Indianapolis Times, Volume 35, Number 93, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 August 1923 — Page 5
WEDNESDAY. AUG. 29, 1923
gOCIAL Activities ENTERTAINMENTS WEDDINGS BETROTHALS
RS. J. R. WHITE will entertain tonight with a miscellaneous i___ shower in honor of Miss Sthelwyne Nalley, a bride-elect, at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Bemis, 4448 Washington Blvd. Garden flowers in the color scheme of orchid and green will be used in the decorations. The guests Trill include Mesdames Lola Nalley, Thomas Bemis. Alvin Romeiser, Joseph Overmeyer, Bernice Estine, Eleene Shaffer, and Misses Lois Haynes, Elsie Neff, Car ley Redding, Almira Davis, Alice Askins, Ruth Thomas, Pearl Bemis and Julia Bemis. Miss Nalley will be the guest of honor at the home of Miss Almira Davis, 5932 University Ave., Friday night. —* • • Mrs. Howard Caldwell, 30 Bosart Ave., entertained today with a luncheon in honor of Miss Frances Brubeck. who is to marry Truman Felt. Saturday. Covers were laid for six at a table arranged with a centerpiece of garden flowers in Dresden mades and little nosegays for each guest. The guests, besides Miss Brubeck and her mother, were Mrs. Joseph Ostrander. Mrs. E. W. Felt and Miss Mabel Felt, who is visiting here from Chicago. Miss Brubeck was the honor guest Tuesday night at a pretty party and shower given by Miss Rachel Campbell and Miss Florence Lupton at the home of Miss Campbell, 4 Q OO Brookkviile Rd. f The guests were served at small tables which were* arranged atractively with yellow fall flowers. The shower gifts were presented by the little sisters of the hostess, Ruth and Genevieve ‘Campbell, dressed as brige and groom. Mrs. Marshall Lupton playe,d Lqhengrin’s wedding march for their entrance. The guests: Mesdames Frank Brubeck. Howard Caldwell, Helen Bastian. Mieses Florence and Mary Wilson, Margaret James, Dorothy Black, Marie George. Mary Elizabeth Hangar. Louise Pittman, Mildred Stilz, Betty Kolmer. Ilene Harriman. Elsie Brandt, Elizabeth De Hass. Gertrude Schmidt, Louise Strickland. Pauline Gellatly and Nellie Brewer. • • • Miss Elizabeth Vickers, whose marriage to Russell Tucker wall take place Sunday, was the honor guest today at a miscellaneous shower at the home of Mrs. Edward Holloway, 732 E. Dr., Woodruff Place. Orchid and yellow garden flowers were used in decorations. The gifts were presented in a yellow and orchid basket by little Miss Marian Jane Holloway, who will be flower girl at the wedding. During the afternoon the guests played “Hearts.” The guests, in addition to the guest of honor, were: Mesdames L. W. Nichols, Philip C. Burns, Harry Argus, Frank Todd, Leonard Dallow, Nathaniel Barker, Thelma Freund, Emma Featherstone: Misses Helen Burns. Anita Tucker, Edith Cline and Childers. Mrs. L. H. Collins lof Knightstown was an out-of-town guest. • • • Mrs. Sumner B. Hosmer, 152 Downey Ave., is visiting in Detroit, Mich. Her daughters. Misses Virginia Lee and Kathryn, will go Friday to be the guests of Miss Phoebe Ann Heath, at “Heath Holm,” near Noblesville. • * • Mrs. T. C. Howe. 30 Audubon Rd., was the hostess for a membership tea this afternoon fNfc - the League of Women Voters, of Irvington. Mrs. Walter S. Greenough was the speaker, Mrs. Wayne M. Reddick gave readings and Mrs. Harry Summers, sang. Mrs. Allen T. Fleming, 1509 W. Twenty-Sixth St., will be the hostess for a neighborhood party tonight. On the program will be Humphrey Harrington, Virgil Furgason. M. Bert Thurman and Miss Hazel Fesler. Mrs. Virginia Kelley, 3936 Cornelius, will entertain the women voters of her neighborhood tomorrow afternoon. She will be assisted by Mrs. Amanda Smithers. chairman of the Fourth Ward League of Women Voters. Mrs. Roberta M. Graham and Mrs. Elsie Geis will preside at the punch bowls. Miss Dorothy Ryker will sing. * * ♦ Miss Constance Stanton and her mother, Mrs. Howard Stanton, 1638 N. Pennsylvania St., are hostesses for a house party of young people at Turkey Run this week. The guests are Miss Emma Deel and Taylor Creighton and James Ray.. * • * Mrs. Jennie M. Black and daughter, | Miss Grace, 517 E. Seventeenth St., who have been spending the summer In Los Angeles at the home or the Rev. Bruce V. BJack, have returned home. Miss Black attended the summer session of the University of California. • • • Christ Church was the scene of a pretty wedding at noon today when Miss Hazel Irene Wolfla, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Wolfla, 365 Grand Ave., became the bride of Samuel F. Brooks, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph E. Brooks, 1605 N. New Jersey St. The Rev. A. L. Skerry read the cere-
©Know Thyself By DR. CLIFFORD C. ROBINSON
The Baby’s Food mN nine case'h out of ten, the breast-fed baby seems to avoid constipation better han the bottle baby. Ocasionally the breast-fed baby ■will suffer from this trouble generally as a result of underfeeding. Your physicians usually can advise hygienic conditions to improve the quantity and quality of the milk. Such cases requin** individual attention. Correspondents cannot deal with them sucessfully. As to the bottle, if the home is in the city and receives pasteuriseJ[ milk, you may be reasonably sure it is good. The mother must be very careful, after its delivery, to prevent bacteria from entering it before it is used. Where pasteurized milk cannot be obtained, be careful to strain and boil it for about 10 minutes. Cool at it in cold water or
August Bride r Jii MRS. OLIVER J. FERRIS Mrs. Oliver J. Ferris, formerly Miss Helen L. De Bruler, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William T. De Bruler, 646 E. Pratt St., was married Tuesday at her home. Mr. and Mrs. Ferris are both employes of the Western Union Telegraph Company where their romance began and culminated. mony before a few friends and the immediate families. Mrs. Ralph E. Brooks, Jr., as matron of honor and wore an afternoon gown of black canton crepe with trimmings and accessories of tan and a corsage of Mrs. Aaron Ward roses. The bride, who was given away by her father, wore a gown of grey beaded canton crepe and hat to match and a corsage of Mrs. Aaron Ward roses. There was ap informal reception for the immediate families after the ceremony at the home of the groom’s parents. Mr. and Mrs. Brooks have gone for a wedding trip to Chicago. They will be at home after Sept. 10 at 418 E. Fifteenth St.. Apt. 3. • • • Miss Charlotte Clarke, Winter Apt., accompanied by Miss Helen Haight, returned Monday from Lake Maxinkickee, where they have been spendinng the summer with their parents. • • • Miss Anna Mae Albershart and Miss Martha Merritt, of Frankfort, have been the guests of Miss Sarah Rodecker, 2112 N. Capitol Ave., on their way to Vevay, Ind., where they will attend a house party at the home of Miss Mary Bear. t • * • The J. I. Rugh reunion was held Sunday, Aug. 26, at Garfield Park. Among the thirty-five guests wore several from Logansport. • • • Miss Lillian Noel, daughter of Mrs. William Collins, 2421 Brookside Ave., was married this morning to Joseph Cangany at the St. Francis De Sales Church. The Rev. Raymond Noll read the ceremony. Mrs. Joseph Gallagher, organist, played the bridal music. The bride w r as gowned in ivory satin crepe and carried a shower bouquet of Kiliarney roses. Miss Mae Noel, sister of the bride, who was maid of honor, wore a gown of yellow georgette and carried an arm bouquet of Ophelia roses. The little flower girl, Teresa Niel, in a frock of white creep de chine, carried a little French basket of roses. Henry Cosgrove was best man. The ushers we.e Charles Kirkoff and Robert Valdon. Among the out-of-town guests was Mrs. F. B. Arnold of Baltimore, Md. A wedding breakfast was served at the home of the bride’s mother. Covers were laid for fifty. Mr. and Mrs. Cangany will be at home at 617 N. Gladstone Ave., after a short wedding trip. • • • The Holy Trinity Social Club will entertain with a card party Thursday night at the Holy Trinit School, 907 Holmes Ave. • • • The Goldin Rule Lodge, No. 1, Independent Order of Shepherds, I. O. O F., will give a dance tonight at the P. H. C. Hall on East and Michigan Sts. * * • The Past Chiefs’ Association of Myrtle Temple, No. 7, Pythian Sisters, will be entertained at a luncheon Thursday at the home of Mrs. Lyda Hunt, 2021 Ruckle St. Mrs. Hunt will be assisted by Mrs. Estella Demmerly, Mrs. Nellie Petri and Miss May Mann. * * • Mrs. Hannah Means of Temple Review, No. 15, will entertain Thursday night with a benefit card party at her home, 20 W. Twenty-Second St. • * * F. E. Davis, 40 S. War-man Ave., Civil War veteran, is attending a reunion of Civil War veterans at Mansfield, Ohio. Before returning home, he will visit relatives.
Boiling is often the cause of constipation and baby’s cross, fretful attitude. Whether in the city or country, milk supplied by cows should be supplemented by some cereals or fruit juices to avoid constipation during the first year. These may safely be given to the baby beginning at the age of three months. Try barley water or oat meal water i;i diluting the milk at first. At the age of six months, some thin cereal gruel may be of assistance. Another aid is to give some thin broth, chicken or mutton preferred, three or four times a week during the seventh and eighth months. At ten months, the baby should be ?ble to digest full-strength pure milk and avoid constipation. Use fruit juices freely, beginning at three or four months and continuing throughout baby hood. Begin dth a few spoonfuls a day and in-
SUFFRAGE FAILED TO CURE WORLD ILLS—MISS PANKHURST
Former Window Smasher Is Now Preacher —Talks in Tent, By JOSEPHINE VAN DE GRIFT NEA Service Staff Writer NEW YORK. Aug. 29.—Christabel Pankhurst, England’s one-time win-dow-smashing suffragist, is a disillusioned woman. “Suffrage didn't accomplish all that I thought it would.” she says. And then she adds brightly, “but I know I’m on the right track now.” By which Christabel means religion. She says votes for women haven’t cleaned up the world the way she thought they would. Now salvation seems more important to her than ballots. Talks Religion or so a week she mounts the platform inside a huge tent over on West End avenue and tells a portion of New- York’s fairly exclusive residential district that religion is the only thing than can save the world. The woman whose small and determined fist some few years ago was threatening anarchy and choas to King George et al, is now raising that same small fist and threatening the most scorching unpleasantness to Americans and English alike who don’t believe in a personal devil and the second coming of Christ. Headed for Destruction “There should be one universal religion,” she says, “and it's the religion that I preach. “The world is hurtling to destruction and nothing but religion can save it. Social workers will find their work coming to naught unless they are animated by this true religion. We’ve had our statesmen and we've had our philosophers, but neither
Martha Lee Says Your Reputation Based Largely on Friendship
Birds of a feather may not always flock together, but it’s hard to make the world believe they do not. That is why it behooves one to choose his friends with care.
At the same time. It is well to remember that character, not reputation, should form the basis of friendship. Of' course, in the majority of cases, reputation is the result of character. But, if it is not—ls, for instance, reputation is based upon family or financial circumstances, as Is frequently the case—lt 111 worth while to defy the world. Asa rule, however, it is not snobbishness or selfishness, but selfpreservation, to have a high standard for one’s intimates. Imposing on Friendship Doar Mias Le*:, Your advice ha* been a great help to me and 1 want to thank you very much As I have several boy and girl friends who are going the wrong way. and two very rood rlrl friends who have rone that way already, I want your advice m to whether to try to keep the others front dolnr so. I like all of them and would like to keep the friendship of one boy and rlrl. anyway They said they knew I would not turn them down, no matter what they did. although I told them I would. This boy and rlrl co to Sunday School with me and then run around with the others. Sometime* I go, lust to see what they do. and. Miss Lee, I wish you could see them. I am Id years old and like to have a rood time, but not the way they do. How would you advise me to r.et acquainted with others or to hold the friendship of the one* I haraf Would you advise ine to tell the two I like 60 well tho way I leel about It’ GERTRUDE. Glad you find some use for my advice, Gertrude. Let’s see what we can do with this tangle. Yes, I believe It would be best to tell your friends how you feel about their actions, as they seem to value your friendship. Tell them you Intend to have a good time, but not to ruin your character doing it, and that neither will you risk your reputation, if they prove themselves unworthy of the friendship of a “good” girl. Don’t talk like a "prude,” but be frank. Past Haunts Girl My Dear Miss Lee: Some time ago 1 formed the acquaintance of a young man. We were mutually Interested and had planned to spend an evening together But, owing to the malicious talk of some companions who probably Judge all girls by their former acquaintances (the lower class I. he broke the appointment without any excuse. I have tried to write to him. but I have no idea what to say. I at least would like to prove my innocense. Please advise me. A READER OF YOUR COLUMN. If, by people of the “lowr class,” you mean people of low character, I am afraid you are only suffering for past indiscretions in friendships. You can hardly do anything in this case. Many men, in such an instance, would have put their judgment above another girl’s remarks and would nave given the girl in question a chance to prove she had risen above her former environment. Rival Appears or Scene Dear Miss Lee: I am a girl of 16. I have been going with a boy 20 years old since May 1. He has been coming to see me every two weeks. Last Sunday he met another girl and went with her. He told me he was going to see her Sunday, whiefc is his time to come to see me. Before I knew he was going with this girl, 1 asked him to spend Sunday with me in two weeks. He has asked me for a date then. Advise me whether or not to let him come. He always has been faithful and has been a gentleman when with me. until this time. What should 1 do? A LOVIN’ LADY. do you think the young man has
WHAT IS A GOOD 0 SET OF TEETH ' 11m Ca.ll and let us put- you right on false teeth; I? Jk * ~m 1 us s^ow y° u samples and explain the disJmk;.. 4?" ference. We have placed our prices so there %>***s&& is no question but what you will be pleased. * Over sets made in our offices. We sureBanning bros. & winkler
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
l CHRISTABEL PANKHURST
philosophy nor statesmanship will be able to save us. There’s a great battle coming, the battle of Armageddon and before that who knows how many other wars?’’ Doesn’t Make Speeches It was during the World War, she says, that she became interested in religion and the manner in which Biblical prophecies had been fulfilled. And though she had vowed never to make another speech, friends induced
sacrificed his right to be called a gentleman? Then we certainly don’t agree. I can see no offense on his part, and no reason why you should refuse him a “date” just because he does not devote himself exclusively to you. You really ask a bit too r.iuch Marriage Annulment Mlaa Martha Lor: WUI you pli:o Inform mo whether a marriage performed while one party 1* not of age can be annulled after •aid party become* of age, if It Is only a matter of months? BLONDIE. Such a marriage could be annulled years after It took place, under Indiana laws.
jpfeSisterMary's ffKITCHEN
Meat Loaves M r ~~ EAT loaves fill an important place in the summer diet. L. in— They are perfect for an Impromptu picnic if sliced cold, and are quite as satisfactory for the home luncheon. While pork Is taboo in hot weather this pork loaf Is delicious and offers a welcome change from beef and mutton. Ham Loaf One and one-half pounds fresh ham, 114 pounds cured ham. 2 eggs. 1 cup fine cracker crumbs, water to moisten. Have meat ground very fine by the butcher and mix well. The salt In the cured ham makes further seasoning unnecessary. Add crumbs and mix well. Add eggs well beaten and mix. Add water to make moist epough to shape in a loaf. Bake in a roaster in a moderate oven for two hours. If a roaster is not at hand, bake in a deep, long pan, ’covered with buttered paper. Veal loaf is not as rich and moist as the ham loaf, but is perhaps a little more delicate and better suited for very hot weather. Veal Loaf Two pounds lean veal, 4 pound lean pork, 2 eggs, 4 large soda crackers, cup cream, 1 dessertspoon salt, 14 teaspoon pepper, 4 thin slices bacon. Have meat ground very fine. Mix well. Beat eggs and add to meat. Add remaining Ingredients, alternating the crackers with tho milk or cream.*, Shape In a loaf and put In a deep pan. Cover with bacon and bake an hour in a moderate oven. Roll the .crackers on a moulding board. This loaf can be served hot or cold. If served hot accompany by a tomato sauce. Meat Loaf Three-fourths pound lean pork, 1 pound lean veal, 1% pounds lean beef, 1 cup dried bread crumbs, 1
her to take to the platform again to make known her new convictions* Now, she gives sermons, not speeches. She goes wherever churches invite her. Christabel dismisses the theory of evolutitm with a couple of pooh-poohs. “It says in the Bible, doesn’t it, that God created man*? Well, I stand on that. Any scientist who doesn’t believe that is only a second-hand scientist anyway.”
Light Rugs Com starch mixed with one-sixth its bulk of chalk may be used to clean rugs with light backgrounds. Let the starch remain several hours and brush it out with a fine whisk broom. Hang the rugs in the sun and beat well before putting down. Long Coats Extreme length promises to be the dominant note in fall coats. Favor runs to the flare models. Wood Shades The wood shades, flame and blending metallic hues will be used in evening gowns this fall.
cup milk, 1 dessertspoon salt, M teaspoon pepper, 2 eggs, 3 slices fat salt pork. Have meat ground very fine by the butcher. Season with salt and pepper and mix well. Add bread crumbs, milk and eggs slightly beaten. Mix w*ll and shape in a loaf. Put In a long pan and cover with slices of salt pork. Pour threefourths cup boiling water In pan and bake in a hot oven 20 minutes. Reduce heat and cover with buttered paper. Bake an hour and a quarter longer. Serve hot with tomato sauce or let cobl and serve cold. Meat loaves can be made with vegetable combinations and are delicious. Onions and peppers always add much to a meat dish. Meat Loaf—ll Two pounds lean beef, 1 pound lean pork, 3 peppers, 1 onion. 1 egg, 3 large crackers. 1% cups stewed tomatoes, 2 teaspoons salt, Is teaspoon pepper. Have meat ground very fine. Put onion and peppers through food chopper. Mix well and add egg, salt and pepper and tomatoes. Roll crackers. Shape meat mixture in a loaf, roll in cracker crumbs and put in a well buttered pan. Bake one hour In a hot oven. These rules make good sized loaves, large enough to serve eight persons. Any one of them can be made smaller by decreasing the proportions. In this case less time will be needed for baking. This rule makes a small loaf that will be found very good. Small Veal Loaf One pound lean veal. V 4 pound lean pork, 1 egg, V 4 cup -'bread crumbs, t 4 cup water, 1 tablespoon butter, 1 teaspoon salt, 14 teaspoon pepper. Have meat ground fine. Mix ingredients as In preceding recipes. Shape in a loaf and bake 45 minutes in a moderate oven. (Copyright, 1923, NEA Service, Inc.)
LETTER FROM LESLIE PRESCOTT TO THE GAY LITTLE MARQUISE I didn’t expect to write you so soon again, but there is something that is worrying me, little Marquise. Not a great big worry but a kind c*f restless conscious feeling like the dull pain of some forgotten and supposedly healed scar. Ruth seemed so queer when she saw the baby. She picked him up and looked at him until he grew restless and began to cry and as he did that one of his eyebrows raised Itself in the middle just as Jack does, and Ruth exclaimed, “Why, Leslie, if Jack was his father this baby could not look more like him.” “I am so glad,” I answered. “You know I have a theory, Ruth, that people grow not only to be alike in manner and disposition if they are long together, but they grow more or less to look alike. I expect this baby, by the time he grows into a boy big enough to go to school, to look like both Jack and me. It won’t be so hard for him to look more and more like Jack if he already has a few little mannerisms. Besides, you know, Ruth dear, that Jack is a very handsome chap.” "Seemed Quite Annoyed” When my husband came home, I told him what Ruth had said and he seemed quite annoyed. “I never did like Ruth Ellington very well. Her greatest fault is curiosity. It has gotten her into a lot of trouble, not only with her friends, but with her husband. I have always believed that she could have avoided much of that talk which has surged about her in connection with Walter Burke If she hadn’t been so curious to know
Goldstein Brothers WASHINGTON & DELAWARE STREETS fSilk and Wool I FALL DRESSES Poiret Twill, Satin Canton and Canton Crepe *19.75 In Navy , Brown, Black and Rosewood Conclusive proof that smart frocks need not be expensive — even at the beginning of a season. Such new and distinctive features as basque waists, draped skirts and circular flounces find pleasing interpretation in these newest models. J I Tj No matter what your type, you’ll find a frock to I-* please you—so wide is the variety. Featured at If $19.75. ’W (Second Floor)
Chiffon Silk Hose In a Sale at—98c * Pure silk hose in the sheer weight so fashionable now. In black, gunmetal, grey cinnamon. Semi-fashioned, with mercerized top and reinforced heel, toe and sole. (Street Floor) Special! Women’s Knitted Union Suits 59c Finely ribbed soft finished cotton union suits, with neat tailored band tQP finl9h - Sleeveless, with tight or loose knee. In white or pink. (Street Floor) Wash Goods Indian Head Cloth , 39c This stylish, serviceable fabric is used extensively for misses and children’s gar--9 ments; in rose, green, Copen, pink, peach, lavender, tan and brick. 36 inches wide. Canton Crepe, 59c A beautiful fabric for children’s school dresses; in navy, tan, grey, pose, yellow, green and Copen. 86 inches wide. Gingham, 39c 32 Inches wide. Fine Zephyr ginghams, in all the desirable colors, and in many attractive designs. Madras, 49c Fine madras for men’s shirts, In white with beautiful woven silk stripes; 32 inches wide. (Street Floor)
just how far Walter would go with a little encouragement. I never did care for these curious women, Leslie.” “But I don’t think,” I answered Jast, “that it was wholly curiosity which made Ruth encourage Mr. Burke. You must know, dear, that Harry is always deep in an affair with some other woman. A neglected wife has some excuse if she knows that her husband is untrue to her.” “Nevertheless, my dear,” said Jack, “I believe it is Ruth’s curiosity more than anything else that has always gotten her into trouble. Curiosity is the greatest temptation in the world, you know, and Ruth never has seemed to understand what happened to Bluebeard’s wives.” “Curious About Baby” “But I can’t understand. Jack,” I interrupted, “why she should he curious about the baby. As far a?**#’ am concerned, I don’t care if he were like Topsy and ‘just growed.’ The next time she speaks to me about it. I'm going to tell her so.” “That’s right, Leslie, hut it is probable that she will never speak about it again. By the next time she comes here her curiosity will have gone off on another tack.” Nevetheless, dear little Marquise, it gives me a kind of uncomfortable feeling to think that every time I go out with the baby someone is going to make some curious remark about it. That is what I wanted to tell you in the first place and I told you all the rest just leading up to it. NEXT:—Leslie writes to her sister, .Mice—The happiness of “natural love.”
A Sale of Felt Sport Hats Purchased at price concessions—Sold on the same basis Jaunty felt hats, in tan, grey, \ PSH bisque and navy, with narrow i vL if | || ribbon trimming. Offered „at a \ ojTu 1111 jl^* price that emphasizes this / B store's ability to bring VALUES I _ JJ f% II to its patrons. ' cb O (Third Floor) * Plaid Blankets Plaid cotton blankets, in rose, lavender, pink \ £ or grey, with heavy, fluffy nap; stitched edges. > *r I||| Size 66x80 inches. Pair, $3.60. ) Pair Cotton Blanket BLANKETS COMFORTS Comfortable* $2.25 $3.98 $3.49 Grey cotton blan- Sateeen covered. Blanket ccmfort- . „ K . with flowered silk- able, in beautiful kets, pink or blue ollne border; scroll floral p at t er n3, in borders, with neat stitched; filled blue, pink, brown stitched ends; full with clean new cot- or grey. Hemmed bed size, pair, ton; average bed ends. Size 64x76 $2.25. size. inches. (Street Floor) * “——— * A Special Offering Beaded Handbags Draw String Style \ price Women scarcely expect to find attractive f headed bags for such a low price. A/if |1 variety of pretty color combinations are pre- | seated at 98<L / JJ ff jl (Street Floor)
PLANS MADE FOR 1924 BIBLE MEET This Season at Winona Greatest in History, By Times Special WINONA LAKE, Ind.. Aug. 29. Average daily attendance at the twen-ty-ninth annual Bible conference this season exceeded 4,500 persons. The registrations were 3,200. This season was the greatest ever experienced in the point of quantity, quality, diversity and continuity of sound evangelical interpretation of the word of God. Speakers this year were Dr. Wylie Blue, Belfast, Ireland; Dr. Reginald W. Thompson, Liverpool, England; Bishop Edwin Holt Hughes, Boston; Bishop Warren A. Chandler, Atlanta; Dr John Timothy Stone, Chicago; Dr. Charles F. Wishart, Wooster; Dr. W. H Griffln-Thomas, Toronto, Canada; T)r. Charles R. Erdman, Princeton University: Dr. H. C. Morrison, Louisville; Dr. Simon Peter Long, Chicago; President M. G. Kyle, Xenia; Dr. P. W. Philpott, Chicago, and Prof. A. T. Robertson, Louisville. Plans have been made and speakers selected for 1924 and some for 1925. Carrisgan “Check” Reported J. Tibbs, 304 American Central Life, has informed police that James B. Carrlegan of Louisville. Ky., under arrest on a charge of issuing fraudulent checks, gave him worthless paper for $246.60. Steal Forty Suits and $99 Bv Times Special MICHIGAN CITY, Ind., Aug. 29. — Robbers, driving an automobile, entered two stores here Tuesday and stole forty suits of clothes from a men’s furnishing store and $99 from a confectionery.
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