and Mrs. John Boesinger. Red and white colors appointed the party at which Miss MacKay, her mother and the following j were guests: Mesdames Fred! Howenstine. Verle Campbell, Evans i Rust, Suzanne Dugan. Max Winehell and Misses Jane Moore. Meadie Schmidt, Magdalene Adams. Joan Boswell and Myla Smith. REVEAL WEDDING OF RUTH PICKHARDT The marriage of Miss Ruth Louise Pickhardt to Charles H. Ellis Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Ellis, is announced by her parents. Mr. and Mrs. o. W. Pickhardt. Southport. The wedding took place Thursday at the Southport Presbyterian Church, the Rev. Harley A. Davis. Logansport. and the Rev. Luther Morgan, officiating. Mrs. Lora Hendricks Stewart, organist, played bridal music. The bride was attended by Miss Kathryn Hines. Southport.’ and George Mumford was best man. Beverly Ann Rardon was ring-bear-er and O. W. Pickhardt Jr. and Ray Durfinger were ushers. A reception followed the ceremony. Guests Invited Mrs. Anna L. Bates and Miss Vern Hook are to be guests at the dinner Jhristmas party which Mrs. .. *■ ' to give Tuesday in the Colur... ub for Martha Washington Club members. The t*.tirles arc to be decorated with miniatnre Christmas trees, as favors. Announce Betrothal Mr. and Mrs. William E. Greuling, 4545 Winthrop-av, announce the engagement of their daughter, Miss son of Mr. and Mrs. Carl A. Losch. Mary Creuling. to Carl A. Lesch Jr . 4413 College-av. The wedding is to be Dec. 29. Bridge Partg Planned Mrs. Peter Lambertus and Mrs. R. A. Staudt are to be hostesses for Hillcrest Country Club’s women’s auction bridge party at 1 Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Chest.. Berry, 791 East-dr, Woodruff Place, have returned from a trip to Los Angeles.
Play Leading Parts in Future Social Events
Mrs. Irvin Wesley (above loft> is chairman of hostesses for the luncheon and bridge party to be given by the Columbia Club Tuesday. (Dexheimer-Carion photo.. pp|? N right) is chairman of the pre- lim 0 holiday dance which Halcyon Club heimer-Carlon Photo.) Mr. and Mrs. Joseph E Mattinglv have announced New Year's Jf§ Day as the date for the wedding J&ifl Jis§§ of iheir daughter, Miss Margaret jpf - 4s,'Mattingly < below ito J. Law'rence llfil|||||| Sims, son of Mr. and Mrs. Roy C. NN If Sims. Miss Mattingly is a Butler WmmM University graduate and member A Sims is a member of Lambda Chi jjjlfillf *' #' y f§P a-. i||lll§ ternities. He is aDe Pauw Uni- gHßmif:: versity graduate and attended In- MBif diana University School of Mcdi- 11111111111 .3m ''V xWW f\ cine. (Voorhis Photo.) , Members of the Council of Social || MviM. jaWPMIT' WiMSiy, \gcncies arc to be guests of the In- N'L.. hanapclis Council of Women Tues- "** '' '* WW lay in Wm. H. Block Cos. auditorum to hear Miss Mary Irene At- s 'N/f----linson, director of Child Welfare 't Division. Federal Children’s Bureau. t •< alk on “Community Responsibility or Child Welfare.” | jVmM Others on the program are to bo 3rc.se Wolfe, Federal Housing Adninistration”; Mrs. Flora Beck. What Other Cities Are Doing”; “apt. Lewis Johnson, conducting a
Mrs. Irvin Wesley (above left) is chairman of hostesses for the luncheon and bridge party to be given by the Columbia Club Tuesday. (Dexheimer-Carion Photo.) Miss Pauline Taylor (above right) is chairman of the preholiday dance which Halcyon Club is to give Saturday, Dec. 7, in the Antlers’ Oriental room. (Dex-heimer-Carion Photo.) Mr. and Mrs. Joseph E. Mattingly have announced New Year’s Day as the date for the wedding of their daughter, Miss Margaret Mattingly (below) to J. Lawrence Sims, son of Mr. and Mrs. Roy C. Sims. Miss Mattingly is a Butler University graduate and member of Delta Gamma Sorority. Mr. Sims is a member of Lambda Chi Alpha and Nu Sigma Nu Fraternities. He is a De Pauw University graduate and attended Indiana University School of Medicine. (Voorhis Photo.)
Social Agencies Council Will Be Women’s Guests i Members of the Council of Social Agencies are to be guests of the In- ; dianapelis Council of Women Tuesday in Wm. H. Block Cos. auditorium to hear Miss Mary Irene At- j kinson, director of Child Welfare ! Division, Federal Children’s Bureau, j talk on “Community Responsibility i for Child Welfare.” Others on the program are to be Reese Wolfe, “Federal Housing Administration”; Mrs. Flora Beck, “What Other Cities Are Doing”; Capt. Lewis Johnson, conducting a safety forum; Dr. C. O. McCormick,! "Making Motherhood Safe,” and Mrs. O. E. Mehring, "Buying Christmas Toys.” Mothers’ Chorus of School 43, directed by Duncan W. Macdonald, is to present a program of Christmas songs. Members are Mesdames C. G. Ade. E. C. Baker, G. F. Black. C. F. Burson, H. E. Cantwell, F. W. Christena, P. W. Oren, J. W. Crose, P. J. How r ey. B. B. McDonald. R. E. McCreary, J. H. Merriman and Mrs. D. E. Compton, pianist. Mrs. C. W. Foltz is to preside. Reservations are in charge of Mrs. Homer J. Williams and Mrs. H. P. Willwerth. COLUMBIA BRIDGE FIXED FOR TUESDAY Mrs. Irvin Wesley is hostess chair- j man for the Columbia Club women's luncheon and bridge party Tuesday. Mrs. J. Hart Laird, club hostess, is receiving reservations and has chosen table prizes. Assisting Mrs. Wesley on the committee are to be Mesdames Leonard L. Young, W. A. McCullough, Dudley R. Gallahue, Herbert C. Tyson, Delos A. Alig, Archie N. Bobbitt, Robert J. Clark, Lewis G. Ferguson, Harlan J. Hadley. Howard E. Nyhart and the following oet-of-town women: Mesdames O. V. Badgley. Earl Sells. Edward Turnquist' and J. E. Westerfleld, ail of Anderson; Mrs. Robert F. Kunkel, Co-: lumbus; Mrs. J. L. Frazier, El wood: Mrs. Ted W. Davis. Franklin, and Mrs. Harry Land. Richmond. Fort Tea Arranged, Wives of all enlisted men are invited to attend a tea which Maj. and Mrs. A. C. Oliver are to give at 2 ! Tuesday at the Service Club. For* | Benjamin Harrison. Mrs. M. J. 1 Barry is to be hostess.
E VENTS PROGRAMS Theta Sigma Phi Alumnae. 6:30 p. m. Tues. Mrs. Donald Drake. 4327 Park-av. Christmas dinner-party. Grab bag. Reservations by Monday. Woman's Rotary Club. 12:30 p. m. Mon. Columbia Club. Luncheon, business meeting. Womans Athletic Club. 3 p. m. Mon. Clubhouse. Mrs. Demarchus C. Brown, “Athens Revisited.” Reception, 9. Miss Vivian B. Ely, hostess. St. John Academy Alumnae Mon, Academy. Regular meeting. SORORITIES Beta Beta Chapter. Pi Omicron. 7:46. Mon. Clavpool. Members urged to attend. Delta Phi Beta. Mon. Miss Elsa Beck, hostess. Business meeting. Eastopolis Club. 8 p. m. Mon. Miss Marie Foley, 1515 Brookside-av. Arrangements made for Christmas baskets. Alpha Chaper. Tail Delta Tau. 8 p. m. Mon. Antlers. Miss Wanita Watson, president. CHURCH GROUPS Social Circle, Woodruff Avenue United Presbyterian Church. Tues. afternoon, evening. Supper 5:30 to 7. Bazar. Circle 3 Central Avenue M. E. Church. 5:30 to 7 p. m Mon. Pennv supper. CARD PARTIES Liederkranz Ladies' Society. 8:15 p. m. Sun. Hall. 1421 E. Washing-ton-st. Mrs. Carl Kramer, chairman. All games. Fidelity Boosters Club. Mon. afternoon, evening. Antique show, card party, chili supper. Mrs. Charles Henson, president. LODGES Brightwood Chapter O. E. S. 399. 8 p. m. Mon. Veritas Temple. Election. Mr*. Nona Everett, worthy matron; William T. Everett, worthy patron.
Eire Fighter, With Untied Shoes, Says Women Usually Cool Headed at Blazes
BY HELEN LINDSAY HARVEY J. KEPPEL. battalion fire chief of District 3, today sits with his shoes untied. And it's not because he is untidy. “It’s so I can get into my fire boots in a hurry,” he explains. “I know that, with this cold wave started, there will be more fires than there have been.” Chief Keppel started this little personal habit yesterday when the mercury dropped to 19 above zero. It is one acquired after 24 years experience in fighting Indianapolis fires. In these 24 years, he has discovered that women are less excited than their husbands when they see their homes burning. "Most women are cool-headed; sometimes more so than men,” Chief Keppel says. “Mamma usually comes out carrying an armload of valuables, but papa is satisfied to get himself out of danger. Sometimes those valuables are insurance papers, usually kept in a shoe box. n a tt “ A ND many of the fires are l\. caused by heavy firing that the husband does when he comes home from work. Firemen always expect—and get—more fire calls after 5:30. The old man comes home and starts shoveling coal into the furnace and stove, and trouble starts.” Sitting in his office at Engine House 13. Chief Keppel recalled
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
the bravery of some of the women whose homes he had seen burning. “I remember a fire in an apartment on Senate-av many years ago. The husband thought his wife had carried their child out | with her; she, in turn, thought he had saved the child. When they got outside the burning building, ! each discovered that the child had been left inside. It was hard | to persuade that mother to stay out and let firemen go back after the baby. o tt “ , T'HAT is one piece of advice that I would like to give everyone, in case of fire. Leave rescue work to the firemen—they know how to do it, and it is their job. When a person discovers that his house is afire, he' should immediately get out. He should j go to the home of some neighbor, j and not even look at the fire, j Then he won’t be in the way of | firemen. "Every fireman knows that his first duty is to save lives; after j that, he is to put out the fire. The first thing firemen do in ; answering an alarm is to go through the house, waking occupants and getting them to safety. “The police help in this, too. A police squad always answers fire alarms. They help the firemen I get people out of the house, and ; keep the crowds away from | danger. They are pretty good at ' it, too; there are a lot of policemen who would make better firemen than they do policemen. “Firefighting takes a lot of bravery; when you see smoke and
Flapper Fanny Saya „ v s pat „r. ?#3 ls-“ MHH9 A rich old man's lap is the lap of luxury.
Local Man Will Be Wed in Baltimore Fortune-Murray Nuptials to Be Solemnized at 6 Today. Timet Special BALTIMORE. Nov. 30.—Wearing her mother's wedding gown. Miss Martha Murray, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James S. Murray, is to become the bride of Russell Fortune Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Russell Fortune, Indianapolis, in a ceremony at 6 tonight in the Protestant Episcopal Cathedral of the Incarnation. Canon Harold N. Arrowsmith is to officiate. With the gown of white satin and rose point lace, the bride is to carry a bouquet of white orchids and lilies of the valley. Miss Gertrude Craig, maid of honor, and Misses Frances Morton. Mathilde Hooper, Betty Miller and Isabel Wagner, all of Baltimore; Miss Helen Tunnell, Pittsburgh, and Miss Mary Lewis. Norfolk, Va., are to wear gowns of ivory taffeta. They are to carry bouquets of gardenias and ferns. Brother to Be Best Man William Fortune. Indianapolis, is to be his brother’s best man. Thomas Ruckelshaus, Conrad Ruckelshaus, Samuel Sutphin and Burford Danner, all of Indianapolis; James Murray, Baltimore. the bride’s brother, and Lee Paul, Wheeling, W. Va.., are to be ushers. Mrs. Fortune is to attend in a black satin gown, with an orchid corsage. Mrs. Murray’s gown is to be of black velvet and her corssge of orchids. Indianapolis guests are to attend the reception for relatives and immediate friends. Among them are to be William Fortune, Mrs. Bowman E’der, Mrs. Albert J. Beveridge Sr., Mrs. Nathan Graham, Mrs. Frederick VanNuys and Mrs. Conrad Ruckelshaus. After a motor trip through the South, the couple is to go on a cruise to Havana and is to return to Indianapolis for residence. The bride made her v out at the Bachelors’ Cotillion of Baltimore in 1930 and is a member of the Junior League of Baltimore.
Department Club Art Group Will Hear Lecture on da Vinci
An illustrated lecture on “Leonardo da Vinci” is to feature a meeting of the art department of the Woman’s Department Club at 230 Monday. Mrs. William F. Rothenberger is to speak, illustrating her talk with a collection of reproductions of da Vinci’s paintings. Miss Helen Dauner, cellist, accompanied by her mother, Mrs. F. E. Dauner, is to present a program of Christmas music during the afternoon. At a tea following, Mrs. Harris P. Wetsell is to be assisted by Mesdames Armin H. Seilken, Walter J. Slate, Guy L. Stayman, Jerome H. Trunkey. Orville A. Wilkinson, Martha E. Wilson, C. E. Wolcott and Lewis E. York and Miss Ida B. Wilhite.
fire belching out of a building, you have to grit your teeth to go in there.” u u a \ NOTHER example of woman’s courage remains with Chief Keppel. He shakes his head with admiration when he remembers it. “That woman kept her head,” he says. “She woke in the middle of the night, and learned that the house was burning. Her aged mother and father lived with her. The mother had heart disease, and the daughter realized that any sudden shock probably would kill her. She went quietly into the room in which her parents were sleeping, and awoke them. “ ‘The house in back of us is on fire, and I think we all had better get dressed and get out,’ she told them. She helped the old couple dress and get out of the house. Then she awakened her own small daughter and started down the stairs with her. “Halfway down the stairs, she met the firemen coming up with the hose and ladders. One of them stopped and offered to help her. “ 'I don’t think I need any help, thank you,’ she said. And she didn’t.” a u o THE Indianapolis Fire Department is much more efficient than it ever has been. Chief Keppel believes. He points to official records to prove it. “We’ve answered more calls than before, with smaller losses,” he says. “When we made a demonstration for the insurance inspector recently, he told me that Indianapolis had one of the finest fire departments he ever had seen. “That’s because every fireman knows that Chief Kennedy is a real fireman himself. The chief knows how to fight fires, because he has done it. And because of that, Chief Kennedy knows when his men are doing their work right. “We are getting a better class of men in the department, too. The depression has brought us young men, many of whom are college graduates. Os course it doesn’t take a college education to fight fires, hut a young man makes a betttr fireman if he is clever. And the new merit board has helped, too. in bringing up the class of firemen.” Turning to the record book in front of him. Chief Keppel pointed to the 29 fires which he had answered during the month of October. “It’s the high mark for me for the year,” he says. “Three weren't so many in November. That's because it wasn’t very cold, and because there was a lot of rain. “But now that December and cold weather is here, we can expect trouble. That’s why I don't tie my shoes.”
KECENT BRIDE
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Photo by Dexheimer-Carion. Mrs. Harry Steen (above) was Miss Estelle Hinton, daughter of Robert E. Hinton, Sellersburg, before her marriage. The wedding took place Thanksgiving Day at the Little Church Around the Corner in New York.
Tudor Seniors to Give Barrie Play On Dec. 7 Tudor Hall seniors are to present “The Admirable Crichton” by J. M. Barrie at 8:15 Saturday, Dec. 7, under Miss Katrine Bucher’s direction. Miss Susan Gatch is to assist. Miss Suzanne Stokes plays the leading role and others in the cast are Misses Marjorie Bunch, Jane Turner, Helen Wyatt, Betty Lee Hoffman, Mary and Alice Dickey, Kathryn Hadley, Lucina Ball. Rosemary White, Anita Cohen. Barbara Kroeger, Rachel Blumberg, jorie Mueller, Judy Preston and Natalie Pfaff. Other members of the production staff are Miss Betty Amos, business manager; Miss Pfaff. technical director; Miss Betty Boaz, property manager; Miss Patricia DePrez, publicity; Miss Cohen, Miss Mueller, Miss Kroeger, Miss Preston, Misses Alice Crume, Sue Stackhouse and Jane Strashun, crew.
Mrs. James T. Hamill, exhibit chairman, announces a display of the work of Ella Riffle, water color painter. The display, to be at the clubhouse through December, includes a collection of smal.' gift water colors. Mrs. H. C. Ryker, door cnairman, is assisted by Mrs. Malcolm Lucas, vice chairman, and Medames Frederick H. Bowen. Earl R. Cox Gage McCotter, Angele Moler, F. D. Le Mond, J. H. Orndorff, Louise B, Pohlman and Charles F. Remy. The Ten O'clock is to meet Wednesday at the home of Mrs. E. A. Brown, with Mrs. Willard N. Clute, vice chairman, presiding. The program is to include a paper by Mrs. Howard W. Painter on “The Picture Quality of Pioneer Life.” and an open forum conducted by Mrs. Helen Talge Brown, chairman. “Pageantry of the Wilderness” is to be the subject for the meeting, Dec. 18. Members who are to present the program are Mrs. Irving Blue, Mrs. Thomas Spencer and Mrs. Irving Hardesty. Social activities group are to meet with Mrs. John Conner, Miss Tessie York TicClain, Mrs. A. C. Barbour and Mrs. E. A. Brown Tuesday, Dec. 10, at 2 at the home of Mrs. Brown. J. J. Merek is to give a talk and demonstration. His subject is “Pottery in the Making.” Mrs. W. Presley Morton, chairman, is to have charge of singing. The music committee, of which Mrs. Charles A. Breece is chairman, is to lead the singing of Christmas songs. Bettie Blair, dramatic reader, is to present Christmas stories.
Designed for Brother and Sister
BY ELLEN WORTH Sister and brother as is the way of smart English children dress alike to the delight of every one. They just love the idea, too, and will welcome these cunning togs among their Christmas gifts. Sister’s dress is maize cotton broadcloth with brown collar and trim. Brother's trousers are brown cotton broadcloth. The cunning maize blouse of similar styling to sister's dress uses the brown for its trim.
-The GOLDEN FEATHER by Robert Bruce
CHAPTER FORTY-TWO (Continued) “All right.” She swung her feet down and moved to a sitting position. helped by his arm. She looked up at him, and realization came to her; she was safe, free, rescued! Then she remembered something else, and looked cautiously toward the window. There was a stain on the carpet there, but nothing else. “We carried ’em out,” said Larry briefly. "Were they—were they—” she began. "One was,” he said. “Jackson wasn't. He was lying there unconscious. A bullet had just creased the top of his skull—just enough to put him out cold. Your bullet. I think.” He looked at her quizzically. She rubbed her forehead. “I’m glad I didn’t—kill him,” she said. a an IT was an hour before they were ready to leave. A patrol wagon was backed up against the carriage house to receive the bodies of two gangsters who had been killed in the fighting. Four others, including Red Jackson a*nd Sandy Harkins, who had been wounded, were being loaded into another patrol wagon for removal to the prison ward of the Portsmouth hospital three men, and white-faced Evelyn Brady—had been manacled and put in one of the sheriff's cars for removal to the jail. Os the government’s force, four men had been wounded. They had already been taken to the hospital, and the report had come back that all of them would recover. Under Larry's direction, the officers who were not busy looking after the piisoners had been seaixhing the house from top to bottom, collecting a small arsenal of firearms and a cache of bonds and currency worth many thousands of dollars. “It’s a cleanup,” Larry jubilantly told Mike Hagan. “We got ’em all. Jackson'll keep, now. until he's put on trial for murder. We have plenty of evidence to get the electric chair for him and for his chief lieutenants. The rest of the gang are good for long terms in prison.” Jean was standing beside him, waiting for him to take her back to Dover. She laid her hand on his wrist and said, “Larry, how about—?” He looked down compassionately. “How about Sandy?” he asked softly. “Sandy's on his way to the hospital. He was shot four times, and—” He hesitated, then decided that she might as well be told bluntly. “He’s dying. I doubt if he'll live until he reaches the hospital.” Jean made no reply, but looked at him soberly. “Do you still care for him?” he asked, putting his arm about her shoulders. Her eyes met his without wavering, and she shook her head. “No.” she said evenly. “I don't think I ever did. I—oh, Larry, I w'as just insane, that’s all—insane. I—” She broke off abruptly, then added: “Os course, I—Larry, it’s a shock to know that he’s dying. Don’t think I’m heartless. But the man I thought I cared for—he died long before the fighting started.” “All over it?” said Larry. “Yes,” she said. “If I can ever forget what a fool I was—” “Never mind about that,” said Larry. “I blame myself. I should have warned you, long ago.” “You tried to, but I wouldn’t listen,” she said. “I could have made you listen.” he said. “Don’t blame yourself too much. Blame me, too.” He helped her into the car, shut | the door and w'ent around to take h:s place behind the wheel. “Now, we’ll high-bali for Dover,” he said. “Your father’s there waiting for you, and you’ll have a good long rest, and then—” “And then? ’ she said, as the car started off.
Besides cottons, linen or wool jersey are lovely for these easy to make costumes. Style No. 1618 includes patterns for both models in the same size. If different sizes are wanted, two patterns will have to be ordered and will cost 15c extra. Sizes 2, 4 and 6 years. Size 4 requires 1% yards of 35-inch material with yard of 35-inch contrasting for girl’s dress with 1 yard of 39-inch dark material and % yard of 35-inch light material for the boy’s suit. Our fall and winter fashion magazine is just full of smart new clothes, that can be made easily and inexpensive. Price, 10 cents.
Enrlosed find 15 cents for which send me Pattern No. 1618. Name Street City State Size
To obtain a pattern of this model, tear out the coupon and mail it to Ellen Worth, The Indianapolis Times, 214 W. Marylandst. Indianapolis, with 15 cents in stamps or coin. Mothers Outline Bridge Members and guests of Lambda Chi Alpha Mothers’ Club are to be entertained with a bridge party at 1:45 Tuesday at the chapter house, 4721 Sunset-blvd. Hostesses are to be Mesdames H. W. Mason, W. P. Billings, A. W. DeHart, H. A. Koss, A. W. Seary and H, S. Leonard. Club to Meet Monthly business meeting of the Children's Sunshine Club of Sunnvside is to be held Wednesday at the Fletcher Trust Building. Talks to Children Arthur B. Carr, Children’s Museum director, gave an illustrated lecture for children at 10:30 today on ‘'Travels Through Germany?'
NOV. 30, 1933
“And then,” he said, smiling in the darkness, “I think I know a young man who'll be only too glad :o help you try to forget about the whole business." She stared ahead at the light of the auto lamps on the leafy road. “Who do you mean?" she asked in a tired voice. “Bobby Wallace, of course.” She shook her head slowly. "No. I've forfeited any claim I ever had on Bobby.” Larry reached down and took her hand. "Tell me this. Jean.” he said quietly. "Do you love Bobby?” The tears she had been unable to I shed earlier that night came, now, !in a blinding torrent. Through | them, at last, he heard her cry despairingly. “Oh. Larry, of course I do. But he'll never want to see me 1 again—and I'll never be able to look him in the face—” a a a THEY were sitting in the living room of Jean's little apariI ment; Jean, her father, and Larry Glenn. Refreshed by 12 solid hours I of sleep, Jean sat in an arm chair, j glancing fondly back and forth | from one man to the other. "So. you see,” Larry was saying, j “the important thing is- not to let all that has happened blight your j life. You’ve been foolish, as you | say; but you’ve been no more foolj ish than any girl might have been under the same circumstances, rha j cards were pretty well stacked | against you, after all.” He dropped his cigaret butt in an 1 ash tray and leaned forward, his | elbows on his knees. “The chief trouble.” he said, “was | that you worked for a black crook | and never suspected it until too j late.” "You mean—Mr. Montague?” she |asked. “I mean Mr. Donald Montague.” jhe said grimly. “He, by the way, is ; cooling his heels in jail right now, and before very long the legal profession will be rid of one of its w’orst shysters—and the population of Leavenworth prison will be increased by one. “Don Montague,” he went on. after a moment, “represents the I sort of thing that every decent | lawyer wants to see stamped out. He was one of the links in the chain that makes large-scale crime possible in this country. Every lawyer has the right to defend a man accused of crime, of course. That’s what lawyers are for. But j Montague didn’t stop there. He j w’ent on and became, to all intents I and purposes, a member of the gang himself. “He helped the Jackson mob plan things in advance. He told them, beforehand, how to dodge the law. He helped frame crooked alibis for them, on occasion—as he did when the Dover police were on the verge of pinning a robbery charge on Sandy Harkins. He helped them dispose of their stolen bonds—as he did in the affair that almost got Bobby Wallace into a jam. a tt a THAT'S a hard one to figure, by by the w-ay—w'hy they should i have shoved those bonds through an j outsider like Bobby. The reason, I I presume, was that they figured it i would leave everybody in the clear ;if the deal came to light. Lewis, | who passed the bonds, would be | gone. Montague, who bought them ; from Bobby, would be able to tell a story which, while manifestly rather absurd, w'ould still leave him technically innocent. And Bobby would have had to take the rap. i “Anyhow, that's what Montague was like. You worked for him. He introduced you to the manager of the Golden Feather Night Club. Naturally, thinking that he was a perfectly respectable person, you | were not suspicious of persons to whom the manager, in turn, introduced you. “And then this final stunt of Montague's—sending you off to carry a letter to Harkins. That was where he overplayed his hand a little. He believed, I guess, that you were so deeply involved with Harkins that you either knew all about Harkins’ record or would be unable to back out when you learned it. “At any rate he had to get this document to the Jackson outfit. Montague has owmed French Pete's place for several years. It’s an ideal place for a hideout for a gang that's dodging the law, but it’s not good j for much of anything else. As an investment, it's a complete washout. What Montague wanted to do was simply transfer title to the j place to Jackson himself. “That was what you took dow’n there—faked papers, by which it appeared that Jackson had come into owmership of the place some six or seven years ago. at the time this man Roubidoux got rid of it. It had never actually been carried in Montague's own name, by the way. Included in the pacakage were directions on how to get there, and a note to the caretaker instructing him to turn everything over to Jackson. Harkins and Lewis went on ahead, took the place over and i then burned this note. Harkins told me that, along with some other stuff, before he died. “Montague, do you see, thought i you were an ideal messnger. He thought that sending these papers ■ with you was infinitely safer than j either entrusting them to the mails or trying to get an underworld messenger through. He never expected you to come back, and he i didn't especially car. The JackT;on gang, I should add, had planned I to lie low there for six months or i a year, until the furore died down j in this part of the country.” (To Be Concluded) Meeting Dote Set Mothers and daughters meeting of the Butler University Mothers' Club of Trianon is to be held at ,7:30 Wednesday at the home of Mrs. ! Louis Schwab, 7 N. Gray-st. Officers Named Mrs. Frank Adams is the newly elected vice president of the Woodside Mothers' Club of the Indianapolis Free Kindergarten Society. I Other officers are Mrs. Edw’ard Wandersee. treasurer, and Mrs. Ora Cavender, corresponding secretary.
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