Indianapolis Times, Volume 35, Number 63, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 July 1922 — Page 6

6

Social Activities

The marriage of Miss Mary I. ; Muss. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Boyd K. Muse. 1326 Linden St., to Charles 2L Noble took place Sunday morning at 10 o’clock at the Brookslde United ; Brethren Church. Tiffs order of De Molay, of which Mr. Noble Is a member, attended the ceremony in a body. . Miss Elizabeth Lewis, bridesmaid, wore a white chiffon frock and carried an arm bouquet of white .rosea. The bride also wore white chiffon and carried a shower of bride's roses and lilies of tho valley. Jack Conneley j was best man. Following the ceremony Mr and Mrs. Noble left for a wedding trip, after which they will be at home at 1326 Linden St. • • • The Bide-a-tVee Klub entertained | With a garden party Saturday evening j at the home of Miss Mary Dugan. | Pink and green, the club colors, were .used in decoration and green balloons bearing the club’s name in pink were pivtn as favors. The program included a reading by Miss Genevieve Tyner and a song. “Smiling Through,” by Miss Dorothy _ Rust The guests include Miss Belle Barn, Miss Frances Dugan, Miss Jene Short, Miss Clara Goede, Miss Josephine Etter, Miss Mary TVeisshaar. Miss Genevieve Btenger, Miss Marie Die trick, Maurice Wehlein. Edward Stenger, John Cal . vir., Claude Stenger. Vaughn Cook, j Verban Stenger, Herbert Frohliger. [ Martin Towery, Earl Mathey. Earl j Howard, Mr. and Mrs. H. J. Alexander j and Mr. and Mrs. Beryl Seudden. The j hostess was assisted by Miss Frances j Niggle, Miss Minnie AVeisshaar and Mrs William Dugan * * * The marriage of Miss Helen Holloway, daughter of L. W. Holloway, 3212 N Capitol Ave., to Herman W. Stillman of Chicago will take place at 2:30 Tuesday afternoon at the home of Dr. \ and Mrs. L. W. Marsha!'., 3914 Guilford Ave. Dr. W. B. Fanner will j perform the ceremony. The bride will j be attended by Miss Virginia and Misa Ruth Marshall. • * • Following the ceremony Mr. and Mrs. Stillman will leave for Los Angeles, Cal., where they will visit before going to Chicago for residence. ♦ * Among the Indianapolis folk at the j Hotel Breakers and the Hotel Cedar at Cedar Point-on-Lake Erie are Mrs. ; M. H. Talbott, Miss Helen Herman, Miss Ame'ia Keefer, Miss Cecilia Spitzmesser and Miss Anna Schleudecker. * • • Mrs. Norma Dean of New Fork City arrived today to be the guest of her sister, Mrs. E. T. Ensley and her father, Charles N. Leslie, 441 Garfield Ave. Mrs. Dean, who will remain several months, before her marriage was Miss Florence Leslie, a resident of this city. Miss Margaret Hedgecock, 715 N. Alabama St., has returned from a fortnight's visit in Detroit, Mich. The Indianapolis members of Delta Gamma will be guests at the annual picnic of the Indianapolis chapter of Kappa Alpha Theta, to be held Thursday afternoon at the home of Mrs. Mark C. Rhinehart. * • • Dr. F. S. C. Wicks, 111 E FortyFourth St. who is spending the summer abroad, has been Invited to speak in London, and Bristol, England. Dr. Wicks also will attend the Passion Piay at Oberammergau before returning home. • • • Mrs. J. H. Albright, of Shady Bank farm will give a noon luncheon I Wednesday for the members of the 1 Ladies Aid Society of the Moravian Episcopal Church. A business meeting will follow at 2:36 o’clock. VISITS POLISH SINGER Harold McCormick Loses Eli tie Time m Getting to Walska Residence. By Vntted Xetci PARIS, July 24.—One of the first things Harold McCormick of Chicago did on arriving here was to visit Mme Ganna Walska, the Polish singer, i whom he is reported as planning to marry as soon as existing matrimonial entanglements are cleared away. Efforts to learn from Mme. Walska what their plans are resulted tn a harsh rebuff. McCormick also is dodging publicity, hiding herself in a modest hotel, instead of staying at the Crillon, as j usual. HIT CATHOLIC CLERGY Soviets Deny Priests Right to Give Instructions to Youth. By Unite* .Vei a MOSCOW. July 24. Catholic : churches in Russia may again be : closed, following an order from the j Government that priests will not be allowed to give religious instruction to persons under 16 years of age. The orders were issued despite reports of an agreement between the Soviets and the Vatican. Applique A French frock of white voile has a many-tiered skirt trimmed on each ruffle with rows of pink roses cut from organdie and appliqued on the surface after the manner of t.he old patchwork quilt.

STUFFED BAKED TOMATOES By BBRTSA S. BBAPLBtOH. Cooling Authority for h'EA StnAec and 1 Columbia Visit%ersity. 6 large, tomato*® 1 cup cold cooked chopped meat 3 tablespoons fat (bacon or Mrt- 1 supf up Boft sta ' e bread crumbs 1 teaspoon salt t®* l . % teaspoon thyme 2 tablespoons finely chopped onion 1 teaspoon paprika 1 teaspoon sugar Cut the tops from the tomatoes anti scoop out the Inside pulp, leaving a wall one-fourth inch thick. Sprinkle the Inside with salt. Fry the onion in fat slightly yellow. Then add meat, bread crumbs and seasonings and cook all together five minutes. Add pulp taken from tomatoes and cook a minute. Fill tomatoes with the mixture—replace the tops, cut a. gash on each side of the tomato and place closely together in a baking dish. Bake until tomatoes are soft. This stuffing may be varied in the following ways: Raw chopped beef, lamb, veal or pork may be used. Cook in the fat ten minutes instead of five. Cooked rice may be used in place of bread crumbs. Chopped red and green peppers or parsley may be added. The same stuffing may be used for peppers, cucumbers, summer •juash. vegetable marrow or egg plant. Vegetables stufTed and baked may be used as the main dish for luncheon, supper or simple dinner. (Cut this oot and paste it in your cook book!

Marjorie Rambeau Suggests Rules to Make Lines of Face Beautiful

/■ - :V.J VXTIAL C r-)u-LC3 PrN; ‘ lHt ' MARJORfE RAMBEAU

fThis m the third of a series of arto-les on beauty, written for The Time* by six of the moat beautiful women of the stage. Marjorie Rambeau. hailed as the successor of Lillian Russell, tells you about beauty of contour.) Bij MARJORIE RA If REA r* Actresi in ‘ The Gaid Ruth,” Famed for Beauty of Facial Cuntour. Plastic surgery is becoming so common that in time every woman may become # the architect of her own face and have any sort of a profile she can pay for. But the average woman would never be obliged to have recourse to the knife if she would remember the contour of her face is a reflection of her thoughts and character. A psychologist once told me it is possible entirely to change the expression and shape of one’s mouth in two weeks by changing the current of the thoughts. • • • If you have overdeveloped your critical faculty and are continually positing you will destroy the beauty of your lips. Small lines indicate you have al lowed small worries to absorb your attention. Sagging downward lines show you haven't looked on the happy side of things. A double chin reveals you have not held your head proudly erect, but have allowed it to slump.

SUGGESTIONS FOR SCHOOL WEAR

ffteM J '■ 't trt stcauA

Dmg: Dong! School bell! It won’t be long before lessons begin again but —there will be compensations in the way of new clothes. To say clothes are practical may recomniend them to the school girl’s mother, but hardly to the young woman herself. However, she won’t object to durability when it is found in such a dashing garment as the cape sketched. In heavy woolen plaid for cold weather or in lighter material for

The greatest beautffler known is relaxation. Ten minutes of relaxation a day will do more to prevent wrinkles than any other measure. • • • The benefits of massage are differently rated by different schools of beauty. Undoubtedly heavy facial massage is not desirable, but the simple massages every woman may give herself nightly after cleansing her face doss much to keep the muscles firm and the face unllned. Always use a pure cream and use the first three fingers of each hand. Rub upward and outward, using a firm gentle touch and a rotary motion. Massage the cheeks, •■temples, throat and forehead, particularly the region between the eyes where wrinkles are prnnoftn assemble. When massaging about the eves be gentle as the t.ssues are delicate To retain the firm contour of the throat massase the muscles in ~ a slanting direction from under the chin toward the shoulders and from the middle o fthe throat upward toward the ears. Correct breathing exercises, swimming and exercises which glvo play to the muscles of the neck will do much to develop It symmetrically. (TOMORROW Petrify Kurton of "Good Mnrninx. llesrle,” will tell how she gained her wonderful complexion).

early fall, bound with silk braid and with long ties to fasten under one’s chin. The middy dress is of the bloomered variety with a skirt that buttons to the blouse and need not be worn at gymnasium or when one is hiking. The one-piece undersutt is typical of the newest underwear for girls—plain, nicely cut, comfortable and in good taste.

AIVHJSEMENTS._

fUHi i I H"F Firßt P® rform - IfSliam 1 ance ton, 9 ht at 8:15 Sharp I The Stuart Walker Cos. In a great revival of Sheridan’s THE SCHOOL for © SCANDAL

MOTION PICTUREB.

“HURRICANE’S *GAL” With Dorothy Phillips Overture “William Tell” Circle Grand

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

’ 01903 SU Jecvlcc.lnc.

What horrible power was forcing' the three Drake brothers. HOBART, the Wall Street broker, ROGf.R, the Scientist, and ANDREW, recently returned from Australia, to place themselves in ridiculous eitua•t.iona? Sedate, middle-aged and wealthy, tlie three were now terror stricken. Some power forced Hobart to deliver a mock speech in a public square. Roger to burlesque a scientific paper, and Andrew to sit on the parlor floor and play with toys. They were sane, and unknown to j them PATRICIA DRAKE, daughter of Hobart, I secured OWEN MILES, detective sergeant, and his colleague. SCOTTIE McCREADY. to investigate Miles Is employed as a houseman and Seottie is to report a-a gardesier On his first night there. Miles discovers Andrew preventing Roger from committing sufelde. The following morning a letter throws Hobard into a passion. Miles finds that tho letter did not go through tho mail. Seottie investigates the family at the country club and reports to Mils* Briefly Miles told his colleague of the events which had occurred since his Installation as the pseudo house servant. Miles watched until the bulky form had vanished. Then he entered the kitchen door and fastened it behind i him. : He had started for thA servants’ j staircase when a flickering glow from | the front of the house made him ! pause, every sense alert. Noiselessly he crept toward it and ; saw that it emanated from the draw- ; J ing-room. As he advanced the sput- I of flames and hissing thud of a, ] falling log came to his ears and then J i the dull clank of metal, j Carefully he drew aside a fold of ! the heavy curtains which draped the ' doorway and peered in. There was jno light save that from tho tiny I blaze burning itself out in the flrej place but against its glow he saw \ outlined a huddled, shapeless figure ; In a loose robe kneeling before the hearth and while he gazed a narrow tongue of flame leaped up, glisteninc | on a heavy coil of silvery hair which hung to the floor. It was Miss Jeru- • ; sha Drake’ I Holding her breath, and moving a! I lently Inch by inch Allies slipped through the curtains and into the shadow behind a tall cabinet, from : around the farther side of which h^ "ASHES, EVERY ONE!” could gain a more direct view of the crouching form. It was swaying back and forth and now a Urn, in distinguishable mutt r not unlike I some weird incantation Issued from her lips. The flame died and Miss Jerusha drew a deep breath. "Gene!” The mutter resolved itself : irto dull, monotonous intoned speech | at last. "Aahes, every one! If only the first had never been conceived j this horror would not have descended upon us. They are destroyed, blit their very fumes breathe poison!” Ho shrank back fearful lest she discover his presence, but Miss .Torusha stared straight before her with the wild blank gaze of oiw who looks upon the hideous visions of a mind distraught and slowly, gropingly she passed from the room. CHAPTER VII A soft rain was falling when Miles awakened the next morning and in the clear, gray light the scene which j he had witnessed in the drawingroom seemed vague and unreal. That creature with dishevelled hair and crazed eyes could not have been the dignified, self-contained Miss Drake, nor could that cryptic speech have issued from her lips! Hastening out into the hall he j opened tho door of the closet under j j the stairs. The mail bag was hangi ing In Its accustomed place and the handy man's first task of the morning was to take it to the postoffioe. There was no sign of life about j the house and Miles soon had a ket- j tie boiling and expertly steamed open j | two of the envelopes. The first felt so bulky that he was not surprised to take from it a folded j

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rn JACX KGLT feSfe* ..niSJSir LJCHItISTrE COWEDY. “HORtiS POKES” FOX NFWS WFERT Y

HOUSE PETERS, ALLAN FORREST, FRIT2I BRUNETTE "THE MAN FROM LOST RIVER” ‘T'UST A MINUTE’—EDDIE LYONS COMEDY. INTERNATIONAL NEWS WEEKLY. —OHIO THEATRE—

inner envelope inscribed: “Mr. Richard Kemp." It was unaddressed but the accompanying letter was explanatory: “Millie, dearest: "I am going to ask a most tremendous favor. I am not allowed to see or even write to Dickie any more—it isn’t that he ham done anything, he is the darlingest boy alive but both our families have decided to break up our happiness and Aunt Jerusha watched me like a. lynx! Will you put the enclosed letter In one of your own envelopes and address it to Dickie for me? For heaven's sake don’t fail me for I am simply heartbroken! “Hastily but with fondest love, “FAT.” Miles smiled to himself as be resealed the letter with its enclosure, but his gravity returned when he opened the final envelope: “My dr. Brother," he read. "I take my pen in hand to let you

HATS TO BE TWO FEET WIDE

Pur:- di-signer.-i say that longer skirts simply demand larger hats. We!!, here is one that should be large enough for any 1922 model gown. It measures Just two feet across. It was brought from Parts by Lillian Atkinson, who says these overgrown pieces of millinery are all the rage there and that they are on their way over to us.

know that r am well and hope you and nU aro the same- but I can’t say as much for the folks The house has not been the same since Andrew came back from foreign parts more noisy and fresh like than when he was a boy “nlj different but up to his old tricks. He played a Joke on the houseman Monday and scairt him eo he left Hobart has took to liquor and made a holy show of himself in the tqwn. Roger has got himself in arr. -ks too over a speech he made in the schoolhouse last week. I am commencing to think they are all getting queer again like they was years ago when they first come Into the money Do you recollect what 1 told you about their actions? Seems like it was yesterday. Miss Jerusha has not been herself lately and no wonder with the gossip and all and she has put a £top to Fat going out with that nice young man I wrote you about but 1 guess it will come out all right. "Y’r aff’t sister HTTTT Slowly Miles replaced the letter and gummed tho flap of tho envelope together once more. He had heretofore regarded the lugubrious Mehitabel us negligible, but he realized now that she might be well worth cultivating. She thoufcht "they were all getting queer again," like they were when their inheritances came. That was the outstanding praise in her letter which struck him with tho greatest force. Miss Jerusha was her calmly reserved self at breakfast, and Miles could perceive no trace of the emotion which had possessed her at midnight. "I wonder if you will go on an errand for me. William?" asked Roger. “I know it is raining, but I have an Important letter which must go in the next mail." "I’ll go at once, sir." Absorbed in his thoughts the detective had plodded mechanically along the path and it was with a start of

BROAD ripple park SWIMMING IN BIG OUTDOOR too,, Cool fresh water, shoot-the-chute*. diving’ board*, float*. Can get. suits at, pool. DANCING In cool pavilion. Peppy melodies. I'RKE MOVIKS E\ KBY NIGHT {touting. Canoes, Steamer Ride, Iftoller ( ouster. Many other amusements. Come out tonight. lIOOSIF.RDOM’S SUMMER PLAYGROUNDS

AMUSEMENTS.

MOTION PICTURES.

surprise that he saw the raincoat and bedraggled, broadbrimmed hat of Andrew Drake Just ahead. He was walking rapidly beside a taller, more distinguished figure. Miles recognized him as the visitor on the night of his arrival, the next door neighbor, Enslee Grayle. , He was about to continue to the village when he turned to find a woman beside him. She was dressed In a tailored suit of brown which displayed the buxom lines of her figure with rather startling frankness; a face that was undeniably pretty although of a coarse type, and bold hazel eyes gazed Into him from beneath a fringe of all-too-yellow hair. "I sye, 'oo Is that man?” she demanded with an Imperative nod toward the pair who had struck off j down the lane. Friends o’ yours?” i “The man In the rallcoat Is Mr. ; Andrew Drake and the older one Is his neighbor, the owner of the house from which you say they came. His name is Mr. Enslee Ora vie." j “ 'Ow, is it?” Her eyes shifted from ! his to rest contemplatively upon the | two figures already misty In the slanting rain. "Strike me pink if I didn’t fancy one o’ ’em was an old pal o’ mine!” CHAPTER VITI Miles hastened to the village, mailed Roger’s letter and lost no time in returning to the house. The family were finishing breakfast the next morning when the

rumble of a well-known voice sounded from the kitchen. “Ze new gradenaire, he ees arrive," announneed Pierre. “Hello. Jack!” Miles grinned as he advanced, for the absence of the grizzled, sandy beard had wrought a vast change. “I’ll take you to Miss Drake —" Miles led the way to the hall. “Study her, Seottie, for she's in on this, too! Whatever it may be that is affecting the men of the family, she is sharing It!” (Continued in Our Next Issue.) Fringe One smart frock is trimmed with silk fringe so long it reaches from the shoulder line to the hem.

i The summer bride wisely jk follows the example of the bride of June. Her photograph are naturally made by Ninth Floor, Kahn Building

Family Washing WET WASH Put in Rag Rugs and Bed Clothes / Call Drexel 6776-6777 One of Our Trucka Will Call Family Wash Laundry 631-837 E. Washington St.

GET THeT”HABIT ' WEAR | NOE’S QUALITY j jewelry THE FLETCHER M. NOE JEWELRY store 103 N Illinois St. Opp. Terminal Sta. JJ

Shave, Bathe and Shan, 000 with one Soap.— Cuticura OoUoarm Pomp 1 f

Jncm-Americcm .’iflil flwq The new, thoroughly up-to-date eill-steel -w* • . ‘~'*C > t'"PW It] limited train of the Louisville & Nashville 111 to NEW ORLEANS birmmcha* COURTEOUS MEMPHIS OLK!VIHt> A V E^ T J° l NTO^E’WANTS AND 8 8 °?5 h rm a LT„.c£ffi?ti Ar S?? COMFORT OF THE PASSENGER 11:65 a. m. “ ... Louisville ."Lv B:‘?0 v. m.' OBSERVATION SLEEPER 9:55 p. m. Ar....Memphls„..L? 7:15 a. m. DRAWING ROOM-COMPARTMENT SLEEPERS 6:03 p. m. Lv... Nashville ....Lv 1I,:06 p. m. niNibm cap 10:27 P- m * ..Birmingham. _ “ 6:42 a. m. MODERN IMRST CLASS COACHED gg V nff " re extra fare 6:00 a. xa. Ar„_ Pensacola...Lv 10:45 p. m, PARLOR CAR TO mfmphk 6."00 a. m. Lv Mobile _I-v 11:12 p. rzi. PARLOR CAR TO MEMPHIS 10:15 m Ar __ New Orleans.. ' 7:00 p. m. 'SaSExSIgSESS Two other throggh train® to these points leave Cincinnati 6:15 p. m. and 10:S5 p. m., and in iiiM'W Louisville 10:10 p. m. and 2:20 a. m. Tor Information, rates, literature, etc., apj)iy to Sjf (k 121 H M. Mounts. T. P. A., 310 Merchants Bank Bide , Indianapolis. Tnd Main 230.7. J. H Milliken. P..P._A^_Lgulgrtlle i _Ky.

BRIDE

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The marriage of Miss Harriet Robb, daughter of Mrs. Mary Robb, 1011 Harlan St., to Frank Blair of Edinburgh, Scotland, will take place Tuesday evening at the home of the bride.

The Raggedies One nice thing about the Whirling Jinney in the back garden of the little Gnomes’ place was that the Whirling Jinney whirled round and round Just like a merry-go-round without having anything to make it go. The Fuzzywump’s cross-eyed Puppydog (who really was not cross-eyed) did not care to ride upon the Whirling Jinney. for he liked to bark at the Frankfurter tree and frighten the Frankfurters into dropping upon the ground so that he could eat them. And Just because the Fuzzywump’s Puppydog had been barking so ffcceh, Raggedy Ann and Raggedy Andy and the Fuzzywump and Snow White paid no attention to the Puppydog J s bark when he ran around the house barking as loud as he could. The Puppydog had heard the little Gnome's front gate squeak and he knew that someone was coming. "I'll bet a nickel it's the mean old Missus Queen returning to harm pretty little Snow White!” the Puppydog thought as he ran around the house. "If it is, 111 nip her heels this time instead of just barking at her.” ’The little Gnome’s front gate had hardly stopped squeaking when the Fuzzywump’s Puppydog reached there and saw a queer old woman coming toward the little Gnome’s house. "Bark! Bark' Bark!” the Fuzzywump's Puppydog cried, forgetting in his excitement that he could talk as well

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4 Hours and 40 Minutes CHICAGO yP* **• The Sycamore Lv. Indianapolis 5 KM) P.M. Ar. Lafayette 6:25 P.M. Ar. Chicago 9:40 P.M. Observation Parlor Car Dlntng-Lounge Car OTHER TRAINS Lv. Indianapolis 12:00Noon 2:45P.M. 12:01 A.M. 12:40A.M. 2:35 A.M. Ar. -Ar. Chicago 5:33P.M. 8:05P.M. 6:50A.M. 7:05A.M. 7:50A.M. For ticket, reservations and detailed Information, call or address CITY TICKET OFFICE Ilffuhinßß 112 Monument Circle Phone Circle 5300 Union Station, Phone Main 4567 J. W. GARDNER, Division Passenger Agent

JULY 24, 1922

as any one else and instead, just yelling in Puppydog’s language, "I’ll nip your heels!” The queer old woman came right on toward the little Gnome’s house and did not even pay any attention to the Fuzzywump's Puppydog. Not, even when he nipped her heels Thisf surprised the Fuzzywump’s Puppydog very much, for he had never met any one who did not seem to care when their heels were nipped. Bo the Fuzzywump's Puppydog sat down and scratched his head with one of his hind feet and tried to think The old woman knocked at the little Gnome's front door with a stick, “Crack, crack crack!” “It Isn’t the mean queen!” said the Puppydog out loud, for the moment he. ha-d nipped the old woman’s heel he knew that it was not the Queen. Puppydogs have a way of knowing whether they have ever met a person before, no matter how they may change their faces or put on disguises. When Snow White saw the queer old woman, she stopped the whirling Jinney and ran and threw her arms about her. “Hello." Grannie!” Snow White laughed. And she introduced Grannie to Raggedy Ann and Raggedy Andy and the Fuzzywump. "How is the Dressbush and the Stocking Vine and the Shoe Tree this morning!” the Grannie asked of Snow White. “They are Just loaded with pretty things," said Snow White as she opened a gate and all walked back into another garden. Snow White helped Grannie select a beautiful new dress from the Dressbush and stockings to match the dress from the Stocking Vine and a pretty pair of slippers from the Shoe Tree. And ’Raggedy Ann and Raggedy Andy and, the Fuzzywump were so surprises* | when Grannie changed her clothes j and combed her hair to see that she I was the prettiest old lady Grannie j they had ever seen. I “I believe I had better make a lot |of doughnuts before we start to play again,” Grannie said, with a sly wink at Raggedy Ann and as this pleased Snow White very much, all trouped into the Gnomes’ kitchen and ate the lovely golden brown doughnuts, with powdered sugar on them as fast as : Grannie could make them..—Copyright, 1922, by Johnny Gruel la. Brown More brown is seen, as the season advances, and style authorities say It will be one of the leading colors for fall and winter. Just now brown lace j is very smart. Straw Embroidery. Straw embroidery is seen on many ;of the lingerie frocks. It is much i more attractive than it sounds. There j are also straw parasols hand-painted I with large flowers or birds.