Indianapolis Times, Volume 35, Number 154, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 November 1922 — Page 3
NOV. 7, 1922
SOCIAL ACTIVITIES
The Cerìars of Lebanon, a locai woman’s organization made up of former residents of Lebanon, Ind.. will celebrate its first anniversary Saturday evening with a party for meni bere and their families at thè Denisor, Hotel. Mrs. A. E. Burkhardt. presi dent of thè club, will speak on “The Reason for Our Organization”; Mis: Frances Bridge will give a group of Bongs. Mrs. S. R. Artman, a monologue: Mrs. Fred Roult of Jamescown. a reailing, “The Man in thè Shadow,” and there 'ti 11 be short talks by ex Govemor Samuel M. Ralston. Fred erick Van Nuvs and Judge S. R. Artman. Miss Bertha Claire Hall and Miss Marguerite Williams will give a group of dances, aeeompanied by Ross Campbell, who will also give a piano solo. The reception committee in cludes Mrs. A. K. Burkhardt. Mrs. T. M. Tyler, Mrs. Charles Wright, Miss Frances Eichman. Mrs. T. B. Buskirk Jr., Mrs. F. A. Bridge, Mrs. George Williams. Mrs. John Walters. Mrs. S. R. Artman, Mrs. Samuel M. Ralston, Mrs. E. A. Williams and Mrs. A. E. Lowman. • * • Indianapolis friends nave received announcement of thè marriage of Miss Zona Myrtle Robinson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Nelson Robinson of Clarksburg, W. Va., to EvÀ-ett Hughes, son of Mrs. S. J. Hughes o*. Indianapolis, whlch took place at thè liome of thè bride's parents. Monday evening. The attendante were Miss Virginia McNary of Clarksburg and Victor Stromquist of Pittsburgh. The Rev. H. K. Hess offìciated. Mr. and Mrs. Hughes will make their home in Pittsburgh aster Xov. 15. Among thè out-of-town guests who attended thè wedding was Mrs. S. J. Hughes of Indianapolis. * * * The Alumni Associatimi of thè Indianapolis Normal Sehool will have its fall meeting at thè Herron Art Institute at 4 o'clock Fri day afternoon. A short talk by Miss Anna Hessleman \yiìl be followed by tea in thè upper gallery. Alumni and friends of thè association are invited. * * • Announcement is made of thè niarì iage of Miss Helen Jane White, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Edward S. White of Quiney, to Willard S. Townsend, son of Mrs. C. S. Townsend of Irvington. which took place Saturday at St. Paul’s Episcopal Church. Rev. Lewis E. Brown offieiating. Mr. and Mrs. Townsend will spend thè winter in Texas. * * * Mrs. S. P. Sheerin entertained thè members of thè Proctor Club at her home this afternoon. Mrs. T. A. Wynne spoke on “Rose Hawthorne Lathrop” and Mrs. J. A. Thompson on Charles Warren Stoddard.” * * * At a meeting of thè Irvington Home Study Club this afternoon at thè home of Mrs. Cari Stone, Mrs. James Murray gave a review of “The Mind in thè Making.” The comedy sketch called by thè authoress, Miss Bee Van Sickle. “The l'aming of thè Flapper," was well received last night at its tìrst production at thè Little Theater meeting in thè Library. The nanne of thè author re mained a secret until aster thè sketch had been discussed. Miss Van Sickle, Walter Skinner and C. W. Weesner took parts in it. The program, which included piano solos by Oscar A. Jones, a monologue. “How Grandma Danced,” by Miss Elizabeth MeCracken, a reading, “Sawdust,” by Miss Elizabeth Chase, a piano solo by Hug'n Daugberty and a costume iullaby by Miss Jessie Brunell, was eonsidered one of thè most interesting ever given at a meeting of thè society. A special effort ls being xnade to interest thè public in thè affairs given by thè Little Theater. • * • Mrs. Demarchus C. Brown was thè speaker at thè meeting of thè Late Book Club this afternoon at thè home of Mrs. C. W. Warren. * * * The following changes are announced in thè parent-teaeher meetings for this week: James Whitcomb Rilev Sehool No. 43 will ineet at 8 o'clock Friday evening. President Robert J. Aley of Butler College will speak and Harold Winslow, director of music at Manual Training High Sehool. will' sing. The sehool orchestra will play. At No. 54 there will be a meeting at 8 o'clock Wednesday evening, at which Dr. Aley will speak and music will be given by children of thè sehool. and at No. 58. Wednesday afternoon. Miss Alma Sickler will speak on “Corning Legislature.” • • • Mr. and Mrs. E. P. Endsley will leave Friday for New York City, where tliev will visit Mrs. Endsley's sister. Mrs. M. D. Dea ne.
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||| , UAKi.i i.HITE WILLIAMS GRINNELL PROFESSOR DOES STUNTS WITH ARITHMETIC si/ ( Hited Press CHICAGO. Xov. 7.—One woman plus one bargain counter equals African savage. The same instinets which caused thè savage to trade a bunch of bananas for a string of beads impel thè American woman to seek thè bargain counter for a fall hat. aecordir.g to Professor E. A. Steiner, of Grinnell University. “It takes a tremendous amount of faith to believe in thè human race when one stands on a Street corner on a dull day and watches thè tentale of thè species bent on bargains," Steiner said.
CORNS Lift Off with Fingers ai ? iulU V ìktJ Doesn’t hurt a bit! Drop a little "Freezone” on an aching corn, inetantly that corn stop hurting, then shortly you lift it right off with fingere. Truly! Your druggist sells a tiny bottle of Freezone for a few cents. sutfleient to remove every hard corn, soft corn, or corn between thè toes, and thè calluses, wlthout soreness or lrritation. —Advertlsement.
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Martha Lee HER COLUMN
I suppose you have been told so jften that it is thè “little things" chat count, you take it for granted without hearing all thè arguments or and against. Nevertheless. I take thè chance of boring you by repeating that statement, because it does mean so much. They are so easy to do —those “litle things"—and stili so easy to forteti You know what they are—tho nusband’s kiss in thè morning; a ■lunch of flowers for “her” birthday; i re mar k about thè new dress or hat; u hope that thè headache is better. It really is largely a matter of remgmbering. Husbands and wives, especially, should cultivate such a inemory. Answer to HUBBY: Oh. dear me, how could you forget wifey’s blrthday? Goodness, Hubby, what business could you have had more iniportant than that of buying her a
IO mSCMEirjpR BOWELS When Sick, Bilious, Headachy, Constipated, for Sour Stomach, Gases, Bad Breath, Colds
Your bowels may seem regular—move every day—yet your thirty feet of bowels may be linei! with poisonous waste which is being sucked lnto your blood. keeping you half sick. nervous, despondent and npset. Whether you have headache. colds, sour stomach, indigestlon. or heart palpitation, it is usually from bowel polson.
Downstai rs AtAyres Silk Petticoats $2.98 $3.98 $4.95
I’etticoats • of taffetà and mossalincs, also jersey. attraetively made. The tasse t a petticoats may be had in ropular and extra sizes.
Boys’ Pajamas, 89c These are inade of a soft quality outing flannel, open In front and have drop seat; nlcely tailored, doublé stitched with Bmooth, fiat seams throughout, neatly trimmed with flber silk frogs. Sizes 6 to 12 years Philippine Underwear, $1.98 Hundreds of beautiful handmade gowns and envelope chemises, of lovely soft materials. Sizes 15 to 17. Children’s Hosiery, Pair, 25c Mercerized and washed cotton lisle hose, very fine rlb, excellent wearing quality and good looklng. Comes in black, cordovan, white. Sizes 5 to 10. Some are firsts and others SECONDS, but all are good values. A Table Full of Women’s Hose, Pair, 69c Hundreds of pairs of pure thread silk, and silk and flber, and mercerized lisle and silk, in plain weaves; drop stitch and two-tone effeets. Beautiful hose at this low price. Sizes 8% to 10. IRREGULARS and firsts.
Women’s and Misses’ Jersey Suits $5.75 Just 75 of these sport suits, excellent for Street, business, sporta wear or motoring, and even very suitable for a two-piece dress; Tuxedo styles, patch pockets, plenty of room, good length, welltailored skirts. In brown, navy, black and gray; sizes 16 to 42. These are really exceptional suits at thè price. For thè day 0n1y— 95.75. L. S. AYRES & CO.—DOWNSTAIRS STORE
present? What conference could have kept your mind so.occupied that' thè date did not even occur to you? And lt’s happened beYofe! This ls serious. So that’s why you want to know what on earth you can do to keep yourself in thè wife’s good graces. You say she does not get angry, but just looks so hurt you feel like kicking yourself. Well, why not do just that? It ought to make you remember. Seriously, I should suggest a calendar for thè dates —birthdays, wedding anniversarles, etc. Also, I should suggest you get into thè hablt of taklng candy and flowers to wlfey once In a whlle. even though she has no birthday. She seems to be ,tho kind of wife who wants just that sort of thing. You men forget how much thè “little things” count with us women. Answer to PRETTY: If "he” doesn’t hke thè e tr-rings. Pretty, and you do Jilce him, i should think your problem could be solved very eaeily. Take ’em off. Oh, yes, I know all about independence and all that sort of thing; but lt doesn't hurt to let a man know you value hls opinion highty. Answer to K. L. F.. 1. Cake should be eaten with a forlt 2. When a man ls walking with two glrls he should walk on thè outslde of thè sidewalk. 3. You are right—even though it
Hurry! One or two Cascarets tonight will clcan your bowels right. By morning all thè constipation poison and sour bile will move out —thoroughly! Cascarets will not sicken you—they physic fully. but never gripe or inconvenlence. Children love Cascarets. too. 10 cent boxes, also 25 and 50 cent slzcs. Any drugstore.—Advertlsement.
Petticoats of very good Milanese, radium silk and messaline, in irregular and extra large sizes. Some tailored styles and smartly trimmed models. Bloomers and pantaìettes of same materials, exceptionally well tailored. Also some princess slips well tailored of radium siiks, in black, navy, brown.
Petticoats o f Milanese, heavy jersey, Mars aline, smar t 1 v made with trimmings of braid. Also bloomers cut to fit, projv erlv reinforecd. Doublé rows of elastic all the most po p u 1 a r shades.
Mercerized Table Damask, the Yard, 59c 64 inches wide, several very good fiorai patterns, fine quality cotton damask. Hemstitched Pillowcases, 45c Each Hemstitched, fine quality, smooth and closely woven, 42 inches wlde, will launder well and wear well. Hand-Drawn Novelty Curtains, $2.50 the Pair Fine quality, of good, heavy weight, with hand drawnwork in cornerà and hemstltcned. Comes in Arali color, 2*4 yards long. Excellent curtains for any room in the house. Bedspreads at $1.79 81x90 heavy crochet hemmed spreads, pretty fiorai patterns. and will wear and launder well. Heavy Crochet Spreads, $2.39 Scaiioped cut corners. Also hemmed Marseilles spreads, 81x90. Marseilles Spreads, $2.98 Satin-finish Marseilles spreads, good heavy quality, slze 81x90, at this exceptlonally attractlve price.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
grieves you to watch thè man struggle to get on his heavy coat, etlquette forblds you to hejp hlm. You Bee, u man would rather struggle by himself than have to be helped by one of thè weaker sex. At least, I suppose that ls etiquette’s reasoning. Answer to EMILY: Emily, some men are so cruel-hearted they actually enjoy to see a girl suffer because tney won’t love her any more. Honestly, Emily, what did you expect when you tcld thè man you didn’t love hlm and wculcl not marry him? You thought he would vow to woo you untlj he changed your mind; that he would camp on your doorstep until you marrled hlm out Now, didn’t you think that? Or perhaps you thought he would declare he would drown himself. But, Emily, men have changed slnce the day when those dime novels thrilled our hearts. If Emily says she doesn’t love hlm, well. he'll Just gc over and flnd out how Dorothy feels about the matter. Or he wlji
&Co
goldkn L S Aì RLS 1022 1 AND COMPANY ,
Vignettes From the Past When L. S. Ayres & Co. Was Five Years Old, in 1877, the eni ployes gave Mr. Lyman 3. Ayres a birthday gift, a gorgeous set of gold and silver chessmen. Upon each man was engraved the name of one of tho donors. and upon a pawn may be seen that of Mr. John Weinnian, ut present buyer of siiks and wool ens for this organization. • • • Little Girls Played with the dolls in the seventies. and had elaborate furnishings to make their lise seern more rea!. Among the exhibits we noted a china doli, with her shiny clilna hair parted in the manner of the period; as well as a delightful folding bed. with drawer for the plllow, and a completo washstand with bowl and basin. the whole being about 8 inches tali. * • • One Doesn’t See Shawls any more, unless upon some stili old-fashioned lady. Yet in their tirile tliey were among the. most gorgeous parts of a well-dressed woman’s costume, and great labor was expended toward their beautlfying. Lovely shawls- — Taisleys, Roman strlped efteets, and wonderfully embroldered Indlan ones —abound in this exhlblt. Miss Mary Nlcliolson loana an Indian shawl in blue that is no doubt already familiar to her countless friends. ♦ • • Twelve Children bave been christened in the long elaborately embroldered robe ’.oaned by one Indianapolis famlly and all are llving. What store could wish better of Its merchandiso than that. Seven sons, four daughters and one grandson received their formai nanies in this beautifully preserved go*n • + • That Catnip Tea was once regarded as a peerless remedy for chlldren’s ills is evtdencod by a little teapot designed particularly for this purpose and now to be seen in the exhiblt. • • • lf You Think that the beaded bag with Its Parlatali trade mark ls a new thing, tho little fiorai pattemed purse we observed in thè exliibit should convince otherwise. Though not so elaborate as the elaborate affairs milady carrles today, tliey had the same individuai charm.
As Fellow Hoosiers We Invite You Cordially to Join in Our Golden Anniversary Celebration A Special Anniversary Luncheon Daily in thè Tea Room The Celebration Will Conclude With Quite thè Greatest Value-Giving Sale in Our Fifty Years of Mercliatidking
leave Emily strictly alone, and she will realize what she is missing. So, Emily, Just remember that, next time a man asks you to marry him. “Keeping ’em guesslng” may work semetimes; but it is a dangerous policy to try very often. In this Instance, I suggest you ask the man to come to see you. I think you can fix matters up pretty quickly, as he seems stili to want you for hls lady-love. Marriage a la Mode In China a bride never has young girls for attendants. She is always waited upon by older matrona or spinsters. Llkewlse, she never wears white, as that it the color of mournlng. Yellow, the national color, ls the favorite color for the brides. At the wedding ceremony and the feast afterward the bride speaks only when addressed by her husband or by hls parents. She takes no tnltiative In conversation.
Golden Anniversary Celebration An Event of Civic Interest
The success of business institutions and the prosperity of their communities are so dependent one upon thè other that what is importuni to one is of naturai interest to the other. How Citizens Have Helped Even our Anniversary exhibitions which have excited so much favorable comment would have been of small interest without the priceless wardrobe treasures so kindlv proft’ered gratuitoiislv by customers aud friends throughout thè city and state. Grandmothers have loaned us their precious wedding gowns, others have added to the eolleetion garments and keepsakes treasured as mementoes of the past. We are glad to make acknowledgment of these almost countless favors. To The Indianapolis News we are indebted for the only volumes extant of their paper published in the early seventies. In a volume of 1872 is published the announcement of Mr. Lyman S. Ayres’ entrance into the business of the “Trade Palare.” We Have Grown Together L. S. Ayres & Co. has grown greatly during the fifty years, but so has Indianapolis and the state. This is a far better store tlian it could possibly have been in the remote past, but also Indianapolis has grown from a small city to a great one, and in culture and phvsical attractiveness. The store as a distributor of necessities and luxuries is a powerful influence in community upbuilding, but even so it is dependent upon a citizenship which appreciates and strives for betterment. Show Features Which Have a Purpose In halting from our work-a-day tasks and viowing and reviewing the contrasts between “yesterday” and “today,” we shall both prosit. This is the thought back of the eloquent window displays, the beautiful fashion revuc at the Circle Theater, the sentimentstirring relics of the past; it is a thought admirably reflected in thè 109 art posters executed by Indiana artista.
AGEO WOMAN IS AGAINSTDRYLAW By RODNEY DUTCHER United Neics Staff Correspondent CHICAGO, Nov. 7.—At the age of 94, Mrs. Tannah Hanley, Chicago's oldest voter, will walk unassisted to the polis and cast her vote for beer and light wdnes. Mrs. Hanely not only believes in a modiflcation of the Volstead act, but In woman suffrage. She told a reporter the night before electlon that she was going to vote for the complete Democratic ticket and hoped she would be allve to vote for the Democratic presidential candidale in 1924. •Tll vote for him if they have to take me to the polis in an ambulante,” she declared. "I’ve always wanted
to help make a Democrat President—ever slnce I carne to this country“l believe the workingman should have his beer, if he needs IL” Mrs. Hanley was bora St. Patrick' day, 1828, on the same island where St. Patrick made himself fainous. She carne to America in 1836, the year Van Buren was elected Presidente FOR SKIN TORTURES Zemo, the Clean, Antiseptic Liquid, Just What You Need Don’t worry about Eczema or other skln troubles. You can have a dear, healthy skln by using Zemo, obtalned at any drug store for 35c, or extra large bottle at SI.OO. Zemo generally removes Pimples, Biackheads, Blotches, Eczema and Ringworm and makes the skln clear and healthy. Zemo ls a clean, penetra tlng, antiseptic liquid. It is easily applled and costa a mere trifle for each application. It is always dependable.—Advertisement.
AND COMPANY ,|
Vignettes From the Past You Can Almost reconstruct the whole fabric of Indianapolis lise flfty years ago by a mere casual wandering through our “Relics of the Past” exhibit. Families long assoclated with the most important developments in the city’s growth have been generous to such a degree that the present displays assume the chaxacter of an appendi! to the history of Indianapolis. • * • It ls Hard to imagine Senator New as anything but the genlal figure so prominent in contemporary politics. Yet he was once quite a wee youngster, else he could have hardly worn the quaint pink dress, so delightfully scaiioped, which now occupies a prominent place among the exhibits. • • • Anothor Child's Dress, this one, we should guess, for a miss of six or 6even. is interesting because it is the first Indianapolis product of one of the city’s noted dressmakers. Madame Aver, who carne to join N. R. Smith and Ayres but shortly aster the flrm’a organization. It ls not hard to picture the glow of pride with which ita first wearer promenadad in the first creaiion of thè new modiste. • • • Women' Ready-to-Wear shipments mean nothing nowadays; every department store and apparai shop is constantly getting new lots from the Eastern markets. But in 1870 such arrivala were matters of moment; they were events. The first shlpment that ever arrived brought one dress stili owned In the city; a polonaise, rich in ruffles and fringe, that may now be seen in the exhibit. • • • Tho Flapper of the Seventies sound in sleighing delights that the girl of today gets out of a zlpplng roadster. And even as the modera mi3B dons sporta appare! for festivlties in tho open, so did her grandmother put on special garments. Among which may stili be seen a smart little bonnet of wool trlmmed In beads with flaps that protected the eare and tied under the chin.
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