Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 November 1939 — Page 9
W.D. C. Group To ‘Hear Nurse
‘Mrs. Rowena L. Harrison, nurse at Technical High School, ‘was to talk this afternoon on *Guarding the Health of the High School Child” before members of the Community Welfare Department of the Woman's Department Club at the clubhouse. Miss Mary A. Meyers, executive secretary of the Marion County . Tuberculosis = Association, was : show a sound film, “Let My People Live.” The m was to follow a discussion luncheon. eae Mrs. Robert Shingler was lunche eon chairman, Mrs, William F, Swope was in charge of the dining room, :
Arrange Masoma Birthday Dinner
‘Music Board’ | |D-A. R's Style Show Mus Board 2 Is Scheduled Today
~ Meets Friday| me cwoine scott sarmson J ioe geet oan _¥ Chapter, Daughters of the Amer-| + |ican ‘Revolution, was to sponsor a bridge pariy and style show this afternoon at the ¢hapter house. Clothes from ritan| times to the present to be modeled by the Mesdames O. Harold Hershman, J. Francis Madden, ian} 0. Weber, Paul S. Ragan, Kenne ~ Coffin, William Henry Harrison, Charles F. Voyles, Roy K. Coats, J. H, Hamlet, W. C. Bartholomew, Walter H. Green, Fred D. Stilz, L. H. Millikan, Harry A. Van Osdol, Wilbur E. Smith; the Misses Margaret Millikan, Mary Ellen Voyles, Peggy Bosart and Jane Wright,
» . i 4 “ : DEAR JANE JORDAN—I've been divorced for six years and still -Jove my husband just as I did at 16 when I married him. I'm 29 now. He got the divorce. I wasn’t so good on money matters, or was I? He would give me $4 a week to buy groceries for three of us. We had a child of 4. : © There never was enough and I would take money meant for _ something else to buy groceries, and lie about paying the bills. Finally when the collector would come, my husband nearly hated me. Still ; he wouldn't offer me more money and Bic salary Jvas Jay Sood, \ He said if I wouldn't appear aga e ; : : \ SY strict’ ; would let his mother take care of our baby that I could have her to : ; report on dissect Bclivides, Rehadic . visit with me whenever I liked. I had to go to work and hated leav- Anan of Hal , e Mart Hon, shai. ing her with a stranger. Even if I kept her and hs supported her, I > wil 6 5 > Means oom.
would have to live in rooms. I had lived in 50 different light house- project. ei : keeping rooms when I was a kid. .- Following the meeting, the group
. 1 didn’t want my girl to go through this. It worked all right for will ‘attend the Indiana Symphony a while, then my husband decided he didn’t want me to see my child ii viens the Indinna’ Sva only once or twice a year as it distracted her mind. I thought if ing concert of the Indianapolis sacrificing myself and staying away would assure her happiness, I'd foe, oie Inala ar i force myself to do it. I've grieved and cried until I'm tearless. Symph : rchestra, I still love my husband and my child. The last time I saw the child she told.me she loved me. I've tried to talk to my ex-husband, but he refuses. He has never married again. Neither have I. I “know I could make them both happy. Won't you try to help me?
| The official board of. the Indiana ng | Federation of Music Clubs is to ~ | hold its annual November meeting © {at 10 a. m. Friday at the Severin Hotel. Mrs. Lioyd Billman, Manilla, state president, will preside and will
- Answer—The reasons you give for tuining your child over to her grandmother sound fairly self-sacrificing on the surface. On closer inspection orie wonders if this is the real reason or if it was the only reason you could find to justify the shedding of your responsibility. Wasn't it easier for you at the time to give up rather than face the struggle of caring for your child and working at the same time? Wasn't it easier to quit than to face your husband with the fact that you couldn’t run the table on $4 a week and compell him to look at your budget? Like a child you always did the easiest thing at the moment by paying the deficit with money laid aside for other things and lying about your action to delay the evil day of reckoning. Can't you see that your technique always has been to evade a problem rather than tackle it? Even now you could face him down and demand the right to - see your child as often as you choose. You could take your case to court and get legal permission to see her providing you have done nothing to render you unfit. Instead you martyr yourself and cry. In dat: of 3 Series) short, you elect the useless side of life instead of the useful. You'll By OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON .always be ste on by someone until you learn to engage in th Co ! y he : struggle for justice. You simply lack push. : BOYS AND GIRLS read pretty much the same type of books - These are the qualities you have to resist in yourself, the tendency up to 10°or 12. Boys may not care for the straight girl story unless
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e Perfect Meals — Easier Meals LT A oY AVA I. ® Save You.
: or fs : Times Photo." The Masoma Club, honorary woman's organiza- ¢ of the party 'were-being completed today by (left-to-tion at Manual Training High School, will mark the | right) Mrs. Alberta Bernd Morlock, Miss Beatrice 25th anniversary of its founding tonight with a din- | Perdue Marell and Mrs. Margaret Bartholomew ner at the Tabernacle Presbyterian Church. Details | Burres, os
pons “we J UNIOR BOOKS
80 to Present A Debussy Work|
‘A choral ensemble of 80° women| will present “The Blessed Damozel,”
to evade, to quit, to save yourself trouble. Accept half the responsibility for the upbringing of your child and let no one deter you from fulfilling it. Nothing can hurt your child more than the belief that her mother deserted her.” If you do not talk against her father, or act itiful yourself, your visits need not upset her. ! P Train ie to face the unpleasant and give up the sacrifice of self as a way of life. This program will bring you a more satisfac-
tory existence, the details of which you must work out for yourself.
JANE JORDAN.
Put your problems in a letter to Jane Jordan, whe will answer your gquestions in this column daily. .
Spanish War Veterans’ Auxiliary To Honor Officers at Banquet
"Several routine business sessions and a banquet honoring state officers are scheduled for this week by members of organizations affiliated with
war veterans’ groups. .
Members of FEDERAL UNIT 62 OF THE AMERICAN LEGION AUXILIARY will meet at 1:30 p. m. tomorrow in the Fletcher Trust Building. Mrs. Bonnie Taylor will preside. ’
Mrs. Luella D. Porter, president of the Department of Indiana Auxfliaries of the United Spanish War Veterans will be honored by the MAJOR HAROLD C. MEGREW AUXILIARY 3 at a banquet Saturday evening in the Claypool Hotel. Mrs. Porter is a member of the Megrew auxiliary. Present and past national and state officers will be guests. Mrs. Laura M. Oren is general chairman, assisted by Mrs. Josephine M. Han-
na, president,
’ Members of the DRUM AND BUGLE CORPS OF THE INDIANAPOLIS AMERICAN : LEGION AUXILIARY will be in charge of the dance for the annual fall con-
9:30 p. m. Saturday, Nov. 25, at the Antlers Hotel. will be held Saturday and Sunday, Nov. 25-26, at .the Legion headquarters. Mrs. Louis Larsen will be general chairman of dance arrangements, assisted by officers, including Mesdames Bernard Stuvell, Thomas McCarrick, Frank Halligan, Connie Schulman, Garner Brannon, Gladys Sullivan and Miss Rosemary Delatore, drum major.
Members of the GEORGE H. CHAPMAN WOMEN'S RELIEF CORPS will have charge of the meeting of the Federated Patriotic Societies this evening at 8 o'clock at Ft. Friendly, 512 N. Illinois St.
The fall conference.
it includes boys. But for the most part they will enjoy the same story. : The 1939 books for children from 9 to 12 are, if possible, better than ever. I can only mention a few. In any book list many of the best may be overlooked. I advise parents to go and judge for themsselves. I myself have had an orgy of fall reading. - “The Singing Tree,” by Kate Seredy (Viking). “Flying Hoofs,” by Wilhelmina Harper (Houghton Mifflin). “Princess September and the Nightingale,” by W. Somerset Maughham (Oxford). , “The Trail of the Buffalo,” by Rutherford Montgemery (Hough= ton Mifflin). “The Sister of the Angels,” by Elizabeth Goudge (Coward McCann). ; “The TFurf-Cutter’s Donkey Kicks up His Heels,” by Patricia Lynch (Dutton). ; “The Happy Flute,” by Sant Ram Mandal (Stokes). “Tall Timber Tales,” by Dell J. MeCormick (Caxton). . “Golden Gate,” by Valenti Angelo (Viking). - “Wooden Saddles,” by Marion Lay (Morrow). “Francie on the Run,” by Hilda Van Stockum (Viking). “Under Three Flags,” by Margaret B. Pumphrey (Caxton).
“Pixie on the Post Road,” by Eleanore Hubbard Wilson (Dutton).
“Bright Morning,” by Charlie May Simon (Dutton). “The Magical Jumping Beans,” by Eleanore Hubbard Wilson . (Dutton). “Peter Hale,” by Julia Davis (Dutton). “Sea Bird Island,” by Vera Andries (Harcourt Brace). “Let's Go to the Movies,” by Wm. C. Pryor and Helen 8. Pryor (Harcourt Brace). } “Terrence O'Hara,” by Thomas Burns (Harcourt Brace). “The, Little House on Runners,” by Marjorie Heyes (Little Brown). “The Red Dory,” by Hazel Wilson (Little Brown). “Farthest West,” by Laura Adams Armer (Longmans).
“Adventure May Be Anywhere,” by Ruth Manning Sanders -
(Stokes). ; : : “Jo-Yo’s Idea,” by Kathleen Morrow Elliot (Brozoi). ’ “Shaggy, the Horse From Wyoming,” by Russell Ggdon Carter (Houghton Mifflin). : \ “S O'S Geneva,” by Richard Plant and Oscar Seidlin (Viking). “Hobby Horse Hill,” by Lavinia R. Davis (Doubleday Doran). “Turi of the Magic Fingers,”.by Henry Lionel Williams (Viking). “Joan and thre Three Deer,” by Marjorie Medary (Random House). NOTE TO PARENTS: Tt is suggested that you clip and keep the book
list above. You will find it a handy reference when making your Christm list of gifts for your own children ny others of various ne Yeoups. »
[a cantata by Debussy, at the Indianapolis = Matinee - Musicale’s
monthly program at 2 p. m. Friday, Nov. 24, in Ayres’ auditorium. . The lyric poem was adapted to the original poem by Dante Gabriel Rossetti by Frank Damrosch and is
under the direction of Joseph Laut-| i ner. Mrs. J. Harry Green, soprano, :
and Miss Lilly King, mezzo-soprano, will sing the solo part, accompanied by the Jordan Conservatory Orches-
. |tra. Mrs. Natalia Conner and Mrs
panists. »
Others appearing on the program |:
will be Miss Lois McCain, cellist, and a wind instrument trio including Harvey McGuire, Richard Foster and Paul Harder, Mrs. Robert W. Blake and Mrs. Howard Stitt are in charge of arrangements. Miss McCain, ae-~ companied by Mrs. Paxton, will play a sonata for cello and piano by De-
bussy. The trio will phy Beethoven's
Opus 87.
On-Ea-Ota Members Will Fete Husbands
Husbands and guests of On-Ea-Ota Club members will be entertained at a. Thanksgiving dinner at 7 p. m. tomorrow in the Christian Park Community House, Games and contests will follow. Members of the arrangements committee are Mesdames Warren Baker, Glenn Hefferman, Lee Angerer, Fred Hite and Clifford Hite.
Sorority Unit Meets Alpha Nu Chapter of Alpha Zeta Beta will meet at 6:30 p. m. today at the Y. W. C. A. :
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ference of Indiana Legion Posts at
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