Indianapolis Times, Volume 35, Number 22, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 June 1923 — Page 5

WEDNESDAY, JUNE 6, 1923

Social Activities ENTERTAINMENTS WEDDINGS BETROTHALS

MISS CHRISTINE IRELAND, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Emmett L. Ireland, 533 E Thirty-Third St., will become the bride of Raymond H. Maguire tonight at St. Paul's Episcopal Church. The Rev. Lewis Brown will read the ceremony. O. H. Carson at the organ will play “Evening Staf.” "Cradle Song,” *T Love You Truly” and "My heart at Thy Sw£et Voice.” The church will be decorated with ferns, palms and roses. The bridal party will be preceded down the aisle by Little Miss Betty Vail, who will scatter rose petals before the bride. The bride will wear a gown of crepe heavily beaded with crystal beads, with a tulle veil arranged with orange blossoms in coronet style. She will have a bouquet of Angelus roses and valley lilies. Miss Caroline Maguire, maid of honor, will wear blue taffeta and carry an arm bouquet of pink roses. Miss Edna Barcus in pink georgette, Miss Catherine Whittington in green, Miss Elsie Milner In orchid and Miss Betty Graff in yellow will be the bridesmaids and will carry’ bouquets of sweet peas and roses. Clifford Wyman will be best man. The ushers will be Frank Vail, James Woods, Ralph Richardson and Karl Schwomeyer. The bride will wear the gift of the groom, a platinum and diamond bracelet. After the ceremony there will be a reception at the home of the bride's parents. Receiving with them will be Mesdames R. Laura Holland, James Woods, James Wilhite, Blanche Maguire. Charles Wharton, and Miss Carrie Thompson. Mrs. Alma Koehne, harpist, will play. Out-of-town guests will be Mr. and Mrs. D. M. Jones, Mrs. William Fell, ’vriw Frances Fell. Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Clay-pool of Crawfordsville and Mrs. Frances Shanks and James Crawford Mitchell. • • • IN the parsonage of the First Presbyterian Church tonight at 8 o’clock Miss Lillian E. Schmidt, of Mr. and Mrs. G. W. fjphmldt. 1815 Montcalm St., will become the bride of George B. Mess, the Rev. Frederick Taylor officiating. Miss Gladys Schmidt, sister of the bride, will be her only attendant. George Mess, brother of the groom, will act as best man. Immediately’ after the ceremony, Mr. and Mrs. Mess will receive friends and relatives at their home, 522 N. Chester. Following the reception they will leave for the Great Lakes. After June 17 they will be at home at 522 N Chester St. Out-of-town guests attending the wedding are Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Mess of Ft. Wayne, Mr. and Mrs. Calif Montcries and Mr. and Mrs. Russell Montcries o f Greenfield and Miss Lulu Witter of Liberty • • • Mrs. Simon R. Reisler, 5749 E New York St., was hostess today for a beautifully appointed luncheon-bridge and handkerchief shower in honor of Mrs. Demarchus Brown, who will leave June' 28 for Europe. Covers for sixteen were-laid at little tables artistically ananged with bowls of pink roses and pink xapers. The place cards were bridge tallies In Dresden figures In pastel shades. Favors were beautiful little bridge pencils wound with green crepe paper and a pink crepe rose on the end. The rooms were decorated with baskets of pink roses and peonies and syrlnga. Lucy Anne Meurer presented the gifts to Mrs. Brown in a huge pink crepe paper rose. The hostess was assisted by Mesdames Albert Alexander, W. C. Gardner. E. D. Donnell, A. H. landThe guests: Mesdames M. D. AlDright, O. O. Donnell. A. H. Freeland, J. K. Kingsbury, O. N. Moore, N. A. Rodman, A. F. Meurer, C. W. Whaley, Tyler Oglesby, H. S. Osborne and Miss Anna C. Gardner. Mrs. Demarchus is taking a group ‘of tourists on a six months tour of Europe and Italy.

, Before an aJtter of palms, June roses and peonies Miss Hilda Jane Wright, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. ' Elmer Wright, 2902 Rader St. became the bride of Haywood Gentry, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Gentry, Tuesday noon at the home of the bridal parents, the Rev. J. R. Fife officiating. Miss Freda Wright, sister of bride, was maid of honor. She was dressed 1 in green satin crepe with a leghorn hat and carried a bouquet of sweet peas and lilies of the valley. The bride wore a suit of grey poiret twill and carried pink roses. The bridegroom was attended by S. F. Evans. A wedding breakfast was served after the ceremony. * Mr. and Mrs. Gentry have gone for a wedding trip to Chicago. They will be at home after June 25 at 2225 Southeastern Ave. -Mr. and Mrs. Ross Layton of Clarksville and Mrs. Earl X. Daggy and little daughter of Richmond were out-of-town guests. * * * Miss Hazel Ritchey of Lincoln, Neb., will be the guest of Mrs. Bernard Batty of Haversticks Park until Friday when she will leave for North Carolina for the bi-ennial conference of the Music Federation of America, Miss Ritchey is the national president of the Sigma Alpha lota sorority. Zeta. chapter will entertain her Thursday at luncheon at the Spink-Arms and theater party at the Murat. • • • Beta will have their annual picnic in Ellenberger Woods Friday. • * After a chicken dinner served by the ladies of the Heath Memorial Church, the Friday Afternoon Reading Club will have an outing in Spades Park Friday. • * * The Past Chiefs Association of Myrtle Temple of the Pythian Sisters will hold an all-day meeting Thursday at the home of Mrs. Jessie Travis. 915 E. Fifteenth St. The hostess will te assisted by Mrs. Bernice C. Arnold nd Mrs. Audrey Manlove. * * * Camp No. 3 of the P. O. of A. will have a card party Wednesday evening at the G. A, R. Hall. • • • The Woman’s Foreign Missionary Society of Robert’s Park Church will meet in the church parlors Friday afternoon for a special program. Mrs.

Don’t Forget Your Cape When You ’re Bathing

WHEN you dress up In your fancy bathing suit, this summer, and are all ready to go out to the beach —to watch the waves—don’t forget your wrap! For it will be a breach of beach fashion to go without one this year. In fact, the wrap is considered quite

Care of Babies

Precautions Should Be Taken Against Contamination of Milk Prepared for Bottle Babies'

This is the third of series of artlcl'S on summer care of babies, prepared especially for The Indianapolis Times readers bye the United States Public Health Service. Bottle Feeding THERE is no such thing ascheap milk for children, particularly babies. Milk and all that concerns it is more important to the baby than everything else put together. The best milk is mother’s milk: and the best substitute, when mother’s milk cannot be had, Is certified cow’s milk. If certified milk Ts not available, buy pasteurized milk—or pasteurize it yourself. If you pasteurize It yourself start by buying "battled” milk; the chain from cow to baby is long enough at best: and milk sold in any other way •than bottled Involves more changes of receptacles—and every- change increases the danger of contamination. Select as many smooth, round nursing bottles, as you are giving feedings in twenty-four hours. Clean them thoroughly- when you get them and repeat immediately after each feeding by rinsing in clear water, soaking in suds, borax or soap water, scrubbing with a clean brush in warm soapsuds and rinsing in boiling water. Clean Thoroughly Get the same number of collapsible nipples, which cleanse after each feeding by scrubbing inside and out in warm, soapy water. Boil them once a day. Never touch the part of the nipple that goes into the baby's mouthNow you are ready for rasterizing

IN FOREIGN LANDS TINTED TRAVELS Sketches by L. W. Redner Verses by Hal Cochran Color the Picture with Paint or Crayons. a IN ENGLAND „

-- jh. tourists often see , T>ie work of Old Sols rai/s ■—* On famous old sun-dials Ota4 Have lived since olden da^s—

W. H. Lay will give a musical program. Fancy Pumps Thepe’s no end to the fancy shoes exploited this year. One" pair of pomps comes in violet colored kid and is embellished with many bands of black patent leather. _______________________________ *** Pointed Caps While* skirts have pretty generally

as necessary as the bathing suit Itself. But don’t shrink from getting it wet. Because every beach wrap in waterproof. They come in silks—checked, striped and in various figured materials —and they're cut on the line of the street wrap. Some

—for home pasterization should always be done in the feeding bottle. Mix the milk as directed by the doctor’s "formula,” and pour the prescribed amount into each bottle. Put the bottles into a wire basket, which put into a tin bucket filled with water a little above the level at which the milk stands in the bottles. Milk is pasteurized by heating it to 150 degrees Fahrenheit and holding it there for thirty minutes, but if you find this difficult, you may gain the same effect by boiling the water in the tin bucket for five minutes, setting it aside for ten minutes and then running in cold water until the milk reaches the temperature of the running water. Then put It Into the ice chest, which should not be warmer than 50 degrees Fahrenheit. Make Icei Chest If no ice chest is convenient a sim pie and effective one can be made from a grocery soap bpx fifteen Inches deep. Make a cylinder of oil cloth or linoleum that will fit loosely about aa earthenware crock tall enough to hold a quart bottle of milk or large enough to hold six or seven feeding bottles. Put crock and cylinder in the box and pack beneath and all about them sawdust or excelsior. Tack newspapers to the cover of the box. When the milk comes, put the bottle (or the pasteurized nursing bottles) ino the crock and pack them with cracked Ice. Put on the crock cover an(i close the box tight. When feeding time comes take out a bottle, ahake it gently, and

gone back to the even hemline, capes show no such tendency. Many of them fall into deep points over the hips. New Handbag Some of the newest handbags have a small ring at one side of the handle through which is drawn one of the colorful handkerchiefs so popular this season.

of them, as the one shown In the center above, conform in design with the bathing suit. But that isn't essential. What is important is that it be worn on the way to the beach. Eise you're not in fashion.

in Summer

warm It by placing In a pan of warm j water. All "fottle” babies, particularly ail taking boiled r>r pasteurized milk, must always be given orange juice or strained tomato juice if oranges are unattainable. Bogin with one teaspoonful mixed with an equal part of cold boiled water just before the morning bath and feeding. Increase gradually to two or three te&spoonsful by the time baby is a year old. Boil Water Anew born baby needs very little food for a day or two. The first feed Ing should be one tahlespoon of milk, two or three tablespoons of water and no sugar. Asa young baby cannot digest plain cow's milk It must be modified according by al ii rig such amounts of water, sugar. ■ .irley, water. lime water, etc., as may be prescribed by the physician. This prescription or “formula” must he changed as the baby grows older. The baby should He down while feeding and the bottle should always be held. Do -not urge him to drink more than he wants and never let him drink more than twenty minutes. Throw away any milk left in the bottle. After feeding, hold baby up and pat him gently to bring up any gas or air. Then place him In bed: do not rock nor play with him. And do not let him suck on an empty bottle or a nipple. Patent foods tend to make fat babies rather than strong babies; do not use them exclusively or continuously. Condensed milk lacks some of the necessary elements and Is likely to cause indigestion and predisposes to rickets if used continuously. When fresh cow’s milk can not be had milk made of powdered whole milk containing 3 Vi per cent of butter fat will be found a good substitute. Bathing the baby and care of its body are treated in five next article.

Cty for A pleasant, harmless Substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Drops and Soothing Syrups, especially .prepared for Infants from one month old to Children of all ages. MOTHER! Fletcher’s Castoria contains no narcotics. It has been in use for more than 30 years to safely relieve Constipation Wind Colic Flatulency To Sweeten Stomach Diarrhoea Regulate^Bowels Aids in the assimilation of Food, promoting Cheerfulness, Rest, and Natural Sleep without Opiates * To avoid imitations, always look for the signature of Proven directions on each package. Physicians everywhere recommend it

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

]V[arthaLee Her Column

Auto Spoils Friendship Dear Martha Lee: I am a young man of 20 I have a boy chum the same age. We know each other's joys and sorrows. Neither has a mother, so we naturally have taken life more seriously than most boys. Until lately he was the finest boy any one could want to know-—before he got a car. But now he doesn't save any money or want me to. He always s taking out a bunch of fellows and girls who do not care for him—just for his machine. . 1 tried to reason with him and ehow him where his extravagance and wild parties will lead him. He listens to every one but those who try to tell him right. There is nothing I would not do for him. But now he Is beginning to tell lies and since he got his car, when we are out with any one, he ignores me. I enjoy the right kind o 1 fun, but I cannot stand back and watch some one make a fool of him. Should I leave him alone? BUSTER. Don’t desert him. Buster, as long as you can stand it. Be his friend, even though he does not want you. Don’t preach to him. The best thing you could do would be to introduce him to some girl who would be attractive enough to win him, but who, like you. be the kind who could have a good time without being “wild.” Don’t let him drag you down with him, but stick by him and try to drag him back up. 'Real Love' and 15 Dear Miss Lee. 1 Do you think a girl 15 knows what real love is? 2 Do you think it is right for a young ma.i to write a strange girl for a date? 3. Would it be wrong for a gir! to go to see her sweethearts mother, who lives In a different city? 4 How many nights should a boy or girl go to the theater? JACK AND BROWN EYES. 1. I do not. * 2. It’s foolish. 3. It would be all right *for a girl to visit a boy friend's mother. A girl of 15 should have no "sweetheart." 4. Depends on ages. A girl of 15 might go to an early show, perhaps once a week, with a group of friends. MR. A. M.: Sorry-, but I do not have this address and could not give it to you if I did. Wants Him Back Dear Miss I.ee: I am a girl of IS. About two years ago I met a very fine fellow. Shortly afterward he joinod the navy, when he came back, we were very dear friends until one nijht we had a fuss 1 guees we will have to go fifty-fifty on the cause He never came back. The other day I wrote him a letter of apology He answered right away l answered that and he never wrote any more. 1 fee! 1 must get him back or 1 will go crazy Can you teU me how to do it*- I feet—like asking him to come down. Should I’ Please don't tell me to forget him. for I cannot. PEOGY Ppggv, you have made all the overtures toward a reconciliation. Unless you want to throw all pride to the winds. I think you had better wait for the young man to take the next step. He knoAs you want to be friends again. ■ In the meantime, don't "mope.” You may not he able to forget him. but you ca nget out with other friends, and so keep yourself from thinking of him constantly. Vapips ’Em All Dear Miss Lee: 1 am a girl IS years old The boys all are crazy about me I his- c been going with a boy from a nearby town We had a quarrel and quit Since then I have met a couple of bov* from Cincinnati. Ohio. They arc crazy about me and I like them, but I still think of the bov 1 have leen going with for a year. Would jou advise me (o try to win his love back, or l-l him go and go with the Cincinnati boys nr some trm- around here? DREAM GIRL. 1 should not r4lvl.se you to limit your boy friends to one. at your age. If you were to blame for the quarrel with this one hoy, write him a note to tell him you are sorry. If he was to blame, he should makarthe first advances. Bus don't let him monopolize you. Young Girl’s Etiquette Dear Miss l-eo: 1 Is it right for a girl to go to a show and if a fellow there wishes to bring her home, to let him? 2 What la a nice present to take a sick fellow you like very much? 3. I know a fellow who. every time I see him, wants to apeak. Should I speak and get acquainted' He aeg.ms a nice boy. THANK YOU VERY MUCH. 1. If you happen to he at a show alone during the afternoon and meet a boy yoq know, it is all right for him to accompany you horn?. Or course, a youitg girl would not go to a show alone at night, and she would not desert those she went with, unless she knew they would all get home all right. 2. A book makes a good gift for a sick Fruit aisfc would be all right. 3. Better not. Too much at stake. VERMA: In fairness to the boy, since he has requested it, you should tell him you want to keep Iris friendship, but never could be more than friends with him.

Swmro &nuja> - )M KXt. XrrK*. OK - S **■*

Letter From Paula Perier, “Former Flame,” to John Alden PreseottMon Bon Amoi/r: , Je Buis dans la peine. I am in great trouble. I am ill in soul and body and to turn I have nowhere ase but to you, mon ami. Why i cannot understand to me you sent tlowers when your presence I asked., instead. ' Oh, mon Jacque! That love me you do not, I know. Is it that you have not even the friendship" for me any Tmore? t Remember do you not know that ofree you loved me? At least you told me so. Remember do you not know that I have loved you always—no one else —and of that great love because I have out of your life gone rather than to mar your happiness. Surely from your hands I deserve a little. I must see you very- soon. If not here, at least I must you at your home. PAUL/ Letter noiii Sydney Carton to John Alden Prescott It looks to me. Jack, .as though you are in it with both feet. I can’t undei%tand why you disregarded that advice which is as old as itself about being "off with the old love before you are on with the new.” Sometimes, old chap, I am almost of the opinion of that delightful person—it was a woman I, think —who said, “The more I see of men, the jnore I care for dogs ” We Are a Sorry Let We are a sorry lot, old man, and K. is only- when we come a cropper that we begin to think there is something in this world which makes for decency and duty. Good Lord! To think that I, Sydney Carton, have dropped into preaching. But haying preached, I will not pass you by with supercilious advice. I will come up and stay with you three or four days. Jack, not particularly to help you out of anything, because I think it would do you good to have to pay and pay well for your sins T don’t want Leslie to suffer, however. Since you have married Jack, your terrible example has made me think a little differently about marriage. Any wsmarvis too good for any one of us, and when a man persuades as sweet a woman, as true a woman and 'as good a woman as your wife to many him. ho should lie down in the dust kissing her little feet and crying "pecoavi,” instead of sending her out of town while he fixes up a truce with a former lov■. “A Kind of Itch” I am getting so I dislike you very much. John. l>ecause giving my moral sense a kind of itch which makes mo want to play the Pharisee and thank God that 1 am not as other mon. I tell my hypocritical heart I would probably have done just exactly the same thing that you have done had I ever met a girl as sweet as I-eslie even while I am abusing you with heartfelt enthusiasm. Expect me on the twentieth and reg —- To Have Curly, Wavy Hair *Like Nature*s Own * Anyone now can have just the prettiest curls and waves! And they will remain the longest time, when liquid sWmerlne Is used before doing up the hair. When the hair is combed out it will be nice and fluffy. Silmerine is perfectly harmless, of course, and is easily applied with a clean tooth brush, it can be obtained at drug stores and at toilet counters generally, and a few ounce* will last for months. It serves also as a splendid dressing, keeping the hair soft and glossy. , Silinerltie is fine for the outdoor girl. ns it prevents the hair from stringing about the face and neck, even when the day is quite warm or windy. A boon to the bobbed haired girl!—Advertisement.

Hair Goods Sale 25% Discount —ON— Transformations Bobb Curls Grecian Curls * Cluster Curls And Side Puffs All Colors, Including Gray. Jane Halcomb Shoppe 508 Kahn Bldg. MA In 2471

L. E. & W. R. R. Excursion Next Sunday to Walkerton . . $2.70 (Koonti lake) Rochester. . $2.35 (Lake Manltou) Returning Same Date Train leaves Indianapolis, Union Station 6:30 A. M.; Mass. Ave. Station. 6:38 A. M. Also low round trip fares, with longer limit, to these and other points. For further information Phono Circle (800, Circle 5:100, Main 4=V57, Main 2120. R. C. Fiscus, Ass’t Genl. Pans. Agent, Indianapolis, Indiana.

Going* on Your < Vacation? Alright, make it complete by calling MAin 3500 and ordering The Times to follow you.-

member one thing—l shall stay until Leslie comes home. Too often have you sent for me since you were married and then insisted that I should • not call upon your wife for fear that she would ask me some embarrass- ng question. X am* not going to lose her friendship even to save you from a bad quarter of an hour. In fact, as I feel this morning, I would not lose her regard to save your neck. Put that In your pipe and smoke itSYD. NEXT—Telegrams and telephone cajls. Preparing to leave. Rxdium is Resto r ing Health to Thousands The curative power of Radium has been known for years. However, the benefits of this precious healthgiving substance have In tbe past been only within the means of persons of wealth. Since the invention of Degnen’s RadioActive Solar Pad, any man or woman, poor or rich, can afford this treatment which offers so ma:?--relief from suffering and disease. Degnen’s Radio-Active Solar Pad is worn next to tbe bo,dy day and night. It pours a constant stream of radioactive energy into the system while you work, play'or sleep, helping to build up weakened nerves and tissues to a strong, healthy condition. It creates a vigorous circulation of blood, thus removing congestion. which is the real cause of most diseases. To prove just what this remarkable treatment-can do for you, we will send our appliance on trial with the understanding that we will not charge you a cent if It fails-to give satisfactory results. This offer is open to any person who has pain of any kind, nerve weakness. high biood pressure, stomach, kidney or liver complaint, bladder trouble, or disease of the lungs or heart. No matter what your ailment or how long you have had It, we will gladly let you try the appliaru-e at our risk. Write today for free literature giving complete information. Radium Appliance Cos., 1522 Bradbury Bldg., Los Angeles. Calif.—Advertisement.

......y°T! ON PIC TU RES X SMITH’S ..MU'— ...n, APOLLO W “HUMAN HEARTS" FIRST ROUND OF THE 3rd XT,: SERIES VIRGIL MOORE’S APOLLO Orchestra

bHCA p R E Another Great Comedy With the Star of ("The Hottentot” DOUGLAS MacLEAN “A MAN OF ACTION” Romance—Laughs—Thrills. OVERTURE Grand March from "AIDA” BY VERDI MODEST ALTSCHULER CONDUCTOR Ruth Page and Adolph Bolm in ‘•DANSE MACABRE” A Novelty Motion Picture with Orchestral Accompaniment A MERMAID COMEDY “ROLL ALONG” Something New in Fun Films . XYLOPHONE SOLO “PAVLOWA POLKA” PLAYED BY O. M. KAPP CIRCLETTE OF NEWS

Safety First! Swim at Broad Ripple Bathing Beach! Competent Life Guards in Attendance at All Times

DANCING * TONIGHT and Every Wednesday and Saturday Evening 8:30 to 11:30 P. M. —at Mr. & Mrs, R. L. Sullivan’s New Dance Studio The Best Equipped Dancing Studio In Indianapolis WASHINGTON BLDG. —138y 2 W. WASHINGTON ST. (i DOORS WEST OF CLAYPOOL HOTEL) (UNION ORCHESTRA ) DANCING LESSONS BY APPOINTMENT Res. Telephone, KE nwood 4024. Studio, Circle 1623. “The Popular Place for Particular Peoplet*

Schoolgirl’s Rings Taken

Dr. Norman E. Jobe, 3426 N. Meridian St., today told poles two diamond rings left 'by his daughter, Vlrglnla, In the washroom in Shortridge High School Tuesday disappeared. The rings were valued at S9O.

“Swingin’ Down the Columbia Record of Columbians, is a gem of

AMUSEMENTS

ENGLISH’S^ ALL WEEK GRAND PLAYERS “TIGER ROSE” MATINEE TODAY, 25 c. 35c, Each Night, 25c. 50c, 75c

K 4 Ilf) B V Matinees Today, fyg 111 l AT Thursday and Isl U Vln I Saturday. Curtain " at 2:30 and 8:30. THE STUART WALKER CO. “An Ideal Husband” A Brilliant Satirical Comedy by Oacar W ildo Matinees—soo Seats at 25c

M ' 1:00 to 11:00 P. M. if J MON., TIES.. WED. ONLY ART LANDRY AND HIS "Call of the North Orchestra" BARNARD 4 SCARTH KAYANAUGH > AND JOHNNY CLARK EVERETT St to. * cO- - DIYEBTISSEHALLEN MEXT” A DAY Stanley CKkpman IN “MORE TO BE PITTED THAN CENSORED” Photo . 1 Florence Vidor Play ' I “Conqnering the Woman”

Continuous Vaudeville i voir LI Klv c oT 1 Josie Heather | The Famous English Comedienne 2 Palos & Palet | Les Buffon’s Musical 3 Mascot | The Pony with the Human Mild 4 Kate & Wiley | Watch Your Step 5 Peck & Harris | An Oddity in Black and Tan 6 Kyrlton Sisters & Mack | Two Baby Grands and an Cpright 7 Philbrick & Devau "Samples” 8 Andrieff Trio I Russian Dancers COMING—NEXT WEEK THE HOOSIER FOLLIES With B 0 Local Boys and Girls

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