Indianapolis Times, Volume 35, Number 9, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 May 1923 — Page 6

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Social Activities ENTERTAINMENTS WEDDINGS BETROTHALS

THE last Parent-Teacher Association meeting of the year will be held Wednesday afternoon at Caleb Mills Hall. After a business meeting at which officers will be elected Dr. William Byron Borbush of New York City will speak on "Understanding Our Boys and Girls." * * * Mrs. Frank Edey of New York City spoke at a luncheon Monday at the Spink-Arms Hotel given by the Indianapolis Girl Scout Council. Mrs. Edey is chairman of the National Field Committee and a member of the national board of Girl Scouts. '* • * A miscellaneous shower will be given tonight at the home of Miss Florence Stanley in honor of Miss Josephine Woods, who is to marry Russell Holler Saturday evening. The j appointments will be in blue and sil ver and orchid and the guests will 1 hem tea towels for the bride-elect dur-, ing the evening. Miss Stanley will be assisted by Mrs. C. W. Irwin. The guests: Misses Charlotte Comstock, Margaret Kelelnback, Maria Daugherty, Dorothy Rhoades, Marjorie Parrish, Betty Campbell, Margaret McWhorter, Helen Gandall, Gladys Young, Edna Hunt. Hope Bed ford. Anita and Nympha Welch. Mildred Harris and Velma Rich. • • * Members of the Caroline Scott Harrison Chapter of D. A. R. met today for an informal party in their new chapter house at 824 N. Pennsylvania St. Mrs. Eugene Darrah, regent, has been promoting the idea of a getting acquainted scheme because of the Increasing numbers. The luncheon was served In picnic style, each member contributing a part of the menu. • * * Miss Medqlka Simeonova. violinist, will present a recital tonight at Odeon Hall. While in the city she has been entertained by Mr. and Mrs. Donn | Watson. • • • Mrs. J. Brumberg of Buffalo is the guest of her parents. Mr. and Mrs. C Medina, 721 N. Delaware St. • • • The Delta Tau Dames will be the j guests of Mrs. Ray Fatout. 1401 Fairfield Ave., Wednesday at a luncheon bridge. Dr. E. D. Cofield. Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Knight, Mr. and Mrs. Ed Robbins. Mr. Forest M. Knight and i Miss Florence Schwankhaus passed the week-end at Rainbow Bend. . . . Golden Rule Lodge No. 1, I. O. O. F., will give a dance Wednesday evening in the P. H. C. Hall, East and Michigan Sts. • • * Catherine Merrill Tent No. 9, Daughters of Veterans, will hold its regular meeting tonight at 7:30 at Morrison's Hall. • • A card party will be given tonight by the Only Euchre Club at Musicians’ Hail, 143 E. Ohio St.

Household | Suggestions Baked Potatoes When you bake potatoes, have the skins dry- Wet skins lower the heat of the. oven. Asparagus When you prepare asparagus, in stead of throwing away the bottom part that you break off, peel it until you come to the juicy center. Cut it in inch pieces and put it to cook half an hour earlier than you do the rest of the stalks. Do not salt until nearly done. Dried Com Corn cooked on the cob should not be wasted. The grains may be taken

from the cob by running a sharp knife between the rows, not cutting. They should then be spread in a thin layer on a bake sheet and dried in the oven. When dried, place in a close receptacle and keep in a cool, dark, dry place. Cake Pudding If you bake a cake and it falls, next day steam it and serve with a good pudding sauce. MISSIONARY WILL RETURN Farewell Reception Friday Night For Rev. Preston Hyde. The Rev. Preston Hyde. 5640 Lowell Ave., with his wife and four children, will leave in June for India, where he will resume duty as missionary for the Methodist Episcopal Church. They will be honor guests at a reception Friday night at the Irvington M. E. Church. The Rev. Mr. Hyde was forced to give up missionary work two years ago on account of ill health. He is the son of the Rev. Marshal H. Hyde, pastor of the Grace M. E. Church of Indianapolis, is a graduate of Moores Hill College and attended Chicago University. LOCAIT PASTOR RESIGNS \V. W. Harris to Take Charge of Church Near Vincennes. Announcement was made today of the resignation of the Rev. W. W. Harris, pastor of the Garden aßptist Church, to become pastor of Churches at Sanborn and Bethel, near Vincennes. During his twenty-seven years In the ministry Rev. Harris has held Uinly two pastorates, first at Linton then at the Garden Baptist His successor has not been Varied. Ewifim > -*irv Golf Tourneys Arranged ff ' ijCrtx' ana Coal Mining” was the subWilliam Zeller at the Gyro today at the Lincoln. tournaments for members

Three Cuban Beauties —All in One Family

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MADAME BORSIRIO BONET. WIFE OK THE COMMERCIAL ATTACH E OF THE CUBAN LEGATION AT WASHINGTON. HER DAUGHTER. FA-ORA (LEFT) AND HER SISTER-IN-LAW, BERTA (RIGHT).

Money Marriage Makes Young Girl Heartless

“An Old Man’s Lover 7 writes me a heartless letter. She is 17 and has beeu married for a year to a man of 50. Now she is waiting for him to die so she can go to the man she loves. Her letter shows she is absolutely selfish. It does not seem to occur to her that she owes anything to the man she married, although she seems satisfied to take all he gives her.

Her attitude is the natural outcome of her marriage. She married for money and she married when she was still hardly more than a child. Asa resullt, she has no more thought of anything except her o\wi pleasure | than a child would have. Waiting for Death Dear Miss Lee: lam a beautiful girl 17 years of ai?e. When I was 1H 1 married a wealthy man of 50. My husband has made me very happy. I raCt a very handsome young man about IK years old Now my husband hasn t anv relatives and is on his deathbed. Do you think it would be all risht for me to go to New York after the old man dies and marry' my heart s de sire? If the old man doesn't die. shall 1 wait until his death to go to New York? I could tell him I was going with someone else. I love this old man ail right, because he gets me anything I want He treat- me ; more as a father than as a husband This young man is marvelous: he is just the mail for me Please advise me. AN OLD MAN' S LOVER 1 know many men of 50 who would j cbject strenuously to being called “old.” You say you love your husband j because he has given you everything' you wanted. You have an odd way of showing your love —proposing to j i desert him on his deathbed, or heart ; lessly plotting to get away as soon ! i as he dies. You married years before you | should have. If your husoand lives, try to make j up for your faithless thoughts by being a real wife. Jf he dies, not consider remarriage lor several years. You are absolutely selfish now. Try to think of others. Pal Infatuated | Mi9S Martha Lee: My friend John ban a ! ear but very bashful with the ladies, s-j I make all of our engagement* A while back. I met a nice young lady anti asken her to go out. The first night 1 was with her John fell deeply in love with her 1 told him he could have her. for I had many more friends. We enjoyed date nights for a tew weeks and then this girl told John not to bring me any more and not even to speak to me. This he has done tor the past week, taking another hoy instead. I think tins girl got jealous because 1 could always get better-looking girls than she She also Is 1 making a fool out of him by making him spend all his money and running his car. I want his friendship again, so what can 1 do? A PAI That's the kind that falls hardest, isn't it? Your friend probably will realize soon how unfair he is to you. And if he is infatuated with this girl, ;he probably would not listen to you now. You might try to show him that you have done nothing to deserve the treatment he gives you. If he refuses to listen, all you can do Is to wait and hope he is able to take care of j himself. BATIN SLIPPERS: Please send me your name and address, repeating your story, and I will try to help you. Left Children Dear Martha Lee: 1 am married and don't know what to do with myself. I have been going with a mail for the past year whom I love better than life. Two weeks ago he got mad at me and said I was not true to him I cannot give him up He is 39. He is a good man. I have written him three letters, but he doesn't answer i them I work every day I have given up two j husbands and two little children, who were | very dear to me. for this man. I am veryyoung yet. I was married when I was 14. Please tell me what to do to win him back. MARY. Y'ou call this man “good.” I call j him the very worst kind of man. for ! he has taken a mother away from her children. Don’t try to win him back. Instead. try to make up for the evil you have done. Forget the past few years and start out anew, to live a pure life from now on. Do it for the ! sake of the children you deserted. If not for yourself. It will be hard, but you can do It. Mrs. Grundy Objects My Dear Martha Lee: 1. I am a girl til years of age. Is it proper for me to go j machine riding with a fellow to w hom the | fellow I have been going with for two years objects? If not. why? *l. Should a girl accept jewelry from a young man before she becomes engaged, just as a present for no special occasion? 3. Should I tell my mother all my love (if that is what they are called) affairs? BABE. 1. A girl of your age should not go | riding at night with a young man un- ! chaperoned. It's not that you j wouldn’t behave. Babe, but that people j do talk, and you don’t want any gos- j sip about you. do you? 2. Mrs. Grundy disapproves of a woman’s accepting jewelry from a man to whom she is not engaged. However, the bars have been let down a gTeat deal in the past few years. Still, a girl as young as you really should accept only very inexpensive gifts. 3. You will find your mother sympathetic about your “love” affairs, and you should make her your confidante because she can give you the j best advice. MACK: I’ican think of nothing I j might have laid which would lndi | •cats to you that I have gone into

Martha Lee Says-

the bootlegging business. You say you have been loyal to your country. Then keep on being so by obeying its ; laws, even though you do not like j some of them. Ho wto Forget Dear Miss Lee lam a girl of CO. When I as 17 I met a young man of 10 and went with him until I was 19 Wo did not marry ihon on ao-ount of my having to sup port my mother Wo had a failing-out and about seven months later he married another girl 1 know he does not love her I And I aimot forget him. Ho calls up my cousin and asks all kinds of questions about me. Can you advise me how to help myself forge!': 1 have not seen him since he married. TRUE LOVE When you find yourself thinking of this man, go to a show, read a book, or do something that will occupy your mind. Best of all, get out among other young people. Don't give yourself a chance to think of him. Your cousin can help. Ask him not to tell you about these calls any more. Then keep yourself busy and In time you will accomplish the end you desire. PRETTY: You do not tel! me whether or not this mans wife is living. If she is not, you should marry him. to give your o ild a nam. TRUCK HITS THREE CARS Driver Is Held Itv Police On Two Charges. Asa result of an accident John Young, 32, colored, 956 Pansy St., was under arrest today on charges of : operating a motor vehicle while under the Influence of liquor, and malicious destruction of property. The accident occurred on Eighteenth St., between Meridian and Illinois Sts., at 4:30 p. m.. Monday. Young, driving a truck, ran info a touring car owned by Otto Miller, parked on Eighteenth St. Young turned north on Pierson Ave., and collided with two automobiles owned by the Kamphouse & Brown Company, parked across from their garage at 1806 Pierson Ave. DEATH CLAIMS GARDENER Funeral of Oscar Porlteus to Be Held Wednesday at Acton. Funeral services for Oscar D. Portteus, 55. of Acton. Ind., will ho held Wednesday at 2 p. m., at the Acton M. E. Church. Burial will bo at the Acton cemetery. Portteus was the son of Zereldia Portteus, of Acton, and a cousin of Theodore Portteus. of Indianapolis, former sheriff of Marion County. He (Hod suddenly Monday while hoejng the garden at his home near Acton. Death was due to heart disease.

A Clean Bathtub ® Is^miK.rtant Hurts Only Dirt — *" < — *-**—— —————

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

•HEALTH IS HAPPINESS’ •> Couple Winning Bacon (live Recipe for Wedded Bliss. Hii I nltcil Vries LONDON. May 22 —The famous Dnnmow fltlitch of bacon, instituted in the year 1214 as a prize for the couple proving to have enjoyed the most perfect married happiness, has been awarded tills year to Tom Graves, labor M. P., and his wife. After presenting claim to the award, applicants must prove at a mock trial that they have lived a year and a day without quarrels or regrets. The Jury composed of bnehejors and spin 1 sters. judged the Graves victors. Her© Is their recipe for perfect happiness: "Good health, which means good temper. Good temper, which means no quarrels. No quarrels, which means no regrets."

_ RwdfEgA PivatxL' Tk Pptsb 1

I JITTERS RK< HIVED BY LESLIE PRESCOTT AM) SENT TO JOHN PRESCOTT, < VRE OF HIS BUSINESS OFFICE. Mrs. John Alden Prescott, The Rosemont. Dear Madam: Possibly the enclosed bill for one hundred and ten dollars has escaped your attention. Will you kindly send us a check by the tenth? Respectfully yours, Green A Company, Grocers. Mrs. John Alden Prescott, The Rosemont. Dear Madam: I find I have some pressing bills to meet by the fifteenth and It, would be a great favor to me if you would send check for twenty dollars Immediately. Thanking you In advance for the same, I remain, Y'ours respectfully, Sarah Homes. TAundress. Mrs. John Alden Prescott, The Rosemont. Dear Madam: May we call your attention to the fact that In some way you have overlooked our bill for ninety seven dollars and twenty-five cents for cleaning of floors and woodwork, sent you lost month. The Sunshine Employment Bureau, Mrs. John Alden Prescott, The Rosemont. Dear Madam: Enclosed please find bill for rent coming month for one hundred and fifty dollars. We always allow our tenants the courtesy of paying these hills on or before the tenth of the succeeding month. Cordially you re. The James Realty Company. M rs. John Alden Prescott, The Rosemont. My Dear Mrs. Prescott: I am not quite sure whether I should send this bill to you or your husband. I wish you would in the future tell me whether I shall send these bills to the house or the office. We are very much flattered that you have liked us well enough to give

DEFICIT FOUND BY STATE EXAMINERS Knox Deputy and ex-Treas-urer Differ in Reports, Conflict becv.fcu official reports of James M. A iuhs of Vincennes, retired Knox County treasurer, and Luther R. Wood, his deputy, are believed responsibly for a cash deficit of $9,124. widen field examiners for the State board of accounts have discovered. The investigation reports, made by W. D. Screeder and O. B. Bales, field examiners, were filed with Lawrence F. Orr, chief examiner, late Monday. Total charges against Adams are $10,131.24. The discrepancies cover a period from 1919 to 1922. Neither the former treasurer nor his deputy, the examiners said, was able to explain th* differences. Indications that use was made of public funds and that personal checks were used to cover the shortage were found, the examiners said. FLIRTING COSTS $5 Transgression of Law Expensive for Youths. By X’nitrd Xews ZION CITY. 111.. May 21.-—Faust Marks and 11. Ban Trunk, two outof town boys, are the first victims of Zion's anti flirting m iinac. passed In 1914 to prohibit the lifting of festive eyebrow' or the dropping of an <-vil eyelid upon pulchritudinous females by designing males. Marks and Trunk lifted their hats to two of Zion's zippiest flappers and inquired to know if the ladies cared foi motoring. The ladies didn’t, and Constable Fisher, who remarked the transgression of Zion’s laws brought the winkers Into court. The hat lifting episode cost each boy $5. Held as Fugitive George Peters, 25. of 642 .Johnson Si is held as a fugitive. Detectives say lie is wanted at Frankfort. Ky„ but they do not know the charge.

so many little luncheons in the hotel instead of distributing your patronage among other places in the city. Believe me, Mrs. Prescott, we appreciate your kindness in bringing your friends here and because of this we have deducted Id per cent from our regular prices and are only oharg mg you. as you will see by enclosed bill, sixty seven dollars and twenty < ents for the four lunches and seven teas given last month. Most sincerely yours, Alice Statson, Auditor. Mr. John Alden Prescott, from the Thomas Florist Cos.: To one bask*’’ of flowers. sl6 Notation by Leslie on this bill. "This came jvith my other hills and T opened it through mistake. Yep see the Mr might easily be mistaken for Mrs. The florist company also must have made a mistake for I have received no flowers. LESLIE.” NEXT: Li's lie Prescott’s secret biter— \ confession of love and trust.

GIRLS! LEMONS BEAUTIFY SKIN Make this Lemon Cream to Whiten Skin and bleach Tan, Freckles

Mix the juice of two lemons with three ounces of Orchard White which any druggist will supply for a few cents, shake well in a bottle, and you have a whole quarter-pint of the most wonderful skin softener and complexion beaut!Her. Massage this sweetly fragrant lemon cream Into the face, neck, arms and hands, then shortly note the youthful beauty, softness and whiteness of your skin. Famous stage beauties use this harmless lemon cream to bring that velvety, clear, rosy while complexion, also as a freckle, sunburn, and tan bleach because It doesn’t irritate.—Ad

HOSPITAL PATIENT UNDER ARREST: WOMAN HELD Fight Starts Over Argument About Choir Practice. When Walter Brown, 42, colored, 729 Ogden St., told Sallie Harper, 32, colored, 711 Ogden St., Monday night that she had not attended choir practice. he started a fight that caused him to be in the city hospital today, according to police. The woman said Brown seized her and she reached into a buffet drawer and secured a razor. Brown told police she went upstairs and got the razor. Brown suffered a severe cut across the forehead, his nose was cut almost off, he had a cut on* his left arm and a cut through his lip. During the battle, Brown fell backward through a dining room window. The woman ran upstairs as he started to re-enter, but he was so seriously wounded he could get no further than the dining room. Brown was held at the city hospital detention ward on the charge of assault and battery aud the woman was charged with assau and battery with intent to kill. Orientals Appease Gods Hu United Sews ST. PAUL, Minn.. May 21.—The Oriental colony is making sacrificial offerings to appease its gods. The wrath of Buddha visited the colony Monday when a fire at the Wing Wah Chong importing house destroyed dozens of little statues and other mystic articles. The sacrifices began as soon as the

GRAPES Rich, ripe, healthful grapes, grown in the famous vineyards of Southern Europe produce the cream of tartar from which Royal Baking Powder is made. The most eminent authorities in the world say cream of tartar makes the best and most healthful baking powder. ROYAL Baking Powder The ONL Y nationally distributed Cream of Tartar Baking Powder Contain* No Alum Leaves No Bitter Taste

’V ‘Hmericen Beauty” ELECTRIC mOJbT The beat iron made Its sturdy construction assures you of the utmost in reliability and durability. In this iron you have an iron that is always ready for use. No troublesome repairs to bother and delay your work. Sold by Dealers and Electrical Companies Everywhere. Manufactured by L American Electrical Heater Company, Detroit X Old—<4 and Largest Exduiha Maker*. EatabUahad 1894. ■DMCM—— 111 ISH"I ■’wmamm |mm * r ~Tr American Beauty 0 MW W week Electric Irons A fill M week r ” ‘ti’fr Gets Yours Today EDISON ELECTRIC COMPANY “£ Formerly Electric Gift Shop l MA in 2455 115-117 EAST OHIO STREET J MA in 2456 “The Home of Your Electric Servant" M

STORMS FOLLOW , OKLAHOMA FLOOD Western Part of State Hard Hit by Near-Tornado. Bi/ United Press OKLAHOMA CITY. Okla.. May 22. —Western Oklahoma was storm swept today following floods in the wake of a near-tornado. The district around Leedey was the storm center. With railroad and wire communication still paralyzed it’was Impossible to determine the damage. Unconfirmed reports said several persons are missing. FORGOTTEN ‘LINCOLN’ IS FOUND IN BASEMENT St. (iaudens .Masterpiece to Be Erected in Jackson l’ark. H<i United Aries CHICAGO, May 22. Augustus Saint Gaudens. America’s greatest sculptor, worked twelve years on a statue of Abraham Lincoln. When he finished the work he declared it his masterpiece. But Saint Gaudens died, and the masterpiece was boxed and hidden away in a dusty basement, forgotten, fifteen years ago. Trustees for n fund of $100,900 which was to provide for the erection of the heroic statue in Chicago also

TUESDAY. MAY 22, 1923

forgot, and also died, and the statue continued to gather dust until today. Now it has beer re discovered, and will be erected at the old fine art building in Jackson park. Auto Tire Stolen J. J. Helman. 2819 College Ave,, told police today a thief entered his garage and took a 510 tire off car.

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