Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 16 April 1937 — Page 26

"PAGE 26

BERS foribnatran Cox

Husband's Slurs Keep

Wife Upset

Woman in Past Must |

Have Deceived Him, Jane Says.

Jane Jordan is a local woman em-

ployed by The Times to study your prob- | Take advantage of this |

lems for you. service today!

[DEAR JANE JORDAN —

We have been married 20 years. My husband is always worrying about what

people will think of him when |

he is with me. Whenever -we are in a public place he will say

to me, “they think I am with a |

woman of questionable character.” When we enter a restaurant, a hotel. or when he calls on trade and I am left parked in the car and someone looks out of a window at me, he makes the remark. Once I accepted a cigaret in his presence and he called me a vile name. 1 have stood for many other things such as drinking. sulking and narrowness. 1 left him once for such reasons and listened to his promises when I returned, but promises are made to be broken. I am quiet and refined, neat in appearance, and his friends treat me with the highest respect. I am not quarrelsome but I have reversed the situation and told him that perhaps people think I am with someone of questionable character. Whatever I say does no good. This has been going on for years. I have thought it was just a queer mental kink in his make-up, but the | remarks are repeated. There never | have been any apologies from him. | I have done nothing to reptoacit| myself for in the past, before | or during our marriage. Lately these remarks are becoming more | frequent. There are no children. | Anything you can say to help me! will be appreciated. READER. ANSWER—The cause of your husband's behavior does not lie in the immediate present or even within the last 20 vears.. We have all heard| the remark, “as the twig is bent so the tree is inclined.” In our efforts to explain the cause of | an adult's obsession, we must discover what unhappy storm bent the twig in the beginning. The first thing any investigator would want to know is what kind of mother did the man have? If he had no mother, who took her place? The key to many a man's attitude toward his wife is still in his mother’s hands. If a young lad gets the. idea that his mother was unfaithful {o his father, it does him immeasurable harm. A fairly typical reaction is the one which you have described .in your husband. The son is apt both to love and hate a woman of questionable character, just as he both loved and hated | the mother who disappointed him. | I do not mean that you are a | person of questionable character, | but where did he get the idea that | you leave that impression? You! have done nothing to warrant such | an idea. It makes one wonder if

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THE INDIANAPOLI

S TIMES ___ Child Likes Spot Where Rules Relax:

Schools Can Use Only Persuasion; Conduct Up to Parents.

By OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON

When Tommy is at home he must obey his mother and father. At school there is his teacher

5

with almost complete dictatorial power. | | On the street, or at the neighbor's, certain rules bind him, the | extensions of home 3Jovectunent, so [fo say. But with no one actually | ron the spot to insist on good be- | | havior, he is likely to throw off the | ties of government and become— | { just Tommy. : | Householders with property adjoining the schoolhouse are likely to complain to school authorities when their lawns are tramped or their walks paper-strewn. They figure that most of the papers are school papers, and that the thoughtless vandals | must come under the jurisdiction|of the teachers and principal. This is not the’ case, however. The child is responsible to his parents and to the city . authorities unless he |is on school property. Schools Only Persuade

i |

Frequefitly the powers in the, school building undertake per- | suasion of their charges, beyond the | bounds of the building, because]

they feel that it reflects on their discipline if the children, as soon as released, forget their manners. |

Yet all they can do is discourage | or advise. Actually there is little | they can do about vandalism on}

Todays Pattern | OPPONENTS TAKE ALL

Today’s Contract Problem

After South had passed, North opened with a diamond, and South jumped to three diamonds. The final contract came to seven no trump by North. Should East double? Should he lead a major, since neither North nor South had mentioned hearts or spades in their bidding? Can seven be made against any lead? AKJ YVAKI109 ® AJ10954 wo A

K1095

Dealer | 2

AAI92

All vul. Opener—? - Solution in next issue.

Ssiuilion to Previous Problem By WM. E. McKENNEY - American Bridge League Secretary

HILE I do not ‘approve of South’s opening bid of one no trump in today's hand, it must be | admitted that any one looking at i his cards would be willing to give long odds that he would take more | | than one trick. As a matter of fact, | ‘he failed to take a single one, due | (in ‘part to the fact that South was | an “experienced player.” , He knew all about such things as | | blocking suits, and ‘the like, "but | | seemingly had forgotten that even a declarer can be squeezed if the

OR children from 4 to 12 years, the peasant frock (No. 8958) is

|

| today in the Claypool Hotel.

(not only practical but pizturesque.

somewhere in his past he didn't ' And it is easy to make and launder. meet some woman, not necessarily | in dotted

(It would be charming | swiss, organdie or printed silk. For

| opponents hold the cards to do it. South's opening bid should have | been one heart. However, he be- | lieved in psychological biddirig. He ‘knew that, with so many players

using strong no trump opening bids,

A432 YKI62 éK Pd AKT6S Dealer AKQ9 YAQ8T ® 654 So Q109 Rubber—None vul. West North East JN.T. Pass Pass Dauble Pass Pass Pass Opening lead—¢ 10.

South

g-

| West then ran all his diamonds. | | After these he led a club and East cashed his tricks in that suit. | East returned a spade, and South, who. had been squeezed, dropped the spade king under West's ace, and then the heart ace on the spade jack. (Copyright.

Padlocks Urged As Restraint on

| Drunken:Drivers

1937. NEA .Service. Inc.)

1

The importance of traffic laws and probation were emphasized by two speakers at the Seventh District Federation of Clubs’ meeting

Mrs. E. C. Rumpler, American citizenship chairman, who arranged the program, introduced Mrs. Edna E. Pauley. law observance chairman. “Most traffic laws remind us of our great, great-grandmothers. They are teethless,” Mrs. Pauley said. She suggested that cars should be padlocked from drunken drivers. Mrs. Emory Scholl, Connersville,

the part. of any pupil. They may | | appeal to honor and civic spirit and | | decency, warn the children to be | | quiet because of the very sick man { | down the block, but | here their | | : { authority ends. |. In former days, I got an occa- | | sional note from mothers, asking | | me to see that Johnny

or Sue | went

straight home from school. |

— Times Photo. From great hunks of mineral semiprecious stones are about to be formed, as Walter C. Geisier, Shortridge High School teacher, gently taps away at his hobby. Martha Nell Plopper, a pupil, looks over the Jewels In his collection,

2 8 A

& u

By MARJORIE BINFORD WOODS Your rock garden may be harboring a gem and you don't know it. Many a semiprecious stone has been found among garden variety rocks,

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according to Walter C. Geisler, Shortridge High School chemistry teacher, |

who is a lapidarist in his leisure time. : Almost any day after school hours he can be found at his work bench slicing rocks to be’ cut. and polished into fancy gems for his collection. ; 1 He goes in for golf and fishing

: rubies and sapphires is one of the just for added opportunity to look | Doe ; Wi for mineral specimens, he confessed. | IOS difficult tasks for a gem cut

| ter, it seems. 7 » from road beds |! X! Manly have come “It sometimes

and river banks but the rarest of | i ms have come from, Western | : 0 . pis 2 i a few have been import- | cutting and polishing of one tiny ed from Africa. A Green Tiger's Eye | stone,” Mr. Geisler explained. from that continent is the most The opal is his favorite because treasuered of his collection of sev- | of its irridescent colorings. He is eral thousand stones. | seeking a greater supply of Aus“There is a romance to a hobby tralian opal, as he considers it the of this sort,” Mr. Geisler said, “and | most beautiful of all stones. it creates a desire to study the ma-| Mr. Geisler recently piloted one

is necessary to

spend three ot four days on the |

Cookies Are

Favored by ~ Uncle Sam

Recipe, Issued by U.S, Calls for 3-4 Cup Of Honey.

By MRS. GAYNOR MADDOX: NEA Service Staff Writer Uncle Sam seems to favor drop cookies. The Department of Agriculture gives this recipe ‘in its leaflet No. 113. Uncle Sam is just a sweetie at heart, you see. Honey Drop Cookies One-quarter cup butt 1 egg, beaten, 3 cup honey, 2 lespoons milk, 2 cups sifted flour, 2 teaspoons baking powder, 12 teaspoon salt, 1 cup chopped nuts, !2 cup chopped dates, figs-or other dried fruits, % cup chopped citron or pineapple. Cream butter. Mix the beaten egg, honey and milk.- Add nuts and fruits to the sifted dry ingredients and

‘| add alternately with the liquid to

the butter. Drop by spoonfuls on a greased baking sheet and bake in moderately hot oven (375 degrees F.) for about 10 minutes. ; The Government expert estimates

‘| that in the United States alone

there are about four and a half million colonies of bees that produce from 160,000,000 to 215,000,000 | pounds of honey a year. It's all very | impressive, but let's use just one cup of it in this next recipe. : Orange Nut Bread Two tablespoons shortening, 1 cup honey, 1 egg, 1!': teaspoons grated orange rind, 3: cup orange juice, 2!3 cups flour, 2!> teaspoons baking powder, 1; teaspoon soda, 1: teaspoon salt, 31 cup chopped nuts. Cream honey and shortening: add beaten egg and orange rind. Sift the dry ingredients and alternately add with orange juice. Add chopped nuts. Bake in moderately slow oven | (325 degrees F.) for 1 hour and 10 minutes. : :

Smithsonian Institute in Washing- | ton. | Arizona, his native state, has tak- | en on a new significance for him in | the last few years. Until he fook up | this hobby he was unaware that, it | is one of the mineral centers of the | country. Now he is counting the | days until school will be out so he, |can start on an Arizona treasure

I would always speak to the child, | {1 io1c of which the world is made.” | of his chemistry classes through the ' hunt.

biit that was the best Iicould do. On| the street, except on | the school] pavement, I was as powerless as any , passing pedestrian. The behavior of the child off | his own territory is up to the parents always: If it exceeds the ! boundaries of civic law, the policeman may step in and have a |say-so. If it is serious enough to. | go before a justice, the parents must appear and answer for the | young offender. The school is out of it, not only from a standpoint of law and order, but morally.

Keep Within Bounds

The child should be able to deport himself within bounds.wherever he goes. It is his parents’ respon- | sibility to see that he does not throw papers, chalk sidewalks, spoil flower beds or track mud up private walks; his parents’ responsibility that he confine his noise to reasonable cadences. (Copyright, 1937, NEA ‘Service,

{ | |

| |

Specimens Sought Afar Frank B. Wade, Shortridge chem- | istry department head and noted gem collector, started him on this hobby four years ago. It didn’t take him long to rig up a cutting and polishing machine ‘in his home | workshop. At first it was difficult to | get rough material of rare quality. But news of gem cutters travels fast and now through -correspondence trom all parts of the world he gets a “line” on mineral specimens of all varieties. Quartz provides the most interesting materials, in Mr. Geisler’'s opin- | ion. Agates are filled with pictures | which have been formed by the | aggregation ot sand and minerals. | One in his collection looks like a | miniature etching of a lake nestled | in the Colorado pines, he said. Oth- | ers show resemblance to butterfly | designs. ?

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his mother, who looked as good as | | size 6 you would need .13 yards of | a bid of one no trump might fright-

gold but was secretly corrupt. Some Such _gheck accounts for NIS obies- jo uch material. For the ribbon | en the opponents from overcalling. | At the same time, he could curb his

sion that his wife is not as good | irim, you'll need 2%; yards. as she looks.

| partner's thusiasm by i of ; r IV. gusts But To obtain a pattern and STEP-. pa: om bain ¥ Passing any thee] sy hn a yg: jay - STEP SEWING INSTRUC-, When the bid was doubled by oh the mans Distr, That ns pag | TIONS inclose 15 cents in coin to- | East. South assumed that West of the man's his ory. T at e al gether with the above pattern num- | Youd rescue and so did not bother a narrow, puritanical upbringing is

IST. Ati your sie, YORE Bam a2 put. in a two heart bid which certain from his violent valuation of | gqqress, and mail to Pattern on would have saved a lot of points, | recognized in other states where the | virtue. :

If a questionable woman |The Indianapolis Times. 214 jos ings Jurned out. | ofice is appointive, she said. |

yo ny a , Mari 3 an When the diamond 10 was opened, | had no appea e wouldn't have | Mary - 1S. the jack from dummy was played. | lived with one whom he feared pee ol) aD SUMNER East won with the king. East now | NISLEY ; ind | ! » WIL a complete returned the club fiv South | CLEAR CHIFFON looked the part for 20 years. Find | 1c tion of late dress designs, now Ny a oan Pure Silk HOSIERY 2 PERFECT C

They're Favorites for Flavor *

y of these in less than 15 minutes

State probetion director, said “Courts can make or break lives.” She advocated probation rather than prosecution in all cases possible, especially in juvenile work. Miss Emma May, only woman State Supreme Court reporter, appealed to the women to keep this office elective. No women have been

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how he has made you suffer for | send in just an additional 10 cents. ' played the scven from dummy. ! what happened to him. =

The French have a phrase which | iH Pp WwW ASSON 3 CO they use in finding a criminal.’ ® a £ i & : . “Cherchez la femme.” Find the : woman! Find the woman in your husband’s youth who destroyed his confidence in the virtue of your sex. For all I know she may be in her .grave, but her influence lives on to destroy your happiness and his. JANE JORDAN.

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Engagement Announced Mr. and Mrs. Meyer Woidowsky, 1302 ‘Union St., have announced the engagement: of their daughter Rebecca to Samuel Mandel, son of Mr. and Mrs. Morris Mandel, 912 Maple St. The marriage is to take place

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