Indianapolis Times, Volume 35, Number 43, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 June 1922 — Page 8

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Itfe&wiw til Airs. Alexander Goodwin, 2221 Ashland Ave., entertained Friday afternoon in honor of Mrs. L. J. Paxton, who just recently moved here from Evansville. The home was beautifully decorated -with black-eyed daisies in large French baskets. Bridge was played, and in the center of the bridge table was a small basket of daisies. The guests included Mrs. W. H. Blodgett. Mrs. E. P. Brennan, Mrs. Arthur Carr, Mrs. P. J. Clark, Mrs. Arthur Harns, Mrs. E. Z. Wacker, Mrs. Lawrence Wells, Mrs. James Berry, Mrs. John O'Ccnnor, from Camby; Airs. M. W. Waring, Mrs. Calvin Alcllvane, Airs. Herbert Cuyler, Airs. Wright of Chicago, Mrs. Albert Atkins, Airs. Elizabeth Smith, Airs. George W. Green, Mrs. Howard Galey, Mrs. W. H. Thompson. Airs. John Ora, Airs. Fern Westcott, Mrs. D. L. Lowrie, Mrs. A. A. Wright, Airs. Frank Kissell and Mrs. Edward O'Day. Mrs. Goodwin was assisted by Airs. A. Saylor, Airs. Fred Bretthauer, Airs. Ora Jackson, Mrs. John Earl, Airs. Ben Patterson, Mrs. Charles Roberts and Mrs. Charles Sonnifield. * • * Air. and Mrs. RileY Smith, 3338 Washington Blvd., are motoring through to New York City. They will Jje gone about two months. Air. and Mrs. Robert H. Smith will occupy the Bme while Mr. and Mrs. Smith are ay. 3p * • • ■Mrs. L. L.. Patterson. 634 X. Capitol He., will leave July 5, for a visit in Col. ■* * * ■ Miss Pearl Sanders, 1608 S. East St., ■as the hostess Thursday evening for ■e meeting of the Alpha Gamma Phi Sorority. Aliss Alary Fletcher and Bliss lona Campton were initiated into [the sorority. * • • The Jaunt-a-Bit Club will meet Friday evening at the home of Mrs. W. B. Montague, 227 W. Twenty-Eighth St. • • • The Indianapolis Athletic Club will hold a dinner meeting Friday evening in the Hotel Lincoln. • * * The Optimists Club meets Friday noon for luncheon at the Hotel Lincoln. • * * Mr. and Airs. Ora Powell, 3234 Park Ave., and son and daughter, Ernest and Sarah, Will motor to the lakes in northern Indiana. They leave Saturday to spend the Fourth at the lakes. • • • Air. and Airs. J. J. Martin, 1849 Drive Woodruff Place, enterjCJV i Friday evening with a bridal ir. honor of the wedding of daughter. Miss Janet Quinn and Morris Ditmars Fields. will take place at 3 o'clock Baturday afternoon in the Westminster Presbyterian Church. ■* * I Mrs. Bradford Noyes, Jr., of Ithaca, N. Y., was the honor guest at a tea given Thursday afternoon in the home of Aliss Dorothy Lee, 2060 College Ave. The decorations were carried out in yellow and white, with yellow candies lighting the dining room. Miss Lee was assisted by her mother. Airs. Charles Lee. and Aliss Sarah Hunter. Aliss Helen Shell, Miss Wilhelmina Alass, Aliss Eldena Lauter. Miss Mirriam Hanna. Airs. Harry Orlopp and Aliss Mary Lee Orlopp. • • •- Mrs. Effie Alarine Harvey, 1504 X. Pennsylvania St.,. has gone to Chicago for a few days.

T>e Molay -will entertain -with a dance Friday evening at Broad Ripple Park. About five hundred couples are expected. The patron and patronesses, who will act as chaperons are Judge and Mrs. W. W Thornton, Judge and Mrs. T. J. Moll, Judge and Mrs. Arthur R. Robinson, Judge and Mrs. James A. Collins. Bright colored balloons will be given as favors. • Miss Lotta Honnold, 2641 Ashland Ave., will entertain Friday evening with a dinner party in honor of her house guest, ♦ Mrs. C. D. Carpenter of California. Both Mrs. Carpenter and Miss Honnold attended Syracuse University. The table decoration will be a center bouquet of larkspur and roses. The table will be lighted with pink candles tied with tulle. Places will be laid for twelve. • • A musical program was given Friday afternoon at the Guest day meeting of the Mcllvaine-Kothe auxiliary to the American Legion held at the ' home of Mrs. A. S. Mcllvane, 2833 .Washington Blvd. Selections were given by Miss Marjorie Wiltrout, soloist; Miss Ruth YViltrout, pianist; harpist: Mrs. Ruth iNWLtqBIIand, reader, and Marthadancer. A short talk LMrs. Edna M. F-arcus, work of the auxiliary. Wj* • • • of directors of the TytNlrCiSf !. r ~ \ •'•ers n: it? la?t meeting before ariT closed for July. The |\j|'JtaJS^| r n;:tee offered sugg<=s ies to be given during months for the benefit l• • • ' * 4^!w ie I-il'ian Gebhardt, 1310 whose engagement to isa 11 has just been anweek, where she will of weeks. Several planned for Miss Geb- *■ wedding will take place idle of July. l.w’VVxLjpd • • • Irs. Albert Walters. 2413 ourth St., have as their

■STHA E. SHAPLEIGH, ■ Authority for XEA 5} md Columbia University. ■up strong tea. ■cups sugar and one cup ■soiled together one min- ■ three oranges. lajf cup chopped fresh I three lemons, pan grated pineapple, nuart grape Juice or logan|JUlC6. I bottles ginger ale. the tea, sugar, sirup, fruit land mint together and al-

Jot t a>lj| • tnW ;

BY MARIAN HALE. There are hardy souls who bound out of bed and dash through the daily dozen without any greater incentive to action than the alarm clock. Others there are to whom this bounding out of bed is go contrary to temperament and training as to be positively unconstitutional. For the large majority of women who make up this second class Anne Hyatt has evolved a series of exercises that may be done in bed. She cuts down Walter Camp's number by nine. And though you may begin sleepily, when you have completed them you have generated so much energy that you actually run to the shower bath —with a smile. Not that the object is the antebreakfast smle, that is a mere byproduct. The real object is the perfect figure. What It Did For Her Aliss Hyatt's exercises are designed to remove the flesh that accumulates guest Mr. and Airs. O. E. Tincher of Sioux City, lowa. • • • Aliss Alargaret Duthie, who graduated from Northwestern University this June, is home spending the summer With her parents. Mr. and Mrs, W. E. Duthie, 1630 Ashland Ave. • • * Air. and Mrs. James Livingston Thompson, returned home Friday after a wedding trip through the East. They will be at home to their friends at 3710 Fall Creek Blvd. Airs. Thompson was Aliss Cornelia Allison before her marriage. • • • Miss Helen Julian Smith, an accompanist of this city, is studying in New York with Frank LaForge, an accompanist teacher, and with Ernest Beremen, a solo teacher. Miss Smith has been accompanist for Airs. Helen Warrum Chappel, in her voice studio. She is a student of Miss Pauline Schellschmidt, when in Indianapolis. • • • Airs. Arnold Hauser and Aliss Gertrude Gutelius. 3028 Park Ave., entertained at the home of Miss Gutelius, Wednesday afternoon in honor of Mrs. Earl Lange, formerly Aliss Alarjorie Turner, who has just returned from a short wedding trip. • • • The St. Anthony fall festival, which was held Wednesday and Thursday evenings on the church grounds on N. Warman Ave., will continue Friday and Saturday evenings.

Sister Mary's Kitchen TWO NEW SAUSAGE DISHES Sausage and apple rings combined make an appetizing and nourishing dish for the principal meal of the day, To make this dish: Pare and core four apples Cut in rings one-half inch thick. Parboil one pound sausage. Cut in slices about three-fourths of an Inch thick. Put a layer of sausage In a lightly buttered baking dish. Cover with a layer of apple rings. Sprinkle with sugar and a dash of cinnamon. Continue layer for layer until all Is used. The last layer should be of apple. Bake about an hour in a moderate oven. Always serve a tart simple salad with pork and let the dessert be of fruit. Another novel sausage dish is sausage surprise. Sausage Surprise Two cups mashed potatoes, 2 eggs (yolks), 1 pound sausage. Parboil sausage. Drain and remove skin. Cut in lengths of two or three Inches. Mix mashed potato and egg yolks till smooth. Roll each piece of sausage in potato. Roll In fine dry cracker crumbs, dip in egg slightly beaten, roll again in crumbs and fry in deep hot fat. The fat should be hot enough to brown a cube of bread in forty seconds. —Copyright, 1922.

FRUIT PUNCH

low to stand one hour. Pour over ice in punch bowl, add loganberry or grape juice and ginger ale. Sliced oranges or any berriesmay be added. Charged water will add life during serving. This will serve twenty or thirty people one gjass each. White grape juice makes a pretty punch and the slices of orange show to better advantage. Any fruit Juice left from canned fruit may be used in punch. Tea is a great improvement to punch, and green tea gives the best flavor.

Generate Day’s Energy In Bed

ANNE HYATT PERFORMING THE EXERCISES SHE ADVOCATES.

about the waist and hips, where inactivity registers. They carry conviction because she says they will do 'for others what they did for her. Before she took up physical culture, Aliss Hyatt weighed 187 pounds. A glance at the pictures will show You she doesn't any more. Since the subtraction of thirty-seven pounds she has won a prize it; a national perfect figure contest, and she has conducted a health institute in a Alichigan city, where she taught other women to work off their weight. Explains Method Here is her own explanation of the exercises: “Before you get up, give ten min utes to your figure. “When you awake, first hook your feet under the framework of the bed and fold your amu beneath your head as in figure one. Then raise the body until the head reaches the position over the knees as in figure two.

Claims Discovery of Good Means to Prevent Flappers MISS I. OIS HATCH.

BY MARIAN HALE. Flapper prevention—that's the latest thing in reforms. Its object is to promote safe and sane freshmen for our colleges and universities. It is based on the theory you can’t cure flapperlsm, once a victim has become inoculated with the germ, but you can prevent inoculation, if you work fast. The ’campaign is not run by the typical reformer—aged and intolerant— But rather by youth. By a club of girls at the University of California, headed by Lois Hatch. “Tame them while they are freshmen” is the slogan of the new reform party. So Miss Hatch and her co-workers are hatching up a scheme whereby flapperlsm will be made exceedingly unpopular at the university next year. Each co-ed will be presented with a set of rules, warranted to be 100 per cent anti-flapper. Any hazing that is permitted will be turned in the direction of the flapper. “We must educate it out of them,” MiS3 Hatch points out. “Flapperism Is absolutely opposed to good scholarship, good sportsmanship and to college ideals.” Which seems to indicate the flapper who contemplates attending the University of California will have to leave her pocket flask at home, bequeath her collection of cigarette paraphernalia to her younger sister, put her hair up under a net and pass up for a time the petting party—or her latest indulgence, the adventure party. The adventure party, the flapper’s latest contribution to social life, consists in divinding up any merry little party into groups, who go forth in search of adventure. This man mean they playfully rob a house or jauntily hold 1 1% a pedestrian, or they may seek ' thrills in

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

“This will take off the fat that has accumulated about the waist line and wifi reduce the hips. Second Psiotion “For the second exercise, go back to position one. Then, holding thi body rigid, raise the legs slowly until they are at right angles with the body. “It Is also beneficial to do this exercise with each leg separately several times. “For the third, lie flat on the stomach, then raise the body to the position shown in figure four. “Relax after each exercise, and do ont try to do too many at once. If you will do each exercise ten times danly first week and mount to fifteen th,e second you will not have sore muscles or be too tired. “The of the exercise l ! es not in the energy with which they are Centered upon, but the regularity iwth j which they are followed.

any manner that the locality suggests. This new type of entertainment is hard on the hostess, for she may never be sure when some irrepressible guest may dynamite the place. After' this sort of thing is seems only fair to warn the reformers of the University o f California that a nice quiet evening with Livy or even Horace and a bottle of milk and into bed by 10:30 does sound a little —well, tame. However, the reformers have not overlooked this, and they are planning a social program for the year that will insure a good time for all, and the flapper type of entertainment will not be missed. We’ll see. Clubs and Meetings The Golden Rule Lodge No. 1, I. O. O. S., will give a card party and dance Saturday evening in Shepherds Hall, corner of Alabama and East Washington Sts, Belts Not Favored The loosely belted coat is said to be losing favor In Paris, where there is a tendency to do away with the belt altogether. Coats are wrapped loosely or draped, or held together with large clasps. Three-Piece Fashion authorities are predicting the three-piece costume will be the smart thing for the coming winter. These are embroidered and beaded and elaborately fur-trimmed. In Green and Black A stunning gown seen on a girl dancing at a. New York roof garden was of black satin slashed about the bottom and lined with green crepe. This was worn over a narrow undertunic of silver cloth. The girl w r ore a jade bracelet above her elbow and jade earrings.

Adventures of The Raggedies BY JOHNNY GRUELLE. (Copyright, 1922, by Gruelle.) Raggedy Ann, Raggedy Andy and Mister Minky were running as hard as they could away from the old woman for the old woman intended going back home to get her magical stick. You will remember that this was the magical stick which had caught Raggedy Andy when he was trying to escape from the old woman once before. “If we do not hurry,” said Raggedy Ann,” the old woman will surely catch us with the magical stick.” “Have you any of the magical powder left?” asked Raggedy Andy, "because if you have, when the old woman catches up with us and sends the stick after us, perhaps you can puff some of the magical powder up ’.he stick and change it into just an ordinary stick so that it can not catch us for the old woman.” “Unfortunately, we have none left,” said Raggedy Ann. "Our only hope is to run as fast as we can until we get to Missus Witchie's house before the old woman gets back with her magical stick.” As the three ran down the bank of a little stream they came to a stone doorway. “I wonder where this little stone doorway leads to,” said Raggedy Andy. “I do not believe we had better stop,” said Raggedy Ann. “I feel that the old woman is close behind us.” Indeed, this was true for coming around a bend in the stream, as Raggedy Ann looked back, she saw the old woman carrying her magic stick. Just at this moment the old woman spied our three' friends and throwing the magical stick upon the ground, she cried, "Stick, catch them.” And the stick started after Raggedy Ann,

Raggedy Andy and Mister Alinky, skimmin’ over the ground faster than they could run. “Quick!" said Raggedy Ann. “Let us go into this little stone doorway." Mister Minky, Raggedy Anin and Raggedy Andy pushed the little stone door shut behind them just as the magical stick bumped it's head against the little stone door. “Now we are safe for awhile,” said Raggedy Ann, "I wonder where this little place leads to?” “Let us lock the stone door ■first.” said Raggedy Andy. “So that the old woman will not be able to open it.” Inside the little stone doorway the three friends found a lock and soon fastened the door tight. "Now,” said Raggedy Ann “Let us go down the steps and see where this little hall leads to.” Raggedy Ann led the way down fifteen steps to another stone hallway. There, they found a little old gnome with a long white beard sitting in a chair smoking a long pipe. *\ lello,” said Ann in her cheeriest raggedy voice. “What are you doing way down beneath the ground? “Why.” the little old gnome laughed, as he took his p.pe out of his mouth,” I am the keeper of this Grotto. This hallway leads to the home of the Gnomes and to the place where the Gnomes work down under the ground digging for gold and precious stones which we send to the jeweler's to be made up into presents for good little children.” "Isn't that nice.” said Raggedy Ann, “May we watch the little Gnomes at their work?” “Yes, indeed,” the little Gnome re plied. "I will show you the way.” The little Gnome led the way down the little stone hallway and opened a door. Upon entering the door our three friends saw a great cavern in which hundreds of little Gnomes were working. Raggedy Ann asked one little Gnome: “Do you ever find Wishing Pebbles down here beneath the ground?”’ "Oh. no." the little Gnome replied. “All we ever find are Diamonds, Rubies and Emeralds. If you want to find Wishing Pebbles you must hunt along the banks of the Looking Glass Brook or along the Sea Shore. I would be pleased to giVe you a Diamond, or a Ruby, or an Emerald, If you would like to have one.” "Indeed, I would.” said Rag-

gedy Ann. “Each of us would like to have one. Then we will give them to Missus Witchie and perhaps she can make wonderful magic charms out of them.” “No doubt she can,” replied 'he little Gnome as he handed Raggedy Ann, Raggedy Andv and Mister Minky each a precious stone. After thanking the little Gnome for his gifts Raggedy Andy asked him if there was not some other way by which they could leave the Grotto. “Oh. yes," the little Gnome replied. “Just walk up these steps and open the door at the top: you will find yourselves out in the open air." This the three friends did, and soon came \)P above ground. Down below them they could hear the queer old woman pounding upon the little stone door with her magic and she seemed to be very angry because she could not get in. "We must not make any noise,” said Raggedy Ann, “or she will look up and see us. for we are right out in plain sight." If the old woman had not been so busy trying to get in the little stone doorway, she would have seen our three friends escaping from the other door high above her. Raggedy Ann, Raggedy Andy and Mister Minky walked away, just as quiet as three mice. The old woman, still angry, was pounding away upon the little stone door. “I believe that we have thrown her completely off the track,” said Raggedy Ann. "Now, we must hurry to Missus Witchie's house and give her the magic buttons and the three “precious stones.” “Well, anyway,” Mister Minky laughed, when the three had gone far enough to feel safe from the queer old woman, “I am very, very glad that the old woman did not catch us again, for I believe she surely would have changed us into potatoes, had she caught us again, and then she would have made us Into potato soup, just as she said ebe would do.”—<"opyright, 1922.

GIRLS! LEMONS BLEACH FRECKLES AND WHITEN SKIN

Squeeze the juice of two lemons Into a bottle contai-ing three ounces of Orchard White, which any drug store will supply for a few cents, shake well, and you have a quarter pint of the best freckle and tan bleach, and complexion whitener Massage this sweetly fragrant lemon lotion into the face, neck, arras and hands each day and see how freckles and blemishes bleach out and how clear, soft and rosy-white the skin becomes.— Advertisement-

To Represent Local Club

miss forba McDaniels. Miss Forba McDaniels and Miss Ida Anderson, State officers of the Indiana Business and Professional Woman's organization, accompanied by eighteen of the Ind.anapolls members, will leave Indianapolis July 8 for Chattanooga, Tenn., where the national convention w ill oe held. Miss McDaniels is president and Miss Anderson secretary of the State organization. The Indianapolis women who are going are Miss Florence Coffin, Miss Merica E. Hoagland, M.ss Mamie Larsh. Miss Helen Brown, Miss Clara Berns. Miss Sara Brown, Miss Ethel Trees. Miss Iza Williamson. Miss Annette Mohr. Miss Lucy Elliott. Miss Adele I. Storck, Miss Harriet Storck, Mrs. Mary Frost. Miss Hazel Street and Miss Nina Cox. Accompanying them will be Mrs. Alice M. Thumma and Miss Frances Nagle of Anderson, Miss Mollie Fesler of Frankton. Miss Stella Clodfelter and Miss Lillian Thompson of Craw-fordsville, Miss Florence Weant of Edinburg. Miss Mary Warren of Elkhart and Miss Rella Murr of Muncie. Miss McDaniels will.give a response to the welcoming address on Tuesday morning, and Miss M. E. Hoagland will make a report on the personnel work of the national organization. The convention program will lay special stress on educational standards with a view to cooperation j with the colleges, in business de-1 portment, ethics, personal integrity i and dress. There will be daily round table talks, at which discussions will lie led by women executives, who are experts in their line. The national federation president is Mrs. Lena Lake Forrest, a prominent insurance broker from Detroit, and ! the executive secretary is Miss Lena Madesin Phillips.an attorney. The headquarters are maintained at 276 Fifth Ave., New York City. Indiana sustains fourteen of the clubs in the organization. and i delegates from each club will go to j the convention. Teas, boating, and dancing parties will take up the time outside of the convention hours. Metal Cloth Metal cloth wraps are brilliant indications of a glittering year. They come in bright gold or bright silver, j with luxurious fur collars and j gorgeous linings. Often a bit of j embroidery or brocade is added. Fur on Suits There is much fur, of the lighter weight variety, used on the summer suits of silk. Often this is used on I the bottom of the coat as well as on the collars and cuffs. Platinum gray fox is very popular. So is monkey fur.

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Ml .vs IDA ANDKRSON. Chinese Shades Chinese lanterns that fold up like fans make very nice lamp shades, particularly for the country home. These are inexpensive, but exceedingly decorative, and they do Impart an "atmosphere.” Lingerie Recent lingerie importations show the hem of the gown is usually scalloped, laced trimmed, or hemstitched by hand. The most delicate of laces are used for the yokes and sleeves. Painted Negligees Hand-painted negligees are now being imported. Usually they are of dashing colors, with large splashy designs with futuristic tendencies.

July 4th July 4th Vacation Day Specials $3.95 tis ° 26-28 E. Washington St. One Door West Washington Hotel.

JUNE 30, 192 T

Painted Back Latest Hobby Os Parisians PARIS, France, Ju 30.—Zebrastriped shoulders an/, neck watches led the list of freaks launched by fashionable women at Longchamps, where 250,000 people saw the favorite, Kefalin, win the Grand Prix, with A. K. Macomber’s American-bred Algerian third. Mannequins paraded with their entire right shoulders bare, with or-chid-colored stripes which beholders first thought were ribbons. Closer inspection found them to be painted stripes, skilfully continuing the pattern of the robe. Maude Loti, called the most eccentric French woman, wore a watch fastened on the back of her neck by a black ribbon studded with diamonds. Henri Letellier w-ore a striped morning coat and Andre de Fouquiers appeared in formal morning dress with the exception of white tennis trousers and a tall white hat. Even these styles, however, were put in the shade when Pierre des Moudins, who started the sockles3 fad a fortnight ago, again leaped into the limelight with diamond and sapphire anklets, his trousers being rut extremely short so as to display the shapeliness of his gem-lad limbs. Pierre's eyebrows were carefully shaved, a line of blue paint drawn >ver them, while a heavy pencil-like mark appeared in place of a mustache. Sleeve Bugbear Is Made Simpler By Explanation BY MARJORIE KINNEY, Supervisor of Clothing, School of Household Science and Art, Pratt Institute. Sleeves always have been a bugbear to the average dressmaker, as every woman’s arms seem to hang in a different way. Only experience in fitting can teach one just how to handle a sleeves, but a few simple directions apply to all sleeves. Most important is the grain of the material. The sleeve must be cut on the true grain, that is, the thread of the cloth of line A-B, as in figure one. This gives a straight grain on line C-D, which is absolutely necessary to keep your sleeve from twisting. The 'only exception is a bias sleeve, which is cut with line A-B on the true bias. The material above line A-B is called the cap of the sleeve. When you have a shoulder in your dress the cap of the sleeve must be high from C-D. Shoulder Seams Short

Shoulder seams are short this spring and often you find a sleeve wrinkling up and down because the cap is not high enough. This may be remedied by drawing the curve higher from A to C to B or cutting out the sleeve under the arm. Both accomplish the same end. Always allow two inches around the top of the sleeve for fitting so you can drop it, if necessary, from the shoulder. A sleeve must be eased into an arm-hole and must be cut at least one inch larger around the top than the correct arm-hole line. It is best to fit a waist with a sleeve basted in, but if your sleeve does not set right, rip it out and correct your-arm-hole, marking anew line with pins, then set in the sleeve, placing It so that the straight grain of the material falls over the top of the arm. Engagement Rings The sale of diamonds this month is reported to be very heavy. The most popular ring at present is the diamond solitaire, cut in a square or diamond shape and mounted in platinum. Band Concerts Start Band concert season in the public parks will open Sunday afternoon. Opening programs will be at Riverside. Garfield and Douglass Parks.