Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 March 1938 — Page 30
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IN INDIANAPOLIS |
"~~ TRAFFIC — VITAL STATISTICS — WEATHER
Here Is the Traffic Record
County Deaths = (To Date)
1938 ........ 24{n ses 45
City Deaths’ (To Date)
- (March 24) . Accidents ....
Reckless Driving | }& 2-
: Bunning Prefer- : ential Street : 1
Drunken Delve ing, 0 Others 25
MEETINGS TODAY
‘Exchange Club, luncheon, Hotel Washington, noon. Ezppa Sigma, lunch=on, Hotel Washington/ noon Indiana
polis Federation of Community 0p. ci
meeting. Hotel Washington,
AlAs Club, luncheon, Hotel Washington, noon. gr mist Club, luncheqn, Columbia Club,
arte Officers’ Association, luncheon, Board of Trade, noon Phi Delta Theta, Iu ncheon, Canary Cot-
ta Peta °F Tau Delta, luncheon, Columbia
b, noo; “Bei Thets Pi, luncheon, Town Tavern, noon
! MEETINGS TOMORROW Indiana Division, National Society of the
Alliance Francaise, luncheon, Washington i noon Indianapo. Smoke Abatement League, Testing. pols, Washing :30 p. m. h School etait Champion-
ship: Ya Fieldhouse, afternoon and
‘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.)
Elmer Leonard, gs, of 1326 W. 25th St.; Marie Count, 18, of 326 Riverside Drive. Charles Tripp. 43 of Indianapolis; Mary L. Micek, 45, of 1310 W. Was! hington St. obert Lee Andrew Jones. 23, of 2201 No aftindale Ave.: Alice Welch, 29, of Luther Robinson, 26, of 437 Drake St.; Mary Alice Dobbins, 26, of 1927 Highland
Plass: rman Dove, 40, of Chicago; Belle Tilford, 28, of 2021 W. Ohio Alonzo N. Keen, 36, of 1329 Oliver Aves Margaret Stephenson. 22, of 457 Haugh St. Chest er Lon 19, of 1238 Martin St.; Allene Whitcomb, 16, of 2111 Mor-
®Arthur Poynton Jr. 22, of Finley, O.; Dorothy Elizabeth Hon, 19, of Indian-
aps olis. Ralph D. Morris, 39, of 240 ton Drive: Evel Childress. 28, to #5401 Washington Boulevard. ulevard
BIRTHS
Boys
C. L. Mary Wise, .at Methodist. ory. Josephine Searcy. at Methodist. arry, Flossie Pray, at St. Vincent's. . iWrence, Helen Fekstein, at St. Vin-
Mabel McAllister, at St. Vin-
Cora Ball, at 1349 W. 23d. Lk t, Willellen Greene, at 247 8. tat
Frank, Hilda Donoho, at 2934 School. Girls :
Mary
cent's. { James, cent’
Wesley.
Robert. Alma Riggs, at Methodist. William, Gertrude Tobias, at Methodist. Albert, Mata Jatin, at Methodist
Urban,’ Ethel R James, Jean
cLaughlin. at Coleman, John, Marie Cronkhite, at Coleman. Frank, Avis Milam, at City. ores Beulah Sherman, at 729 S. Em-
or pert. Wemoma Enders, at 2143 Becher.
DEATHS Gladys. Risse 31, at Methodist, pulmonary edem rch E. Brown, 44, at Veterans, cardiac
dilatation Odetta Fay Kelley. 30. at Methodist, t Long. brain tumor.
acute myocarditis, Bessie Brittain, *0. at St. Vincent's, dia-
Daughters of the Union, state council mee ing, Hotel Lincon, ali day
SERIAL STORY--
Hotel | 7
OFFICIAL- WEATHER
United States
INDIANAPOLIS FORECAST — Showers and thunderstorms tonight and tomarrow;: warmer tonight; much colder tomorrow.
cose gs 6:02
Weather Bureau ___
Sunrise ...... 5:40 | Sunset
TEMPERATURE —March 25, 1937—
Precipitation-24 hrs. ending 7 a. m... .00 Total precipitation e Deficiency
s MIDWEST WEATHER Indiana—Showers and thunderstorms tonight ‘and tomorrow; warmer tonight, much colder, tomorrow. Hlinois—Showers and thunderstorms tonight and tomorrow; warmer south, colder extreme northwest tonight; much colder tomorrow. Kentucky—Showers tonight and tomorrow in east and centra rtions and showers tonight probably ending tomorrow morning in extreme west portion; warmer in east and central and colder in extreme west portions tonight; colder tomorrow and tomorrow night. Ohio—Showers tonight and tomorrow; warmer tonight; colder tomorrow and tomorrow night. Lower Michigan—Showers and thunderstorms tonight and tomorrow; warrer tonight; colder tomorrow.
WEATHER IN OTHER CITIES AT 7 A. M. Station. Amarillo, Tex. Bismarck, N. D Boston Chicago Cincinnati
* | Cleveland, O.
Denver Dodge City, Kas. Helena, Mont. Jacksonville, Fla. Kansas Sy,
Mineapolis Mobile. Ala. New Orleans New York Okla, hii Okla. Omah Neb. Pittsbur h
St. Louis
Ora Small, Priscilla King, 42, at Flower Mission, pulmonary tuberculosis.
Tampa, Fla. Washington, D. C. ...
© LOVE LAUGHS AT THE DOCTOR
By Elinore Cowan Stone
CAST OF CHARACTERS CONSTANCE MAIDWELL — heroine; the stand-in. DEREK MANTEHON—an artist who loved money first. HILDEGARDE THORVALD — Derek painted her portrait. DR. ROGERS—he¢ met his most difficult case.
Yesterday—Arriving in California with Dr. Rogers and thinking of Derek, Conmie is amazed to learn they are bound
for the Thorvald ranch! “But I can’t do that,” she cries.
—
CHAPTER FOURTEEN
R. ROGERS interrupted with, “Take the bags {o the car, Vincento.” Then he turned to Constance. “Now,” he demanded curtly, “will you please tell me what, in God’s name, you are talking about?” Constance repcated miserably, “I said I couldn't #o to the Thorvald ranch. | For a momen: he stood without speaking, just-looking down at her.
. For all ‘ths world, Constance|. . . . thought, as if I were some new and particularly incredible kind of
microcosm. At length he demanded with a patience he was obviously forcing
upon himself, “ Vould you mind ex- |}
plaining yourself?” “I just—can’t go,” Constance repeated piteously “I—it is unthinkable™ “I hadn't even unglerstood that you knew the Thorvalds.” “—~I have met them. . . . Why didn’t you tell me where you were taking me?” i “Principally”--he spoke as if he were humoring an excited and unreasonable child—“because it could hardly have occurred to me that any ofthe Thorvald family had done you so grievous an injury that you would find helping them intolerable.” “They haven't. . . . They've probably forgotten my existence,” Constance flounderad. “I—it’s nothing I care to tal kabout, Dr. Rogers. . Must you stand there looking at me as if I were a—a biological
“Aren't yqu?” he asked with a {twinkle ‘of exasperated amusement. “My dear young woman, please be adult. You can be, I know. . . . The Thorvalds are friendly, generous, courteous people. You say, yourself, that ‘hey have never injured you. They are in deep trouble, and I believe you can help them, or I certainly shouldn’t have put Mr. Thorvzld to the expense of bringing you across the continent—
~ He broke off, and stood for a moment just waiting. But in his waiting there was something jnexorable and - compelling that seemed to reach out and beat her down like a physical force. “All right,” she said in a smothered voice. “You're not leaving 7 me much choice, are you?” Without a word, he turned and strode toward the waiting car, and Constance followed.
&® » »”
NSIDE the car, Dr. Rogers said ‘with a magnanimous air of letting the dead past bury its dead, “I understand that the young artist- who did the Lady in Blue is painting Miss Thorvald’s portrait —Manthon—isn’t that his name?” - “Yes,” Constance said, trying to echo his off-hand tone. “That’s it.” . She was thinking, after all, this isn’t my fault. I didn't deliberately follow Derek here. But will Derek realize that, or—what am I imagining? ‘Why, Derek loves me.” “He’s damnably clever,” Mark Rogers went on. Constance frowned faintly. She did not like “damnably clever” as a characterization of the charming sophistication of Derek’s work. But Mark Rogers did not notice her frown. “And Hildegarde Thorvald is a charming subject.” ‘“She’s really lovely.” Constance’s tone was painstakingly enthusiastic. She was thinking, ‘perhaps I shan’t meet Derek here after all. He can’t Jost Drei 1 the portrait in the midst of all this. . . « Suppose he should have gone away for a while? «+ « Oh, but he must not be here. I couldn’t bear that. “If Miss Thorvald’s portrait is as successful es yours,” the doctor going
ing at. . . . Do you know, in my weak moments I envy fellows like Manthon?” “Why ‘weak moments’?’’ Constance asked tartly. “Aren't you being just a little bit patronizing?” He glanced at her, chuckled, and then sobered abruptly. “Lord, no,” he replied. “I know my place. Manthon creates things. I just try to patch up what someone else has wrecked. . . . Sometimes I think it would be a whack-
ing good sort of life—just to create
beauty, instead of tinkering ugliness. Did you ever stop to think
that a doctor spends half his time
patching up people who might be better off dead, so they can go right on suffering some more?” Constance said vaguely, “Yes, I suppose s0.” She was caught up in the flight of her own racing thoughts: Derek’s face when he first saw her there. . . . The first words he would say to her, and she to him. And from time to time, a chilling dread of the fantastic thing she had come here to try to do. 8 8 |» HE had seen Camilla Wynne often on the screen; and she had, she knew, an amusing gift of mimicry. It was that which had carried her triumphantly through that historic afternoon at Daimler’'s. When she did Camilla Wynne for her friends, they rocked with mirth. But she hadn’t been brought here to be amusing. This was stark reality. Today she must be -Camilla Wynne—to a boy who had known and loved her. She leaned back in her seat, her. eyes closed, and tried to picture the screen actress in every phase and mood in which she had ever seen her. When they drove through the outer gates of El Rancho del Oro and up an avenue of palms to the door, a white-clad nurse was waiting to meet them. Evidently Dr. Rogers knew her well, for he smiled and said, as if speaking to a friend in® whose judgment he had confidence: “This is Miss Maidwell, Miss Wilcox, the young lady I wired about. : What do you think?” . “It's an amazing resemblance, doctor. With a little touching up here and there, she could fool Miss | Wynne’s mother.” “How is Mr. Thorvald?” “Very restless, Doctor. Every time
Mind Your Manners
Test your knowledge of correct social usage by answering the following questions, then checking against the authoritative answers below: 1. At a public dinner where, the speaker’s table is long and narrow is it customary for the guests to be seated on one side of the table only? 2. Where does the chairman or toastmaster sit at such a, table? 3. May one use just first - names on place cards where the guests are few in number and all are proferab friends? 4. Is it pre ble to use plain white place" cards or fancy- colored ones? : 5. If there is no woman guest of honor at a dinner party, who is seated .at the host's right?
What would you do if— You are writing names on place cards for ‘a good-sized dinner party? «Write an individual’s name-as— (a) Mrs. Charles Davis. (b) Mrs. C. E. Davis. (¢) Mrs: Davis. # 2 2
Answers 1. Yes 2.In the center. 3. Yes
4, Plain ones. Unusual ones are only for feature parties. 5. Generally the eldest woman.
Best “What Would You Do” solution—(c) unless there is another
maliciously. . .
lax.” |isn’t it? Easiest in the world to give
| but I’ ve forgotten it.”
screen newlyweds.
(Copyright. 1938. NEA “Service, Inc.)
he drops off to sleep, he starts up
again and begins to cry out, ‘I
killed her, I tell you. ... You can’t fool me. . . . But she shouldn’t have grabbed my arm’—or something of that sort. And the first wrong ove is going to start that hemorrhage up all over again.” “Did you tell him Miss Wynne was coming to see him?” “His sister did, but he wouldn't believe her. ... . I sent Miss Thorvald to lie down, Doctor-—and her father, too. They were up all night.” “Fine,” he said heartily. .. . Ah, that pleased him! That's right up his street, Constance thought
now?” he went on. “The other nurse. I waited up till you came—oh, and Dr. Sandford’s in the library. He thought you'd want to see him before you took over the case. Miss—this young lady to her room.”
8 o 8
NHE led Constance to a pleasant second-floor room. It was huge and airy, with cool plastered walls. A door opened out upon a gallery shaded with roses and wisteria. Below was a flowering .patioc with a
pool and fountain.
.As Constance sat down at a dressing table to remove her hat, Miss Wilcox watched her critically.
“Yes, it’s really an amazing resemblance,” she said again, “with your eyelashes built ‘up and your hair changed a little. . . . We've found two or three pictures of her that’ will help, -and. fortunately there's a young—but. just wait here a minute—" She hurried | out, still talking. . : Constance was jooking about her at the quiet, simplé beauty of her room when Dr. Rogers knocked and came in. : “Well,” he said; “I think the time’ has come to make our experiment. . No use to run a temperature over it, now,” he went on as his
alert eyes followed the sudden tens-|/
ing of her hands. “The room will, be shaded, ‘and you needn't say more than a word or two. Just reHe grinned. “Helpful advice
and the hardest to take. But try— oh, here comes the makeup man.” Miss Wilcox appeared in; the: doorway, and behind her, a box of cosmetics under his arm, was Derek. “Mr. Manthon,” began Miss ‘Wilcox, “this is—oh, I'm so sory. Doctor Rogers did tell me your. ngme,
4
(To Be Continued) .
(All events, names and charagters in ‘this story are wholly fictitious.)
SO THEY SAY
From what I observed in China, I believe, this war will last.as long
| as there is a man in China to bear
arms.—Williami Benton, vice president of the University of Chicago, returning from the Orient. °
She is the apple of my eye. If anything should happen to her I guess I'd die—Wallace Beery, movie actor whose adopted daughter was threatened by kidnapers.
It was too perfect. We were so
| polite and considerate that we got
on each other's nerves.—Eleanor Bailey, movie chorus girl, explaining plan for a divorce from Director Eddie Foy.
We play for keeps and if you git beat don’t squawk. We won't have much time for squawkers.—George Kame of Almond, N. ¥,, comment-. ing on the horse trading convention at his { farm.
and I'm going-.to say it.~-J. P. Morto the United States from a trip oad.
It’s the dullest, mo: most bering, most tradition-bound form of entertainment that the
gatieq ened debutante has to bear.—.
Maxwell, commenting on the average college prom.
Many misunderstandings and quarrels in Hollywood have origin< ated from some untrue gossip note. —Tony Martin and Alice Faye,
pnley's future on the screen has. been Prophiesien ‘by practically everyone but in long run she es
“Who's with him |
. + o I'll show
* THE INDIANAPOLIS. TIMES OUT oy R WAY
_ FRIDAY, MARCH 2, 1938
[ UR HIM UP | f OVER IN | \ INDIAN | SPRINGS COUNTRY wee LOST HIS
SEEIN' YO’ FIGHT FO’ ME. LIKE. THET= 4 MADE. SUMBTHING HAPPEN--INSIDE O° | ME “LiL ABNER, dil LOVE No
DADDY, IVE GOT TO GIVE ‘up THE IDEA . OF DEBATING AGAINST FRECKLES IN THE AUDITORIUM! ©
ABBIE AN' SLATS
Np emg TS COMES Ne ADR HIS POL
OF COURSE, SLATS Te LEADER BECAUSE SLATS
YOUR HEALTH
By DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN American Medical Journal Editor
ONES are [the solid element of of structure which sustain the body’s form @nd its position. The most important attribute of a bone is its rigidity. The moment it is broken or crushed, it loses that rigidity so that motion becomes possible ‘at the point where the break
has occurred. This is the element of importance in a break of a bone. Since it is [important to get the fregmentis of | the bone back into the proper position before they heal together, the first step to be taken
after. it has been determined that|
a bone is broken is the setting or
the proper position. * When a bone is broken there
| will be bleeding and discoloration
of the tissues around the bone and a considerable amount of pain because of the pressure of the fragments of the bone on the nerves in the area coricerned. Motion of the
dinary motion of the portion of the body affected. Sometimes the frasments can be heard rubbing on each other, scientifically called crepitus.
a # =
X-ray in 1898, it was necessary for doctors to diagnose the presence of a fracture by studying these signs and symptoms. Nowadays, one of the very first steps in the study of a broken bone is the taking of an X-ray. picture. This shows exactly how the broken fragments lie in relation to each other. It is also possible by the use of the X-ray to determine exactly whether or not the fragments have been replaced in a position as nearly normal as possible. When the fragments have been replaced, they are held in a suitable position by the use of the splint or a cast. - Then healing begins. Lime salts are deposited by the blood in the area where the fracture occurred. Gradually thé scar tissue is transfo med ne new bone and then the
DILUTE THET MILK ew: T'S TOO RICH FER, A FAWN!
» KNOW YOURE GOING “IO DEBATE ON THE NEsATIVE
6 A PLAGE CALLED VINE DATES SHOULD
replacement of the fragments into |
fragment is different from the or-|!
EFORE the discovery of the |
HAFTA T'RAISE
ACK + THET
VUH'LL HAVE) ON A Te | WON'T WORK" |
SHE'LL KICK HIS HAID OFF?
TR WILLIAMS,
anh
3-26
FLAPPER FAN NY
8.2%
“Ips my birthday, Fan. Couldn't I take the day off 2”
“Nope, but wait until you're 30 or so, and whenever you ‘have a birthday you can take off a few years.”
CULES): WAL MAMMY SAYS " AH o A LSve SOMEONE-
IAN SHAR 1
ELSE ARUN ‘AHLL TRY,
AIN'T NO ONE
COME. EASIER: EF J ISSED
MEBBE. IT WOULD
a
—By Al Cap]
TILE =. HOME. OF DR. PARA ISE : THE BANDAGES ARE. REMOVED.
An xn SEE"
Ve Fon Sees LVL. ABNER
L ABNER 7-
—By Blosser |
I COULDNT TELL HIM ! IF HE KNEW, HE'D FORGET HIS Les RT Load SOS 1
10
1 OONT
Yes, 0apDY ! \) THIS DEBATE. : MEANS A LOT | [7 TO FRECKLES ~ vr
OF DUDLEY
|
AND HE THINKS You HAVEN'T SEEN
BET HE'D GINE 2 wor © GET £ CRACK OLEY! |
eg ) Hl
HIM BECAUSE ELL GET A WANGLE ! 1 A CHANCE TO--DUDLEY IS DEBATING IN
| By Rasbum Van Buren
HAVING EVERYTHING (AS HE IMAGINES) BE PERFECTLY--- SLATS GOES
“About that Shipmont oF cars to Scotland—test the ‘brakes : and see tint they’ re able to stop. on a dime!”
broken ends will Te found firmly » » . the broken: bores have not en put into a correct position, they will heal incorrectly and as a result an arm or a leg may . he severely bent or shortened. There are some instances in which healing does not occur - promptly: and in ‘such cases | ‘the surgeons may unite the: broken |
fragments by the use of = plates, | ‘wires, nails, pins or. other fasben- :
ing: methods.
physician is not mimediately avail able, the first. step must be ‘to -put the tissues at rest and to ‘hold them
jin one position by the use of a suit-1
able splint. Care should be taken, however, not to restrict too greatly
the blood supply and thus. . .bring|
about damage of the tissue before
the ‘ physician has opportunity“ to}
Undertake Stjontific care vor the frac-
"COMMON. ERROR “Nev ever.
In case a bone: is broken’ and; 84 an-jel; say. exkraniel
7 AND IF YOU DO, YOU FORFEIT | SOMETHING eA KISS! HOW jj) W-WELL=-===
34 Passage.
45 Note" in, scale.
_ ALL RIGHT. THE CHEEK
SHAKE’ YOUR ADs $0 SOFT sue .GILBERT--~ ST a OH WE SAID 77,
THE NEXT EPISODE OCCURS 30 SECONDS LATER.
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
HORIZONTAL
1,4 Pictured
scientist.
12 Ovule.
14 Away. 15 Prevaricator.16 Airplane. 17 Branch. 18 Growing old.
20 Feminine
pronoun. 21 Rope *walker. 23 Gibbon. 3 24 Exists. 25 Encountered. 27 South
America, » 46 Sea robbers. : 51 Streamlet.
28 Form x To put on. * ® Bor : '53 Wild ox. 36 Half. 38 Therefore. 39 Opposed to ~ higher. - ' = '60‘Also. 41 Butter lump. 62 Tatter. 42 Either 63 He "was 43 To perforate the skull. n cian.
54 Four and five. 3 Back. 55 Sea eagle,’ 57 Golf teacher. © 59 Bronze. ©
famous — 10 Dress coat end mathémati-
16 He was also known as ®', seem, . 19 He : propounded, the law of |
sna,
22 Form of “be. 26 Thick shrub, 28 Languishes./" 29 Drain. 31 Fiber knots; 33 Fern seeds. 35 Complains. 37 Man. 40 To snatch by force.
SITIA
64 Male: child. . : VERTICAL 44Convent 2 Small islands, + Worker. 47 Pealed. >a 48 Form of “a.® 49 Small shar sharic{ 50 To merit. © 52 Permits. _ %.56 Sun gods, - ; . 58 King of 7 . Bashan. ) Sloth.
. &Th hy 5Far a 6 Usurper. ti 7 Hair tool. ¥ 8.Exultant. a’ ‘9 Toupee, *
11 Measures: 13 Half an ‘em.
eR
‘61 Hawat bird
By Sylvia: :
Ss i aR I Hogi i wp
i
