Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 February 1937 — Page 4
PAGE 4%
THE
Spouse Who Philanders Vexes Wite
Patience and No Drastic Action Urged By Jane.
Put your questions in a letter to Jane Jordan, who will discuss your problems in this column.
DEAR JANE JORDAN-—-We are in our late 40s and have three children in school. For several years I
Childre
N X
have known that my husband | § chased women. A few months | E= ago he started going with a business girl who makes more money than | 1e does; yet he spends money on |
her and buys her presents.
He is |
unaware that 1 know of his latest |
affair, but my eldest son foilowed him. My children want me to divorce him but I hesitate to break up our home. In times past he has been a model husband and I am hoping he will reform. This girl knows he is a married man with a family. His income barely covers our expenses and all we have at present is unpaid bills. Is there a court where I can go and stop this woman from seeing him? Or can I go to her place of employment and stop her by telling her boss?
We are going to have to do something soon as our creditors are get- |
ting impatient. My children say that they will quit school and find work if I get a divorce, yet I do not want them out in the world without a high school education at least. I have tried to reason with my hus-
band but in the last few months he | does not stay at home except when |
he is broke. I would be forever grateful if you can give me some good advice. MRS. READER.
ANSWER—If you invested a large sum of money in an enterprise
Little Nancy Miller's costume supplied the truly nautical note of the Miami Biltmore's Kiddies’ Fashion Show, held in Miami, Fla., recently. It has ribbed jersey | slacks in navy blue and white.
n Present Own Fashion
ToReRRNeNee
The Tyrolean outfits of Helen Marshall and Billy Aldrich stole the show and made grownups want to go right out and do a bit of shopping for peasant blouses and Dalmatian dresses. Helen's gayly embroidered
dress of sheer cotton is topped by a
bright felt jacket.
Party Scheduled | Josette Yelch to Be Married
For Club Women
Several prominent South Side
From South Side!
{
Flowers arranged in keeping with and a short train. ° the modernistic Alpha Chi Omega ' net veil is to be held in piace by | the | lily-of-the-valley rosettes on both
| Sorority House are to form
At Alpha Chi House Tomorrow
Her two-tiered
|clubwomen are to be honor guests | background for the wedding of Miss | sides of the cap. Her shower boulat a tea from 3 to 5 p. m. tomorrow | Josette L. Yelch and Edmund C.! quet is to be of white Kilarney roses
{in the Business and Professional | Women's Clubhouse, 1101 N. Dela-
| Horst at 3:30 p. m. tomorrow. | The
| and lilies of the valley.
Miss Ruth Fouts, the bride's
INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Show at Resort
SATURDAY, FEB. 18, 1937
Plump, charming little Maryan King modelled a pert printed maillot. The background is blue with white nautical figurines. The crinkly rubber beach cap looks like a beret.
Three Entertain Bride-to-Be at
| | | |
Bugbee, Jessie Strickland and Isabel Hanson, entertained with a
Bridge Shower
{ just the same.
Three hostesses, Misses Virginia |
Valentine's Role in Love Is Debunked
Monk Not Sweethearts’ Patron at All, Writer Says.
By OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON The stores are filled with hearts and flowers, cardboard cupids and paper lace. Envelopes to fit are the order of the day. Sticky pennies in grimy hands are off to the shops and the Valentine makers are doing a land office business. Who was St. Valentine? Nobody quite knows, except that he was a great and good monk who lived about a thousand and a half years ago. Did he hob-nob with Dan Cupid? Did he bless lovers? It seems not. There was a mixup in holidays, it seems, or rather, one was a holy day and the next after it had something to do with swains and their ladies. Time does queer things. When they dig us up 1500 years from now, archaelogists will probably say that Lincoln was the patron saint of lovers, or Washington, because a few days on the calendar makes little difference. Adults Least Concerned Another incongruous feature of this peculiar festival is that adults on an average are as little concerned with it as they are with Whale Island. It is tots and the green saplings of humanity that go
the heart; pleas of anguished desire and the nervy suggestion that sweet Ange-
rail and become So-and-So’s Valentine.
billets d'amour by the dozen. Loyalty is not one of their passions, it would seem. Yes. It's a perfectly swell day. your hat, cor sticking out your tongue.
—fiddlesticks! But it's a swell day,
Comic Cards Often Hurt And it is a passion. A very real one. It provides the same outlet for the youngsters that Christmas
linen | cards do for us, or the inevitable |
postcard we send home. The minute
in hard for these mementoes of | the sighs of love, the |
New Leader Tasty Menu
For Nightly Snack ( Given
Chili and Tomato Juice on List of Recipes for Midnight Meal.
By MRS. GAYNOR MADDOX NEA Service Staff Writer Once it was oysters any way in a big way. Now it seems to be toe mato juice, chili con carne or link sausage with French toast. Those are new. But scrambled eggs, ham and eggs and, of course, griddle cakes hold their own against changes of time and tide. Where the belle and her beau of 47 years ago used to begin with an oyster fry and wind up with a chare lotte russe, the miss and young fellow of this kinetic age will wash down the last trains of the comic opera they have just come from with a glass of tomato juice, regain nourishment with a few eggs or a platter of chili con carne, and wind up their late supper with a baked apple. It sounds almost too pure to be true. Maybe what they say abouts the younger generation won't stand up under their dietetics. But all these facts, researched for us by an important cruise leader through Childs restaurants, have a flavor of authority. So if you must feed the younger set after the curfew rings, better be guided by the latest | fashion news in midnight menus. A { few recipes might be of service.
—Photo by Kindred. Mrs. Lloyd Tucker is the newly elected president of Sigma Alpha Chi Sorority. Other officers are Mrs. C. H. Eberhard, vice president; Mrs. W. E. Acheson, secretary and Miss Helen Klasing, treasurer,
Meridian Hills I.uncheon and
Bridge Are Set
Meridian Hills Country Club members are to use a George Washington birthday theme for a luncheon and bridge party Tuesday in the
lina throw herself over the balcony | | [is to be assisted by Mesdames Harry | The worst of it is that the per- |L. Foreman, Walter R. Foltz, Herfidious youngsters send out these |bert E. Wilson
|
|
|
It means no more than tipping scheduled for last month is to be |
St. Valentine, and Cupid [per at 6 p. m. is to bz followed by |
clubhouse. Chili Con Carne
Mrs. Paul R. Summers, chairman, |, 1 V0 and two-thirds cups kidney [ beans, 4 cups cold water, 2 pounds
raw beef, 3 teaspoons olive oil, 1 cup | chopped onions, 1-3 cup chopped celery, 1 small clove garlic, 3 tea~ spoons salt, 3 teaspoons chili powder (your specialty grocer always carries | this), 14 teaspoon cayenne pepper, | 22-3 cups canned tomatoes. Soak beans over night in cold water. Cook until done, drain and reserve 1 cup of the liquid. Put meat through chopper, using coarse | blade. Heat oil in saucepan. Mix { grounded meat, chopped onions, Mr. and Mrs. Stewart A. Greene, | celery and garlic and a Add party chairmen, have on their com- | {4 hot oil and simmer until meat is mittee Drs. and Mesdames B. A.|aimost dry. Add the tomatoes and Richardson and Louis Belden, | cook untii meat is done. Combine Messrs. and Mesdames W. N. Flem- | jeqt with cooked kidney beans and
and Lawrence V. Sheridan. Reservations for the 1 o'clock luncheon may be made at the club or with committee members. A buffet supper and musicale
given Feb. 21 in the clubhouse. Sup- | a Sigma Alpha Iota String Ensemble |
program. Miss Mary Ann Kullmer, chose the selections.
shower and bridge party today for | Miss Mariadna Colburn, a bride- | to-be.
marriage ceremony to be we've passed the first bend in the D8 Jr. John Willard Hutchings, | jeserved liquid. Simmer 10 minutes
road, the last lightship, we begin [Dan W. Flickinger, Arthur E.|{, pend flavors. Add more season-
{ware St. The members of the club's | performed by Dr. J. Ambrose Dun- | cousin, is to be bridesmaid. Her | Krick, Thomas M. Rybolt and John
which only could be saved by in- i {South Side section are to be host-| ke] will be the first ever held in the | @quamarine mousseline de soie gown
creasing your investment, would you ing to taste.
do so, or would you throw the whole thing overboard because it was wor- |
risome and presented some difficult problems? You have invested the best years of your life in your marriage and now the partnership is about to fail. A further investment may save the business. The commodity which all of you need and none of you have is patience. If you have not widened the breach by antagonistic acts like taking your case to court or publicizing the affair at the woman's place of business, you may live to see your marriage a going concern again. Understand I do not think that any woman has to be sugar
sweet when she finds herself in your situation, but if I interpret your let- |
ter correctly, you haven't been. It is too bad that your children have been drawn into this affair and feel obliged to take sides. The knowledge of their parents’ difficulties is a burden they should not have to carry. Furthermore, their condemnation only makes it harder for their father to find peace at home. Can't you soften their hearts and your own by pointing to the years when he was a model husband? Didn't all of you profit by his care in those days? Must it all be forgotten because he makes a final stab at the romance which has flown from his life and which looks more desirable than ever to persons in the late 40s.
I don’t suppose you are aware of |
any lack in yourself which may have
sent him out to chase rainbows, but | an honest examination of your re- | lationship might reveal something | to work on. I ¢annot tell you exactly | what to do to straighten the whole | 1 only know that con- | criticism and condemnation |
tangle out. stant will only increase his feeling of guilt and make it harder for him
to admit it when he is wrong. The | bills are serious, but after all if the | creditors did close in, wouldn't it be | more effective than anything you | can say? Sit tight for a while and | avoid the bitter words which make it | so hard for a wandering husband to | light by his own fireside when he | illusions which he!
has lost the
chases mistakenly. JANE JORDAN.
Clubs Will Push
Cancer Control |
The Indiana Federation of Clubs | is to appoint 13 district chairmen | to further education for cancer |
control. This announcement was made
yesterday following a conference between Mrs. George Dillinger,
French Lick, Women’s Army for the |
Control of Cancer, state commander, and Dr. Frank L. Rector, American Society for the Control of Cancer, field representative. The federation is working in cooperation with the Indiana Medical Association. Appointments made by Mrs. Dillinger were: Mrs. Greencastle, Fifth District; Mrs. Oscar Ahlgren, Whiting, Tenth District; and Mrs. J. Walter Kirkpatrick, Muncie, Eighth District. Other appointments will be announced later.
Fraternity Sets Dance
Alpha Omega Fraternity members are to give a dance from 2:30 to 5:30 p. m. tomorrow at the Riviera Club. Louis Partello and his or- . chestra are to provide the music.
Frank Donner, |
| esses.
| The guest list includes Mesdames | Bert S. Gadd, Carl Manthei, Oscar Claude
| Edwards, Frank Heiman,
| will appoint the party. | Dickerman, chairman, is being as-
| sisted by Misses Mary Jane Wells, |
Josephine Borst and Clara Cleeman. Mrs. Kathryn Turney Garten is to review “The Hundred Years,” by
Philip Guedella, at the club’s regu- | Miss |
| lar dinner meeting Thursday. | Ida Anderson of the program com- | mittee will introduce the speaker.
Mrs. Nell Warren will preside.
| chapter house.
| Sicuspandura trees, turquoise blue | urns, holding Sansiveria plants and
| Ackman, Erast Peipenbrok, Austin |yhite cathedral tapers are to form Bowls of calla lilies | Wise, Claude Franklin, Joseph Wade | are to decorate the rooms. {and Miss Mary Ellen Galbreath. Valentine colors and decorations | Miss Lucile |
| the setting. Ribbon Aisle Planned
Mrs. Harry L. Yetch, is to be given in marriage by her father. She is to walk to the altar through an aisleway formed by white satin ribbons. Her white lace gown is fashioned on princess lines with white satin buttons beginning at the neckline and continuing to the hem. The gown has a small scalloped collar
‘Wives of Legislators to See
Historic In
Indiana legislators’ wives are to see city parks and historic points during a sightseeing tour Wednes{day afternoon arranged by the | Indiana State Assembly Woman's Club. The trip is to be taken Wednesday afternoon at the invitation of Mayor Kern and Mrs. Louis R. Marsun, Board of Park Commissioners member. The party is to meet at 1 p. m.
Todav’s Pattern
| | | ! { {
OU always need a trim-fitting slip (No. 8505). Here is one | with built-up shoulder straps that | stay put, and a moderate V neck- | line that makes it an appropriate | slip to wear under any daytime or | informal dress. Make it in silk | crepe, taffeta, rayon or linen. Pat- | terns are sized 34 to 50. Size 36 requires 3's yards of 39-inch fabric.
| BY-STEP SEWING INSTRUC- | TIONS, inclose 15 cents in coin to- | gether with the above pattern num- | ber and your size, your name and | address, and mail to Pattern Editor. | The Indianapolis Times, 214 W. Maryland St., Indianapolis. The WINTER PATTERN BOOK,
with a complete selection of late! dress designs, now is ready. It's 15,
cents when purchased separately. Or, if you want to order it with the pattern above, send in just an additional 19 cents.
i
dianapolis Points
| Miss Yelch, daughter of Mr. and
| has a full skirt with lace godets. A { pink illusion veil is to fall from a blue Juliet cap and her arm bouquet {is to be of pink Briarcliffe roses. | George W. Horst Jr. is to be his
brother's best man. Reception to Follow
Misses Mae Henri and Jean Lane ‘are te play bridal music. A recep- | tion is to follow the wedding. Alpha | Chi Sorority sisters of the bride are | to assist. They include Mesdames
, Louis Dawson, Francis Baur, Du- | ane Shute, Thomas Arnold, Wendell | Brown, Henry Unger, Misses Louise | Haworth, Dorothy Stewart, Mary | Helen Karnes, Lottie Irwin, Ruby | Gene Beaver, Betty Akin, Gretchen | Tripp and Mrs. Edwin Mower, | Evansville. | Mrs. Yelch is to wear an olive | green crepe dress with lame jacket | and yellow rose corsage. Mrs. i
George W. Horst, the bridegroom’s |
| mother, is to attend in a navy blue | chiffon gown with a white carna-
To secure a pattern and STEP- |
lin the City Hall Park Department. | tion corsage.
| Mayor Kern is to make a welcom- | | ing address and present the visitors | , with a key to the city.
The bus is to leave the City Hall | Polytechnical Institute and | graguate of Indianapolis College of | He is a Sigma Nu Fra- |
at 1:30 p. m. Mrs. Joe Rand Beckett, itinerary chairman, is to point out and speak on the historic points, and Andrew Miller, city horticul- |
Pharmacy. | ternity member.
After a wedding trip, the couple
|is to be at home at 37 W. 21st St. The bride is a Butler University
raduate. Mr. Horst attended Rose
turist, is to explain the park system | features.
Tea to Follow Tour
Stops are to be made at the following locations: James Whitcomb | Riley home, Brookside Community { House, Garfield Park greenhouse | {and sunken gardens, Scottish Rite | Cathedral, national American Le- | (gion headquarters, World War Me- | {morial Monument, Riley Library, | John Herron Art Institute, Locke- | | field Gardens, City Hospital, Perry | (Stadium, Riley Hospital, City Water | | Works, Riverside Park, Taggart | Memorial, Fish Hatchery, Riverside | Nursery, the Fairbanks, Harrison, | Taggart, Tarkington, Nicholson and | | Hubbard homes, Butler University {and the Indiana State Fairgrounds | Manufacturers’ Building where flood | | refugees are housed. | | Mrs. Markun is to be hostess for | ‘a George Washington tea following | {the tour. Mrs. M. Clifford Town- | {send and Mrs. john W. Kern are | to pour. Other hostesses are to be Mes{dames Henry Schricker, James P. | Hughes, Bruce Lane, Robert L. | Moorhead, Walter E. Treanor, Lloyd | Claycombe, Thurman Gottschalk, C. |J. Buchanan, Clarence R. Martin, | William F. Dudine, Dana Enloe Mendenhall, Clyde Karrer and Es[ete Ebaugh. | Pasquale Montani, harpist, is to | play during the tea hour.
Friends Arrange Valentine Party For Bridal Pair
| ee | Wedding attendants of Miss Mary | Alice Pierson and Mayburn F. Land- | graf are to be among the guests at a party for the couple tonight at | Meridian Hills Country Club. Mr. {and Mrs. Harry M. Stitle Jr. are te (be host and hostess at a Valentine | bridge party. | The wedding party for the cere{mony on Feb. 20 includes Miss Jes- | sie Strickland, bridesmaid; Evan | Walker, best man; H. Edward Raf- | fensperger, J. Russell Townsend Jr., (Urban K. Wilde Jr. and Mr. Stitle, ushers. | Other guests are to be Mrs. Raf- | fensperger, Dr. and Mrs. Glen Ward
15 Grandmas, ‘Frankly 60,’ Still Have Fun
Do they sit in the corner and knit? No. Not the 15 wide-awake members of the Grandmothers’ Club of the First Congregational Church. They have as much genuine fun as young neighborhood gangs. Rituals, secret passwords and blindfolded initiation services still hold mysteries for this group of women, “frankly 60 and over.” Today, while many youngsters meet for their “day out of school” sessions, these grandmothers declare a holiday from “grandmother-ish” duties. They are to initiate Mrs. Louisa Waldron the Grandmothers’ Club. “What would you do with a cold potato and a slim piece of beefsteak if unexpected guests arrived for dinner?”... is typical of the initiating questions which keep these grandmothers on their toes. The organization, formed 12 years ago by Mrs. E. A. Brown, is purely social and informal. The constitution states that there are to be no officers, no dues and no stated meetings. They inveigle their relatives into entertaining them, whenever they decide to meet. To be eligible for membership all they have to do is to prove that they have grandchildren. Mrs. John R. Bowen, daughter of the initiate, is to be hostess this afternoon. Mrs. E. B. Curtis, 83 years old, is the oldest member, with the distinction of being a great grandmother. What do they do? Why, instead of knitting they brag about their grandchildren.
into
is ai
| Lee, Dr. and Mrs. C. Basil Fausset, | Miss Virginia Holt, Messrs. and | Mesdames Erwin Schafer, Karl Har- | dey, William Raffensperger, Royer
| Knode Brown and Newell Munson.
ROGRESS
Rinses, also, in soft water.
LAUNDRY
ee ANNUAL
CLEARANCE CANNON SHEETS
72x99 $7.00
81x90
sees
The marriage of Miss Colburn to Frank Edward Abbett is to take place March 6. Guests with Miss Colburn and her mother, Mrs. Robert H. Colburn, {included Mrs. Edward Campbell, | Louisville; Mrs. Herbert Owens, | Spencer, and Mesdames Walker H.
{ Knotts, Sam Simpson, Richard Huggins, Wells Hampton, Harold Starke, Arthur Loftin, Jack Gulling and Misses Joan Jose, Grace Abbett, Mary Margaret Hill, Martha Jane Baker, Myla Smith, Jane Fitton,
Wise, Jane Sherer, Mary Britton, Peg Martin, Elsie Schmidt and Margaret Gabriel.
| kindness is receding.
Ruth ! Peterson, Jean Underwood, Marjorie |
{ | | |
{ |
to worry about the next port, so we can mail a card back to the charming Briggses whom te haven't seen | for years and years and years. Or maybe just Mrs. Smith whom we | forgot to return the cup of sugar | to before we left. Just anybody with an address. I see that “comics” are coming | back once again, now that the era | of good manners and neighborly | The comics always hurt some feelings. Send- | ers mean them in fun. They are | usually about as welcome as poison. Please warn the fry to be careful. Otherwise, I don’t think there's a bit of advice to be given. Cer- | tainly there is nothing to worry | over. (Copyright, 1937, NEA Service, Inc.)
Today's Contract Problem
South’s contrac: i. six spades. Aiter the opening lead, he is permitted to enter dummy with the small trump, discarding a losing diamond on the king of hearts. The ‘second diamond lead shows that diamonds cannot be established. Should he now take the club finesse? Ad YKQ9 ®AJ10987 oh AS8:
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(Blind) (Blind)
Dealer! AKQJ1064 v
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32 SKJIT76
N. & S. vul. Opener—¥ 3
Solution in next issue. 6
Solution to Previous Problem By WILLIAM E. M’KENNEY
American Bridge League Secretary
trick cheaply. ccasionally a situation arises at the bridge table where the declarer should be willing to pay much more for the trick than he is required to do. Today's hand is just such an example. It was played by James Grilfuss of Milwaukee. Mr. Grilfuss, seeing that a shift to another suit would defeat his contract, avoided the shift by a clever ruse. This fooled the defender in the West into continuing a suit which gave Mr. Grilfuss his contract, When the opening lead of the six of spades was made, declarer could see that his chief worry was the diamond suit. He must take a finesse in clubs, and there was grave danger that, if this failed, West might then shift to diamonds and defeat the contract. He wanted to encourage the continuation of the spade suit, if West won the club. So, when East played the jack, South unhesitatingly won the trick with the ace, although the queen would have been high enough. Now a heart was led jo Summy's ace and the club finesse en.
West won, but not appreciating
\
Advance 3: Showing
AUTHENTIC NEW MODELS ARRIVING DAILY
V7 20 ren | i: AA w al
HOME OWNE
FI SHOE STORE
RUSE DECEIVES DEFENSE
|
T doesn’t always pay to take a Would have shifted to the diamond
So AQL095 Rubber—None vulnerable.
West North East 1H Pass 16 Pass 2N.C. Pass IN.T. Pas
Opening lead—& 6
South
South's splendid strategy, he re- | turned a small spade, naturally placing his partner with the queen. | South won, cashed four clubs and | two more hearts, giving him his contract.
Otherwise West almost certainly
suit and defeated the contract,
Robinson led devotions.
‘Vandaworker Club
hostess. There are no invitations.
A. McConnell.
New Service Club
Plans Infirmary
Entertainments
Entertainment for women in the
| Marion County Infirmary is to be | the main philanthropic project of the recently organized Service Study
Club. Club members, meeting recently at the home of Mrs. A. G, Marquis,
2062 N. Temple St. voted to hold programs at the Infirmary the
| fourth Thursday of each month, A { fund was established for members’
monthly contributions. Papers were read by Mrs. B. E. Noon and Mrs. L. V. Hadin on
That's one way to get the strenuous young things to come indoors.
Sweetheart Dance Program Arranged
The Fraternity-Sorority Sweetheart Dance is to be held at 10 o'clock tonight in the Murat Temple Egyptian room. Louis Partello’s orchestra is to play. Ticket sales are in the charge of the following sororities: Omega Phi Tau, Omega Kappa, Sigma Delta Sigma, Tau Gamma, Beta Beta Sigma, Kappa Lambda Epsilon and Phi Theta Delta. James Keene is ticket chairman; Walter Loman, arrangements, and Harold Engelhardt, finance.
Best Etiquette
It surely is a personal ques-
tion, but how IS your etiquette? Is it correct to say “Miss Black, meet Mr. White”? Do you know how much to tip a waitress? The new etiquette feature, -~ || MIND YOUR MANNERS, poses To Meet Tomor I'ow | a modern social problem daily,
, [| with three possible solutions. Officers are to be hostesses at the | Picking out the right one is
Vandaworker Club's dinner tomor- | the trick. tow night at Cifaldi's. They in-| You'll find each day's release clude Mrs. Will E. Johnson, presi- || 0f MIND YOUR MANNERS a dent; lot of fun. It tests your knowl-
Mrs. Carl Schey, vice presi- y dent; Mrs. Alvin Jose, secretary, and || ©dge of correct social conduct. If you can give the correct
Mrs. Frederick Schaub, treasurer. | 4 hav Reservations may be made with || aDswer you ee t ave no ent Mesdames Frederick Matzke, George of perpetrating faux pas. you don't already know the
Joslin and Carl Rush. . . correct answers, it provides
Reception to Be Held Nm
MIND YOUR MANNERS starts Monday in The IndianFor Engaged Couple Mr. and Mrs. Fred R. Berger, 3546 |
“Mothers of the Bible.” Mrs. A. J. Kassler presided and Mrs. A. M.
apolis Times.
o AXNINCS0S ©
Cleaners of RUGS
N. Illinois St. are to give a recep{tion from 3 to 5 p. m. tomorrow in South's unnecessary play of the honor lace to the first trick was very fine. | Eleanor Louise Berger, and her fiance, Thomas Hipkiss. | riage is to take place Wednesday.
of their daughter, Miss
The mar-
DRAPERIES UPHOLSTERING
Phone TA-0198
Mrs. A. E. Berry is to assist the
temperature reaches a
Laramie, Wyo.;
the solution:
These Maps Will Tell You
When you read your daily newspaper, do you get a real picture of world events ? The Germans land marines at Ceuta; the British Government reduces the status of its diplomatic post at Addis Ababa; Italy denies that General Franco has promised the use of the Balearic Islands; an earthquake occurs in Costa Rica; an oil concession is granted in Afghanistan; new minerals are discovered in Siberia; the
the China Clipper pauses at Wake Island; a border incident occurs in Outer Mongolia; ships take supplies to Nome—scores and hundreds of date lines in your daily newspaper make you want to look at a map to visualize where and why world news is happening. Well, here's The Indianapolis Times Washington Service Bureau has a
Dept. M-400, Washington Service Bureau, The Indianapolis Times, 1013 Thirteenth Street, Washington, D. C.
1 want the set of four maps, the U. S., North America, Europe, and the World, and enclose 25 cents in coin (carefuily wrapped), money order, check, or postage stamps. Send my maps to:
NAME 4 5 4 8 8 0 0 98 8 8 0 P EEE PEIN ERNIE IIE YENI EEE IIE
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series of four splendid maps ready for you. In the drawer of your library table you can have the world at your finger-tips. The set of four maps includes:
(1) Map of the United States (2) Map of North America (3) Map of Europe (4) Map of the World
Each one is 1314 inches by 21 inches in size, printed on good paper, in black and three colors, and on the reverse side contains a wealth of facts and figures on cities, rivers, population, air line distances, ete., which explain and supplement the maps themselves. The set of four maps in a single packet will be sent to any reader for 25 cents to cover return postage and other costs. Fill out coupon below:
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