Indianapolis Times, Volume 35, Number 98, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 September 1923 — Page 5

> TUESDAY, SEPT. 4, 1923

gOCIAL Activities ENTERTAINMENTS WEDDINGS BETROTHALS

EMBERS of the bridal party V 4 for the wedding of Miss Thelma ’ * Scott and Fred Van Arsdel, whicn will take place Wednesuay night will be entertained tonight by Mrs. Lydia Scott, mother of the bride, with a dinner party at the SpinkArms. Covers for sixteen will be laid at a table arranged with azure and gold appointments. Besides Miss Scott and Mrs. Van Arsdel and Mrs. Scott will be Misses Marjorie Van Natta, Virginia Sherrer, Betty Smith, Daisy Fairfield, Josephine Koons and Margaret Koons; Messrs. Paul Arsdel, Phillip Johnson, Russell Reagan. Henry Van Natta, Charles Obold and William Albershart. Out-of-town guests who have arrived to attend the wedding are Miss Elizabeth Wright, so Wilmington, 0., and Miss Gertrude Terrell of Louisiana, O. • • • Mr. and Mrs. Orlando C. Forbes, and daughter Miss Eleanor, 3028 N. Illinois St., acompanied by Miss Marjorie Douglas, of Logansport, and Miss Charlotte Reyer, 1801 X. Capitol Ave., have gone by motor to Miami, Fla. They will stop at DeLand. Fla., where Miss Forbes will attend Stetson University this winter. The rest of the party will be at Miami until spring. • • • Mrs. Max Leckner, 109 X. Pennsylvania St., has returned from Walloon Lake where she has been spending several weeks. Miss Adah Smith, of Mitchell, Ind., arrived today to be her house guest for the winter. • • • Mr. and Mrs. Fred Cordapeter, 834 E. Fifty-Second St., have returned from Lake Wawasee, where thhey attended a house party over Labor day. • • Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Hart. 135 E. Thirty-Sixth St., acompanied by C. K. Alexander, of Cleveland. Ohio, motored to Lake Wawasee for the weekend. Miss Pauline Baity, 2932 Washington Blvd., has gone with her grandfather, D. H. Baity, of Greenfield, for a visit to Asheville and Statesville, N. C. • • • Dr. and Mrs. A, J- Clark, and granddaughter, Martha Davis, 624 X. New Jersey St., attended a reunion at Trader’s Point and Xew Augusta Monday, where Mrs. Clark was one of the speakers. • • • Mr. and Mrs. Henry E. Ostrom, 1455 X. Pennsylvania Bt., have returned from a motor trip to St. Louis, Mo., where they accompanied Gypsy Smith evangelist, on his way to ■Wichita, Kas. • • • Among the parties being planned for Miss Ruth Phythian before her marriage to Merrill, Harter Smith, Sept. 21, will be one Thursday afternoon given by Miss Margaret Clough and Miss Irma Ulrich. Miss Louise Pittman, 3029 College Ave., will entertain so rher Sept. 17-

Miss Laura Barrett, SOU X. New 1 Jersey 8t„ entertained this afternoon > with two tables of bridge in honor of Mrs. Harvey Miller of Dubuque, lowa, ! who is visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Bert Gaines, 3041 N. New Jersey j St. Roses and fall garden flowers i formed the attractive decorations In! the rooms. The guests: Mesdames Paul Crozler, L. W. Turner, C. J. Pettinger, Richard Stewart, H. W. Beebe, L. S. Ffell, and Miss Hazel Miller. Miss Barrett will entertain In honor of Miss Hazel Miller, a bride-elect Sept. 11. • • • Miss Julia Lanahan. 2151 X. New Jersey St., who will marry William j Klrkhoff Sept. 8, will be the guest I Os honor at a dinner party Wednes- j day evening at the home of Mrs. Earl Williams, 617 Wallace Av. Miss Lanahan will hacve as her attendant her sister. Miss Kathryn Lanahan. Frank Lanahan, brother of the bridegroom. will be best man. • • * All members of the Central W. C. T. 17. are invited to the home of Mrs. Carrie Styer, 1521 Park Ave., Thursday afternoon to an Informal reception for Mrs. Mary Nordyke and her daughter. Miss Lucile. former Central Union members, who are visiting here from Ann Arbor, Mich. • • * The Wednesday Birthday Club will meet Sept. 12 at the home of Mrs. Carrie Bobbs, 330 N. Eastern Ave. * * * Mr. and Mrs. Harry Dunn of 3615 Carrollton Ave., have returned from Lake Maxinkuckee where they spent the week-end. * * • Miss Mildred Benton, 3067 Park, Ave., spent the week-end in Alex- j andrla, Ind. * • • The Only Euchre Club will have a j card party tonight at Musicians’ Hall, ! 143 E. Ohio St. MRS. AUGUSTA GOZA FUNERAL WEDNESDAY Last Rites for Aged Resident to Be Held at Residence. Funeral services for Mrs. Augusta I Goza, 78, who died Monday at her j home, 343 N. Davidson St., following ! an Illness of several years, will be held Wednesday afternoon at the residence. The services will be private. Burial will be in Crown Jlill cemetery. Mrs Goza was born at A'-'anta. Ga., and came to Indianapolis forty years i ago. She was a member of the Trinity Congregational Church. Surviving are one daughter, Stella Goza; four sons, Lon, Fred and Will Goza, all of Indianapolis, and Albert Givens, by a former marriage, of Bedford, Ind., and a brother, John W. Holmes of Indianapolis. MANGOLD HOME ENTERED Burglars Ransask Place in Absence of Family. Police were called to the home of 1 John Mangold, 957 Tecumseh St., by Mrs. T. W. Bridges, a neighbor who noticed a window open in the Man-1 gold house. Officers found the house had been entered and ransacked. The j Mangolds are visiting In Marlon, Ind. i

Relief Worker to Address Ad Men

MISS MARIE CECILE CHOMEL

Mis Marie Cecils Chomel, who recently returned from Europe, where she was working for the American Relief Administration, will address

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LETTER FROM LESLIE PRESCOTT TO THE GAY LITTLE MARQUISE, CARE OF THE SECRET DRAWER DEAR LITTLE MARQUISE: You certainly have had your compensations. You never had a cantankerous old mother-in-law. I didn't know until yesterday that Jack had been having any trouble with his mother. I supposed she liked me very much, for didn’t she give me this beautiful desk and wasn't it through her that I made the acquaintance of this lovely old secret drawer and took to myself your proffer of confidential friendship? I was literally broken-hearted when I received her letter. It seems there is an old maid in the town where she lives that she wanted her son to marry and she has never forgiven me for being young and good looking. Sometimes I think, dear little Marquise, that people never should grow old and that is probably another compensation you had, for you did not live to be very old. Old people are so hard to live with and they make such hard work of living. They never seem ,to think that you should have any other life but the life that they have planned for you. Jack’s mother prides herself on descent from the Mayflower, and if descent from Puritan stock means being narrow and selfish and bigoted and self-centered, then I am glad that dad came over in the steerage With nothing but his splendid physique and big brain to depend on. Jack has been awfully angry at his mother, and of course, she lays

Know Thyself By DR. CLIFFORD C. ROBINSON

PREVENTING TRAECHOMA One often meets persona who boast of their strength and endurance. But ! endurance is a thing seldom accurately measured, and those with so much boasted vitality may easily overstep and break down or destroy the real effectiveness of delicate bodily adjustments. They eyes, for instance, are often abused and overworked so as to seriously injure them. Ralical treatment has done much to prevent and stamp out traechoma (granulated eyelids). But though the disease is not hearly as prevalent as it was in this country, it still is as I menace in a number of European lands which send many emigrants to the United States. The government physicians at Ellis Island always are on guard, however, and no traechoma case enters, if detected. There are parts of America where traechoma seems to prevail owing to lack of proper sanitation. The prominent symptoms are itching and burning of the eyelids. t There is a swelling of the mucous membrane and the eyes are red and discolored. There is much eecretion, which may be thin and watery or yellow in appearance. In the morning the lids may stick together. When this condition exists rubbing with the fingers should be avoided. Efforts to dislodge the little nodules will only cause irritation. Traechamo may be contracted by using the comunlty towel in working camps or boarding houses which still use such toilet nuisances. Also by contact with the articles which have been handled in common in mills, shops or large working quarters. Be careful always to keep your hands away from your eyes under any working conditions where infection may be waiting for you. A soothing eye wash is a safety first preventative when any doubt exists at tt. ena of tt. lay. Be 01 wmch

the Advertising Club luncheon Thursday. Mis Chomel is a well known writer and speaker. While here she is at 47, the Blacherne.

it all to me. though if she only knew it, it was I who kept him from going down to her house and reading the riot act to her. She is very angry over the baby, you see, particularly as Jack has insisted upon it being named after himself and, of course. John Alden is the ancestor upon whom she prides herself. I’m sure if she could see dear little Jacky she would know there never was any John Alden before him who was any sweeter than he. i I wanted Jack to let me go down j to his mother and see if I couldn't j make up with her, but he wouldn't let me. Said that all his life he had put up with her whims because he thought he ought to, but when it came to choosing between his wife and his mother, it wal his wife every time. He remarked, "Fronr! now on I am going to run my own affairs in Bpite of all my distinguished ancestry.” I guess, dear little Marquise, that things even themselves up in this world. Perhaps you found that out, too. before you went away, to that other sphere. If you were not able to speak to the world of your lover and proudly proclaim yourself his wife, yet I Hot from your letter you never doubted his love. If you did not have a baby in your arms to love and caress you weren’t harassed by an old mother-in-law and a disappointed old maid. I am not very happy tonight, little Marquise, for Jack’s mother is the only person I have ever known who didn’t like your poor Leslie. NEXT: Beatrice Grimshaw to Leslie—A wee bit jealous?

for anyone who may have traechoma and guard against any possible contact. Chenille Used Combination of velvet and chenille and georgette crepe and chenille in rust, brown. navy and gray are featured in the fall overblouses.

After Vacation Peel Your Discolored Skin

Women returning from the seaside or country with browned, reddened or freckled skins will be wise in Immediately tnkimr up the mes .—.art wax treatment. Weather-beaten skin had beat come riff, for no amount of ‘’beautifying” will ever make it prptty to look at. The surest safest, easiest way to shed the despoiled cuticle is with the treatment suggested. Put the wax on before retiring, ns you would cold cream, and rinse It off next morning with warm water. Minute particles of scarf skin peel off day by day gradually showing the healthy, youthful skin beneath. One ounce of mercolized wax. obtainable at any drug store, is enough to make any discolored or spotted complexion clear, white and satiny soft. Its action is so gentle no harm is caused and the face shows' no trace of Its use.—Advertisement.

PESKY BED-BUGS (Pesky Devils Quietus) P. D.Q. it the new chemical that putt the everlasting to the Pesky bedbugs, motha and roachet—impossible for the pesky devila to exiit where P.D. Q. it used. Recommendations for Hotels. Hospitals. Railroad Companies and other public institutions are a guarantee to the public that the safest, quickest and most economical way of ridding the pesky insects is by the use of P. D Q . as this chemical kills the eggs as well as tbeliva QMS, and will not injure the clothing. K 35c package makea a full quart, enough to kill a million bedbugs, moths and roaches—and also contains a patent spout to get to the egga nests is. the bard-to gst-at-places and aavea i uict. P D.Q, mi also be purchased In aeaiod bottiaw double strength, liquid form. Sold by Hook Drug Company and Unig

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Lee Her Column

Forgetting Is Hard Dear Miss Lee': This time a year ago I had a most terrible love affair. For a very unaccountable reason, the engagement was broken. Since then, we have drifted apart until we do not ever correspond. I cannot say I still love him. but there is a very strange feeling I cannot live happily. I have gone to three different cities and have tried to be happy and cannot. I have made new friends and have taken a great deal of interest in sports this summer. I am 20 years old and am considered rather good-looking. Everybody says I look like a. fashion plate. I have had another proposal of marraige since, but I declined, as there was still that peculiar feeling Can you give me a remedy? UNHAPPY AND BLUE. A year would seem long enough for you to recover, once you got over loving the ipan. Take life as it comes, enjoying it and not thinking too deeply about it, for a while. Don’t deliberately try to overcome this feeling. That will just keep the affair in your mind, instead, accept philosophically whatever lisp has to offer. Take an interest in other people as the surest way to cure yoursolf. WAITING: Apparently the man told you his story in a sincere .effort to ' wipe the slate clean.” He will need your help to win back liis selfrespect, as apparently his story., is unknown to other people. Girl Doubts Love Dear Miss Lee: 1. I love a boy very much and he acts as if he cares for me. He said he was going to the country Sunday. Do you think ho is going away because he does not like me or just lor a vacation? He said he could not tell me when he was coming back. I met him in June and we have boen going together since. He said he would write. 2. Do you think this boy really loves mes 3. Would you write, if he wrote first? 4. What do you think of this boy? BLONDIE. 1. I don’t ’ know why you should doubt the boy. But if you make your love as evident to him as you do to me, I should not blame him If he did run away. 2. Goodness, Blondie, I don't know. 3. Os course. 4. As I know nothing about him, I have no opinion of him. Ah, Love’s Worries Dear Miss Lee: I am a boy of 14. I love a girl of 14 very much, but she does not fill the dates I make with her. I am asking your advice whether to quit her or keep on going with her. BLUE I should think the only kind of dates a boy of your age would be making would be to play baseball, go swimming, etc. Why waste time cn girls now? Correspondence Troublesome Dear Miss Lee: lam a girl 15 years old. I like a boy the same age very much- He writes to me very often. Ido not like to receive the letters, aa I am too young for too much correspondence. How can X let him know I do not care to receive any more letters. without making him entirely mad? BROWN EYES. Your parents probably do not like for you to receive these Jetters, either. So tell the boy that. Unrequited Love Dear Mies Lee: lam a young lady lfi and I am in love with a young man 10. 1 came to ! Indianapolis from a small town, whnro wi i both lived, because 1 want to go with him. He tells me he is In 1 ••re with a girl 21. with whom he has t>em going eight months He says she is not the girl for him. because they cannot gel along and if he could meet someone he likes, he would go with her. What can Ido to make him like me? And do you think he is in love? If he Is. what makes him hate her for some thUigs she does? I do not think he Is In love. But I do think you made a mistake by following him to Indianapolis. Instead, you should have stayed In your home town and have made your letters so attractive that he would realize how much he missed you. As It is, just be friendly and jolly, and don’t make yourself ridiculous by letting the man see that you love him —if It really is love.

Your Little Girl Deserves It * * * THERE is nothing that it penetrates every thread of gives such a cool, soft, the fabric,and helps strengthpliable finish as Linit for en it, thus preventing wear starching your children’s and increasing the life of the dainty clothes. material. That is why mothers welcome Linit, the remarkable New Starch Discovery new starch discovery. T>E sure to use Linit acLimt makes even ordinary £> cording to directions, cotton fabrics look and feel an( j > un like other starches, like linen. y OU vv jH not Linit stiff Because Linit remains thin or jelly-like. This is why and free-running like water, Linit goes much further than the old-fashioned kind of starches—and why it is easier Go to your grocer, ask ■ | ■ /or a 10c package of Linit 1 ■ I 111 and begin to use it for all fabrics. Perfection in starchmoney refunded. 1316 Merchant*' Bank Bids* -•> Indianapolis, Ind. §§ flakes Cotton look and feel like Linen

Four Generations at Birthday Party

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LEFT TO RIGHT—MRS JOHN H: LEWIS, MftS. D. D. XEHER AND MRS. JOHN XEENAM. ANNA GERTRUDE NEENAM IS SITTING IX HER GREAT-GRANDMOTHER’S LAP.

One of the gayest of the family party when D. D. Xeher of Frankfort, Ind., celebrates his seventyfifth birthday Sunday will be his grsat-granddaughter, Anna Gertrude Neenam, 7 months.

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EGGPLANT _ j SE vegetables and more vegeta-1 bles! Only keep in mind the I needs of a balanced ration and plar. the meals accordingly. Eggplant is a delicious vegetable j with many possibilities. It makes an ; excellent hearty dish if stuffed with meat or a delicious breakfast vegetable if carefully sauted in butter. The most perfect vegetable can be ruined In the cooking. Too long cooking makes highly flavored vegetables strong and unpleasant, while the delicately flavored ones become tasteless. Underdone vegetables have a raw, unpleasant taste. Os course the freshness and the age of all vegetables has much to do with the length of time required for cooking. And a wllty fegetable should be freshened before cooking just as carefully as if It were to be served uncooked. Let stand' In cold water until firm and crisp. The blanching of vegetables preserves their color and flavor In cooking quite as well as In canning. To blanch eggplant put it In a square of cheesecloth and dip it In boiling water for five minutes. Remove from boiling water and plunge Into cold water. Let stand one minute and drain. Stuffed Eggplant One good sized plant. 1 small onion. 4 fresh mushrooms, 4 tablespoons cold chopped meat, 4 tablespoons dried bread crumbs. 2 tablespibons butter, stale coarse bread crumbs, Vi teaspoon salt, V 4 teaspoon pepper, 1 teaspoon minced parsley. j Out eggplant In halves lengthwise without paring. Blanch and cold-dip halves of vegetable. Then put In briskly boiling salted water and cook until tender, but not mushy or bro-

Four generations will be represented at the party at the home of Xeher's daughter, Mrs. ,John H. Lewis, 411 W. Twenty-Eighth St. Representatives of the four generations shown here are: Mrs. Xeher,

ken. Drain well and scoop out the Inside, leaving as thin and firm a shell as possible. Chop the pulp quite fine. Melt butter. Add onion cut in \ thin slices and fry a pale straw color. Shed mushrooms and fry with onion. Add chopped eggplant and mix well. Cook just a minute and remove from fire. Add meat, •'dried bread crumbs, parsley, salt and pepper. Mix thoroughly and put In eggplant shells. Put In a shallow pan to bake. Cover the stuffing with coarse bread crumbs, dot thickly with tiny bits of butter and hake twenty minutes In a moderate oven. The crumbs should brown. Serve at once. Small eggplants can be used, each half being served Individually. Eggplant combines with other vegetables advantageously. If you have a little of this and a little of that in

fr At great expense we A developed the product to Jk "Ww meet our ideals in quality ■ ' and f,avor * Then we spared no expense RJa to make the package worthy of the contents. Sealed Tight—Kept Right. ’jmUP'Bml You’ll always get WRIGLEY’S jgpr f|9 in all its original goodness and CK ■ Pure chicle and other ingredients of Ipak fH the highest quality obtainable, made iK H under modern sanitary conditions. AftahFuery Mpal

great-grandmother; Mrs. Lewis, grandmother; Mrs. John Neenam. 341 W. Twenty-Seventh St., mother, and Anna Gertrude Neenam, greats'a nddaughter, granddaughter and daughter.

the house try a vegetable casserole for luncheon. Baked En Casserole One eggplant, 1 onion, 1 cup corn cut from the cob, 1 green pepper, 1 tablespoon minced parlsey, IV4 cups tomato juice, 1 teaspoon salt. V 4 teaspoon pepper, V 6 teaspoon paprika, 2 tablespoons butter. Pare eggplant and cut in slices one Inch thick. Dip In boiling water for five minutes and plunge into cold water. Drain and cut in cubes. Cook fifteen minutes in boiling salted water to cover. Drain. Melt butter, add onion minced and oook until onion Is a pale straw color. Put pepper in boiling water for five minutes, plunge Into cold water and nib off the outside skin. Cut open and remove seeds and white ribs. Cut in fine shreds. Scald tomatoes and slip off skins. Rub through a fine wire sieve to remove the seeds. Mbs all ingredients and turn Into a well buttered baking dish. Cover and bake forty-five minutes In a moderate oven. (Copyright, 1923, XEA Service, Inc.)

SOUTH BEND WILL MARK CENTENNIAL 100th Birthday to Be Observed With Celebration. B Times Special SOUTH BEND, Ind., Sept. 4.—Former residents of South Bend, northern Indiana and Southern Michigan should be in South Bend Sept. 30 to Oct. 6 to assist in the observance of South Bend’s 100th birthday. This centennial of South Bend’s founding in 1823 will be observed with a remarkable celebration. A union religious service wall open the affair Sunday. Sept. 30 and through the week will follow a marvelous historical and industrial pageant, public receptions, a kids’ circus and other interesting features. The historical and industrial pageant will depict South Bend’s history. South Bend is planning to spend thousands of dollars on this birthday, especially on the great historical and Industrial pageant, and hopes for the return of every former resident. Automobile Turns Over Trying to avoid striking a car driven by William Massey. Bowling Green. Ky., at Concord and Michigan St., Monday, C- A. Snap. 3511 Garden Ave., unbalanced his machine and narrowly escaped serious injuries when it turned over on the car tracks.

HAY FEVER Treated at Home To avoid hay fever entirely, so away for two months. If yon can’t go, Vicks will help you endure it at home. Keep Vicks in the nostrils to protect the membranes, Inhale the vapors of Vicks melted in a spoon to clear the head. A rub with Vicks at bedtim* will often keep away asthma. WICKS W Vapoßub Ornt UtViuom Jam Uuo Ykamut

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