Indianapolis Times, Volume 47, Number 267, Indianapolis, Marion County, 16 January 1936 — Page 13

JAN. 16, 1936.

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BEGIN HEBE TODAY Dana Stanley, divorced from her htuhand, Dr. Bcott Stanley, la making plana to marrv rich Ronald Moore, who has been In love with her tevrral year*. Dana had left her hnaband', believing him In love with Paula l/Onj. Scott believe! Dan* left him because he was poor. After the separation, he becomes a partner of the town's outstanding phyaieian. Dr. Osborne. Nancy, Dana’s half-sister, loves Ronnie, but has always concealed her feeling from him. On an impulse, she tells him Dana still loves Scott. Ronnie refuses to believe her. With no heart in her plans, Dana goes ahead with her preparations to miry Ronnie. Aunt Ellen goes to Dr. Osbrvne and tells him Dana and Ronnie loan lo marry that night. Dr. Oshorn* telephones Scott, wh', is out of the illy. Driving at breakneck soeed, Scott's car crashes with another car. CHAPTER FORTY-ONE THE middle-aged man dreaded reaching the wreckage a few yard* away. There would, probably, be little he could do. A smash like that could mean but one thing. There wasn’t a chance in a hundred that the occupants had escaped alive. But he saw, as he came closer, that one driver haa used his head at the fatal moment. He had turned his car so that the engine of the other automobile had struck the side and not the front. This chap, he saw, too, had escaped in some almost miraculous fashion and was lifting the driver of the outbound car from the tangled mass. The middle - aged man said: "That was a sorry smash. You’re lucky. Is that poor chap dead?" "No," Scott said, “he’s badly hurt. But he isn’t deaa. Thank God.' "We’d better get him to a doctor at once," the stranger said. "I’m a doctor.” Scott replied. "A hospital is what we need. I’m going to take time to bandage a gash in his head, -if a surgical case I have isn’t smashed to bits.” b a THE stranger stooped and held the unconscious mans head while Scott explored the back of his wrecked car. The case was located in the tangled mass and Scott bandaged the ugly cut quickly. “The best thing." Scott said, straightening, "is to phone from the first house and have an ambulance come out and meet us." They lifted the unconscious youth into the stranger’s car and started on. Scoot supporting the boy in his arms. If the kid died, he would never forgive himself. The boy had been on the wrong side of the road, driving with the recklessness, the cocksureness of careless youth. But it took two to make an accident. He, himself, had taken a dozen risks since he left Eaton. He had let his car out to 70 a number of times, holding it around 65 gen ■ orally. He’d taken the curve too fast, without a thought of a careless driver around the bend. Deep hi his unhappiness, he had been driving mechanically. And another’s life might be the price he must pay. B B B THE thought of Dana was like a sharp, stabbing pain. Now he could not go to her as he had planned. He must take the boy straight to an emergency room, determine the extent of his injuries and get to work. A thought came like a reprieve from sentence. Any of his friends would he glad to help him. Some of them would be making casual rounds, and any one of them would drive out and bring Dana to him. He knew, with a sense of deep conviction, that if he asked her to come, nothing could keep her away. It was as simple as that. All of

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your petty doubts and fears and suspicions fell away from you when the real crises of life came. Dana would come. And never again, please God, would anything in life separate them. They were driving steadily and fairly fast. But not fast enough for Scott. Minutes in a case like this counted. He wanted to change places with the conservative, mid-dle-aged driver. This time, with all his faculties alert and sharpened by the experience Just past, there would be no danger in traveling fast. Speed combined with a black fog of unhappiness had brought this fearful affair about. BUM BLOOD had soaked through the bandage on the boy’s head and was staining Scott’s coat. There was so much blood on his own clothing it would be hard for an ordinary observer to tell which of the two was mast hurt. Yet, except for some painful bruises, he apparently had come through unharmed. They had reached a lighted house. Scott was praying there would be a telephone. He could hear his companion pounding on the Ucor. Then the door swung wide- and a flood of light poured through. “An ambulnace is starting to meet us," the middle-aged man reported when he returned. "What time have you?" Scott asked. "Six-thirty. I figure you’ll be at the hospital at least by seven.” The number had a dark sound to Scott. Dr. Osborne had not specified any particular time. He had said Dana and Ronnie were to be married tonight. That could mean they had set 8 o’clock as the hour. It could mean seven. B B u IT was 10 minutes to 7 when Dr. Harvey Robertson stopped in amazement, staring at a bloodstained, haggard, wild-eyed man, who had come in through the emergency entrance. "Scott!” he cried. “My God! You’ve been in an accident. Scott nodded. “I’m all right. The boy who is really hurt is being brought in on a stretcher. He's had a nasty blow on the head. I’ve got to get up to the dressing room to get some linen—” "You can’t mean you're going to

Daily Recipe SALT CODFISH CHOWDER pound salt codfish 3 potatoes 1 onion 2 slices fat salt pork V* teaspoon pepper Vs teaspoon thyme 2 cups water 1 cup canned tomatoes % teaspoon soda 2 cups milk, water crackers Cut codfish in small squares and soak in cold water for half an hour. .Dice salt pork and fry to a crisp brown in the soup kettle. Cover with a layer of potatoes pared and cut in cubes, add a layer of fish and sprinkle with minced onion, pepper and thyme. Continue layer for layer until all is used. Add water, cover kettle and simmer for 40 minutes. Heat tomatoes, add soda and when effervescing stops, add them to the chowder. Heat milk to boiling point and add chowder and remove at once from the fire.

handle the case? Man alive, you are in no shape—l’d be glad to take it over for you. Or, maybe, there’s someone else—” Scott broke in, grimly. ‘“Thanks, but this is my job. I’m going to put something more into pniling this boy through than a man ordinarily gives to a case. And I’m risking something more precious to me than my life to do it. Harvey I need help—” You know I’ll be glad to do what I can.” , “Get into your car and drive like the devil to the Cameron home at 1800 Magnolia and bring my wife back with you!” "Bring—” Dr. Robertson’s mouth flew open. B B B “ TARING her back with you. Tell JD her I was coming for her when this accident happened. Youll get off right away, won’t you? I can’t explain, but it’s a case of every minute counting.” Dr. Robertson stammered, “Os cou r se—right off.” Scott reached out ond gripped the other physician’s hand hard for a moment and then startpd on a run. Dr. Robertson stood staring after him. Scott had looked irresponsible and he had sounded like a crazy man. Then he had made this request which had been even more insane. Sending him after his divorced wife! He got his hat and went out into the court in the rear of the building to get his ccr. Two of his colleagues. Dr. Charles Warwick and Dr. Ph ilip Stem, were coming in together They stopped and spoke to him. “Your busy day Robertson?” Dr. ‘Warwick asked. “No.” He didn’t relish his mission and some of his distaste was in his voice. “I made a promise to .look after something for Stanley. He’s all cut up over something. He’s brought in ar. accident case. I figure he figured in it, some way.” B B B “pROBABLY been drinking, f> said -*■ Dr. * Stem. “Suppose you’ve heard his divorced wife is getting married tonight.” “Good heavens, no!” Dr. Stem nodded. “I guess that’s true,” Dr. Warwick said. “We heard it, too. The Osbornes’ cook told our cook that one of the Cameron granddaughters was marrying Ronald Moore tonight. He was in love with Mrs. Stanley • before she married. And since he returned from Europe, he’s been camping on her doorstep, they say. Seen everywhere together.” “What was it Stanley wanted you to do?” Dr. Stem asked. “Nothing of any importance,” Dr. Robertson answered. “Just a small errand . . . well, good night.” He went toward his car, waited until the two men had entered the hospital, and then slowly retraced his steps. It was a good thing he had bumped into the two men. It was queer he hadn’t suspected Scott was drinking. And here he had been planning to humor a man who probably didn’t realize what a crazy lequest he was making. He might have known, if he had used his head, that Stanley had either been drinking or was just off a bender. Calling Dana Stanley “my wife” when they’d been divorced for months. B B B IT WOULD have been a pretty come-off if he had walked into the wedding and commanded the bride to accompany him to meet her former husband It would have been something he would never have lived down. He’d offered to take over the accident case. But he would be damned if he would make an ass of himself He got off on the fourth floor. Miss Hazelton, Stanley’s anesthetist, was hurrying along the corridor. That meant he was going to operate. You had to admire him for character and cool nerve. Feeling responsible in some way for the smash up and determined to put the boy together again. Miss Reid, floor supervisor, looked up when he passed her desk and spoke. “The automobile accident case—pretty serious?” He asked. “Rather, doctor. Intracranial hemorrhage. But he’ll have a fine chance. Dr. Stanley’s operating.” Dr. Robertson walked on. The hospital staff certainly had confidence in Stanley. Well, he was a mighty .keen young surgeon. And after awhile he was going to come out of that operating room and he'd have to tell him something. He would say something important had come up preventing him from going on Scott’s mission. A man had his own professional standing to consider. And it was easy enough to make mistakes. It would be a mistake to antagonize Ronnie Moore. He was feeling uncomfortable for some reason. It was a feeling that surely had no logic, connected with it. But he was worried, logic or not. Scott’s face kept coming before him. There had been something haunted, trapped about it. (To Be Continued) Club Hostess Named Miss Betty Benson, 3663 N. Dela-ware-st, is to entertain the Top Hatters Club tomorrow night. Her assistants are to be Misses June Carlisle, Betty Skinner, Jeanne Tudor and Jayne Leland.

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Stars Don Winter Togs for Fun in Mountains

p,. M JK, :

Interest Yourself in Others and Their Problems, Lonely Girl Told

Do you need help with your personal problems? Write a letter to Jane Jordan today and read her answer in this column. Dear Jane Jordan—Why am I usually left out of a crowd? Why do I sit out dance after dance while girls less pretty than I dance constantly? Why am Iso timid? I could ask myself a million questions and never find an answer that satisfies me. I am very sensitive toward ridicule and afraid of being laughed at. My

life was not easy and I have had to work hard since I was 15 years old. I did not have much time for fun. My parents brought me up strictly and did not let me act my childish age. I think I am a bit serious minded. Some times a boy is interested

jHi

Jane Jordan

in me, but I do not know how to heighten his interest. I am told by girl friends, who are few, that I look unapproachable and cool. I fi nd it hard to act silly and flighty like other girls my age, and I don’t try. I don’t tnink a girl has to act silly and force herself on a boy to be popular, do you? I am only 19, but do not have the fun that girls of 15 or 16 have. I don’t get along well with other girls either. I need helpful advice as I sometimes get hopeless. M. B B B Answer—No one can answer your question accurately and satisfacfactorily with no more information than that contained in one letter. The only obvious conclusion based on material you present, you already know. “My parents brought me up strictly and did not let me act my childish age.” Many a timid person started out with a strong aggressive attitude toward life. His, or her, characteristics annoyed the family group which disliked strong competition.

A Day’s Menu BREAKFAST— Stewed prunes, cereal, cream, salt pork with cream gravy, com bread, milk, coffee. LUNCHEON— Cream of potato soup with grated cheese, shredded leaf lettuce salad, reheated rolls, white grapes and bananas in orange jelly with whipped cream, nut cookies, milk, tea. DINNER— Chuck roast with browned potatoes and carrots and parsnips, brown gravy, endive salad, brown Betty, milk, coffee.

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Bucked by parents, brothers, sisters and playmates, the aggressor early grew discouraged and formed the habit of retreat. Timidity is a very useful device for avoiding a situation which is feared. Was this what happened to you? The girls who have the least difficulty in making social adjustments are those who were trained through childhood in co-operating with the family group, and those who were encouraged from babyhood in forming friendships outside the home. Another factor that hampers the bashful person is a lack of any real interest in others. Often he is a victim of the “be loved” complex. He is willing to take in, but is uninterested in flowing outward. You could help yourself immeasurably by wresting your attention from yourself and deliberately fixing it on the people whom you meet. You make friends by first being friendly yourself. A few well-directed questions will start the average person talking enthusiastically about his hopes, hobbies, fears and aspirations. Your attention flatters him and he can’t help liking you. b # B Dear Jane Jordan—l am in my early thirties. I lost my husband Thanksgiving Day. He meant everything in the world to me and his death has been such a shock that I don’t know which way to turn or what to do. I have a very nice home and do not want to give it up, yet it is very lonely. I wonder if you know some one my age who would move in with me and share my home for half of the expenses? LONELY. B B B Answer—l am sorry I do not know of any one. I suggest that you advertise in the classified advertising section of the newspapers for someone to share your home.

Zeta Tau Alpha Butler Pledges to Hold Dance A leap year dance is to be held by pledges of Alpha Delta chapter, Zeta Tau Alpha sorority of Butler University tomorrow night, at the Meridian Hills Country Club. Dr. and Mrs. Karl Means, Dr. and Mrs. Guy Shadinger, Dr. Henry G. Nester and Mrs. F. B. Johnson, sorority house mother, are to be chaperons. Harold Cork is to be master of ceremonies. During the evening the orchestra is to play “Alone,” which is to be sung by Miss Geraldine Kuntz. Miss Ellen Farrell is dance chairman, and among her assistants are Misses Frances Luchingcr ana Margaret Ann Weinbrecht.

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JUST as in St. Moritz, feminine Hollywood stars don winter sports togs and hie themselves to the snowy climes near the film capital. Gladys Swarthout (upper right), starring in “Rose of the Rancho,” proves her theory that beauty and health go hand in hand. Garbed in bright green jumper and dark green skiing trousers, she seeks her share of the wintry out-of-doors. (Costume courtesy of Broadway-Hollywood.) In California, Betty Grable (upper left), finds she can frolic in* shorts in summer weather at Palm Springs and be ice skating at Yosemite or Arrowhead the next day or so. Here she is togged out in a winter sports costume of navy blue, the jacket made double-breasted with large white buttons. Her scarf is a clear bright red, her cap of navy and the same red. As an original touch, the screen actress picked a sports corsage of pine cones, pine needles and a few vivid snow flowers.

SIGMA PHI GAMMAS GO TO NEWCASTLE Members of central and southern Indiana chapters of Sigma Phi Gamma, international philanthropic sorority, are to attend the Alpha province meeting in Newcastle Saturday and Sunday. Attending from Indianapolis are to be Misses Nellie Morgan and Ruth Duval, delegates-from Upsilon; and Misses Mary Jane Schenck,

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Marian Isham, Marie Wilde, Joan Hayes, Gertrude Wachs, Mary Bieker and Mr. and Mrs. Charles D. Snider. The program includes a formal dance for members and guests following dinner Saturday; an impromptu breakfast, business meeting and luncheon Sunday. Chi Chapter at Newcastle is to be hostess group with Miss Marcelle Ann Kelly, province president, in charge.

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Stage Star Gives Hints on Posture Attract Attention by Walking Beautifully, Margot Says. BY ALICIA HART “Every woman should carry herself so beautifully that all heads turn her way when she enters a room or crosses a floor,” says Margot, lovely young actress whom critics have praised for her work in "Winterset,” one of this season's outstanding dramatic successes. “I received my posture training when I was a little girl in Mexico,” the actress continued. "My grandfather let me have French and American dresses, but with these I had to wear typical Spanish mantillas and carpet-slipper type shoes. The mantillas forced me to hold my head erect and to support it by the muscles in the sides of my neck—not my spinal column. I suppose the carpet slippers helped my posture, too. Anyway, I still stay away from extremely high heels. I feel happier and more energetic in fairly low ones.” Margot has long brown hair which she combs straight back from her forehead, thereby emphasizing her widow’s peak. She brushes it for more than an hour every day, brushing with one hand while she reads or studies her lines. Asa result, it’s shiny and bright. Occasionally she gives herself a dry shampoo, first rubbing cornmeal, mixed with a small amount of orris root, well into scalp and hair. Then she wraps a towel around her head for an hour. Afterward she brushes for 20 minutes. She washes her face with soap and water, pats on a milk lotion powder base and applies lipstick and powder. She never uses rouge. PLAN CRUISE PARTY FOR WOMAN’S A. C. A novel program in the form of a cruise party has been arranged for members of the Woman’s Athletie Club for 6 Wednesday night.

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