Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 March 1938 — Page 14

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T AGE 14

IN INDIANAPOLIS |

* TRAFFIC — VITAL STATISTICS — WEATHER

‘He 2 Is the Traffic Record County Deaths (To Date) 1938 ...:.... 22 1937 vias 33

City Deaths (To Date) 1938 ........ 1937 fe vweeae .

13 32

March 21) Accidents ...

Dead ....

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ese

MEETINGS TODAY. net." Club, luncheon, Claypool Hotel,

Medical Society meeting, mad: ‘abo is ‘Athletic Club, 8:1

County Demaeratie. Yoomen's 3 “meeting, Claypool Hotel, 8 ha om Omega, luncheon,

Boara of = £. -noon Lid Club, luncheon, Spink-Arms Hotel, Mer ator Club, luncheon, Columbia Club, oon noon. ersal Club,. luncheon, Columbia Club,

po aiyity of of Michigan Club, luncheon,

1 Jetferson

MARRIAGE LICENSES

in the County Court House. The Times, therefore, is not responsible for errors in names or addresses.)

” 32, of 1226 N. Illias A on 26, of 824 N.

t. mag a, Same, Ji gf, Racin sephine Bishop, PANE Dior: 6 of RB 3. Box 304 Gladys Marvel, ‘is, of 2154 Park Ave.

in Knittel, of Danville, Ill; Evelyn Lucille Hervey % of Earl R of 1

ato

is St.;

anapolis. 1147 N. Bap

Anna Marguerite d right, 35, of Vid N Tlinois St. Ave.; Betty Jane Pefry. 18, of 5666 Indian-

ola Av shel’ 3: Nichols, 47, of Indianapolis: Mabel Seiglo, 30 of Indianapol Ro! elly Sr.; 47, of 2i on ® Graces land fl Margaret ‘Edith Demarcus, 23,

of 2430 Ethel St.

Major Elgin Fain, 23 of 842 N. Troub Ave. . Lule Mae Cooper 20, of 1934 W. James Miller, of 2045 Columbia ghve: Annie B, Mylie, Ek of 1818 Yandes S nly : Vo el, 35. 2308 N N. ela yore Ruth! en 2. of 651 W. Delbert Carl Bland. 23, of 423 N. Noble St.; Inez § urling, +18, of 423 N. Noble st. aod James Wells, of 1025 St. Peter st.; 1 Myers, 18, Ne 1023 St. Peter St. BIRTHS Boys Robert, Mildred Rouh, ; John, Kathryn Lewis, ‘at Wayne, Thema Golder, Russell, Stella Minnis,

orothy Carter, at Dorothy, Charles Fields, at Charles, Bernice Rieger, at Lawrence, Edith Lane, at St. Omer, Mildred Quandt, 2813 Roger, Agnes Bailey, 320 N. Theodore. Gladys Colvin, 1

'2125 Olive. Marshail, Lula Ras 2760 N. Sher-

ma. Roy, Ina Woodall, 1438 Hiatt. Girls P Everett, Edna Lemon, at’ Coleman. Marion, Helen Wooley, at Methodist. ine Vivian Warner, at Metho gist, oyd, Cora Hobbs, at- ‘Metho dis Joseph, Cora Lee Peck, Bernard, ‘Adelaide Eck,. Lawrence, Helen Huck leberty.

oa Viethoaist ancis. at St.

(These. lists are from official’ records v Ros

dward Altom, 22, of 2027 N. Tacoma’

‘carcinoma Fred Armstrong. | 47, . at- 1501 Samoa,

cerebral hem Nellie Brickert, Es, at City, chroni¢

™Emilius 3 Milam, 58, Methodist Hospital, rnicious nemia. Pe sther W. Jegen, 35. at 3736 E. Wash-

ho-pneumon ington, broncho-p 3 As at Methodist,

marasmus.

OFFICIAL WEATHER

INDIANAPOLIS FORECAST—Cloudy nfid cooler with probable showers and thunder

Weather Bureau

storms tonight: tomorrow partly cloudy and cooler. Sunrise ..... 5:45 | Sunset ......5:590 TEMPERATURE —March 22, 1937— 78 Mies... 34 PMs svvs 51 BAROMETER Ta m....... 29.98 Precipitation 24 hrs. ending 7a m.. .00 Total SEEgsipltatio RI Ee . 7.04 Deficiency (=... vis. iii iins 1.12

MIDWEST WEATHER 2 Indiana—Cloudy; showers and thunders storms tonight and probably south portion tomorrow; cooler tonight Exeent extreme southeast; cooler tomorrow

Illinois—Cloudy; showers. and thunder-

‘| storms tonight and extreme south portion

tomorrow; cooler tonight and extreme east portion tomorrow. Lower Michigan—Cloudy and thunderstorms tonight and probably. extreme southeast portion tomorrow; cooler.

Ohio—Showers tonight and tomorrow; warmer in south portion tonight, colder toWortow, yeh colder tomorrow night.

Kent ‘Showers Be vn tonight warmer in extreme tomorrow, much col

and tomorrow;

er tomorrow night.

WEATHER IN OTHER CITIES AT 7 A. M.

ancis. chasing Agents” "Association, lunch- Edward, Frieda Mill Station. Weather. Bar. Temp. = er, at St. ¥ eon, Snenasum \ 20 gon. 4 Sinn H Wilbur, Thelma Toney. at i Francis. Amarillo, Tex. ....... Clear 29.70 50 gor B Ae bax ative, er, Hoo- ills, NDlanche Hutson, 322 E. Morris. Bismarck, N. Duce Clear 3.04 3 - ale, ettie Baniste West. 0S Series meanness a . Buen of Columbus, luncheon, Hotel | Ruscell, Ellen Blackwell, 1333 Blaine. Chicago ........eeese. PtCldy 20.82 62 n, Joseph, Dora Kirgham, 1266 New | Cincinnati. ............ PtCldy 30.06 .60 yore Fes Pleton Cleveland, 0. TEN Leas 39.02 g0 ‘1 ale, Fae Fletcher, 1538 E. 18th. GAVEL sedis ns now ‘EETINGS TOMORROW John, Agnita Crutcher, 1639 Cornell. - | Dodge City, Kas. ....Clear 20.76 42 Coy. Hallie Smith, 215% Geisendorf. Helena, Mont. ....... Clear 30.10 16 Kiw nis Club, luncheon, Columbia Club, Albert, Lucille McKinney, 1132 S. Per- | Jacksonville, Fla. ....Clear 30.16 66 00 BE cy Kansas City, Mo. ....Cloudy 29.68 66 polioni Club, luncheon, Hotel Washington, John, Stella Ellery, 2544 Columbia. Little Rock, Ark. ....Cloudy .92 62 oon, ——— 10s Angeles ......... tCldy 30.06 48 ond: na Title Association, meeting, Clay- DEATHS Miami, Ma. .......... Cloudy 30.10 174 pool Eotel, 10:30 Minneapolis Sty Ra Cloudy 20.78 50 Indi: oapolis Apr Ament Owners’ Assgeia- Worthy Demont Wardlow, 45, at City,.| Mobile, Ala. .......... Cloudy 30.04 68 tion, !''acheon, Hotel Washington, noo broncho Futumenia New Orleans side en Cloudy 29.98 66 Beve age Credit Group, luncheon, Hotel k, 54, at City. cerebral throm- |New Yo ie .Clear 30.16 , 60 Antlers. noon. bosis. Okla. City. Okla. ....Rain 9.70 ~ 64 Your ry Men’s Discussion Club, dinner, chael Brand, OR, at 157 W. Arizona, | Omaha, Neb. ....... Cloudy 29.80 44 YM. p. m. arteriosclerosis Pittsburgh ......... Clear . 30.10 52 Pura: o Atumni Association, luncheon, Louella May Kidwell, ‘73, at 2035 N.|Portland, Ore. ...... oudy 29.80 38 Hotel -verin, noon. Pennsylvania, cerebral ‘hemorrhage: San Antonio, Tex. ....Cloudy 29.80 68 12th District PY Legion, luncheon, h A. oF ompson; 53. at 5827 W.|San Franci SCO. “w......Cloudy 30.12 46 Board 5° ads, noon washington, jnfigens 5 aod ae Se den de PiCldy 29.84 66 Signs Alpha Epsilon, luncheon, Board Catherine Tar, 75, at 502 Chase, T ....PtCldy 30.12 ' 64 Trade, 110 on. chronic myocarditis. Washimgton Dp. ©... Clear 30.14 52

ser. STORY—

{CAST OF CHARACTERS CONSTANCE MAIDWELL — Heroine: the stand-in. DERIK MANTHON — An artist who loved roney first. HILD" GARDE THORVALD — Derek painted her portrait. DR. "OGERS—He met his most difficult cise. --

Yeste: 1ay—Constance accepts the invitation' to ride home with Doctor Rogers anc returning to her work next mornin; feels vaguely uneasy abéut affairs a the store. -

CHAPTER "ER ELEVEN LSA! O'DARE was sitting at her de: z when Constance went in. “You vanted me, Miss O’Dare?” Constance asked, uneasy without exactly -nowing why. Elsa G i Dare laid down the papers

fectly groomed hands on her desk top and looked up thoughtfully. “I'm =siven to understand,” she said, “t.at you allowed a gentleman wh’ came here with one of our custome: s to drive you home last

“Why, oie » Constance said, won- |

dering. ‘Ves, I did. His mother was kind enciugh to suggest it.” “I am not questioning the pezsonal propriety of your doing so There vas in Elsa O’Dare’s faint smile something puzzling that Constance v2s to remember later. “But there hz spens to be a rule in the store tht none of our employees shall ac ept attentions from the male rel: fives or—ah, appendages— of our customers. It is, I believe, much rescnted—but there it is.” “I don't resent it,” Constance said, flushing. “I simply didn’t know an: Shing about it.” She tought, why didn’t Miss Letts wein me? : Elsa O’Dare raised her

“Well-’ shoulders in a little shrug. “You Know no. . . You have been duly

admonisk=d, Don’t do it again. That is =; I think.” 2 82 = » AULINE was loitering in the corricor when Constance wnt

. 8h= shot a furtive, probing 160k from under her lashes at Constance’s uatroubed face, and as ‘if dissatisfle” with what she saw there, bit her lip and turned away, But Constance was not so untroubled. 2s she seemed: She was beginning to realize that at least two of ile women here—Pauline and her ally, Miss Le ed

miliated. ‘And Constance had never before kncwn an open enemy. There vas another letter from ‘Derek for Her when she went home

i Tharvald and I went for a long horseback ride yesterday,” wrote. “Perhaps I should se} you that the Baron has placed utifu. mount at my disposal.

Miss. Thérvald is magnificent on |

artists like to think Joan of Arc

battle standard to make a really heroic figure. “1 hing vou would like her treusly. ‘To > Sppreciate the unusual quality of her charm, one usual see her in her natural environment, the gorgeous golden California out-of -doc s—or, perhaps, at the “Have I told you that

ili

“In ‘a day or so I hope I shall feel well enough acquainted with her to tell her of our engagement. I shall have to be careful. She is so kind that it would make her frightfully uncomfortable to realize what . a crimp she put into our plans.” It would, Constance had to admit to herself. - Hildegarde Thorvald was kind. But I wonder if it has occured to you, Derek, Constance thought, that Pm. being made a little uncomfortable, too. “Mr. Thorvald is so busy, and young George is away so much,” Derek wrote on, “that she and I are often alone in the evenings. She enjoys being read aloud to, and I have been reading to ‘her lately some of the books to travel and exploration of which she buys so many. For some strange reason

‘| she seems particularly interested

in Tibet. She has a huge illuminated globe on which she follows the text as I read. Pi Te #8 =» . ONSTANCE was finding her own evenings unendurably lonely. Since the beginnings of Derek’s swift courtship until he went away there had hardly been an evening that she had not spent with him, dancing, at play or a concert, or

‘quite .as often just sitting in her

cosy chintz-hung apartment. It was almost impossible to touch an article that had not some poignant association with him: the armchair in which he used to lounge, his fingers clasped behind his handsome blond head, while she sat, on a footstool, her head against ‘his knee,

Mind Your ‘Manners

Test your knowledge of correct social usage by the following questions, then checking against the authoritative answers below: 1. May a divorcee wear her wedding ring? 2. Would it be possible for the two couples in a double wedding to serve as each other’s attendants? TH 3. When the bridegroom has a sister of the same age as the bride is it customary to ask her to be an attendant? 4 May a bride wear a - white wedding dress and veil if she is to be married in a parsonage? 5. At a small house weding is it correct for the: bride’s father and mother to greet the guests?

What yould you do if— You are a widow being married for ‘a second time? Have--(a) Bridesmaids? (b) Only a maid or matron of honor? at (c) No attendants?

s 8 ©

Answers

-1. If she chooses. 2. Yes. 3. Yes. 4. It is not customary, but she may if she chooses. : 5. Yes, and expected.

Best “What Would You Do” solution—either (b) or (c). .

#27 FROM OUR OWN FARMS AT

LOVE EALGHS A AT THE DOCTOR

“By Elinore Cowan Stone

(Copyright. 1938. NEA Service. Inc.)

and they. talked and: talked and talked. . The gateleg table at the window, where .they had eaten so many gay, informal little suppers by candlelight." The piano, where he sometimes sat for hours— for Derek loved music, and played remarkably well.

It was three days before another letter came. Derek had a great deal to say about the convenience of the studio Mr. Thorvald had fitted up for him-—about the bridal beauty. of the fruit trees—about his moonlight horseback rides. . . . At long last, Constance found the ‘paragraph for which she had been waiting:

wrote you last that has made it impossible to bother Miss Thorvald with my own-affairs for the immediate present.

- “It . seems . that there is some trouble about her brother, to- whom she is devoted. I do hot entirely understand: the circumstances; but I gather that the young cub has got himself mixed up with some woman, and that his father is furious. The poor girl is in a terrific spot between the two. I am surg you will agree with me that it is out of the question to intrude ‘our plans on jer just yet.” If Constance felt that some of this chivalrous tenderness might have been devoted to her own need, she suppressed the thought. Besides, it was not chivalry she wanted from Derek. If he did not long for her as she did for him, then she did not want anything from him, she told herself. And one could ‘not blame Derek for that fine sensitiveness - that ‘made him so sympathetic to the moods of those about him. There was no reference to young George in the next letter, or to Derek’s impending talk with Miss Thorvald—nor in the next.

LHe Ns

ONSTANCE continued to write cheerful, chatty letters -about her experiences at store-—thére seemed, strangely enough, to be so little else she had to tell Derek about, since of the one thing closest to her heart she ‘would not write. She thought some of her efforts really amusing, sometimes composed them with tears in her eyes.

had been to say, “I am a little hurt, darling, that you did not take my suggestion that you give yourself a complete rest until we can ‘be married.” On what? Constance thought a little grimly. . . . But of course it wasn't Derek’s fault that she had thrown her money around like a prodigal fool. In the meantime, it was’ rumored in the department that Lucille was better. Elsa O’Dare referred to it once. “I hope we'll be able We keep you, too. . . That is, if you: care to stay.” Constance, ignoring the - implied question, murmured her thanks, There had been no letter at all from Derek for over a week. One day Constance, opening the door. into .the room where several

ing, found herself entering on a full stop. . As she crossed the room, she was conscious of velled glances following her. Then Pauline, who. wds bending over a magazine open on a table, said smoothly, “Here's something that may interest you, Constance.” py rude cried, “Pauline!” sharply; and someone tittered. 8 ans that she was walking into a.trap, but seeing no possible ‘retreat with dignity, Constance

na R.: Bltagewend; -43, at Sisthodist, pose. Ciattey. 6. ‘at City, cerebral ames Wooten, 51, at Methodist, _pul- : ios aura Wesler, 55. at 3618 Robson,

and probably | portion tonignt, colder’

“Something came up here after I|'

even ‘though: she |

Derek’s one reference to her work |

of the girls were laughing and talk-.

| may not begin to fall

ouT OUR WAY

AND TWO POUNDS OF °° LIMA BEANS -= OH, WAIT, WAIT== THAT CAN'T BE EIGHT POUNDS! A AAR WAIST.

: Mn Xf - CALL OOP ON 4 DE TALAPHONE “BF HE'S NO COOM SOOPER. DUN'T - GONE TO NO TROOBLE-.YUS. - SAND DE BOY

/ JUST TH

FOR DE ©

PEACE WE. GOT THA

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BORN THIRTY YEARS. -

FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS nn

OVER=-NO ' - TROUBLE AT ALLY GOOD : GOSH! CAN'T © EVEN EAT IN PCE

\ "YELEPHONE! yy

~~ By Williams |

IT MOST BEN

THREE BLOC Ks FROM HERE.

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Come IN, | S MY BOY, COME IN !' ALWAYS GLAD hu TO SEE You! p

HED BE HERE! JUNE, | MAY

-MIGHTA KNOWN :

I SEE YOU. "ALONE PLEASE ?

3-22,

“ thought you said that guy Halli a convertible coupe.”

“It is—dates in the evenin’, grotgries in the fieytime.”

-—By Al Capp

1 CANT

© GANG!

Cv, , YOU MUST!

"TELL YOU, ‘|| WHEN 1 PHONE FRECKLES ! || You ara ME BUT ITS OFF | OKAY, pNORING | IF YOU WANT {| IT THAT WAY a T {1 L.Gcuess 1

‘BETTER ge :

You'D BETTER

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moved over: to the table ord glanced down at the open paje. The magazine to which Pauline {{ pointed was a pictorial ‘bulletin of gossip concerning the great and near-great—the famous and the merely infamous. i On the page spread before ‘Constance: over the caption:: CITRUS PRINCESS AND INTERNATIONAL

WINNER, she saw a picture of Hildegarde

Thorvald: and Derek, snapped as |.

they lounged- under palm. : trees. The story underneath began,‘ “It is rumored that a romance is ripening between the beautiful Hildegarde Thorvald and the ‘handsome young artist imported from the east to paint—" Constance did not read any further.

. (To Be Continued) ay As, Same whole. fonitioees

By DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN American Medical Journal Editor T is common for fat parents to have fat children. Sometimes this is due to glandular structure. In most cases it is due to the fact that the - children. eat too: much: They eat too Hien, Sequently, because their parents too much and they like to ee PAs: parents. - - Once the excess of fat is distributed in various portions of jue body, - usually around the: hips, the breast .and the thighs, the cutting down of "the. diet to the average amount will not lead to the loss of | weight. In fact, there Way even continue to be a gain in weight because the person who is. fat does not exercise “as much as the one

who is thin. : If, however; amount of food taken is less ace

e. body - tually: needs; ritie~fat that has heen distributed in various -portions : o. the body is ‘picked up in order. i make up the deficit. The ‘weight diately | because the la { which’ must also be perme fore the weight actually falls,

2. 8 8 i HE ‘question of dieting for the

child jis’ extremely by the fact that the child

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be el

“Pahaw—its the same warden! Let's plead self-defense’ ”

certain’ Amounts ot essential ‘ma. terials for growth snl repair ‘Of tis sues. beyond the’ amounts required by an adult. Therefore, the child's diet must be. estimated not. only in felationship io the calaties, but als m 0 ihgee RBOPaRE

are. ' heluded. Then tats, Sugars. ‘and starches are reduced to a minim Skimmed milk may be used insad of: of whole niilk; vegetables with

h considerable amount ‘of celluloss,| |

ts are added to provide the Reteeary bulk so as to satisfy the

Fr = te. Sat

appet) Rr w oa cas fend aad

TT ‘will, of course,

-FOR ALL TER FRIENDS : a COME CALLINS

um. |

VIEIN|

ALEK ANPEREELLL. © MIO | |RIEJEL IEIE!S.

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