Indianapolis Times, Volume 35, Number 132, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 October 1922 — Page 6
6
SOCIAL ACTIVITIES
Mrs. R. D. "Weaver entertained the members of the Thursday Lyceum Club this afternoon at her home on Broadway. ♦ • * Mrs. J. A. Hundley was hostess for an "old-fashioned” luncheon and party today for the members of the Round Table Club. Covers were laid for twelve guests, all of whom came In quaint costumes. The table was decorated with baskets of thistles, sweet peas and cosmos, and lighted with candles. A short program on the subject of "Grandmother” was given following the luncheon. Mrs. Hundley was assisted by her granddaughters, Mrs. Otto Suesz and !\lrs. I. Izenhart. • • • Mrs. Harry Foote spoke on "The Political Divisions of South America” at a meeting of the Hoosler Tourists Club today in the home of Mrs. C. A. Call. Mrs. F. C. Robinson took “The Romance of the Amazon" for her subject and Mrs. J. E. Andrews talked on “Vagabonding Down the Andes.” • • * Mrs. Franz Binneger entertained the U-Tak-A Club this afternoon at her home on X. Capitol Ave. * • * Mr. and Mrs. Bert S. Gadd, Mrs. Waiter Hawkins and Miss Sadie Hamilton spent a week visiting by motor all historical places In Southern Indiana, stopping at the Fauntleroy home, New Harmony, the home of William Henry’ Harrison, Vincennes, Madison and other points of interest. •• • ' Miss Laura Woodbridge entertained at luncheon today’ In Ayres’ tea loom, in honor of Miss Eliza Paramore, a bride-elect. - • • • Miss Verne Lowman will entertain Saturday evening for Miss Gartrude Wilkinson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. T. J. Wilkinson, whose marriage to Joseph W. Kaercher is to tike place, Oct. 25. • * • Miss Helen Tipton will entertain tor Miss Edna Lee Hind, Oct. 21. Miss Hind, who is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Otto Hind of Irvington, will sail Nov. 16 'or Yokohama. Japan, where her marriage to John Craig Sample, son of Mr. and Mrs. Henry T. Sample, will take place, Dec. 1. * * * Mrs. Charles Arthur Jones, Jr., of Birmingham, Aia.. will entertain with an attractively appointed luncheon tomorrow at the Country Club In honor of Miss Ruth Austin McGinnis, whose marriage to Willis Dhu Alne of Chicago is to take place Oct. 14 at the All Souls Unitarian Church,
THE FLAMING JEWEL *
SYNOPSIS It wxs QUINTANA and Ws band of intemutiorai ! thiev**s who first stole the priceless gem, the Flaminir Jewel, from the COUNTESS OF ESTHONIA Lore of the now bt-ggared count** forced JAMES DARRAGH to seek the irera and ! trace ft to the disreputable "hotel'’ In the i Adirondack* owned Uy MTKE CI.INCH. Under the name of HAL SyilTH. Darrash works at the Clinch "hotel." where he meets Clinch's beautiful stepdaughter, EVE STRAYER, tfce one great influence for good in the crime-stained career of Clinch. When Quintana and his gang arrive in the vicinity. both Clinch ar.d Hal Smith know they will stop at nothing to regain the loot filched Ircm the royal casket. Clinch determines to hide the jewels more sal ely. She heard Clinch’s light step on the uncarpeted stair; went on making up Sdilth’s bed, and smiled as her stepfather came Into the room, still carrying his rifle. He had something else In his hand, too—a flat, thin packet wrapped in heavy paper and sealed all over with black wax. “Girlie,” he said. "I want you should do a little errand for me this morning. If you're spry it won”t take long —time to go there and get back to help with noon dinner.” “Very wedl, dad.” “Go git your pants on. girlie.” “You want me to go into the woods?” “I want you to go to the hole in tbs j neks under Star Peak and lay tills packet In the hootch cache.” She nodded, tucked in the sheets, smoothed blanket and pillow with deft hands, went out to her own room. Clinch seated hlmeelf and turned a blank face to the window. It was a sudden decision. He realized now that he couldn’t keep the jewels in his house. War was on with Quintana. The “hotel” would be the goal for Quintana and his gang. And for Smith, too, if ever temptation overpowered him. The house was liable to an attempt at robbery any night, now —and day, perhaps. It was no place for the packet he had taken from Jose Quintana. Eve came in wearing gray shirt, breeches and puttees. Clinch gave her the packet. “What’s in it, dad?” she asked smilingly. “Don’t you get nosey, girlie. Come here.” She went to him. He put his left arm around her. “You like me some, don’t you, girlie?” “You know it, dad.” x “All right. You’re all that matters to me * • • since your mother went and died • • • after a year. • • * That was crool, girlie. Only a year. Well, I ain’t cared none for nobody since—only you. girlie.” He touched the packet with his forefinger. “If I step out, that's yours. But I ain’t a-going to step out. Put it with the hootch. You know how to move that keystone?” “Yes, dad.” "And watch out that no game protector and none of that damn millionaire’s wardens see you in the woods. No, nor none o’ these here fancy State troopers. You gotta watch out this time. Eve. It means everything to us—to you, girlie—and to me. Go tip-toe. Lay low, coming and going. Take a rifle.” Eve ran to her bedroom and returned with her Winchester and belt. “You shoot to kill,” said Clinch grimly, “if any one wants to stop you. But lay low and you won’t reed to shoot nobody, girlie. G’wan out the lack way; Hal's in the icehouse.” CHAPTER II Slim and straight as a young boy in her gray shirt and breeches. Eve •xntlnued on lightly through the woods, her rifle over her shoulder, her eyes of gentian-blue always alert. But as she approached the tiny ford, warily, she saw a saddled horse to a sapling and a man seated j ■ *s a loom? log.
I Dr. F. S. C. Wicks officiating. The table will be decorated with asters | and autumn leaves and covers will be laid for fourteen. The guests will be the members of the bridal party, Mrs. Jcr.es, matron of honor; Miss Kathryn j Keith of Los Angeles, Cal., and Miss [ Fay Turpin and Miss Marie NemerofC |of Chicago, bridesmaids, and Miss Marjorie Pickthall, maid of honor, who are the house guests of Mrs. Philip Meier ot N. Pennsylvania St. The men attendants will be Knefler McGinnis, U. S. N.. brother of the bride-fleet, best man; Charles Clarke, Chicago, and Manuel Clnnerols, Madrid, Spain; Thomas McGinnis, New York; Dr. Lawis D. Belden and Morris Hamilton, ushers. % Tomorrow evening Mrs. McGinnis will entertain with a bridal dinner at the Columbia Club for the members of the bridal party. • * • Mrs. Isaac Born has returned from a visit in the East. • • * Miss Esthe - June Thompson has returned tp Northwestern University after spending a few days with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. Thompson. • * * The New Era Club will observe President’s Day with a luncheon Monday at the home of Mrs. Everett A. | Hunt on Ruckle St. EDUCATOR TO SPEAK Mrs. M. U Johnson Will Deliver Two Lectures on Cliild Training. Mrs. Marietta L. Johnson, who is head of a school at Fairhope. Ala., which Is well known among educational circles for its pioneer work along the lines of creative education for children, will speak at 4 o’clock this afternoon and 8 o’clock this evening in the auditorium of the library under the auspices of the Orchard School. Her subject is "Discipline and Creative Action” and parents and teachers are invited. Mrs. Johnson is noted for her unusually advanced ideas concerning Individual attention In teaching. Marriage a la Mode Small weddings are unknown in Borneo and so are wedding invirations. A wedding is a neighborhood event in which every one is supposed to have a hand. The maids dress the bride and deck her out with flowers. The matrons attend to the preparing of the feast and the men see there's liquor enough assembled to last as long as the celebration continues, which may be anywhere from a day to a week.
The trappings of horse, the graygreen uniform of the man, left no room for speculation; a trooper of the State Constabulary was seated there. A detour was imperative. The girl, from the shelter of a pine, looked out cautiously at the trooper. The sudden sight ot him had merely checked her; now the recognition of his uniform startled her heart out of its tranquil rhythm and set the blood burning in her cheeks. Until the moment. Eve had never dreamed what the memory of this man really meant to her —never dreamed that she had capacity for emotion so utterly overwhelming. She drew her hand from her eyes and looked upon the man she had attempted to kill —upon the young man who had wrestled her off her feet and handcuffed her—and who had bathed her bleeding mouth with sphagnum—and who had kissed her hands— She was trembling so that she became frightened. The racket of the brook In his ears safeguarded her in a measure. She bent over nearly double, her rifle at a trail, and cautiously began the detour. "When at length tha wide circle through the woods had been safely accomplished and Eve w-as moving out through the thickening ranks of tamarack, her heart, which seemed to suffocate her, quieted, and she leaned against a shoulder of rock, i strangely tired.
IN A STEEP WET DEER-TRAIL. RISING SKYWARD. "Halts la! Crosse cn air!" "Drop that rifle!” came another voice from behind her. covered! Throw your gun on the ground!” She stood as though paralyzed. To the right and left she heard people tramping through the thicket toward her. "Down with that gun, damn you!" repeated the voice, breathless from running. All around her men came floundering and crashing toward her through the undergrowth. She could see some of them. As she stooped to place her rifle on the dead leaves, she drew the flat packet from her cartridge sack at the same time and slid it deftly under a rotting log. Then, calm but very pale, she stood upright to face events. The first man wore a red and yellow bandanna handkerchief over the lower half of his face, pulled tightly across a bony nose. He held a long pistol nearly parallel to his own body: and when he came up to where she was standing he poked the muzzle into her stomach. She did not flinch; he said nothing: she looked Intently Into the two ratty eyes fastened on her over the edge of his bandanna. Five other men were surrounding her, but they all wore white masks
‘Marry a Modern Girl’ Advice Given by Flappers' Friend
S'' Bachelor, ma try the Moctpm (3irJ MRS. CHARLES WESLEY FLINT, LEFT, AND MRS FLORENCE
E S. KNAPP. * By VEA Service SYRACUSE, N. Y., Oct. 12.—Business experience and college life are developing the finest type of womanhood — And to the young men who are contemplating marriage. we say: Marry the Modern Girl! This from Mrs. Charles tVe§!ey Flint, wife of the new chancellor of Syracuse University, and Mrs. Florence E. S. Knapp, dean of the College of Home Economies, Syracuse University. “The flapper is a victim of circumstances.” says Mrs. Knapp. ”It Is regrettable to see a Rirl of sixteen or under er.gtossed in business pursuits and pleasures that should, according to past beliefs, be reserved for her early twenties. “But. on the other hand, business experience, added to early college
of vizard shape, revealing chin and mouth. They were different otliorwlse, also, wearing various sorts and patterns of sport clothes, brand new, and giving them an odd, foreign appearance. What troubled her most was the silence they maintained. The man wearing the bandanna was the only cne who seemed at all a familiar figure—merely, perhaps, because he was American in build, clothing, and movement. He took her by the shoulder, turned her around and gave her a shove forward. She staggered a stop or two; he gave her another shove and she comprehended that she was to keep on going. Presently she found herself In a steep, wet deer-trail rising upward through a gully. She knew’that runaway. It led up Stsr Peak. Behind her as she climbed she heard the slopping, panting tread of men; her wind was better than thelra; she climbed lithely upward, setting a pace which finally resulted in a violent jerk backward—a savage, wordless admonition to go more slowly. At last the vast arch of the eastern sky sprang out ahead, where stunted spruces stood out against the sunshine and the intense heat of midday fell upon a bare table-land of rock and moss and fern. As she came out upon the level, the man behind her took both her arms and pulled them back and somebody bandaged her eyes. Then a hand closed or. her left arm and, so guided, she stumbled and crept forward across the rocks for a few moments until her guide halted her and forced
'Spoonful for a Penny Brings Quick Relief
Prove tplecd.d laxative propsrtiei of Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin by test \ SCIENTIFIC test has now proven what Dr. Caldwell of Monticello asserted many years ago, that constipation will slow you up fully 25 per cent. The test was made by Dr. Donaldson of L 4 Loma Linda upMlgS, on f° ur men ln t t^le P r ' ,ne °f life 'sICG r w ho delilteralely JKteJy went without a bowel movement (Spi2& ft n./Lu for four days. lw?"irWithin 48 hours ( the men had \ * coated tongue and foul breath, cankers in the mouth, no appetite, restless sleep, indigestion, headache, depression, nervousness, cramps. The blood pressure was up 28 per cent. It is just this that Dr. Caldwell has preached to his patients in private and to tho public through the printed word ever since he began the practice of his specialty, diseases of tho stomach and bowels, back in 1875. After observing for years the satisfactory effect of his prescription for constipation, he placed it in drug stores in 1892, u simple vegetable compound of Egyptian senna and pepsin with pleasant-tasting aromatics, now
SYRUP PEPSIN Sffie family laxative
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
, life, has developed the finest type of womanhood. “I have no patience with reform"rs who cry that American womanhood Is on the decline. I think every true woman refutes such statements. "The college girl Is being trained today to regard her home as the ultimate goo! In life, and it la taught her that her duty lies therein. "As for the flapper. I think that her children will profit by her expertj enfce. It will be a bitter one. In the j long run, and she will be anxious to spare her own from a like ordeal. This applies, of course, to the extreme type, the real flapper ” Mrs. Flint agrees that girls of today approach marriage and motherhood with greater intelligence and efficiency than did their mothers or grandmothers. *
her Into a sitting position on a smooth, flat boulder. She heard the crunching of heavy feat around her. whispering made hoarse by breath exhausted, movement across rock and scrub, retreating steps For an interminable time she sat there aione In tho hot sun, drenched to the skin in sweat, listening, thinking, striving to tlnd a reason for this lawless outrage. After a long while she heard sometody coming across the rocks, stiffened as she listened with some vague presentiment of evil. (To Be Continued) CEMENT HELD UP Unleas shipments of cement for paving the National road, west, arrive today the State highway commission will reroute tho shipment. It was said today. Cement ordered last week by the commission Is alleged to have been held up by tho Pennsylvania Railroad because of an embargo. Officials of the State office sold that tho cement will bo taken to Danville and then hauled to the road by motor truck. STRATTON IS ELECTED By United News CAMBRIDGE, Mass., Oct 12.—Dr. Samuol Wesley Stratton, dtrector of the Bureau of Standards at Washington. was electee president of the Mas •snehusetta institute of technology, Wednesday. The election becomes effective Jan. 1, 1023. Dr. Stratton, who Is a native of XJtchfield, 111., was president.
ANY FAMILY MAY TRY IT FREE Thousands of parents are tithing themselses, "Where carl / find <1 Irustuxjrlhy laxalivo that anyone in the family can uee when constipated?" I urge you to try Syrup I’epsin. I will alanly provide a liberal free sample Dottle , supicient for an adequate test. Write me where to send it. Address Dr. H\ 11. Caldwell, 5/5 Washington St., Afaniieello, Illinois . Do i< now! known as Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin. That was 30 years ago, and today over 10 million bottles are bought, annually, the largest selling family laxative in the world. You will find it in any drug store you enter, a generoussize bottle costing you less than a cent a dose. Every member of the family from the infants to the grandparents can use it with safety. It is gentle and ntild. Tho formula is on the package. Airs. Itoy Cook of Bellefontaino, 0., has been giving it to her 5-months old baby, who now weighs 19 pounds; and Mr. J. B. Dawson of Brinson, Ga., declares it the best laxative his family has ever found. Try a tenspoonful of Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin for constipation or any of its symptoms. The results will delight you. And the cost is only one cent a dose.
Martha Lee HER COLUMN
Martha I.ee will he slad to answer questions of Times’ readers regarding problems of love, clothes and etiquette, for personal reply, send stamped, selfaddressed envelope. Questions will be withheld from publication at the writers' request. The apartment house is blamed frequently for the fact that home life has changed greatly in the past few years. It is true that many people now live in apartments instead of houses. It Is also true that tho old custom of the family’s gathering around the fireside in the evening has passed. But the apartment house is not to blame. A home can be built In an apartment as well as in a rambling house. Conditions have changed. There were no picture shows and there were few automobiles in the days when the family spent every evening at home. However, “bo It ever so humble, there's no place like home” is still true; so that the mother who makes her dwelling, whether it be apartment or house, a real home, will have little trouble with her children. Answer to ANXIOUS MOTHER; Your children are all under 12, Just at the impressionable age. Now is the time for you to form their characters You are afraid they will “run atound too much.” They won’t if you open your apartment to their friends and let them have as good a time there as they cculd have anyplace else. You should have a piano and a vletrola, it possible. An open fireplace helps. Your kitchen and pantry' should be well supplied with goodies for chance visitors. Then you must keep yourself young | and be a playmate for your children. As they do grow older and begin to go out, memory of a beautiful homo life will keep them straight. bear Miss Lee: Ism 18 years old and am , enjnw-d to b married to a toiui next Morii dsv Ho is 22. but he doesn’t work very ; steadily at present. I should like to know I whether I shoule marry hten or not. He it )*hms of mo. but la very mo# to meF. O. M. H. Answer: I certainly do not advise you to marry the man, feeling as you do now. I have three reasons for such advice; You do not love him; he could not support you, apparently, and he Is Jealous. There is no reason why each of these objections cannot be overcome later. You may grow to love the man; | he may get a steady position, and he ! may get over his Jealousy. A little | jealousy is not so harmful, but much [of it can cause a great deal of unhappiness. | It would be pretty hard on the man for you to tell him at this late hour that you are not going to marry him, but it would be better than to marry him and then be unhappy. Pear Msrtlis I,ee: I hv two children All my married Ilfs my husband lits never , worked, lie dossil t set as II he csrrs for me. but he loves the babies. Every time I correct the older child, my husband will slap me and fuss at me fur two or thre day*. He bring* me flu# things, su-’h as glove*, silk handkerchief*, a diamond tiraceiol ami •ther thing* that belong to girls. Ho says bu round them. Every day he roe* out dressed up. If I ro out bo follows and beat# me when I come home. What could I do to mtks s living for my children? I am not strong and am under a doctor’s care It would brrsk my heart to part with my darling*. Can't you toll mo somethin* ■ —Ol’AL. Answer: I am afraid the only way out for you is through the courts. Your husband can bo forced to support his children. You do not seem to worry about
" —RINK’S— W The House of Fashionable Millinery F-ryi \ Sale Friday—As Long As They Last \Qy 300 Fall .Hats Worth to $6.50 Advantage, @ Section V. ' Come Third f *■' Jr Trimmed Hats of Lyons Velvet, Panne Velvet, Ereet and Pi] e Velvet, Duvctyn, Trimmed and Tailored Felt JK - \\ Hats. A wonderful selection at a very low price. k yLyff
WOMEN EFFICIENT Bank Secretary Says They Know WHILE ELEC S£__i L ilSl Tine WASHERp J works*
MARY JANE WINFREE.
Bu J fARIAS HALE “Housewives today are running; their homes just as efficiently as men | are running their businesses,” says t Mary Jane Wlnfree. Her position a secretary of the Continental Trust Company of Washington, D. C., where she teaches hun-! dreds of women to keep their accounts and balance their check books, gives her a good vantage point from which to form her judgment. "And all this talk about women being unbusinesslike and their overchecking and unde "depositing and making themselves a nuisance generally for cashiers Is all without foundation,” she continued. "Women learn simple banking principles in an amazingly short time. "Today women pay their grocers, butchers and tradespeople by check. They run their homes on a budget plan and balance their accounts down how he gets the things he gives you; but hla stories of finding them are not true, of course. If you can sew you might support youraelf and help support your children in that way. Then you could stay at home with them. Y'ou had better cak your doctor what sort of work you could do without injuring your health. The Children’s Aid Society, or Judge Lahr of the Juvenile court probably could help you. Answer to MARJORIE: As black shoes are being worn a great deal this year It would be better for you to have all yours black, if you want to economize; that will save you extra stockings. Oxfords are good for street wear and satin seems to be the favorite for dress. Answer to H. K. TANARUS.: You should call on your new neighbor first. Wait until she has had time to get settled in her new home. Your first call should last about fifteen or twenty minutes
Chili Sauce Bu BERTHA E. SHAPI.EHM Columbia University. 12 large, ripe tomatoes 2 tablespoons salt 3 large onions 2 tablespoons mixed spices 4 green peppers tj cup brown sugar S pint vinegar Peel and chop tomatoes; peel and chop the onions. Remove seeds and any white part in the peppers and finely chop the peppers. Mix vegetables with the salt, sugar and vinegar, adding the spices tied in a piece of cheese cloth. 801 l one and one half hours and bottle, sealing with melted paraffin. Or place ln glass Jars.
to the last 5 cents if it takes five 1 hours. “Women’s accounts are really much harder to manage than men’s, too, because they involve small amounts and small checks, while men work in larger figures. "Labor-saving devices for the home have done more than anything else to make women efficient, because they 1 have given them time to catch up. While the electric washer is getting tho dirt out of Johnny's rompers his j mother has time to do her bookkeeping and find out where the household money is going and why." Miss Wlnfree’s unique position in the banking world, shared by not half a dozen others of her sex, Is the result of her business policy of asking no favors, but always doing some little service that will put others under ob ; ligation to her. Can Translate Finance. She knows stocks and bonds and investments sometimes have to be transj lated into plain English for those who ; do net speak the language of finance, j Her willingness to act as interpreter makes most of the women who have accounts at the bank prefer to do their business with “Miss Mary.” And many a wise looking man, after a consultation with a wise-looking banker, : comes to her afterward to say; j "Now what did he really mean by it all?” The old prejudice against promoting 1 women to executive positions in banks is rapidly evaporating, she says. “Tho only reason for it Is because men can't help regarding women em- : ployen as merely temporary—bridging the time between school and matj rimony. ! “I started as a stenographer fourteen years ago. I belDve stenography Is the best wedge a woman can employ to get into the banking business. A really good stenographer is bound to attract attention anywhere—she is 1 so rare.”
OCT. 12, 1922
BEDOK DEMAND STBICTETIDDETTE Choking on Camel Stew Is an Unpardonable Offense { Against Society. No people in the world are more hospitable than the Arabs—not only hose w’ho live in towns, but the Bedouins or nomad tribes, who live in tents. The traveler invited into one of these Bedouins’ tents is protected from every possible danger with as much care as the Arab takes t. guard hie own flesh and blood. . He is given the very choicest piece of meat from the camel stew—the standard dish of •.he Arabs —and his coffee In-made just as strong as the hostess can make it, for this is a delicate attention. But the guest, on the other hand, must live up to all of the customs of the Bedouins and is supposed to know what Is courteous and what Is not polite. If by chance a person should choke over his camel stew or his coffee should go down bis "Sunday throat” and make him choke, whether he can help It or not, that man Is put down as a boor—beyond the pale of good society, and absolutely lacking in breeding- Ho is jiever invited again because of this insult. Caracul Caracul in black and in dyed shades is very popular for banding gowns and cloth coats, as well as for short sports coats, belted with cords ana tassels. INDIGESTION!!! UPSET STOMACH, CAS, GAS, GAS
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