Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 November 1947 — Page 5
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THURSDAY, NOV. 21, BR... ee reeeniees Ask Mrs. Manners— TE
I'm Old for My Age—Other Kids Bore Me’
"rand can't help it. There is no one Yo care for the children but me as people in ofir. neighborhood aren't very friendly. Um not in.ove with my husband and’know I should have realized that before I married, but what is done ‘is done. I have tried to leave him and live with my parents but they have eight children younger
Dear Mrs. Manners: 1 HAVE an” awful problem that I just can’t ast out of my mind. I wish you would give me some advice. I am only
18 and act much older for my age. It’ t like thi h 1 the office, where 1 than I and it takes all my father can.get to keep them, s just like 18—W en am in e olhce Cw ere The Jast time I left my husband he promised to do right if I would work, I am very much’ at ease with the older men and come back. I went back with him and my father told me to come home “ . h s old habits, He has, Should I go’ home and bring women, but when I am with the “kids” I went to school with he returned to his o have an awful time keeping up on their conversations and sometimes up my babies alone? . HEART, ICK, Indianapolis find myself ignoring them. I wish I wouldn't do this as they always A man is bound to react when he doesn’t think that his wife loves have been my friends through school. But sometimes I wish I were him. You might be able to make him think that you loved him— with someone older and more interesting who would talk’ about the and deceive yourself —if you worked harder at affection and conthings I like to talk about ion TE I guess-F-have an awfully silly problem, but I even forget what the Go out with yoiff husband somehow. other * “kids” are saying to me and it makes them awfully sore at me. around--he asked you to come back. You've failed some place. Can't J. J, City. you revise your budget and get sitters? Advertise for them or call . sitter services. You need to go out together, not separately, and enteres wn. Years Sine jv enjoy all sf Ste=BUt oie} Jump oo You Du. tain at home. Your husband wants companionship and affection and ; . » | he'll find it someplace. fi ber “aw back Lottuble Srowing WP 0 Lue any Je a uy similar Strange that you haven't made friends with other young mothers. aT a hard work and didn’t you really have Offer to take care of their children in exchange for occasional care more fun with persons your age? of your-famlly,
You owe your children a harmonious home, and you have no busi- ! ¥ § d adults. ) : go need, frends, old friends and nen ones, yuh 40d SS | pes ing back fo Yur paren. Assuming support of thre chien
fri but meet new young friends with Interests like yours wouldn't give you freedom-—and freedom ‘is what you're’ missing
at 19, A Private Message to ‘Donna’
TO DONNA, who wrote confidentjally. Stay where you are. You sound more unstable than your husband and your unrest may make him restless. He loves you and gives you all the money that he can. Help him find a job that he likes and don't nag him™ You and his mother are partly to blame for nis dependency. try to think for him. Make him proud to think for himse}f.
Is Man, 73, Eligible for a Pension? I' AM WRITING this letter for a gentleman 73 years of age. Because of his age and limited experience it seems he is unable to get
(Let Mrs. Manners and readers of the column share your problems and answer your questions. Write in care of The Times, 214 W, Maryland St.)
Odor Ostracizes Good Bug Killer
Play Cast Picked By Howe Seniors
Selection of the cast for “320 College Avenue,”
Don't
a mystery to be pre-
_ sented by the Howe Senior Class employment and has no income. He owns a house and property which By Science Service Jo 15, 1 and 5 hi Class has a small mortgage against it. WASHINGTON, Nov. 271 — A ey by Darrell Gooch nun Under the circumstances would he be éligible for old-age pension or socially impossible” insecticide tut 266tO ‘ ’ L . social security? If eligible for either, would he have to sign his property used less than it might be oe- Matv Jo. Taviol ai Valta over to them? to ! ite disagreable Wusty Ld Mary Jo Taylor was selected for i 2 ‘ause o S 1sagrea Sy ¢ "w Pp p 1s a © { He shares his four-rébom house with a family of three who keep 8 . the lead. Others in the cast inhas had its handicap turned into cludes Carol Eves, Patty Andrews,
house for him, board him and pay telephone, utilities, etc. He is satisfied with the set-up but has no income for taxes, upkeep or spending. Above all, he wishes to retain his home, If you can give him U, 8.
Helen Aldrich, Freers, Mary Hit
Ellen Barnes, Jackie e, Diane Hays, Ba. -
an advantage in at least one case,
Department of Agriculture
) ‘ bara Ziegler, Joy Wilson, Dave any information I'm sure he'd be grateful. . scientists here report. Owen a, Harvey Don. AFin. I feel your column is a valuable contribution to our city. | ; Benzene hexachloride. which aan Oper, Vilna in 8, D Arn A FRIEND, City. not- be used for food-plant "ro- i EN 1
Richard Sharkey, Allan Smith, Richard Bakemeier, Brandt Steele, Don Brown, Robert McDaniel and Lloyd Collins. : The faculty committee - includes Marthana McWhir, Richard dammond and Mr. Gooch. Members of the student committee are Richard Sharkey, Diane Hays, Barbara Jo
Tell your {friend to visit the Marion County Department of Public Welfare, 148 E. Market St, and the Social Security Administrative Field Office, 307 N. Pennsyivania Si. “Social Security representatives will contact him if he is unable to go to their offices. A lien Is placed on property for the amount of assistance reczived when old age assistance is given through the welfare office. No lien is involved in Social Security insurance which is due him if Pine oil containing from three to he were employed a sufficient length of time under the Social Security 5 per cent of benzene hexaprogram. chloride, when squirted into cows’ Riegel nd Brands Steel . sars, not only kills the ticks already Riegel and Bran eele, ‘I Don’t Love My Husband—Shall | Leave Him?" | ietelt but serves as a repellent for - — I AM 19 YEARS OLD and the mother of three children. I live in at least 17 days. NAMES ON THE MOON the suburbs of town and seldom get to go anywhere. My husband goes| Counting both killing and epel-| No less than 672 details of the to the movies at least once or twice a week but refuses to care for the|lent action, one dose “de-ticks” a moon's surface have authorized children so I may go once a month, {sow for about a month, at the sost names approved by the InternationHe has been going with other women. f 1 cent per ear, al Astronomical’ Union.
tection because nobody would want to eat the food afterword, has tween 1sed “effectively against a tignly pecialized cattle parasite in ghe Southwest, a tick that attacks only he insides of the ear.
He says he goes with them
12S. Hynes & (o.
AT HOME IN INDIANA FOR 75 YEARS
Bright Spot In Your Winter Ward
of “Tropic Ice"~ a smooth
Ings LUIARA FULL ‘Lav
He evidently wanted vou
0 Schools Better, Say Fucators
Improvement Shown Over Year Ago WASHINGTON ‘Nov. 27 (UP)== |The National Education Association
| | |
lin better, shape than a year ago, But, the association ‘warned, at {least - two million children are bes ing denied educational opportunities Ichiefly because of the loss of quali~ fied teachers to better-payving jobs. Reporting ‘on its annual preview of conditions in education, the ase sociation also said: ONE: Nearly. one million pupils are being transported to school daily in unsafe buses. - TWO: Classes are and needed textbooks ment are lacking. “Worst of all,” sald ‘Willard E, Givens, association executive secs retary, “great inequalities=in educae | tional opportunity, among and withe {in the states continue to exist, Such discrimination against millions of youth is contrary to the ideals of democracy we 'profess.” | Givens urged congressional action |to remove these inequalities through
" : " " " federal aid to education. PLAN "BLANKET HOP" — Planning the traditional "Blanket Hop" of Butler | “Givens Tn inploves University Sigma Delta Chi fraternity tomorrow night are (left to right) Donald Siebert, ment in the teacher supply—largely William Tobin and Brooks Walter, all of Indianapolis. They hold the coveted hg Hesse o ry doves, of veterans— : 8 ole blanket which will be presented to the outstanding senior grid star at the dance at RE Murat e. enough, he said.
County Builders Gives Away $1 Million Because I's Fun
WASHINGTON Nov, 27
overcrowded and equip=
tem Nn
(UP)—Giving away a million dollars is next gift was a library for Alex
I M fun to Robert 8. Barratt, and a source of satistaction. andria. Then a hospital for Riche 0 gp ] dy The 71-year-old retired Alexandria, Va. newspaper publisher, has mond. been giving away money most of his life. But he says nothing gave him “None of the buildings cost “Home Builders Round-Up,” the more pleasure than when he recently gave away almost all his fortune. much,” Mr, Barrett said, “Maybe 8th annual meeting of Marion Mr, Barrett's money goes mainly to charity and his tiny, blue-eyed $25000 or $35,000. But no big County Residential Builders, Inc., wife approves. Ys is in his mother's Alexandria home. philanthropist ever had more fun will be he'd Monday in Hotel aut “So much money doesn't belong “I knew what it was like to have giving.” lers. More than 150 builders and tq oye couple,” she sald. “It belongs to pawn my vest so I could get! Now, their three sons and a associates will attend, to pt ople who need it." money to eat on,” Mr. Barrett re- daughter will serve as trustees for Nicholas F. Molnar, builder and = yp. garrett, a tall powerful man,’ called, the new]y-created Barrett Foundae
realtor of Greater Cleveland, O., will it speak, He is past president of the Home Builders . Association of
Greater Cleveland and currently a
used his $1,000,000 fortune to set up the Barrett Foundation, Its timated $30,000 annual income Will he went to Mexico City,
‘That was when he was a cub tion, es- reporter in New York. From there! At the end of 30 years the founda= where he tion is to be dissolved and the
national director and trustee of the P¢ distributed among several chair- saved enough money to buy a small prineipal divided equally between association : {table organizations. The bulk will newspaper and his fortunes im-|/the National Florence Crittenton p : go to the Florence Crittenton Mis- proved, {Mission and the Elks’ National
LeRoy Carson is chairman of the arrangements committee in charge of the program.
sion, which operates 60- charitable! Eventually he became publisher | Foundation, maternity hospitals for unwed of the Alexandria Gazette, the As for the Barrett children—they An election of directors also is mothers and their children. . country's oldest daily newspaper. already have -been provided for. scheduled. Directors will be elected! His mother, the late Dr. Kate Then he made his first sizable do-| “Anyway we never believed in to replace Hugh Bremerman, Harry Waller Barrett, helped found the nation for a boys’ club for Alex- giving a great deal to them,” Mr, Dillehay, Ov O. Grinslade, H. A. National Florence Crittenton Mis- andria and "his wife suggested he Barrett said. “Three of them even Lindeman Jr. and Delbert B. Meyer. sion
OPEN ALL DAY MONDAYS ; UNTIL CHRISTMAS . |
Shop daily from 9:00 to 5:25 — Monday thru Saturday
Coral, aqua, amber, sand.
Sizes 10 to 16.
*
v
Budget Shop, Third Floor
oo
robe! Lampl's full-skirted suit dress
17 |said the country's public schools are ~
®
Its national headquarters still give it=to the community. Their worked their way through college.” ,
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