Indianapolis Times, Volume 33, Number 149, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 November 1920 — Page 5
A i>*i4a-elect, who has been the center 4S -a series of social festivities, is M-ss Myra Fischer, whose marriage to John W. Brown will take place Wednesday afternon in the parlors of All Unitarian Chnrch. Tonight, Mrs. E. C. Matthius, who is to the matron of honor, will entertain with a theater party at the Murat In honor of Miss Fischer and Mr. Brown. The guests will include the bridal party and a group of out-of-town folks who have come for the wedding. Tomorrow evening, Mr. and Mrs. Hugo Fischer, parents of the bride, will entertain with the bridal dinner at the Athenaeum. • • • Women of the Gatling Gun Club will meet tonight in the clubhouse for a business session. • • • Mrs. Leonard James of Atlanta, Oa., came today to pass a few weeks with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Valodin, 3012 Talbott avenue. Arthur Schultz, who Is attending Indiana University, accompanied by C. Tuttle, passed the week end with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. L. E. Schultz, 2318 Kenwood arcnne. • * • A pretty wedding of Saturday night was that of Miss Francis Luclle Duncan and George A. Kramer, which took place at the home of the bride's mother. Mrs. Minnie E. Duncan, 345 East Merrill street, the Rev. E. I. La Rue officiating. The rooms were attractive with a profusion of lavender and yellow chrysanthemums combined with palms and feathery greenery. A program of bridal music wns played by a harpist, including the Mendelssohn •‘Wedding March” for the processional. Mrs. Esther Moslman, matron of honor. In lavender Georgette crepe over white satin, carried an arm bonqnet of yellow chrysanthemums. Arthur Lindstaedt was best man and Florence F. Fearnought and Edith Snyder were ribbon bearers. Little Susan Jane Eberhardt, in a frock of green organdie, was Cower maid, and Frank Ebner. In a white satin suit, carried the rings in a French basket of roses. The bride wore a handsome gown of bridal satin combined with princess lace, with a tulle veil arranged cap effect caught with orange blossoms, and she carried a shower of bride roses. Mr. and Mrs. Kramer left after the service for a trip.
Mr. and Mrs. T. J. Kanary, 1523 West Market street, entertained Sunday with a dinner party. The guests Included Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Shake and Richard Shake of Monrovia, Miss Goldie Adam*, of Martinsville, Mr. and Mrs. Forsythe, Charles Forsythe and King Forsythe of Bloomington, Mr. and Mrs. William Thayer M. Dunn. Mrs. Mary Adams, Miss Margaret Nussart. Mr and Mrs. Emmett Cates of this city. • • • Miss Fern Sears. 146$ Central avenue, announces the engagement of her sister, Kathryn, to William J. Miller, the wedding to take place Nov. 18. • • • Baskets of yellow and white chrysanthemums, masses of Premier roses, combined with asparagus fern, palms and t-milax, effectively arranged under the soft glow of tapers set in tall cathedra! holders, made an attractive background for the marriage of Miss Mary Elizabeth Gardner and Jesse Fletcher, which took place Saturday night at the home of the bride's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Fred C. Gardner, 4131 North Meridian street. The service was read by the Rev. Allan B. Philputt, assisted by the Rev. O. D. Odell. A program of bridal music wag ployed by Mr*. Carrie Hiatt Kennedy, organist; Mrs. Franc Wilhite Webber, harpist, andRnth Elizabeth Murphy, violinist. Robert Hendrickson. Wiley Daniels. Charles Fletcher and Robert McConnell of Northampton. Mass., were the ushers and Mstthew Fletcher acted as best man. Miss Margaret Gardner, sister of the bride, maid of honor, wore a frock of peach-colored satin with chiffon overdrnpery and she carried a shower of Sweetheart roses, violets and maidenhair fern. Miss Lilian Fletcher, in sunburst yellow satin veiled in pink tulle, with r shower of Mr*. Aaron Ward rosea, yellow daisies. Sweetheart roses, and Miss Susan Helsey Walker of Newark, Ohio, In flame-colored tnlie over yellow satin, with a shower of Ophelia roses and yellow orchids, were bridesmaids. Little Cecily Fletcher, in a dainty white
Post Toasties as President of the League of Rations Girls! Girls!! Clear Your Skin With Cuticura zc&sz. Says, “Have Taken MenthoLaxene, and Found It Just as You Said— Only Better” Home-Made and Pure MOTHERS' Give Pure Medicine to your sick child. Make it at home with concentrated Mentho-Laxen e and simple sugar syrup. Directions with each bottle. 8o many coiifh medicine® contain narcotic®—not enough, perhapa to poison—but enough to deaden the nerves which cause coughing. Mentho-Laxene contains no narcotics It la all purity, with Wild Cherry Tolu' Menthol, Caspars, Grindelia, Ammonian Chloride —a highly concentrated, pure compound. Give children and aged folks this pleasant home-made mixture, and see how the very first dose does a world of good for severe cough, tight cold, bronchitis,’ hoarseness, whooping cough, throat tickle, etc. It is antiseptic; it loosens the tightest cough, and sleep, restful sleep comes. Mrs. M. L. Martin, 993 Prospect Ave., Buffalo. N. writes: “I have taken your Mentho ; Laxene for a short time and found It to be just as you said—ionly better, for I had u Tery bad cold and it made me well in four da vs." Quick results. quick relief gotten cheaply, too—as any one saves two to three dollars by making Mentho-laixene cough syrup at home. Your druggist ha* It—you should have it loo.—Advertisement.
7^ Grandmother and 72 to Vote for Gov, Cox KANSAS CITY, Mo., Nov. X.—Mrs. Elizabeth Bnlla, 1)9, Albany, Mo., will lead seventy-two descendants to tho polls tomorrow. She will vote for Governor Cox and declared that each oue of her children, grandchildren and great grandchildren will vote the same way. One of her sons is the Rev. Dr. diaries I>. liulla, general secretary of Methodist general board of Nashville, Tenn. V J frock, scattered rose petals In the path of the bride. The bride wore an exquisite gown of Ivory Callot velvet, embroidered In crystal and pearls, fashioned with a court train, over which fell her tulle veil, arranged with a coronet of real lace, held In place with orange blosoms. and her bouquet was a shower of lavendar orchids and Hites of the valley. Following the ceremony a wedding supper was served, the bridal table being decorated with bride roses, lilies of the valley, with the glistening wedding cake on a mound of white crysanthemums as a center piece. Mr. and Mrs. Fletcher have gone on a wedding trip and will be at home after Dec. 1 at 20 West Forty-Second street. First Presbyterian Pastor Retires Dr. E. Woodruff Halsey of New York City, secretary of the t’resbyterlan board of foreign missions, preached at the morning service of the First Presbyterian Church yesterday. Dr. Halsey took the place of the Rev. M. L. Haines, who resigned his patorate after nearly thlrty-alx years of service. A successor to the Rev. Mr. Haines, who tendered his resignation last July, has not yet been made by the committee of fifteen, appointed to select anew pastor. Dr. Haines, who will make his residence in Indianapolis, made a short talk at the close of the service, announcing his retirenfent. McCulloch Stand for Teachers Made Plain ‘‘l am absolutelv and unqualifiedly In favor of any and everything that will legitimately redound to the benefit of the teaching profession,” declared Dr. Carleton B. McCulloch. Democratic candidate for Governor, in answer to an Inquiry from Miss Belle O'Hair, president of the Indiana State Federation jof Teachers, regarding the standing of tfie two gubernatorial candidates for governor on a working pension law for disabled and aged teachers. ”1 owe too much to education myself to feel otherwise,” stated Dr. McCulloch. GREENSBORO MAN INJURED. GREENSBURG. Ind., Nov. I.—Charles Tremaln of near this city suffered serious Injury and narrowly escaped death when an automobile he was driving was struck by a Big Four train.
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WOMAN'S CASE AMAZES INDIANAPOLIS I A business rain's wife could not sew or read without sharp pains In her eyes. For years her eyes were red and weak. Finally she tried slmpie wltchhaeel, camphor, hydrastis, etc., as raized In Laroptlk eye wash. The result produced by a single bottle amazed everyone. We guarantee a small bottle Laroptlk to help ANY CASE weak, strained or inflamed eyes. Aluminum eye cup FREE. Henry J. Huder, druggist.—Advertisement. How to Keep the Face Young and Attractive The way to ward off old age Is not to fear It, not to allow one’s self to be oppressed by the dread of advancing years, t'se only legitimate preventives and avoid trying experiments with preparations that have not stood the tent of time. An entirely safe and very effective way to keep the complexion young-looking and beautiful Is to apply ordinary mereoltzed wax at bedtime, using It like cold cream, washing It off In the morning. This gradually absorbs the withered, faded cuticle, which Is replaced by the more youthful, pink-tinted underskin. One ounce of this wax, to be had at any drug store. Is enough to completely re- ! juvenate a worn-out complexion. Crow’s feet and other wrinkles, the first ' signs of advancing age, may be removed ! by a simple, bodiless preparation made ! l>y of powdered j —Advertisement,
PUBLISHES NEW BOOK OF ESSAYS Robert Cortez Holliday of Indianapolis has published another book of essays. He calls this one “Men and Books and Cities.” In a short preface it is described as "a rambling hotchpotch of irresponsible comment.” The essays, written originally for The Bookman by Mr. Holliday, who wrote under the name of Murray Hill, are breezy comment and narration, jumping from one subject ot place to another with startling abruptness. All of the book is good reading, but the first half, which pertains exclusively and Intimately to Indianapolis and its people, is especially Interesting to those who know the city and the persons described. He reveals that Dr. Carlton B. McCulloch writes poetry. He tells Intimately of the two foremost Indianapolis authors. Booth Tarklngton and Meredith Nicholson, and reports Intimate conversations of both. ''Meredith Nicholson and a Camel,” deals tncldently with the troubles of a certain easily recognized hotel publicity man. “The Soul of a Trap Drummer” (the drummer 1* Nicholson's young son!; "Why Shakespeare's Audience Didn't Walk Out on Him” (Tarklngton's theory of why Hamlet did certain things!; “Booth Tarklngton Discusses the Cosmos,” and "Riley and a Colored Barber* 'are snbjects treated. The book concerns other cities and other people. The whole book is worth reading. F. F. B. Mrs. Housewife , Do You Know? 1 What Is the origin of mullgatawny oup? 1. llow to prepare old-fashioned "ruo3. I U possible to secure the oldfashioned bathhrlek, preferred by many housewives to any other sort of knife scourer? These queatlona will be anawered to-
■* *■* •IftHTVIZT Pay by Check \\ omtn have come to recognize the advantages of their own checking account. A check endorsed, becomes a bona fide receipt; is safe when sent by mail, and, if desired, can be stopped in payment —- whereas, paying by cash is irrevocable. Inodentally, paying by check sumps you as a business woman. With the added facilities offered by the Woman’s Bank Department unequalled aervice given in this connection. Why not surt a checking account now? FLETCHER AMERICAN NATIONAL BANK StSTCMEX-AIrfSHCAK *AK SUILOIMO
M A ZOLA equal to butter for shortening at ii am about half the cost* MAZOLA better than lard and compounds MAZOLA preferred by thousands to the finest i fii olive oil for salads. AT ALL GROCERS Selling Repreeentattves 2. H. Gunman, Manag-.r, NATIONAL STARCH COMPANY, 712 Merchants Bank Bldg., Indianapolis
INDIANA DAILY TIMES, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 1,1920.
morrow by the Housewife. ANSWERS TO SATURDAY’S QUESTIONS, 1. Marshmallow cundy, etc., was once made from a decoction of the roots of the plant marshmnllov., but now it la usually made from s:gar, corn syrup and gelatine. 2. When making tea use one teaspoon of tea to every enp of water, adding more water as desired when pouring. To pick up dust after sweeping without having to bend over, use a long handled dust pan in connection with a short-handled or child's broom.—Copyright. 1020. -feNationaljgy f I 'HE made-with-milk flavor appeals to nil. The pound-and-a-half size loaves go a long way. The fine- \ keeping quality means no waste. Buy a loaf of * National Bread today * for anew experience Made in bread goodness. wrth NATIONAL biscuit milk" COMPANY Th# Eagle Wrapper Meant National Bread
I Tuesday Morning the Store Will Open at 10:00 O'clock AyresDownsta/rj Store Smart , Isn’t It? And Only $3.95 Os course, it seems impossible, but it’s a habit of the Downstairs Store to offer surprising values. These charming hAts are of St/k and Panne Velvet The one pictured was chosen at random from half a hundred or more, each just as captivating as its neighbor, though different in style and coloring, —Ayres—Downstairs Store. Smart Shoes for Street Wear Stylish Shoes for Dress Occasions Good Shoes for all the *lime Patent Leather and Dull Kid Cloth Tops in Contrasting Color Black and Broun Kid High and Military Heels A Small U/f ) E For Good Price f>T.yj Shoe t And one’s choice is not confined to just a few. There are hundreds of pairs—smart, stylish shoes for women, young women and girls. —Ayres—Downstairs Store.
Plush Coats At $39.50, $65 is the combination that vS I makes many of these coats so attractive, for the most of them have / fur collars, fur cuffs u II and some of them a hand \ ill of fur around the hot- id tom. They are silk lined, k of course. The styles are n varied as are the j i lengths. km —Ayres—Downstairs Store. w
Groceries You'll Need
Butter, Ayr**’ special creamery “Extra Quality," peund, GO<J ; Swastika, a high-grade creamery butter, pound, 584. Jam, Libby'* pure fruit and auger; Loganberry, blackberry and rprlcot; 20-onnce can, 484. Monaoon peaches, diced and halve*. apricots and white cherrlee, all 1920 pack, from California, put up In handy No. 1 cant. 284: doxon assorted, as you desire, $3.35. Maple Syrup, pur* *ap, Natiye Purity brand, 10-pound cana, $355; 5-pound cana, $1.00; 2V4-pound cana. $1.00: 18-ounce cana. 554-
Pumpkin and Sauerkraut Monsoon brand, large No. 8 cana. 11 <*. Rice, new crop, fancy head, 2-pound bags, 254. Buckwheat Flour, pure floor, but aelf-rlalng, avoids the nee of yee*t; Batavia, box, 254, Snowdrift pure white vegetable fat for shortening and frying. Packed in 1, 2. 4 and 8-pound cans, pound. 244Pork and Beans In tomato sauee, Campbell's, large cans, 114. Sunahlne Cakes and Cracker* box, 84. 174 and 184—Ayree—Downstair* Store.
&Co* This Store , and Others , Will Not Open Until Ten O'clock Tuesday Silks Amenable to Chic Fashioning Priced Low This Fore Week jfti Now is the strategic instant for •jSpjga the choice of silk to be done into I**® 145 ®! fascinating dancing frocks, supple ks, J gowns for dinner wear or the crisp, dark silks for day dresses. fthy) //* ]j The price of these silks listed has "jPTf / I j I been lowered especially for this / 7 \ offering. /I : /YV, Gros de Londres, $2.98 /. - i ‘■■ .ly.r WjgSs. /S Iff fM&BB . uagy {/ .1. Chiffon tzffetoa for the simple dancing and bridesmaids' Crocks are grouped at this price as welL They are In the plain and glace effects that bespeak a fine quality In a wide range of evening and street tones. These silks are entrancingly soft, brilliant, lustrous, plain or "changeable.’’ Yard wide.
Noveltv Georgettes, SI.BB Printed designs of fine color contrasts and the new ombre Georgettes are finding many novel uses. The latter materials shade through blue, brown, green, purple and red, from light to dark. Width 40 inches. Faille Franeaise, $2.98 Our best tailoring silk is represented In the Haskals finest pure silk cords, toned in navy blue, taupe, Copenhagen, browns, tans, sand and gray. Yard wide. Printed Satins, $7.48 These are the finest Lyons chiffon satins, both brocaded and printed In exclusive designs and colors. New importations such as these are capable of rich garment use. Yard wide. Tailoring Poplins, $3.98 Poplins of the most effective tailoring persuasions are of extra heavy quality and beautiful finish In navy blue, taupe, brown, olive, madure and seal. Width 40 inches. Tricolette, $2.48 Pine quality of Bamer and Crystal trlcolettes In plain staple colors of navy, brown, black and white. These are standard qualities of yard width.
“Old Fogies” or Not, Find Comfort in Outing Flannel Nightgowns What do you care what any one thinks of you compared to the luxury of snuggling down to a dreamless sleep wrapped in one of these outing flannel gowns. Th plain colors you ore most devoted to are shown in gowns of just as warm natures as those of a striped character. It's an Investment that will pay you In warm returns, for the Initial cost of SI.BB up to $4*95. Ayres—Third floor.
Tngly Ruffled and Frrmmea New Pinafore Aprons Do you have the taste of a dilettante when it pertains to houseworkT Do you like ruffles and such? Then, these are the aprons for you. The materials are novel and pretty, and trimmings include rickrack as well as chic asshes to match the otherwise beruffled appearance. Priced $1.50, $1.95 and $2.25 Manicurist Aprons, $2.75 A white apron with a wide belt, large pockets, full skirt and rickrack trimmed bears this professional appellation. However, the name does not deny thsm many other delightful uses. Conservation aprons are fashioned with the three-quarter sleeve, and are of all white with collars and full skirts. They are shown in three sizes at $2.95. —Ayres—Third floor.
Keep Warm Without Coal Use Perfection Oil Heaters SDo you like to dress in a warm room, wash in warm water and yet keep your window open all night? A Perfection oil heater is designed to meet those needs. It heats a room quickly, and will warm a basin of water at the same Do not fear any odor from this heater, for if it is kept clean there is no distinguishable odor. It's light, and easy to carry from room to room, as well. Reasonably priced. —Ayres—Sixth floor.
Brocade Charmense, $3.98 The new soft, solid color brocades and moire that Is finding vogue in entire frocks as well as being a favorite for lining handsome furs, have found a deep price cut. Light navy blue, sand, gray, petrina, taupe, brown and black are obtainable in 38 and 40-lnch widths. Pussy Willow, $3.98 Malllnson’s genuine pussy willow Is here offered at startling values. In pink, white, navy blue, browns and black. Widths 40 Inches. Coating Plnshes Find Favor Black Polark, $7.98 A rich deep pile in perfect black. In 50-lnch widths. Prybiloff, $14.88 Black or seal is obtainable here in one of the handsomest fur plushes. Width, 51 inches. Black Sheldon, $10.98 A close furry pile fabric favored for fur coats. Width 50 inches. —Ayres—Second floor.
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