Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 16 March 1938 — Page 16
IN INDIANAPOLIS
I TRAFFIC — VITAL ‘STATISTICS — WEATHER
. Here Is the Traffic Record
County Deaths (To Date) 1938 .........22 1937 ....... 35
City Deaths (To Date) 1938 .........13 1937 cies 30
(March 15) Accidents .... 2
Injured ...., 0 Dead ......... 0
Arrests 60 Speeding
10 " Reckless Driving | K 7
Running Prefer-
Drunken Driving, 3 Others 9
i MEETINGS TODAY 1 Swans Club, luncheon, Columbia Club, “Lions Club, luncheon, Hotel Washington, american Bankers’ Assceiation, Jesiona] sonference, Claypool Hotel, all day Beverage Credit Group, luncheon, Hotel {intlers, noo 3 > Young Men's oP xeunsion Club, dinner, Alumni Association, luncheon, in, noon istrict American Legion, lunch-
of e, noon. ha Epsilon, luncheon, Board of n.
MEETINGS TOMORROW -7- American Bankers’ Association, regional _onference, Cla; 1 Hotel, all day. Jndian napolis al state Sa, lunchon, Hotel Washington, Advertising Cl Lub of, ‘indianapolis, lunch‘on. Columbia - - Federal Basincssnien's Association. lunch- * Wasi ashingion noon. . Indianapolis Con erence of Bank Audi“ors, dinner, Hotel Washington, 6:30 La Fine Paper Credit Group, lunc eon, 1en’s Brille, the William H. Block Com-
~ Bal? Chi, luncheon, Board of Trade, American Business Club, luncheon, Cou
:mbia noon wt Sigma Nu, luncheon, Hotel Washington,
2 =SERIAL STORY—
Acacia, Junsheon, Board of Trade, noon. Caravan’ Club, luncheon, Murat JVempie,
Hotel Antlers, noon. Phi Kappa sl," Juncheon, Board of
Trade, Radio Bo Engineers’ Guild, Hotel Antlers, 8
‘oii Club, Sncneon, Hotel Se Severin, ooh. onstruction Juneheon., Architects and uilders nie uildng. noon gan napolis Camera Club, meeting. 110 Allante Francdise, meeting, Hotel Wash: on ndianapolis Smoke Abatement deague, meeting. Hotel oy agnin ton, 7:30 o I oR ‘En-
ndiana Society essi fineers, meeting, world War emorial, :30.p. m, /
MARRIAGE LICENSES (These lists are from official records in the County Ceurt House. The Times, therefore, is not responsible for errors in names or addresses)
lovd Lee Williams, 22, gnb Oropare 1628 Milburn ie Ei oy a A ® Katherine E. Rid To. of 1229 Oliver Si Phillip E. Dacue. 2%. Grand Hotel; Velda wDYon Wiiked Bryant 31. of 280 ryan 42d 8t.; Mary Evelyn Cook. . ut 2869 ¥ Illinois" St. James Harrison Elliott, 41, New Palestine; Mary LY Hester Brandenburg, 44, of 1914
English A
- BIRTHS Boys i moure. Mae yashin on, at Cit William, Pearl Hill, eis at oltr. Thomas. Ruth Fisher, at Methodist. . Clarence, Eleanor Williams, at
Tothels .:Elsie Ernst, at Methodist. Bart’ ‘Violet. Goens, at 122 E. Ninth. Ralph O., Grace Parks. at Methodist. Thomas, Helen Holloran, at St. Vin-
Sirsil, Violet Eastwood. at Coleman. Robert, Geraldine .Elmore, at Coleman. Girls
Dale, Julia Haywood. at Methodist. Joe, Catherine Takaco, af 254 N.
on John, Rita Feeser. at St. Vincent's. 1s Roy, Dlayme Jones, at 146 W. 33d. Joseph, a_ Rosner, at lem : net Retin NR hibroton. at 3217 Brookside
Tre-
DEATHS Guido J. Betzler, 45, ‘at St. Vincent's, atelectasis. 4 Earl McCormick. 47, ‘at City, mococcic meningitis. Pertie May Bryant, 26. sh City, pneumogoceie meningitis Mary Hastin, 5, 6 .at: Methodist. hypo-
static pneumon Dilla Bollar, Methodist, carcinoma. , 62, at 4441 Wash- .. coronary occlusion. Stahlhut, ‘71, at 422 Pulton, endocarditis, athew Anderson, 36, at Oity, stephlooy septicemia. Clark Highbaugh, 68. at 502 N. California. cerebral ior ries. vir zai Hammond, 20,
uremia. : Livine M. Perry. 50, at City. carcinoma.
oon Indiana Motor Trafic Association, lunch. ha Se
pneu- {
at Methodist. | Si
Matti ie Porter, 89, at 1422 E. 15th,
chronic myoca arditis.
Betty Jean Stokes, 8.
ba hace: heard uss. at 28 N. East, Britis Staley Miller, 77, at City, brencho J, Jsmes mes’ Willa LY 65, at 42¢ W. James Jackson, 63, at City, broncho pneumonia.
+
“OFFICIAL WEATHER
United States Weather Bureau |
Indianapolis Forecasi—Cloudy and colder tonight; probably light rain; tomorrow fair and slightly colder.
sales 5:55 | Sunset
= TEMPERATURE - : March 16, 19 1981
Sunrise ......5:35 | Sunset ...... 5:53
Sreciviiation 24 hrs. ending 7 a. m.. ofa Dr Drecipita ation
MIDWEST WEATHER Indiana—Mo0stly cloudy and colde night, 1 ght rain north and central; generally fair SomnIraw, slightly colder east and north portio Hlinois—Mostly uly and colder tonight, light rain north and central portions; fair tomorrow, slightly Solder nogtheast, warmer extreme west portion. Lower Michigan—Cloudy, ring ; vonight and probably tomorrow morn: south and extreme west tonight, ‘colder Thursday. Ohio—Mostly cloudy and colder tonight, probably light rain in north ion; tomorrow generally fair and col Ken! tucky—Cienerally fair tonight and tomorrow; Solder tonight and in east portion tomorrow
WEATHER IN OTHER CITIES AT 7 A. M. Station Weath Bar. Ti
Amarillo, “Tex. Bismarck, N. D Boston
‘Chica, Cincinnati Cleveland, O. Denver Dodge oly. Kas. Helena, nt,
]
an a Tex. Geary Ls an ancisco ....... -30. 3. as ...PtCld
LOVE LAUGHS AT THE DOCTOR
By Elinore Cowan Stone
CAST OF CHARACTERS CONSTANCE MAIDWELL—heroine; thé stand-in. DEREK MANTHON—an artist who loved money first. HILDEGARDE THORVALD — Derek nainted her portrait. DR. ROGERS—he met his most dif‘icult- ease,
"Yesterday: Connie gets her first letter ‘rom Derek, brimming with his ewn vlans. Then she looks for the news she really wants to hear.
CHAPTER SIX
trip has been delightful,” Derek wrote on. “I could not he: e imagined such luxurious comfort in so confined a space. The sunset was magnificent this eveTing.” As Consfance read, she be--ga1 to feel chilled and very tired. - :By:ry word seemed to carry Derek farther and farther away from her. ‘¢. . « “Some day, after I've painted .the portraits of the whole California God Coast, we'll buy us a plane, --anc I shall paint sunsets from above the clouds for the rest of my days— ‘with - you beside me to hold my brushes, darling. “Miss. Thorvald, by the way, took ‘® geat fancy to you. She says you mal! ce her think of the kind of objet vart that dealers put into the windows ‘all alone by themselves— like an exquisite. Japanese print or 8 bi‘ of jade, for instance—because the: are so completely perfect and finished in themselves. I did not tell ner of all the things you make me chink of. They are too sweet and foo precious for other ears. I .Bave hardly dared think about you all afternoon. Still less shall I dare tomcrrow—" Was Derek perhaps thinking - abou’ her at this minute—rememberirz that in a few hours they were to have been going away to.gether—alone? = - “Buf; perhaps,” she read on, “we shall he even happier after this brief separation, than we had dreamed possible before. And believe me, darling, the delay will be as brief as -humen devising can make it. As “soon e are settled at the ranch, J .shall begin to pave the way for ur coming. a or Pr I kiss your hands.and : Four =yes and your mouth. Derek.”
8 =»
: ONSTANCE read that last paraC graph four times. Then, catching a zlimpse of herself in the mirror before her, she dabbed. at her eyes and thought, I mustn't do this. What will the aluminum dowager {in the unspeakable het think if I * “march in to lunch with a red nose -and bi-ary eyes?
“ry
.- For the first time she began to|
«consider the problem of her costume or that luncheon with the wealth - "Mrs. Major. = “Miss Taft had said that she must 2 ‘100K her smartest. And most of her -smarte: clothes were already packed. “There -=mained at hand only her -weddin:© dress, the tailored pinSestrtpe lb, the gray knitted dress, cand ~‘pouffant gray coat. It gemed . sacrilege to- put on one of <:these. But: after all,” Constance =:fhough' a litle grimly, just now “’that jor with Mrs. Major was bread
: ‘warm 21d soft as a cloud. It had : just the right air of informality—a § devepiis- simplicity combined with smartness. She could wear ‘he cherry hat and bag and
AIMLER’S was only five blocks from her apartment. She de-
cided to walk and let the cool air fan her tear-fevered eyes. Before she reached the canopied entrance to Daimler’s, she began to feel, in spite of herseif, a definite pleasure in the fluid ripple of the soft fur above her ankles. It was
| nice to be well dressed, even when
your heart was breaking. Daimler’s was the most expensive restaurant in the city. Constance had gone there sometimes with Derek . .. “It pays to go where you can be seen by the first people,” Derek had said when Constance had suggested a more modest place. Constance knew that the alacrity with which the doorman, who looked like a glorified rear-admiral, sprang to attention at her approach was an inyoluntary tribute to the plutocratic exclusiveness of the gray coat and cherry accessories. When she spoke her name to the girl at the reservation desk just inside the door, the girl smiled briefly and said, “Miss Maidwell? Of course. Mrs. Major sent a_ Hote for you. ” She handed Constance a square cream envelope. :Constance sat down in a tapestried armchair to read the note. “My dear Miss Maidwell,” Mrs. Major had written, “I am so sorry to be- unable to keep our appointment today. I am, as .it happens, unpleasantly confined to my bed. “However, although I am unable to be ‘present, I hope you will still’ be my guest. You will, find a table reserved; and the maitre d’hotel has’ instructions to serve you whatever you care to order for lunch. “Now as to the object of our meeting. My health seems to demand that I relinquish my activities in thé Associated Artists’ Show to other hands. But Miss Taft has spoken so highly to me of you that I am passing on your name to my successor, the present chairman of the committee, and suggesting that she get in touch with you. “With best wishes for your success, I am very sincerely yours, Marcia Major.”
Mind Your Manners
Test your knowledge of correct social usage by answering the following questions, then checking against the authoritative answers below; 1. Should a whole slice of bread be buttered at once? 2. Is ice cream served in a sherbet glass eaten with a fork or spoon? 3. Is jam put on a biscuit with a fork? 4, Is a water goblet lifted by
the stem?. ‘be sipped
- 5. Should water when there - is food: in the mouth?
What would you do if— You are ‘entering a restaurant dining room— (A) Walk in and find a ta- * ble for yourself? (B) Stand in the doorway antl wait for the headwaiter to show you to a table? (C) Walk out into the middle ‘of the room where the headwaiter is standing? 2 x = Answers ~
1. No. A small piece or two at a time. 2. Spoon. 3. No. A knife. : : 4 With the fingers on both _ the Je5, and bow : 0. x
‘Best. “What Wo Would You Do” : oluti :
n—-"“k
CovRight 1938. NEA Service. Inc.)
ONSTANCE sat for a moment, turning the note over and over in her fingers. . . . “I am passing on your name . . . suggesting . with best wishies—” not too promising. . . . Well, Constance decided a little grimly, I might as well get a lunch out of it, anyhow. She had eaten lightly that morning—partly because there had been no room in the black mood of those first waking hours for interest in food, and partly because Mrs. Major's invitation had seemed to dispose of the food problem for that day. The Daimler dining room was a
large semicircular chamber with a |
small brightly lighted stage on the side opposite the entrance. The walls were done in huge frescoed panels, each framing an autumn landscape. as between pillars of a creamy portico so that the painting | seemed to make one single vista of woodland about the room. : This was the busy hour—but Mrs. Major had reserved a table. As Constance looked about her for the maitre d’hotel, a round dark little man with a Vandyke beard caught her eye and signaled her toward an empty table near the edge of the stage. . . . No doubt the girl at the desk had signaled him that Mrs. Major's guest had arrived. Moving toward the table, she found herself halted by the leisurely progress of a smartly dressed young woman in the aisle ahead of her. Glancing ta her, Constance was surprised to see that she was wearing a long velvet dinner dress with a silver cocktail jacket. ® - - Doesn't the girl know it’s still mid-day? Constance thought. Oh, well, I suppose it's new, and the poor thing just had to wear it somewhere. » 2 ”» A S she stood waiting for the girl to finish a brief: conversation with someone at the tableahead, she glanced with some complacence down at her own eminently correct ensemble, Looking up, she caught the eyes of a man fixed upon her from a nearby table. There was something vaguely familiar about the man; he was youngish and broad, with sandy hair inclined to be red, and—of, course! He was the man who ‘had almost knocked ‘her over
| outside Derek’s studio the day before.
His singularly alive brown eyes, now coolly amused, said as plainly as words, “Well, well! The little girl rather fancies herself in that get-up, doesn’t she?” Constance ‘was furious with herself for, blushing. She was turning away with what dignity she could retrieve |indica ‘when a plump elderly lady who sat at the table with the impertinent ‘young man leaned toward her and asked pleasantly, “Will you ‘please tell me. the price of of that coat?”
(To Be Con Continued)
(All events. names and characters fin this story are wholly fictitious.) ——————————— rn
HEARD IN CONGRESS
Senator Copeland (D. N, N. Y,)s know there, is distress, I know there | that ia Poverty on the Tarte but there is no Poverty, Mr. Roosevel ble the poverty oo people in my city are impoverished, they have n eat but’ the sidewalks of New York.
Senator Minton (D. Ind.): Mr.
| President, will the Senator yield? | @. Neb,): I glad- | Senator from 2
Senator Burke ly yield tothe junior Indiana
Thomas, 44, at Veterans, brain |: at 10th and |
Yell on Aare | Berson
O00 GOSH? ’ I'M oT SO or . SCARES ME WHEN I FIND MYSELF LEANIN' AGAINST SUMPIN, WITH - GOLDIE ALWAYS THINKIN BIG ! Rr : AN’ MOONFIXER. WITH
AN A SEZ.ny YO* SAVES A AER PoE I una AGREES
poet EE FOOEY ! YOUR SPEECH /HOW CAN
“Now, once more— Sweetheart, I love you'—and try to get some umph mn it.”
JUNE
NOW. CALM YOURSELF!
WAYMAN * HAS THE
RIGHT TO SEE WHOMEVER
SHE PLEASES)
YOUR HEALTH |
By DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN American Medical Journal Editor
HE current year has seen an outbreak of measles quite beyond the usual incidence of this disease. In Chicago more than 500 cases have been reported for several consecutive days. Measles is a condition likely to infect every person who. has not alregdy suffered a previous attack. It is one of the most contagious of diseases. usually protects a person against
fourth attacks have been recorded.
emphasized, however, that .this is rare and that possibly some of the
German measles or may be erup-
ilar conditions. 2 x 8» i We the child is born it probably derives from. its ‘mother a certain amount of resistance : to measles but this resistance tends to be lost by the time the child is 6 months ‘old. The disease 18, un-
effects on very-small babies. The exact cause of aieasles has never. been definitely © established. Last year experiments were indicating that some vestigators had
measles which for -that disease.
substance and the disease was not established. 2 "There is, however, no question but | that the disease is’ transmissible and contagious because ‘there has been
Sxpetimental transmission to ani-
Whatever the causative virus
that 11s not exceedingly } away from body infected | person Thus.sunlight and fresh air | V will destroy the virus and it is not nearly as easily by in-
transmitted to. direct contact as is the infection of : certain,
scarlet fever. Suite
ls
Although one attack
having another, second, third and | in the same person. It should ‘be: so-called second, third and fourth |: attacks may be of the type of tions due to food poisoning or sim-
fortunately, most disastrous in its |"
Sofie New yor: oe 3 8 Si . from the mouths of persons with |™ seemed |
causative relationship between that ted
1|happbne to be. it 1 well established resistant | ,
GRIN AND BEAR Im
BN
in- | dsintectad as soon us they are re
® Alem s Sue tory symptoms such as cough, sneezing, ‘fever, vomiting: or dizziness, he
ston 35 a child develops premoni-
Shodd_be put to bel. in a room
bi
ever; .
| sunshine and light are essen
in- | moved from the sick room. ,
It should be remembered 3
disinfecting the room of a patient who has had measles. During the
cept for certain portions of the day when the room may be sunned and
ways, however, be
disease the room is kept dark ex-|
aired. The patient's eyes must al-| Drolectsdl by: the|
of sorrow.
£ Crown official in Canada.
“43 Responsible. 46 Vale or valley.
Your BROTHER HAS CAUGHT THE TRADER. AND NOW HE'S REACHING FOR THE LIGHTNING /
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
UIS|E IEA PIOILIAINID
47 Heavenly food. 50 Sudden inva sion by police. 81 Aeriform
fuel. 52 Kind of theater. 53 Distinctive
: theory. © G4 He is
: ‘general of Canada.
8 Self. .
HORIZONTAL fae to Previous Pusle 3 Exclamation
E] AIN[UISIT(S
. 5% He writes
under the
name of ——
2 Tibetian
3 Exterior seed covering. -
-4To withdraw.
S Banal. 6 Soft mass. 7 A star.
9 Half
11 Measure. 12 Portrait statue.
16 He was ——
by the British |
8 24 To exchange. 26 Three 27 Golf device 29 Wayside hotel
43 Young sheep.) 44 To smash. 45 Kind of bean, 48 Stir. ;
- 49 Chaos.
GY.
i AR BSE va rm ing A
