Indianapolis Times, Volume 35, Number 76, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 August 1923 — Page 5
THURSDAY, AUG. 9, 1923
QOCIAL Activities "ENTERTAINMENTS WEDDINGS BETROTHALS
1 ""“I PRETTY miscellaneous show- | Ijk er was given Wednesday night [•**•l by Mrs. Donald Smith, 4144 College Ave., in honor of Miss Gertrude Lieske, whose marriage to Fred Busch will take place this month. Orchid, blue and pink were used in the decorations and appointments. The gifts were presented to the bride-elect in a large basket covered with crepe paper in the bride's colors. The guests were served at a table arranged with a centerpiece of orchid garden flowers. The favors were candy corsages In the bridal colors. The guests were members of the Tau Sigma Phi sorority: Mrs. Julia Ernestine, Mrs. Harry Schuh and Misses Dorothy Zalley, Melba Colter, Virginia Thatcher, Edith May, Olga Matz, and Elsa Gunsei*. * • • SVVENTT -TWO society women, under the leadership of Mrs. T. Neil Wynne, have been appointed to a committee of patronesses in the Chamber of Commerce to assist in promoting the national amateur championship swimming meet at Broad Ripple pool. Aug. 23-25. A precedent was set last summer when society turned out in force for the swimming meet'. The Chamber of Commerce committee in charge of this year's meet decided to place the disposition of boxes in' the hands of women active in social affairs. Some of the world's greatest swimmers and divers will compete In the meet. The patronesses will hold their first meeting Tuesday at 11 a. rq. at the Moorfield Studio. The committee consist of: Mrs. Charles Bushman, Mrs. Henry Dithmer, Mrs. Frank Flanner, Mrs. John S. Kittle, Miss Eldona Lauter, Mrs. W. O. Lee, Mrs. Ray Macey, Mrs. William Morrison, Mrs. F. H. Miller, Mrs. George O’Connor, Mrs. A. Ogle, Mrs. Walter Pittsford, Mrs. Samuel M. Ralston, Miss Mary Reynolds, Mrs. H. L. Richardt, Sirs. A. G. Ruddell, Mrs. Mrs. Frank B. Stalnaker, Mrs. Anton Vonnegut, Mrs. L. M. Wainwright. • • • Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Brooks of Paris, 111., are the guests of Mr. and Mrs. John C. Mellett, Bell Ave., and the canal. • • Mr. and Mrs. Albert Harris and children. 2817 Talbott Ave., accompanied by Mr. and Mrs. Charles O. Harris, 2454 Central Ave., have returned from Chicago, where they motored last week. ... Mrs. A. J. Howard of Jeffersonville, Ind., is the guest of Mrs. A. F. Demlng, 3048 N. Delalware St. •
About 100 persons, officers of the C., I. & W. Railroad, tpembers of the C., I. & W. Clerks’ Association, and Other employes, with their families, picnicked Saturday at the home of George W. Wildraan, Terrace Beach, on White River. A basket supper was spread on the lawn. * • • Mr. and Mrs. Wilmer Strohm of Independence, Kan., guests of Mrs. Strohm’s uncles. Henry and Charlie Hare, 3108 E. New York St., went Wednesday to St. Paul. Ind., to visit Mrs. Strohm’s grandmojthgr and aunt for the rest of the week. Sunday the Hare reunion wijl be held at side Park. ... Miss Evelyn Hovey entertained this afternoon at the home of .her slste|r. Mrs. Carl W. Piel, 3368~N. Meridian St., with a miscellaneous shower and bridge in honor of Miss Gertrude Lockwood, whose marriage, to Earl Robinson will take place Aug. 15. The decoration and appointments were in pink and orchid. The guests were served at a dining table arranged with a centerpiece of an imitation wedding cake In which the gifts were concealed. The table was lighted with
©Know Thyself By DR. CLIFFORD C. ROBINSON Fellow American College of Surgeons
KEEP YOUR YOUTH
j —“"I T a recent commencement proA gram, one of the speakers mentioned De Soto as racking the fountain of youth. Sortie of you may know that it should have been our other old friend of history, Ponce de Leon. It was just a slight mistake and cost nothing except a laugh at the expense of the speaker, by those who knew the difference in the historical activities of'Hhe two gentlemen mentioned. But think of the mistakes so many people are making every day, in not keeping themselves physically fit for the battle of life. The fountain of youth should be the ceaseless quest from which one should never for a moment diverge. In fact, it should be your end and aim to bask in the sunshine of yputh, so to speak, until "you walk the plank.” Health Fixes Age Os course you will understand that when I say youth that it is a matter of bodily condition and health to which reference is made and not a mere matter of years. One may be old at 40 and another youthful and FRECKLES Now Is the Time to Get Rid of These L'gly Spots. There’s no longer the slightest need of feeling ashamed of your freckles, as Othine—double strength—is guaranteed to remove these homely spots. Simply get an ounce of Othine-*-double strength—from any druggist and apply a little of it night and morning and you should soon see that even the worst freckles have begun to disappear, while the lighter ones have vanished entirely. It is seldom that more than an ounce is needed to completely clear the skin and gain a beautiful clear complexion. Be sure to ask for the double strength Othine as this is sold under guarantee of money back if it fails to remover freckles.—Advertisement.
Summer Bridal Couples on Northern Honeymoons
lil r w If ~ Sh|
MRS. HERBERT LOUIS FYE
Mrs. Herbert Louis Fye was Miss Norman Rieman, daughter of Mr. and‘Mrs. E. H. Rieman, 102 S. Bradley Ave., before her marriage Wednesday night at home. Mr. Fye is the son of Mr. and Mrs. William
pink and orchid tapers in silver holders. The guests: Mesdames William Cegley, Forest Thorne. George Browne, Donald Aspey and Miss Mary Alice Coleman, Dorothy Wilhelm, Helen Neal, Dorothy Davis, Janet Bass, Helen Keehn, Mary Norwood, Marie Thompson and Hazel Lockwood. • • • Miss Winifred Brown was the hostess for a bunco party at her home, 4349 Carrolton Ave., Wednesday night in honor of Miss Bess Steele of Shreverort, La., who is the house guest of Miss Cecil Fry. 3110 N. Ilinois St. The background of'garden flowers and Japanese lanterns made an effective setting for the four tables of bunco. Favors were little Japanese fans. The guests: Misses Denney Beckman, Esther Goche, Cecil Frye, Margaret Gosman, Ruth Higgins, Evelyn Byrd, Ruth Miller, Mildred Miller, Pauline Shirk. Helen Bykrit, Romilda Gaffron, Helena Wanner, Mrs. M. J. Doody, Mrs. Gordon Fiscus, Mrs. Leigh Felton. " Household Suggestions Cabbage Before cooking cabbage or cauliflower. lay it into a bowl of cold water with a tablespoonful of salt. Mend Clothes If you will make it a practice to examine your clothes for any necessary repairs as you take them off, and mend them as soon as possible, they will lgst much longer and look much better. s
full of pep at 65. "Old age ne’er cooled the Douglas blood.” V The war examinations fsund the available human material in the United States to be In rather a deplorable condition. Thirty-eight per cent of those examined by physicians for the second draft were rejected. The majority for physical conditions and diseases which were easily preventable under hygienic principles of right living. Exercise Is Best Scientific tests made at many different times and In many and towns, show that heat has much to do with the physical activities of the average person. In summer when the temperatures reaches 77 degrees the average loss In mental energy Is about one-fourth or 25 per cent. At 93 degrees the loes is 25 per cent of the physical energy and | one becomes laz yand low spirited. At any increase in temperature above ! the points given the loss in both | physical and mental energy is rapid and marked. There is a daily battle going on | with the forces and habits that i menace your health and strength. You ' can only win by keeping the health battle-front intact and your reserves always ready to be called into action. If temperature has such an Influence on one’s mental and physical activities, think what the drain and pull must be by disease and lack of physical condition. Probably seven ou . of ten pay little attention to their proper physical wellbeing throughout life. One-third of your life is scheduled for sleep. Don’t be a night owl. Sleep knits up the raveled sleeves of care. WaUk and exercise in the open air keeps the arteries from hardening and the ankles from becoming stiff. Walking gives a healthy heart action and the lungs become real blood purifiers. 'lt starts a perspiration and keeps away skin troubles. Walking is better than all the blood purifiers and tonics you can swallow.
Fye, 47 S. Sherman pr. Mr. and Mrs. Fye have gone to Niagara Falls on their wedding trip and will be at home at the Blackstone Apts., after Sept. 1. Mrs. Leo Gates Cleary was Miss Margaret Rose Gaughan, daughter
Senario Writer Says Romance of Women Appeal to Men
BY MARIAN HALE By JiEA Service * HEW YORK, Aug. 9—When people tell you that the man l. of today is not romantic— Just don’t believe them, advises Josephine Lovett.. "And if you want to collect proposals instead of a career, don’t direct your appeal entirely to a man’s mentality, or his senses, or his practical nature — to his imagination." she advises. "When you have touched that, you dominate him.” "Do *s’ou know,” she asked earnestly, “what quality every director in the country is looking for in women today? It is the ability to inspire romance. That's the most desirable quality any woman can have.” Miss Lovett is the wife of John S. Robertson, the famous motion picture director. She writes ail his scenarios, goes over all his plans with him and, according to his own statements, inspires much of his best work. She probably knows as much about what pictures need as any woman in the game. Movie Men’s Ideals She recounted this little incident: "Recently I sat In a projection room with three directors, viewing a -picture in which anew and unknown actress was appearing. They all agreed she was a winner. " ’Because she’s the true madonna type,’ said the first. ’Because of her eyes—they suggest hidden fire and smoldering emotions,’ volunteered the second. ‘Because she’s so irreslstably feminine,’ put in the tffird. ' "Now, as a woman, I had seen neither the slumbering fires, the madonna or the extreme femininity. I saw an ordinarily pretty girl doing a very clever bit of acting. But I saw a future for any actress who could have three such distinct appeals for three men in the same business, looking for the tamo thing. And I promise you that girl will succeed. “Types change. The imagination of the modern man may respond to different stimulae than that of his great-grandfather, but it’s romance that gets him, just the same. “Composite Woman” “So I believe that the woman who is popular on the screen will always boa composite of the most popular women of her day. Like a jewel, the more facets she can show the more valuable she is. “It is true that girls most appealing on the Screen are not so in real life, but it may be because externals blind us to the very qualities which the screen brings out.” Actual beauty or the ability to wear clothes is each secondary to the romantic appeal in women,
HAT FEVERS NOT THIS YEAR! , elveß thev fib JfkPP §l9 ThMe who habitually scar the„ ish flBjH *pwchto*.iiiinetMaoMwith homej wi t£,t f,r <&&&*& the dread of hay few or sura- again becoming victims of the Jf ““ welcome Raz- distressing conditions asso- W Msh. TW. summer it wfll not C iated with those coihplaints. ba ® #c ” *“ any to seek] Raz-Mah is a tested treatment. JP ie7 r t has brought 100% relief to capsules, easily swallowed. It esa take their holidays for them- thousands. It is manufactured contains no harmful, habit-forme 1 A for the sole purpose of alleviat- mg drugs. Raz-Mah is taken as ‘ „ t&rSfy these troubles. you need it and relief is suiv affix/A You may have tried other prisingly quick. things—yoa may think there is Then why go through another # nothing left worth trying, bu? summer without at least gett- - jr just give Raz-Mah a chance to mg yourself a $1 box as a try- , prove you are wrong. If it fails out? Your druggist shoud have It n frrrr^wfyfr,your money will be refunded, or we will send you one C.O. D. Raz-i.„n ib now o/ moat druggists. Your own dependable druggist has it or will get It for you. Always at Goldsmith Haag or Hook’s Drug Stores, Indianapolis.
—Photos by Cart liretzman Jr. MRS. LEO GATES CLEARY
of Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Gaughan, before her marriage Wednesday mornipg at the Assumption Church. After returning a wedding trip to Chicago, Mr. and Cleary will be at home at 2013 Jones St. The "at-home” date is Sept. 1.
Miss believes. "But the woman who inspires romance usually has an instinct for clothes. She may not have a sense of fitness or of fashion, but she will have an unerring sense of type that will make her bring out her beat. That’s part of the romantic appeal,” she concluded. Silk Garments Silk garments should never be wrung when you wash them- They should be squeezed gently, or put between cloths and put through the wringer.
Okitchen MERINGUE •
BY SISTER MARY HERE is no mystic incantation to pronounce ovei meringue making. The result may be etheral, but the procedure is of the earth earthly—by main force and elbow grease. Eggs for a meringue must be beaten with a whisk. A dover beater or a churn beater can not whip the amount of air into them necessary to make a perfect meringue economically. One egg well beaten will “go” farther than three half beaten. And the eggs must be fresh. The temperature of the whites has little effect on their beating properties, but the whites must be unclouded. A tiny bit of the yolk prevents them from beating well. If when breaking the egg and separating the whites from the yolk the yolk is broken and some does penetrate the white this must be removed. To do this dampen a clean soft cloth and dip into the yolk. Do this until every trace of yolk is removed. The yolk clings to the cloth. Tf!e beating of an egg is a delightful example, of "physical change” without “chemical change.” Chemical change of course takes place as soon as sugar is added, but the action of air on the alubumen causes no "chemical change.” Simple Meringue This for pie and pudding frostings. One egg white, one tablespoon cold water, one-eighth teaspoon sAlt, tablespoon sugar. J Separate white from yolk carefully. Put white on a platter. Add water and salt and beat with a whisk till stiff and dry. Beat in sugar and use
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
LETTER FROM LESLIE PRESCOTT TO THE GAY LITTLE MARQUISE, IN CARE THE SECRET DRAWER. I am, for tne first time, sitting here beside the window in my room. The balmy air of summer raises the laces on my breast, laces that flutter about a tiny head, covered with soft golden brown hair, that is pillowed there. Ah, dear little Marquise. I am sorry for you. In that gay and thrilling life of yours, you never had the emotion, never had the thrill, that ,i3 mine. f They tell me that this baby that my arms are clasping is not blood of my blood and flesh of my flesh, but honestly I know no difference. You see, little Marquise, there were weeks of which I have no memory and then this baby was laid in ny arms. To me it was the baby I had longed for. To me it was the baby I knew was coming It means nothing different to me than one of my very own.
You missed the great primal thing.; little Marquise. You missed the great-1 est thing, the most wonderfully mi- 1 raculous and ecstatic thing that can come to a woman. It is the one thing that makes her glad she is a woman and not a man. Only to you. little Marquise, who must ajways dwell within the shadows of this locked drawer, may I rave on in this way. for others might think that I was foolishly happy. Honestly I tell you that I not only have the transports and unutterable Joy of motherhood, but there is always connected with it a subconscious feeling that I am bringing joy and happiness into the life of a little child who might otherwise have never known it.' I feel that I have really given this child more than life. Jack has been so lovely about it all. Notwithstanding there might possibly be another boy in our family) he has given to this one. this little nameless wa if —this child whose parents he probably will never know —his own name.
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I would not have dared suggest it, although I wanted him to be called Junior. but Jack said, "Leslie, wouldn’t you like to have him called after me? He is such a sturdy little chap that I’m sure you and I will both be proud of him. Perhaps even a better man than I was his father.” "But JaVk,’* I whispered, "some time in the future you may really have a boy of your own. Then | wouldn't you feel sorry that this boy j had been given your name?" And Jack answered, dear little Marquise. "Leslie, darling. I already feel I that this boy is mine I am sure I
as desired. Bake in a moderately hot oven for six minutes. This amount of meringue will cover a pie or pudding eight inches in diameter. Special Meringue Two eggs (whites), one tablespoon water, one-half cup powdered sugar, one tablespoon lemon Juice. Put.eggs, sugar and water In a deep platter or shallow bowl. Beat with a whisk until stiff enough to hold its shape when pulled up with beater. Add lemon Juice slowly, beating constantly. Bake ten minutes in a slow oven. This makes a heavy meringue. Either of these meringues can be spread evenly, piped with a pastry tube or puffed with a fork for baking. Kisses or Meringue Three eggs (whites), three-fourths cup granulated sugar, one-half teaspoon vanilla, one-eighth teaspoon salt. Beat whites on a large platter till Btiff. Gradually beat in sugar. This mixture must be beaten till it keeps its shape when dropped from a spoon. /Cover a damp board with old-fash-ioned foolscap paper. Drop mixture from a large spoon onto paper, shape smooth with spoon. Bake three-quar-ters of an hour in a slow oven. The salt should of course be added to the whites when beginning to beat. Add vanilla with last bit of sugar. When meringues oro done remove from paper and put two together. The bottoms of the “kisses" will be sticky and stay together. Or remove from paper and scoop out the soft inside and return shells to oven for a few minutes. To serve, fill with fresh fruit and whipped cream or ice cream. (Copyright, 1923, NEA Service, Inc.)
shall know no difference between my sons if I have more of them.” And someway I have felt the same ever since I took this child into my arms. I know now there is a great deal of foolishness in that tradition which has been disseminated, that a mother has a different feeling for the child she has borne than the child she has adopted when It is very young and brought up as one of her own. It is the constant living with and seeing the little bodies and souls and minds grow that makes a mother love her own. Nowadays, when a woman Is apt to take a narcotic and know very little of birth pains, motherhood does not mean just the matter of birth; it means the matter of constant care and love with which a woman surrounds a child that is constantly in her household as well aa in her heart. NEXT: Karll Whitney to Mr Hamilton —A report on Alice. MEMORIAL IS PLANNED Senator Hemenway Remembered By i Warrick County Citizens. By Times Special BOONVILLE, Ind., Aug. 9.—The ■board of commissioners of "Warrick County has passed a resolution recommending to the county council that it appropriate $5,000 for a memorial to the late ex-United States Senator ’ cm Indiana, James A. Hemenway, who lived here. He died in Febru a v. tnis year. He represented the First Indiana district in the House six terms, resigning durinf, his last term td accept his election as Senator. Moving Van Robbed Charles Maverfield, 3464 Birchwood Ave., told police a box of silver and linen, valued at SSO, was stolen from a moving van.
i Important To All Mothers * * * Your children can always be WATER—with a “milky* appear charmingly dressed if you ancc. will starch their wash clothes Be sure to use Linit according with Linit —the remarkable t 0 directions, and unlike other starch discovery. , starches, you will not find Linit Even ordinary cotton goods, stiff or jelly-like. This is why napkins, table-cloths, curtains, Linit goes much further than the etc., have a cool, soft, pliable old-fashioned kind of starches, finish, like expensive linen, when and is much easier to iron with* starched with Linit. Linit penetrates the fabric, n n.r n , . helps prevent wear, and prolongs A New Starch Discovery t he life of the material. v • 1i nit is a scientific starch dis- * * * * . covery —distinctly different -J from ordinary starches. Af- will be interested to know ter Linit is thoroughly dissolved, V that Linit was originally doaccording to directions and i§ veloped for the use of the ready for use, you will notice it is . great Fabric Makers to give that THIN and FREE-RUNNING LIKE smartly fashionable finish now so much in vogue. ✓ /With Linit you can have your shirt waists look like new. The children can have their jjarments finished in the daintiest style, equal to the most beautiful 1 p Linit is sold by ic-s* iiß ' imi & rocers * !?••?.> H 1 —Perfection in starching is guae* I ■**>£*•*•• anteed or your money refunded. j Link is made by the Corn Prond J ducts Refiling Company—makers " sosf of the famous Argo Starch—Karo _ Syrup and Mazola Salad and CORN PRODUCTS SALES CO. 1316 Merchant*’Bank Bldg., Indiaiupolit, Ind. Jtfakes Cotton look and feel like Linen
— Martha Lee Says ■■ World of Imitations Would Be Monotonous
What a queen world it would be if nature turned out one person after another, all looking and acting alike, just as machines turn out their products! When we realize how monotonous life would be, it seems strange that some people should do their best to achieve a world of people just about like those I have described.
A favorite movie star is copied to the last detail of dress and mannerism. Even conversation in a popular took is A certain degree of imitation is natural. Practically every person has an ideal, some of whose characteristics he tries to copy. But discretion must br used. It is all right to follow styles, to a certain extent; byt the individual note is what counts. * Lacks Introduction Dear Miss Lee: I am a girl of 17 and I crave dancing. Every time Igoto a dance hall fate seems to be against me. I have bobbed hair. U6e powder, etc. But Ido not know what it is that other girls do to attract men’s attention. I try to dress as nearly like them as possible, but I do ont seem to have any luck. I know It is not right for me to go to public dances, but 1 do not know what to do on Saturday. Please advise me. LONESOME. Try being yourself, instead of just a copy of many other girls, and you niay have better success. However, the public dance hall cer tainly is not the place for you to shine. You will not always be able to amuse yourself in dance halls. It. is best to begin now to find other sources of entertainment, unless you want to spend many lonesome Saturdays. You say you “know it is not right," so you probably get very little pleasure out of these evenings in the dance hail, anyway. Having girl friends, and not bothering so much about the boys will make you happier and probably will make you so 'much more natural that the boys, too, will find you more attract- * Jve. s
‘Confirmed’ Bachelor Dear Mies Lee: I am 17 years old and in love with a fellow 24 years old. I have known him two years, but have gone with him lust a few times. lie, does not go with any other girls. He sayß he Is going to be an old bachelor. How can I make him love me? LONESOME BETTY BLUE. He’ll probably be married within a few years. These "confirmed bachelors" usualjy are. You have the inside track and should be in no hurry to marry. Just keep on being friends, and don’t scare him off by trying to rush matters.
GIRLS! MAKE UP A LEMON CREAM Lemons Whiten and Beautify Skin; also bleach Tan, Freckles
Mix the Juice of two lemons with three ounces of Orchard White, which ary 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 beautifler. 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-white complexion; also as a freckle, sunburn and tan bleach because It doesn’t irritate.— Advertisement.
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