Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 March 1938 — Page 20

a a Ro AE i

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Here Is the Traffic Record

Fine Paper Men's Grille, the William Block

: hi Trade,

- and a little for incidental expenses. - Take a taxicab to the airport. You'll

racine ahead of her. . . . Light-

$0 choose with discrimination. Better take some sports things, anyhow.

ably never need, just because there = ‘was room.

~cher'v hat and bag. As she settled ‘a litt! wryly at her reflection in the

PAGE 20 _

IN INDIANAPOLIS

TRAFFIC — VITAL STATISTICS — WEATHER

County Deaths (To Date) 1938 ........ 24 1937 .........

City Deaths (To Date) 1938 sae 13 ve 32

(March 23)

Accidents .... 4 veess 9

Reckless Driving 1

Running Prefer‘ential et ?

Rebate Red Light 4 : Drunken Driv-

Others 7

MEETINGS TODAY

Indianapolis R Real Estate Board, luncheon.. Hotel Washington, noon. Advertising Club of indianisolis, luncheon. Columbia Club, Credit ° Group. huncheon, 0.,

na Chi, luncheon, ‘Board of Trade, noon.

3 Ameri ean Business Club, luncheon, Coumbia Club, noon. ea luncheon, Board of Trade. noon. Sigma Nu, luncheon, RA Washington,

noon. Caravan Club, luncheon, Murat Temple, n.

Indian: Motor Traftie Association, luncheon. Hotel Antlers, Phi Ra Board of

iacheon, Oil ‘Clty iuncheon, Hotel Severin, noon. Radio Engineers’ Guild, meeting, Hotel Antlers, Pep Lo "Construction

E anandlis Cs Camera Club, meeting, ‘110 Rainbow Division. "dinner, Hotel Wash-

ington, 6:30 p ndiannpolls. S Smoke Abatement League,

| in the County Court House. The Times,

League Indianapolis, Woodrow. Indias and Builders Build ing, noon

Alliance Francaise, meeting. Hotel Wash-

in Phan dian oR Conference of Bank Aun ndianapolis Co - ditets, dinner, Hotel Washington, 6:30

MEETINGS TOMORROW

i Exchange < Club, luncheon, Hotel Washngton, noon . am Sigma, luncheon, Hotel Washingon, Nn I dia n lis Federation of Community Civis Ci a pe! ® meeting, Hotel Washington,

i Salesmen's Club, luncheon, Hotel Washn, "Bptimist ¢ Club, “lunchean, Columbia Club,

DServe Officers’ Association, luncheon, Board of Trade, noon.

tage os oan Delta, luncheon, Columbia Beta Theta Pi, luncheon, Town Tavern, noon.

MARRIAGE LICENSES (These tists ‘sre from official’ records

therefore, is not responsible for errors in names or addresses.)

Sherman Orange, of Indianapolis; Rosa Matlock, 28, oe far Yandes St. Arthur J. Lewis Hotel Lincoln; ‘Mildred- Anderson, 38, of Tadisugpol s. William G. Logsdon, 23, of 428 S. Keystone Ave} Elizaveth Johnson, 2. of 1123

Spann A ———

BIRTHS Boys : Henry, Marguerite Rohlfing, Francis.

Lowell, Mary Moére, at Coleman. William, Ruby Foster, at. Coleman. Douglas! Myrtle Wjiveson at Methodist. - Lee, Margaret Lucille Gray, 1 Metholist, Glen, Ruth Moore, at Meth od ist. ’ August, Ruth Osterman, at Metaodist. yaooree, Anna Grifiia, at 707 E. New

ank, Mary Ball, at 2264 Easter: Robert, Ruth Cannon, at 653 Blackford. paid. | Nona Montgomery, at 2450 NW eal 1 Floyd. ‘Dorothy Adamson,’ at 1850 ‘W. Mihnes % Harry, ® Frances Dougherty,’ Lab 851: N. ran \

Girls > £ Bernard, Gertrude Lark, at St, Prahcis. Garrett, Helen Rochford, at aL Francis. Edwin, Jennie Elsner, af St. Delbert, Eva Noel, at A ky Yorda, Emolen Kiger, at Colem ni Enimets, Anne Murphy. at ny. mme

Anne Pores ny Oren, Bernic ing. 8 1022 Division. John, Lucille Berjam n, at 116 Noble Myron, Viola Salrin, at 826 Division. Everett, Mabel Montgomery, at

DEATHS

Robert Huggins, 40, at City, cardio vascular diseas:

at St.

Phi Del ta Theta. luncheon, Canary Cot--

Mary Louise Ke

63, at 239 Audubon Re cardio vasc ease.

ar renal dis

ulcerative colitis. ‘Norman Weber, 30, at Methodist, acute

ne; NF McGehee, 51, at 511 Agnes, acute ‘dilatation of heart. James Anderson Kelley, 177, at 2632 Graceland, broncho-pneumonia,

OFFICIAL WEATHER

ememUnited States Weather Burean ___

INDIANAPOLIS FORECAST: warmer tonight and tomorrow.

cries 5:42 | Sunset TEMPERATURE —March 24, 1937—

Fair and

Sunrise cee. B201

Precipitaiton 24 hrs. ending 7a. m... .69 oat precipitation ........ceci000000 . 832

MIDWEST WEATHER . Indiana—Fair tonight and tomorrow; warmer north and central jortions tonight, Possibly nd frost extreme south, warmer tomor a MNlinois an ‘tonight - an tomorrow; warmer tonight and south and east portions iday. Lower Michigan—Generally fair warmer tonight and tomorrow. Ohio—Fair and warmer tonigh : tomorrow increasing cloudiness and warmer, showers tomorrow night or Saturday.

and

Kentucky—Fair and warmer tonight; tomorrow increasing cloudiness and warmer, showers tomorrow night or Saturday.

WEATHER IN OTHER CITIES AT 7 A. M. Station, Weather. Bar. Temp. Amarillo, Tex. , 44

» | Bismarck, N. D. h 32

56 Chicago ; 3s Cincinnati Cleveland, i

‘ FH 66 48 50 Ange Miami, . 72 Minneapol Li 44 Mobile. Al . , 64 New Orleans ... \ 68 58 48 44 33 44 64

yf iEkS Hias, 51, at 1618 Milbury, neph-| ritis

meeting. Hotel Washington, 7:30 p

SERIAL STORY—

30.08 50 St. Lows, ho 44 30.08

| 70 pa, a: DC. .. : 56

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—Dhe met his most difficult ease, Yesterday—Facing an. incredible assignment, Connie is about to depart by plane for California with Dr. Rogers to stand in for Camilla Wynne. The time is gettinz short.

CHAPTER THIRTEEN ONSTANCE said in. a moment of recklessness, at which she was to wonder later, “I still have no reason to think youre not insane, but—well, it will take me a half hour to pack.” Before she got out of the car in front of her own house, Dr. Rogers took a wallet from his pocket. “Since this is a business arrangement, Miss Maidwell,” he said, “and since I don’t imagine you habituaily carry airplane fare to California around in your purse, I'd better give you something on account.” He stripped some bills from a roll and handed them to her, . “Here's enough to buy a roundtrip fare — I don’t want you to imagine you're being shanghaied—

find a ticket waiting for you in your own anme, I'll meet you in the plane.” He might, Constance thought, have bzen instructing a nurse in the operating room, in full confidence ‘hat every command would be implicitly obeyed. “Aren't you taking a rather long chance?” she asked. “If I thought so,” he said with a short unmirthful laugh, “I'd bundle you up in a sack and carry you along as excess baggage.” And he looked for an instant grimly capable of doing it. _ “You needn’t be concerned about the money,” he added a little impatienily as Constance looked uncertainly at the bills in her hands. “The boy’s father will make it good, and be only too glad to pay you for any inconvenience this may .cause you. . . . Now you'd better run along. op at least ‘a half hour to get to the flying field. . . . And, oh yes! Better take along some lightweight clothing: It will be much warmer there than here. Please don’t be late. I've got enough to think about without walking the floor with a watch in my hahd.”

” 8 2 { WE well, Constance thought. I'm getting ahead in life—from substitute for a clothes model to stand-in for a screen star—or am 1? She ran upstairs, her thoughts

weight clothing. . . . But all of her lighter clothing was still stowed away in the basement locker—except. of course, for the new things

for hier wedding journey. She and |

Derek had been going south. Well, she had bought" them and paid for them, hadn't she? And

this was the only journey she]

seemcd likely to make for some time. . . . There wasn’t much time

4+ . . In ‘the end, she put in any number of things she would prob-

She would wear the dark tailored suit vith the silver fox fur and the

the hat over her hair, she smiled ‘that other oc-

had plenned in a moment of. happy delusion, Tl wear the tailored sui on tlc plane. Tm 50 glad 1 got the Tol 1iatand bag. Sb wasn het geal in tie plane

yi think he’s eloping with me, e thought maliciously. But no. I don’t believe that man really cares what anyone is giong to think. Then she sa® that he had taken a telegram from his pocket and was studying it with bent brows, the line between his eyes deepening as he read. He wrote a reply and settled down in his seat, quite as if he had forgotten her.

RESENTLY, however, with an air of suddenly remembering a duty that should be attended to, he came over and took a vacant seat opposite her. “Do you know,” he began with’ a rueful grin, “I don’t believe it’s occurred to me yet to say ‘Thanks.’ I’ “Don’t,” Constance cut in. “I'm just beginning to realize that youre staking a good deal on me. I'm not an actress, you know. I'm only a clothes model—an amateur at that.”

“You're an unusually adaptable young woman, if I'm any judge of human nature.” . . . He'd be the last to deny that he is, Constance thought with a flutter of irritation. “Elsa ODare, in whose judgment I have a lot of confidence, happens to be an old friend of ours. You don’t suppose,” he added, with a brief twinkle, “that I dragged you into my private practice without taking the precaution of finding out something about you, do you?” That, Constance realized, feeling a little foolish, was steely what she had supposed. “And just what” she ‘demanded, “did Miss O'Dare tell you?” “Not all she knew, I suppose. . . Only that when you walked into Daimler’s that day, you had no more idea of modeling in a fashion show than—well, than I had. But that you slip into the situation with cuch engaging impudence and such amazing poise that she couldn’t resist hiring you on the spot. . . . And,” he added. thoughtfully, “that she, personally, likes and respects you.” And that, Constance felt sure, was all Elsa had told him. ‘

“And now”—hiv friendliness sud-

‘Mind Your Manners

Test your knowledge of correct social usage by answering the following questions, then checking against the authoritative answers below: : 1. Should there always be a | plate under a soup bowl? 2. Should a hostess avoid the use of small side dishes: for vegetables? 3. Is it better to serve salad dressing at the side of a salad than on top? 4. Should one use intense colors when . putting vegetable coloring in foods? 5. May one eat the garnish oh food?

What ‘would you do if— You were a newcomer in a town and are invited to a small luncheéon . in someone’s house and you do net know if it is

A. Manage not to. be the first arrival and. follow what the others are doing? B. Ask someone ahead of

(Copyright, 1938. a Service, Ine.)

denly merged into a briskly rrofessional manner—“I think you'd better get to. bed as soon as the stewardess can get your berth ready. I'll call her and—" “Bed?” Constance said blankly. “But I never go to bed so early. . « » Oh, you needn't take the trou= ble,” she went on with malicious amusement as his hand moved in what she had come to know as an Babjtval gesture. “I have a watch,

She found herself disproportionately annoyed by his brusk shift from friendliness to:'this impersonal matter-of-factness. “Though you may not guess it,” she went on perversely, “I've really been out of boarding school for some time.” For a moment he examined her with that curious, tolerantly amused look she had come to recognize. . . As if, Constance thought with growing resentment, he were trying to decide just what kind of Inprediciable bug I might turn out

» » tJ

INALLY he said — obviously trying to be patient—"“Perhaps I'd. better remind you that you may have a hard day ahead of you. You'll need all the rest you can get.” “Please ‘don’t worry about me, Dr. Rogers,” she said; sleepless nights.” Without a word he turned stiffly back to his own seat. Indeed! Constance thought, watching him. with covert malice. We get a lot of fun out of standing off and feeling superior and amused, don’t we? But it isn’t so funny when people refuse to take us as seriously as we do ourselves, is it? } She took a great deal of satisfaction out of sitting up a good hour after her usual bedtime, Snuggled into her amazingly comfortable berth, Constance began to realize for the first time in that dream-like evening, exactly what was happening to her. Once in California, it was incenceivable that she shouid nct see Derek. And once she had seen Derek, all thé doubts and petty fears of the past few weeks would drop away like mist. She would

1 lose that feeling which had begun

to possess her that Derek had gone away into another and different world, and by that very act, had become different, himself; 80 that he no longer even spoke a language she understood. She fell asleep dramatizing those first few moments with Derek. There was a car waiting for them when they landed. The chauffeur, who seemed to know Dr. Rogers well, said, “I am to take you directly to the : ranch, sir. Miss Thorvald asked me Ww say she was sorry not to——" :

“Miss: Thorvald?” Constance said faintly. ' “Does he mean—is it the Thorvald ranch we're | to? CI But I can’t do that.”

(To Be Cont Continued) A

(Alt sSvents. names and .charact i his story are wholly Betitioney” n

HEARD IN CONGRESS

- Rep. Maas (RK. Minn.).—Now I want to make a few statements about the minority report (on the! naval bill). It is a very well‘worded report, it is a very fine report except for the simple fact that every paragraph in it is wrong and every figure quoted is in - errer. (Laughter),

|

- A

Senator Clark (D. Mo.), discussing the reorganization bi ill and certain

garding Senator from Tdaho (MF. Pope) ‘and the Seriator’from Kentucky (Mr,

Barkley) have spoken here about|y

assurances, but they have declined or failed to state from whom or whence the i

Thomas Hancock, 49, at Long, |.

“I thrive on|

THES SMELLIN' _ SALTS

TH WAACHINE THIS HAPPENED ON? YOUR FULL: NAME + YOUR

|: ADDRESS" YOUR

| AGE «MARRIED ! = SINGLE FOOT

2 LEFT

LI'L ABNER § K-KNOCKIN'

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.

3-241

“I'll meet you in front of the soda fountain, Chuckie.” : “Might as well make it the popcorn stand—a nickel’s

all I got.”

—By Al Capp

U TO 'KNO

I ¥ HATE TO TALK ABOUT ME Ab THE JME, SSUNE, BUT

HOW TMBORTANT THIS DEBATE IS) ve sist: GOT TO WIN im!

SCHOL,

ABBIE AN! SLATS | [OEE EWH= SES A

KNOCKOUT

YOUR HEALTH |

By DR. ‘MORRIS FISHBEIN American Medical Journal Editor REQUENTLY the question arises as to.whether or not certain dis‘eases stimulate those who suffer

fantile paralysis. The famous Lord Byron was. crippled, as was Steinmetz, one of ‘America’s greatest invenfors,

ing has been frequently associated with starvation, It has even been -asserted that syphilitic infection of the brain such as results in paresis may have been responsible for the extraordinary inventiveness of some of the great short story, writers of the past.

attached ‘to tuberculosis as a concomitant of genius because many of the greatest writers of the past suffered with this disease. For example, Louis Stevenson and John Addington Symonds revealed in their writings the gradual progress of tuberculosis.

The famous poet, John’ Keats, who. was himself a physician, and Aubrey Beardsley, the afiist, also had a rapid hemorrhagic form of tuberculosis. The writer de ‘Quincy and the famous writer -on ‘architecture, John had a slowly developing. fibrous em -of

“Confessions of an Opium Eater,” writes that his father died of consumption at the age of 39. He him-

1 self, however, lived to old age.

: 2 = = : HE. fatin of L Ralph, Waldo

of tuberculosis and Emerson himself suffered with repeated ill health. the famous: Sjohans Goethe had a severe attack of ‘bleeding from the lungs in youth and that ‘thereafter

| amount of world famous iteratur

from the lungs..

quent 5 or 100 a ago than mong other great

tuberculosis. De Quincy, who wrote |

Emerson died -at. an early age “It is interesting to realize that |

he _ recovered, producing a Tat. =

IF I WIN, IT WILL SORTA GIVE ME A BOOST ! I'D KINDA : LIKE TO TRY FOR A RHODES ARSHIP WHEN 1 GET TO COLLEGE!

You GO © KINGSTON | HIGH, June! DO YOU HA KNOW arper OPPONENTS GONNA BE?

==] KNOW YOUR OPPONENT VERY WELL!

Sy Raeburn Van Buren

from them to extraordinary mental{ or physical activity. Sir Walter| . | Scott, early in his childhood, had in-

Genius in literature and: in paint- | Fess

Particular importance has been ©

sstinta; 4 ausiolans as physicians who suffered rR tu-

and dying eventually at the ‘age of Systems most De 83 with a second attack of ? bleeding Jon

kerculosis we must include the} names of Honore Se (Ean Jate |

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CROSSWORD PUZZLE

¢ HORIZONTAL Answer to Previous Puzzle

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brother (pl). 36 Beer. ;

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35 Devoured. 37 Wager. _ 38 Social nsec. 39 Chaos -- 41 Still. 43:Hog.

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45 Work of skill. 47 Revolved, 80 Before.

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60 He inherited figures.

his half 15 Confession of

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ingredient 49 Neap.

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this —— from11 Compass point 56 Afternoon.

58 Ss Mawmtalik

———,———_—————