Indianapolis Times, Volume 35, Number 52, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 July 1923 — Page 6

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Qocial Activities ENTERTAINMENTS WEDDINGS BETROTHALS

A number of parties are being given for Mrs. William Schussler of Hollywood, Cal., who is visiting her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Stuckmeyer. 1353 Madison Ave. This afternoon Mrs. Carl Sanders entertained in her honor with a theater party at the Murat. Other guests were Mesdames William Locks, Arthur Smith, Sherrel Styeis, Dan Kessler, John Pfarr, Edwin Stuckmeyer and Miss Minnie Locks. Thursday evening Mrs. ' Reginald Smith, 4962 Winthrop Ave., will entertain with a dinner party, and Tuesday, July 24. Mrs. William Meyer, 2645 Madison Ave., will entertain at home. Mrs. Schussler was Miss Esther Berauer of Indianapolis before her marriage. • * BOX parties are the society feature of the national tennis tournament being held at the Woodstock Country Club this week. Among the box holders is Mrs. Charles Rauh, 3735 N. Meridian St., who will give a box party Friday afternoon in honor of her guests, Mrs. Frederick Holmes. w'ho won the woman's State tennis championship at Terre Haute recently; Mrs. Charles Erisman and Misses Anne McAdams and Dorothea Davidson, all of Lafayette. • • • Mrs. J. F. Edwards and Mrs. A. C. Terhune will be the speakers at the meeting of the Seventh District Democratic Club at the home of Mrs. W. T. Young, 5009 E. Washington St. The round table discussion will be on the topic of “The Monroe Doctrine.” Each member Is to bring one guest, a prospective new member. There will be a business meeting of the club Thursday afternoon at the Democratic Club. * * • Mrs. L. F. Butler of Buffalo was expected today to visit her parents. Mr. and Mrs. Melville Moon. 2404 Talbott Ave. • • • Miss Catherine Cavins, 1232 N. Alabama St., left Tuesday for Los Angeles, Cal., where she will visit relatives for two months. • • • The Marion County chapter of American War Mothers will meet Thursday afternoon at 532 N. Pennsylvania St. Mrs. May Hahn, president, will preside. • • Mrs. Verl Jackson of Shirley. Ind , is the guest of Mrs. Lundy Welbom, 351 N. Audubon road. • • • Misses Ruby May Keefauver. Laela Elston. Hazel Smith. May Wynn. Eileen Erly and Harriett Lobowitze have returned from a motor trip to the sand dunes and a ten days' visit to Barr’s Beach, on Lake Michigan • • • Mrs. Philip Kearney Buskirk. 2161 N. Meridian St., will spend August with her son. Haynes H. Buskirk and his family at their summer home at Forest Beach, Michigan. * * • Mrs. A. V. Faris. 1409 N. Delaware St., has her mother. Mrs. Mary E. Brodix of Bloomington, as her guest. * t • Mrs. Allen T. Fleming, 1509 E. Twenty-Sixth St., has returned from a two weeks' visit in Ohio. * * * Mrs. John Steel and daughter Isabelle of McCordsville. Ind.. are the guests of Mr. and Mrs. S. E. Stubbs, 46 N. Audubon road. Miss Isabelle Steele will become a student under Mrs. Max Leckner, pianist, and will enter Tudor Hall in the fall.

Mrs. Robert Oreaham. 910 E. Fortieth St., has returned from a trip to Trenton. N. J.. where she was the guest of Mrs. Frank Moore. * • • Guests for four tables of bridge were entertained by Mrs. Harold Trusler, 2319 Gale St., Thursday in lienor of Mrs. Richard Calkins, who was Miss Lucille Coppoek before her marriage, Mrs. L. B. Thompson, of Chicago, who was Miss Pauline Marshall. and Mrs. W. B. Blank, of Bartlesville. Okla. Other guests were Mesdames Robert Bowser, Edward S. Hall. J. K. Vance Jr., John Cady, Thomas Hanson, Maurice Sellers. William M. Moore, Ralph E. Suits, and Misses Florence Ray. Florence Schwa,nkhouse and Maud Ray. • • * Additional hostesses for the D. A. R. card party to be given at the chapter house. 824 N. Pennsylvania St., Thursday afternoon, are Mesdames D. M. Parry. A. J. Parry. Edward L. Krause, Edward Stormont, Albert Gall, Henry Campbell, George T. O'Conner, "William Bristow, George P. Olive, W. P. Putnam. W, C. Smith, John Twitty, Thomas Mifflin, Henry Hendrix. C. L. Cook, J. P. Peden. R. L. St. Pierre. C. E. Dunnell. Charles A. Edwards. Frank La Foe Link, W. H. Blodgett, W. C. Smith and Misses Lucille Herron and Mabel Rose. • • • Dr. and Mrs. John T. Wheeler, 3951 N. Pennsylvania St., announce the engagement of their daughter, Mary to Charles Mason Wells, son of Dr. and Mrs. George M. Wells, of Indianapolis. The wedding will take place in September. * * • Joseph R. Gordon W. R. C., No. 43. will have no meeting Friday, July 13, it was announced today. • • Women of St. Catherine's parrish will give a benefit card party Thursday afternoon in their hall, Shelby and Tabor Sts., in the interest of a lawn social to be held July 26-28. • • • Mrs. Carl C. Gibbs, 10 E. ThirtySecond St., has as her guest Miss Esther Detchen of Crawfordsville, Ind. CHILDREN TO GIVE PLAY A one-act play, “The Lovelorn Princess,’* written by Miss Wilma Davis of the Associated Artists, will be given tonight on the lawn of the home of Mr. and Mrs. A. Lustig. 2034 N. Illinois St. Those taking part in the play are pupils of Miss Davis. The cast includes Evelyn Koehler. Fay Thomas, Edna Mae Schoen, Ruth Ferguson, Marguerite King, Betty Douglas, Rosemary Buddenbaum, Ruth Childers, Katherine Louise Gish, Elaine Lustig, Buddie Ziegler and Eugene Fife. There will be several dance numbers by Alice Hart. Hazel Teager and Mrtt Ernestine Swing.

They Used to Wear Fanny Frocks, but Short Skills May Seem Queer in Future

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“Whoever wore these queer oldfashioned frocks?” is your first thought on looking at these pictures. The answer is, the first ladies of our land. These are replicas of costumes worn by wives of the Presidents, now displayed on marble figures in the Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D. C., to trace the development of style in women's clothes. Sarah Angelicia Van Buren, second from left, shows the period between 1837 to 1841. That was when

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LETTER FROM LESLIE PKES- ( OTT TO LESLIE PRESCOTT, CONTINUED “I wish. Jack, you could have seen Harry Ellington's face,” I said to Jack that night when I told him of meeting Walter Burke, “when he caught sight of his wife and me.” "I don't blame him much,” said Jack impatiently. "Walter Burke is one of the greatest rounders in town and there has been a good deal said lately about him and Ruth Ellington. 1 would rather you would not train around with them much, I^eslle.” Being a woman, little Marquise, you can understand that this made me very angry and I answered somewhat coldly. “I cannot understand why Ruth Ellington and I cannot talk to Walter Burke in a public tea room. He did not take us there. And why haven’t people been talking about Mr. Ellington? He certainly looked like the one who was guilty. “His face was most laughable as he struggled between surprise at meeting us there and a sheepish annoyance at being found out. “Who is friend husband’s dear friend. Walt?” asked Ruth as composedly as though “friend husband" was nothing to her. "I do not seem to recognize her.” Walter Burke made a great show of scrutinizing the woman with Ellington and then he said, “That Is Edith Chapman, the moving picture actress. I thought, of course, she was a friend of yours, Ruth. Harry has been beauing her around a lot lately and he rather Intimated to me when I razzed him about it that he was doing it at your request.” Right then and there, little Marquise, I learned something about men that shattered one of my ideas completely. I had always heard that

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the small waist, low bodice, long skirt and lace bertha were the vogue. The kerchief, of sheer material, lace edged, and the decorative fan were always features of the well-dressed woman. In the frivolous age of gorgeous materials, laces and fol-de<rols, Sarah Childness Polk, extreme right, oc cupied the White House. In those days no woman flattened her hips or concealed her slender waistline. Frocks wore confections In the social reign of Lucy Webb Hayes, ex treme left, during 1877 to 1881.

men never fail to Btick together, that they never told a woman anything which would reflect upon their own sex, and here was Walter Burke telling his friend's wife that her husband had been paying court to another very pretty woman. From under my eyelashes I watched Harry Ellington, He kept glancing our way. although he did not call the attention of his companion to us In any way. Finally he derided that I was the woman with whom Burke was flirting and I saw a look of anger go over his face as he came to the conclusion that I was using his wife as a chaperon in my nefarous designs. “There you have it,” said Jack as I told him thl. “You see very well what it would mean for you to trot nround with Ruth Ellington. I won't have it.” “If you thought Mrs. Ellington was not the kind of woman for your wife to go with, why did you Invite her here?” "Oh. she's all right, only a little foolish.” he answered, “and Harry, you know, is one of my oldest friends.” “Then you think. Jack, it is perfectly all right for Harry Ellington to be seen in the smartest tea room in the city with a moving picture actress, while all the while his wife is staying home and eating her heart out? “I like Ruth Ellington, Jack. I have a feeling that she is going to he my oldest and best friend in the years to come.” Would you believe it, little Marquise. Jack looked at me a moment In silence, then went out and siammed the door. NEXT: Walt rails up RuUb Ellington—End of a flirtation.

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—AdTwtlemapt. |

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Trains, bustles, fringes end miles of ribbon went into the composition of the smartest modes. The ruffled hoop skirt occupied the attention of the belle in the period of 1841 to 1845 when Julia Gardiner Tyler, second from right, entertained at the White House. A dainty type of frock that Is always beautiful and lives perenially in the costume play. Os course, they are funny old dresses, but the chemise frock or the flapper uniform may look quite as funny 60 years from now.

Woman Plays With Poison and Warns Others of Danger

By SEA Service BOSTON. July ill.—Teaching at Harvard is only a side line for Dr. Alice Hamilton, only woman professor at the university medical school. She spends only half her time at it, for the rest is devoted to the “poison trades." A specialist in Industrial hygiene. Dr. Hamilton has conducted innu merable investigations into those industries where the danger hazar4 is greatest. Asa result of her activity, much remedial legislation has been passed to make the factory safer for the worker. “Os the poison trades," says Dr. Hamilton, “the lead trades rank ths highest. The number of lndustrias using this poisonous lead is enormous. In Illinois, where I made an investigation recently, there were more than seventy different trades in which lead was used. "The making of white lead, the smelting, manufacture of storage batteries, practically all piping and plumbers' supply tradesf the printers' pottery glazing, rank as dangerous trades, because of their danger of poisoning the worker. There is danger, too, in the manufacture of aniline dyes, and the making of felt hats in which nitrate of mercury is used. “There has been a complete revolution of the white lead industry since 1912. Few women are engaged in the poison trades here, and the United States is much better off in this respect than Europe."

Plates Crowns Bridgework Lowest Prices in City B | The fact that my prices for k dental work is the lowest in I army of boosters. If you are. assure you that the cost will ALL DENTAL WORK GUARANTEED BRIDGEWORK When you have a Cofleld plate You will have plenty of money in your mouth you will thor- left to eat with if you let Dr. oughly enjoy your meals, be- Cofleld make your bridgowork—cause every plate fits perfectly. lowest prices for best work. Dr. J. W. COFIELD, Dentist ROOMS 203 TO 208 MARION BUILDING Corner of Ohio and Meridian Sts. Entrance 10 W. Ohio St. OFFICE Monday, Wednesday, Saturday, 8:30 a. m. to 8 p. m. UAI tDC Tuesday, Thursday, Friday, 8:30 a. m. to 6 p. m. HUUKj Sunday, 9 a. m. to 1 p. m.

OLDEST BOOK TO COME TO AMERICA Gutenberg Bible Is Bought by Collector, NEW YORK, July 12.—The Gutenberg Bible, the first book printed with movable type, which was bought for $43,500 by the Rosenbach Company of New York and Philadelphia at an auction of the collection of rare books of the late Ear! of Carysfort at Sotheby’s in London, may be sold to an American collector before the famous old Mazarin Bible, as that issue is known, ever reaches America. This was disclosed by a representative of the Rosenbach Company, 273 Madison Ave. He said that numerous inquiries were received by the book collectors as soon as it was published that the Rosenbach Company was the successful bidder for that and several other rare volumes in the Carysfort collection. In the absence of Dr. Abraham S. Wolf Rosenbach, head of the Rosenbach Company, the representative said he was unableto name the exact price which would be asked for the two volumes of the famous Bible by its present owners. "But it will be sold for something like $70,000 or $75,000,” he said, and called attention to the statement by Dr. Rosenbach, who said, when he was advised that his company had made the successful bid of 9,500 pounds: “The Rosenbach Company would have bid as high as 15,000 pounds.” Dusty Bedsprings To remove dust from bedsprings, set the springs out in the yard on a sunshiny day, then turn the hose on them. They will dry in a few minutes and will b clean.

DR ALICE HAM ILTON. TWO WOMEN KILLED BY BOLT OF LIGHTNING By United Press CEDAR RAPIDS. la..' July 11.— Two w f omen were killed when lightning struck a tree under which they took rpfuga during a night electrical storm. The dead are Mrs. Mary Green and Miss Mildred Levensen. Four others In the party w*ere stunned.

Martha Lee Says True Love Willing to Sacrifice If Necessary

Love is not always the chubby, smiling little god pictured in cartoons and molded for wedding cakes. Sometimes lie is an exacting god, demanding sacrifices that seem not at all in keeping with his character. y

Throughout the ages it has been thus. And it is the lovers who made the sacrifices, when they were exacted, who have come down through history. Sacrifice is not always necessary to love. But willingness to sacrifice is. Man Obstinate Dear Madam: I fee! free to write to you. as you seem like an older sister. I should like to learn to forget days that are gone by. when I had the boy I love. We have separated and lam not happy I have been going with other boy friends, but it only makes me sad He loves me. he says, but yet he was not willing to give up bov associates who had a bad Influence over him. I believe that in time he will see his mistakt—or is it mine: I told him that he would have to make a man of himself before I would be bis wife. I am going to stick to my plan and believe I will win in the end. Do you believe I am doing the right thing by going with other boys to make him see that others like me and he isn t the only boy in the world? Do you think I have judged him too badly for going with bad associates? I know- he would not want me to run around with girls without good char acter. You may publish this to show some girls we must be willing to sacrifice for love. MISS TRUE An “older sister” is what I like to he to you glrl.s so keep coming. You are using the sigle standard of morals in judging this man. You want him to act as he would expect you to. That's right. Stick to it, and you'll win him, if he is man enough to be worth winning. August Wedding Dear Miss Lee 1. Wha t should you suggest for a girl to wear who la going to be married by a justlee-of-peace? Would organdie be all right in August? C. T* it all right for a girl to write to a dear fellow friend and tell him to call at her home, when he does not get to see her very cHen? 3 Is it bad manners for a fellow to whom vou are engaged to put his arm around you in a neighborhood theater? JUANITA JACK3ON. 1. Organdie would be nil right. But I should suggest some sort of silk crepe, that could be worn during the fall and winter. 2. If the man has shown a desire to visit the girl. It would be all right for her to write him a note inviting him. 3. It is poor taste. True Friend Dear Miss Lee: I am a boy 21 years old I work in a large departmetn store In the same departmetn is a girl with whom I fell in love. 9he Is considered beautiful among all the east side fellows But she is engaged to a vary good looking man She seems to be wild about him. but he doesn t act so crazy about her. Only a few of their most intimate friends are supposed to know they are engaged. She told her cousin and I heard It that way. Her fiance has had his cousins visiting him and it seem* as though he has left her alone completely. The other day she told me she heard he was making it a habit, to play pool and he had not called her up in the last two weeks I notice he barely speaks when he sees her It seems as though it is breaking her heart Four fellows are simply crazy about her and she will not give any of us a date, though we had tried hard enough In the last two weeks, to make her feel better. I love her and. If she is happy with this other fellow. I want her to have him. But'how can I gain her incere friendship? A FRIEND IN NEED You have the right spirit. Show the girl, by your actions, that you will respect her wishes and not ask her for more "dates," but that you *do offer her your friendship. Don't hesitate to let her fiance see that you admire the girl very- much I don't mean that you should delib erately arouse his jealousy. But let him know, indirectly, tnnt you value this girl's friendship more than he seems to value her love. EXUBERANCE: You were not to blame for theawkard circumstances at the picnic. The girls who changed their minds were. However, you should have taken both ffirls home. You owe the second girl an apology for not doing so. Explain to her that, in the confusion, you did not realize what was happening. Explain to the first girl, and then let the matter drop. It was unfortunate, hut not serious enough to worry you longer.

Washday Is No Different From Any Other Day — / When You Have the Laundry Queen Washer It’s thorough In Its work. Rapid in action. Safe In operation. Working parts enclosed. Swinging, reversible wringer. Quiet in action. Tub tilts to drain. Users in your neighborhood will tell you its merits. Low terms. $5 down, $5 monthly. Hundreds in use In Indianapolis. WHAT MORE COULD YOU ASK WHEN YOU ARE BUYING AN ELECTRIC WASHER. NOW! TRY IT OUT YOURSELF. CALL MAIN 1900 TODAY 1900 Electric Specialties Cos. 144 E. OHIO STREET MA In 1900. MA In 1900

Let Him Prove Love Dear Miss Lee: I am a girl of 18 and very good-looking and very, very popular among many boy friends. About four months ago I met a very nice young fellow who is 23 years old. but looks as if he is 18 We kept company for about a month steady. He asked me to marry him. I said. "You havo to give me time to think it over. 11l let you know in a couple of weeks.” In those couple of weeks, I noticed he did not come as much as he had. I began to find out be was trifling with me. When he came for his answer, I told him what I had seen and hoard. We finally split up. Now we have been going together a mouth again. He has just begged me to marrv him. I told him that if he trifles with me before marriage, h will do it afterward Do you think he will change any? What would you do if vou were I? 1 love him dearly. DOWNHEARTED. You are quite young to marry. So I suggest that you make no decision for a while. In the meantime, it is up to the young man to prove he is not a trifler. If he really loves you, he will prove it. Don’t marry him expecting him to change.

HAY-FEVER Do you fear the coming of summer? Are you dreading the return of sleepless nights, constant sneering, streaming Sit, wheezy breathing generally aaeoted with hay fever and summer asthma? RAZ-MAH will bring you 100% relief as it has to many thousands. Comes in small capsules, no harmful drugs. Druggists sell RaxMah in 91 boxes or write us to send

“JOSEPHINE, Let's Have Dinner at the Guaranty Cafeteria Tomorrow “Instead of going home after the matinee let’s go over to the Guaranty Cafeteria and have dinner. The men would Just as soon do that as to have dinner at home. You know how they love to eat at the Guaranty—Jack always insists that the meats he gets there are cooked better than you can get any other place and I am beginning to agree. “The service of this cafeteria is so much better than the average, too. to say nothing of the splendid music. Another thing that appeals to me Is how lovely and cool it always is here.” The Guaranty Cafeteria Circle and Meridian St. Under Hotel Lincoln Management

THEY’RE: FALSE!! Haven’t you seen people that the minute you looked at them you knew that they had false teeth? There lips protruded, their cheeks sunk In, their teeth clicked when they talked. This should not be. False teeth can and should be fitted to every mouth so that they look real and feel comfortable. The face should look normal and It ought not be possible to detect them. If your teeth do not fit, If they hurt your gums, if they don’t look right—come in, let us examine them. We will tell what is the matter and correct It if you desire. The Maxoline Method we use in extracting teeth is painless and has no bad after effects. If It Hurts Don’t Pay Amount paid for extracting applies on False Teeth or Bridge Work. HANNING BROS, and WINKLER 11th FLOOR NATIONAL CITY BANK BLDG. 108 E. WASHINGTON ST. Call LI ncoln 8228. Hour*: 8:30 to 6; Sunday*, 0 to 12; Evenings by appointßant only.

WEDNESDAY, JULY 11, 1923

BIG POPULATION GROWTJTEXPECTED New York to Have 29,000,000, Expert Says, NEW YORK, July 11.—New York and its environs will have a population of nearly 29,000,000 in the year 2,000, with a negro population triple the present quota and a substantial decrease in the percentage registered in th forign-bom element. This is the predicition issued yesterday by the committee on plan of New York and its environs, 130 East Twen-ty-Second Street, based on a statistical study of the population undertaken by Professors Raymond Pearl and Lowell J. Reed of the School of Hygiene and Public Health of John Hopkins University. The area under the scrutiny of the scientists was called the “New York Region” and comprised a territory of more than 5,000 square miles in New York, New Jersey and Connecticut. The counties included in the survey were Dutchess, Putnam. Orange, Rockland, Westchester, Nassau, Surfolk. Bergen, Hudson, Passaic, Essex, Union, Morris Somerset, Middlesex, Mommouth, Fairfield and the counties of New* York City itself. The present population in that area is estimated roughly at 9.000,000.

AMUSEMENTS

Mat. Today, A T Mating Tomorrow* MllUfl I 500 Seats and Sat. IViUllfl 1 At 25c THE STUART WALKER CO. Homecoming Week for Elizabeth Patterson In the Comedy Success “A Very Good Young Man” By Martin Brown

ENGLISH’S ISS' ALL WEEK GRAND PLAYERS “DADDIES” MATINEES WED., SATURDAY and SUNDAY. 25c, 35c, 50c. Each Night, 25c. 50c, 75c. Mats., 2:15. Nights, 8:15

ltoßraaiy firrtr'tivs\SS)ffX r' s ITOIIP. M. r DOROTHY BYTON and Her LA PETITE BALLET 3 MARSHONS REX’S Prent ( COMEDY -n: C,RCUS - JIGGS With a “A Night at Dlnty Great Laugh M pore's. 1 * I Kick SWEENEY A WALTERS Likable Uolks —Phot-o Feature— KATHERINE MACDONALD in “MONEY. MONEY. MONEY”

3 VDIf* WHERE THE LYnlll CROWDS GO RENEE SISTERS In a Spectacular Danoe Revue “CHIC SUPREME” Famous European Clowns GAUDSMITH BROS. And Their 4-Footed Friends Morrisey & Young Dewey and Rogers Fernando De Page Rial & Lindstrom Harry Bewley & Cos. BABY PEGGY COMEDY, “THE KID REPORTER” Dancing in the Lyric Ballroom Afternoon and Evening

MOTION PICTURES

APOLLO 'W Jane Novak in “DIVORCE” Lloyd Hamilton Comedy “F. O. B.” VIRGIL MOORE’S APOLLO ORCHESTRA

A ThomM H. Inc Iroduotion “SCARS OF JEALOUSY” A DRAMA OF THE OLD AND NEW SOUTH CIRCLE ORCHESTRA PLAYiNG'Wedding Bells’"^lt-z By JOSEF STRAUSS MODEST ALTSCHULER Musical Director. A GENUINE NOVELTY “WONDERS OF THE SEA” WEIRD AND BEAUTIFUL SCENES PHOTOGRAPHED AT THE BOTTOM OF THE SEA.