Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 March 1938 — Page 28

ere Is the . ‘County Deaths (To Date)

1938 ......... 22 1939 .........35

Eeckless Dri 2

Running Preferential Street 23

Running Red Light 7 Drunken Driv-

MEETINGS TODAY

American Bankers’ Association, regional conference, Claypool Hotel, all day. Seventh jou of eqsration of Clubs, meeting, aypoo, otel, a. m. = ub, luncheon, Hotel Washington, noo

n. ptimist Club, luncheon, Columbia Club,

noon. . Reserve Officers’ Association, luncheon, Board of Trade, noon. i Phi Delta Theta, luncheon, Canary Cot- . 3 n. Bata" Tau, Delta, luncheon, Columbia Ota Theta Pi, luncheon, Town Tavern, noon. Indiana Stamp Club, meeting, Hotel Lincoln. noon. t Kappa Sigma, luncheon, Hotel WashingAO amen’ Club, luncheon, Hotel ‘Washington, noon. MEETINGS TOMORROW

National Progressive Educational Association, Meeting, Claypool Hotel, all day.

IN INDIANAPOLIS TRAFFIC — VITAL STATISTICS — WEATHER oh

Traffic Recordi

Indiana mesung

2:30 p. m.

MARRIAGE LICENSES (These lists are from official records in the County Court House. The Times, therefore, is not responsible for errors in names or addresses.) : » Lewis Billiard, 21, of 1243 Madison Ave. ar r, 22, of 717 E. 33d St Edward

A. Owen, 21, of 3526 Paris Ave. Athos Rodgers, 20, of 2501 Indianapolis

ve. j Henry Buckson, 21, of 1537 N. Senate Ave.; Lucille Holland, 20, of 2157 N. Capitol Ave Earl Hollister Gahan, 21, of 3033 Boule-

lis Smoke Abatement League, otel Washington, 1:30 p- m. A., meeting, Claypool Hotel,

‘| vard Place; Elizabeth Lou Mellett, 18, of |

4828 Winthrop

inty. 64, of R. R. 4, Box Douglas: 30, of Sand-

y f 935 Iris Bernice Hollins, 26, of 320

Ww. h_St. John Ivan Clark, 25, of 1916 N. Hard St. Dorothy Ethel -Foxworthy, 20, of 1

t. roy Louis Small. 30, of 1807 Pope St.; Emma Belle Jones, 38, of 536 W. Vermont

Addie Bell, 43, of 318 W. 16th St.; Al-. berta Chandier, 35, of 344 California St.

BIRTHS

3 Boys John, Sibyl Martin, at St. Vincent's, Earl, Marie Bruner, at Coleman. Glenn, Ella Mae Wise, at Coleman. : Edward, Dorothy Patrick, at Coleman. Claude, Be thy , at City. Daniel, Fara C City. Arvil, Vettus M) v 8 Brouse. Robert, Katie McKinney, at 1251 Stand-

ard. Girls

. Francis. 1 fethodist. J ethodist Samuel, Se. , at Methodist. FL hard Marjorie Tague, at 2901 Mere-

DEATHS

Leroy T. Rickey, 67, at 1105 N. Tacoma, coronary thrombosis.’ ed C. Jeffries, 51, at 6217 Broadway, hemiplegia. . y Sarah Frances Dugger, 66, at 1402 S. Capitol, carcinoma. . ohn Orvel Pumphrey; 34, at 95¢ 8. Tremont, coronary occlusion. Ora A. Hughbanks, 50, at St. Vincent's, coronary thrombosis. ; Charles E. Burcham, 74, at Long, mitral insufficiency. : : Roy Killion, 37, at Methodist, pulmonary embolus. . Jgmes A. McDonald, 44, at City, chronic e is. oseph S. Whitley, 79. at City, chronic nephritis. ; ank P. Smith, 68, at City, bronchopneum :

‘| extreme west portion tomorrow afte:

OFFICIAL WEATHER

United States Weather Bureau ___

JNDIANAPOLIS FORECAST: Increasing cloudiness with showers tonight or tomorrow; warmer tonight; cooler fomorrow.

Sunrise ...... 5:51 | Sunset :..... 5:85 TEMPERATURE

March 18, 1087—

Precipitation 24 hrs. ending 7 a. m... Total precipitation ...... tesssesnses 1 Deficiency

sesesase Sas0000sscet0ssccne

MIDWEST WEATHER " Indiana—Mostly cloudy, showers tonight or tomorrow; warmer tonight, cooler tomorrow. - “ Illinois—Mostly cloudy, showers tonight and extreme south and: extreme east portions tomorrow; wa south and east, colder extreme northwi tonight, colder tomorrow. Lx » Lower Michigangsiostly cloudy, rain tonight or tomorrow; warmer tonight, cooler tomorrow. am Ohio—Fair and warmer tonight; tomorrow increasing cloudiness and warmer; showers tomorrow night or Sunday; colder Sunday. : Kentucky—Fair and warmer tonight: tomorrow increasing cloudiness and warmer; showers tomorrow night and probably in rnoon; Sunday showers and colder.

WEATHER IN QTHER CITIES AT 7 A. M. Weather.

: Cloudy D. sees. .Cloudy Rain

ha, NO

» J

Alliance Francaide, luncheon, Hotel ‘Washington, noon.

SERIAL STORY—

LOVE LAUGHS AT THE DOCTOR

: §.. By Elinore Cowan Stone

CAST OF CHARACTERS CONSTANCE MAIDWELL — Heroine; the stand-in. : DEREK MANTHON — An artist who loved money first. HILDEGARDE THORVALD = Derek painted her portrait. DR. ROGERS—H: met his most difficult case.

——

Yesterday—The strange query about the price of her dress turns’ out to be a stand-in modeling job for Connie. But she is not to hear ihe last of this.

ann

CHAPTER VIII

HE smartly tailored young woman who had talked with Papa Anton was in the dressing room when Constance went down to change into her last costume. One of the other girls—the redhaired one with the sultry eyelashes and sulky mouth-—was saying to her, “How should I know? We thought you'd sent her as & stand-in for Lucille” As Constance hesitated at the entrance, the newcomer turned and said with quiet authority, “Oh here you are! Iam Elsa O’Dare, Mr. Anton’s assistant. . . . Suppose we step jn here for a few minutes.” Inside the small office beyond, Miss O'Dare shut the door and faced Constance curiously. At close range she seemed older than she had upstairs—a little tired; but very much alive and sure of herself, and exquisitely groomed to the last detail. Her eyes, which were a clear, cool green, were penetrating, but not entirely unfriendly. “Now,” she began quietly, “perhaps you had better begin by telling me who you are, and just what ‘you think you're doing here. I happen to remember,” she went on, “al=though Mr. Anton did not know it, that gray coat you wore in here could not possibly have been listed for the show today, because it was sold several days ago. It was the only one of its kind, and it has not been returned to the store.”

w= Constance continued to hold her silence before the utter absurdity of any explanation she could offer, sa O’Dare went on, .%T shall have to insist on your telling me how you came to be here displaying a coat that we had sold.” “You sold it—yes,” Constance said. “To me.” “Do ‘I underéiand—? Of course some of our competitors have used inspired tactics from time to time" —Elsa O'Dare’s yes were like green jce—“just whom are you represent-

»

The situation was so incredibly fantastic that Constance was beginning to enjoy it. Miss O’Dare’s beautiful manicured hands moved in a gesture of complete frustration. “Well,” she said with something amost like unwilling amusement, after all, this ig our show, you know. Do you n to tell me— wait a minute!” eyes narrowed. “That coat .was sold as part of a trousseau. I remember because it was part of a rather large order—

so large that fhe saleswoman who|

handled it-was quite upset about it. And the customer who bought it was to be married today.” “Yes,” Constance, said. “I was to have been married today. But we—I—=" » » w “Y’VE seen yo: somewhere before.” Elsa O’Darc was studying her with a mediiafive attentiveness. “You were wearing blue—just the shade of your ¢ves. . .". Of course! The Portrait of 2 Lady in Blue. ... And there a squib in Danforth’s .column “in the Dispatch—something about’ your engzgement to Derek Manthon. The girls in my department thought it terrifically romantic. ang sh ape hos ticing Constance’s piteous attemp at self-control, che broke off and ~ finished swiftly. “Suppose we let “this drop for thc present. You—” “No,” Constance said more steadfly than she could have believed

possible. “I think we'd better clear}

~ this up here and now, Miss O'Dare. ‘I came here to meet a Mrs. Major for lunch anc falk about a job. Since my—my vedding had to be tp A Fonited something to do Jor a few vceks.” ;

w:c finding it strangely |

onia. Sallie McKay Woods, 59, at 4111 English, acute myocarditis.

large one, Miss O'Dare—large enough fo swallow up my whole bank account. . . . Well, Mrs. Major didn't turn up. I was just beginning to realize that that job was definitely out when Mr. Anton mistook me for one of your models. And— well, I thought, “Why not, if I can get away with it?’ ” Elsa O’Dare sat for a moment digesting this. Then she threw back her head and burst into peal upon peal of unrestrained mirth. “Well!” she gasped finally, wiping her eyes. “I imagine advertising is about’ the insanest- business any woman can be mixed up in; but my wildest experience never prepared me for anything like this. . . Well, I'm certainly not going to shed any more tears over it. Of course you did put us in a spot about that coat. On the other hand, we could also have sold the other costumes you modeled several times over... . . You want a job?” “Like the very devil,” Constance told her. “All right!” Elsa O’Dare got up with one of her characteristically clean-cut, decisive movements. “Lucille. won’t be out of the hospital for weeks. You've bought it. . + « Now you've got one more outfit to model today, haven't you? Better—” ate iE 2 2Y » « Ed HE broke off, her green eyes suddenly dubious. “I suppose you know that your final display is a wedding outfit, don’t you?” she asked. “I know,” Constance nodded. Elsa O’Dare said with the nearest approach to hesitation Constance had seen in her manner, “This show is really important to me. We're staging it rather elaborately, you know—bridesmaids, pages, wedding march—all the trimmings—" “I know,” Constance said dryly. “Everything but the groom.” “You wouldn't let me down, would you? It may be a little—I mean—" “Don’t worry. If I'm tempted to hysteria, I shall remind myself that my telephtne bill is due tomorrow.” . Constance did not know that as she passed, a little pale in her white velvet and gossamer veil, sentimental old ladies wiped their eyes, young girls dreamed, and men looked thoughtful. Her thoughts, if it were possible to report them coherently, might have run something like this: “I

Mind Your Manners:

Test your knowledge of correct social usage by answering the following questions, then checking against the authoritative answers below: 1. Is it correct to reach in front of another person at the table? : 2. Should one put used silver on the tablecloth? - : 3. Should serving silver be put in the dish of food when it is placed on the table? 4. Is it important to see that the handle of a pitcher is toward the person to whom it is being passed? 5. Is it excusable to go to a Dreskiass table with disheveled

What would you do if— When you are eating you find a piece of gristle which you should not swallow? A. Swallow it anyway? B. Remove it from your mouth with your fork? C. Remove it with your fingers? ‘ ” 3 8 Answers 1. No, ask to have the article passed. : No, on plate or saucer. 4, r

No. Yes, so it is not awkward for him to take it. $i

5. No

Best “What Would You Do” solution—(C) for it can usually. be done less conspicuously: than with a fork. Fo a

(Copyright, 1938. NEA Service, Inc.)

you're getting into. The publicity

{other people’s- feelings very tenderly. “1. . « You, like everyone else in the

‘to report at Bartlett's at 8:30 to-

tit ttl 28E38272283722823

Ba 0 2BBS33

wonder if I ought to walk a little

faster. . . . What would Derek think |.

\

if he knew I was having a wedding all by myself—and a fashionable one, too? . . . But I mustn't think about Derek. . . . The bridesmaids look marvelous in those posygarden frocks and bonnets. . . . Derek would have liked a big wedding. . . . I mustp’t think about Derek. . . . Now if the pages don’t forget to lift my train when I turn. « « « «+ I wonder what Derek is—I must not think about Derek. I

promised Miss: O’Dare, . . . Think|

about my telephone bill. . . . Oh, Derek dear, it was to have been just about this time!”

# 2 »

HEN it was over, and Con- _ stance - had taken off her wedding finery, she found Elsa O’Dare waiting for her in the little office of the dressing room. “Before you decide to go into this, Miss Maidwell,” she said, “I want you to understand exactly what

department of an establishment like ours is no place for people with tender sensibilities. We are tuned to a pretty high tension; and people

who are hyrried and worried seldom |

have time or inclination to consider

department, will be a constant:target for . criticism, buck-passing, and backbiting from other departments all over the plant.”, : “I suppose the only answer to that is that I can take .it,” Constance said. “You'll have to. Sometimes it’s like living in a psychotic ward. . . . Personally I rather enjoy it”—Elsa O’Dare grinned a surprisingly boyish grin—“perhaps because I've grown up with it. Perhaps because I'm Irish and like a fight. . . . I'm telling you this because you seem to have had a rather different background from most of our girls.” “I think I'd like to try,” Constance insisted. : . She went home with instructions

morrow. Her first day in the store left her a little giddy with all she had seen and experienced. After leaving her bus at the corner, she almost ran the half block to the apartment house, hungry for the letter from Derek Jha she hoped would be waiting for er.

S——— (To Be Continued) (All names, events and characters in this story are wholly fictitious.)

SO THEY SAY

In Europe you never feel secure— at least not nowadays. The last time I danced in Praque it was wonderful . . . but I remember thinking: How long will it be this way? When will somebody spoil all this?—Lotte Gosler, noted European dancer.

We must realize the seriousness of a child's always getting A's. . . . That sort of child is likely to grow up to be a conformist. .”. . He is not likely to be a. leader or a dynamic individual.—Miss Etta Anchester, teacher of Philadelphia.

The United States Army has plans outlined which, in case of war, would transform this democracy into a totalitarian state overnight.— Lawrence Dennis, writer and -diplo-, mat.

Sensitive couples are disturbed by

differences in eating customs, al-|-

though they may not recognize what is bothering them.—Dr. A. A: Brill, psychoanalyst. : ; Very soon things will be humming so that the American people will hardly know that they had a de~ pression—E. E. Norris, president, Southern Railroad, - Budget your time when you are going .to worry. . . . Use reason and

imagination together. That is good worrying.—David Seabury, psychol-

The future of ‘human liberty for : ‘generations

to come depends on what the United States, Britain and France do and on what they do

Children may be written oft

dead loss, oe

speaking, in

29885323

fault-finding, |

AN

OUT OUR WAY

a“

THEY GOT A BIG TLL

TLL GO RIGHT AN'GET A JOB

Ls a

Tu

GOVERNMENT ORDER - FER. GUN CARRIAGES BUT YOU'LL NEVER _ ME WORKIN' ON' EM QUIT FIRST-- IM AGIN THAT STUFF! MAKIN' MACHINES TO KILL PEOPLE.-NOT ME! OVER

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JRWILLIAMS 3-1

NLT SAYS Al COT ND A Ar TA ZN

LOVE OF AN” WHIT MAH MAMMY. SAYS -AN DO).

SUBJECT OF THIS DEBATE YOU'RE GOING TO HAVE, SON 2

ABBIE AN' SLATS

RESCQLVED : | THAT PEACE BE MAINTAINED AT ANY PRICE! IM ON THE AFFIRMATIVE

-

“If you gotta talk, keep your hands in your lap! You sige nalled for a left turn and two stops tellin’ that last story.”

Gs NO HAPPY GALS. AH NEEDS A MZ.

a NAN NN HE'S WEARIN®' HIMSELF out! LAST NIGHT WHEN HE WENT TO BED HE WAS | SO TIRED HE COULD § \ HARDLY KEEP HIS MOUTH OPEN!

Bur He's GOT -

-TO PRACTICE - HIS SPEECH!

1 NY A :

WHERE AM 1--92-2--WHERE'S THAT LIL SEA-SNARESI ILL

YOUR HEALT

idea developed some years ago to

by injecting it with the blood of a child ‘who had already had the disease or who was just recovering

injection of a small amount of ‘the fluid material from the blood of a child who had recovered from measles into another child would protect against the infection. Furthermore, in those instances ih which it did not protect completely aghinst the infection, it modified the attack of measles.

2 an = T= protection is, of course brief since the material. does not remain long in the body of the child that is injected, nor does it stimulate the development of additional material. However, the protection seemed to last many months in some instances. It has been

found that the injection of the convalescent serum more than five days after the child was first exposed to the disease will not prevent its development. - The serum must be given immediately after exposure or even before exposure of the child to the disease. When this serum is injected, it is put into a’ syringe. * The needle is then inserted into the muscles either on the outer side of the thigh or into the buttocks. : Since it is know that the mother can transmit protective material

idea occurred to some investigators to prepare material taken from the

is attached to the body of the mother and to use that material as a protective : substance against measles. This has been tried in a considerable number of cases and the substance, which is called. hu-

By DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN . .|. American Medical Journal Editor |

carry within it substances that are| | protective aaginst that disease, the |

protect. the child against measles |

from it. © . Many doctors reported that the].

against measles to the child, the

tissues by which the growing child

PLENTY ©’. 1: — TIME J |

3-18

“__and | hope, Miss Clancy, thot you're not considering this job merely a stepping stone to marriage!”

used in many places to prevent the. development of the disease. = s = =» iat are frequently confused

measles,’ black measles, 1 measles, and German measle ; are just two main and" Germah ordinary - measles there ‘may ~ be

varying degrees of severity, the most severe - being: that :in which there

PEELE Las to the different varieties of | days measles. We hear them called oq

measles, 21-day measles, ordinary easles,

[ceedingly virulent. cases tn which all

in-which the patient dies in a few * COMMON ERROR"

say hite (like kite).

you, then just take it—Mayor IL. B. Owens, Columbia, 8S. C. who,

when ready to leave a hotel banquet,|

12 To: glance at.

© 39 Musical note. 58 His =—= has ¢

eight—hit-th; |

[Fem ide. U. & Pat. 8-N richis sessreed] ~~. CROSSWORD PUZZLE HORIZONTAL Answer fo Previous Puzzle 1, 7 President of _ [I TVININLIFIOINITIAINNIEL, rime. EUENOREL i 13 Amphitheater |AITINSIEINTINRIE!| INIOIR center. . IDIRSIPIIITIERESITIEIAIMINA a 18 Flaxen fabric aba 3 Farewell! we. ea 3 DN 22 Serious. AIBIOID 25 Form of “a.” 26 Meal. 30 Father. 34 Golt clubs. 35 Giraffe-like animal. 36 Teaser.« 38 Fine line of a letter.

(NSIT OIDIE |

54 Hooks. $5 To rent by contract. 56 Blood. $7 He was === - to office in 1932.

40 Colt. 41 Italian city. 42 Auditory. ~ 43 Ovule. 44 Flat plate. 45 Thought. '~ 46 Wise men, 47 Contest for a prize. . 48 Long ago. 49 Feminine ' pronoun. 51 Father. 53 To .obtain.

4 Water cress. 5 Genius. 6 Skin tumor. 7 Genip tree. 8 Coarse part of ground grain. To split. been dissolved 19 Consumes. several times. 11 Northeast. VERTICAL 14 To free. Act oti + 20 His country

40 Ices as a cake 44 To appall, 49 Carbon in . smoke. 50 Lukewarm. 52 Astir,

oo

man immune globulin, is now also

are hemorrhages into the. skin. This

discovered his hat was