Indianapolis Times, Volume 35, Number 104, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 September 1923 — Page 5

TUESDAY, SEPT. 11, 1923.

gOCIAL Activities ENTEItTAI N M E N' T S WEDDINGS BETROTHALS

RS. CUSMAN HOKE, 4541 V 4 Guilford Ave.. was the hostess this afternobn for a pretty bridge party of three tables in honor of Miss Esther Jane Johnson, who is to be married Sept. 16 to Earl Robert Burroughs of Ponca City. Okla. Basinets of pink and lavender fall flowers ..v.vs used to decorate the rooms. Beside Miss Johnson, the guests were Mesdames A. W. Uroadstreet of Greencastle, C. T. Johnson. \f R. Kellum, A. Hastings Fiske, Warren Hanson, Perry Lesh and Misses Charlotte Lesh, Christine Wilson. Madeline Jlixon and Jeanette Benedict. • • • Miss Hazel Miller, whose marriage to Earl Wagner will take place Oct. 12, will be the honor guest tomght at' a dinner bridge and kitchen shower given by Misses Helen and Laura Barrett, 3011 N. New Jersey St. The small tables at which the guests will be served* will be lighted with pink tapers in crystal holders twined with smilax. Tiny pink rose cups with green leaves will further carry out the color scheme of pink and green. There will be five tables. The guests: Mesdames Ray Driggs of Terre Haute, John Haymaker, Robert Manfield, George Miller, Earl Robinson and Misses Ellen Woody, Helen Baker, Margaret Hamilton, Dorothy See, Dorothy Arndt, Nelle Richardson, Helen Henry.** Helen Hildebrand, Katherine Whallen and Marybelle Weininger. The hostesses will be assisted by their mother, Mrs. D. G. Barrett. Miss Helen Hildebrand, 1824 N. Alabama St., will entertain for Miss Miller with a dinner bridge Oct. 6. * • * Miss Carolyn Dorothy Lauth. daughter of Mrs. Josephine Lauth, 1424 E. Ohio St., has chosen her attendants for her wedding Sept'. 16 to Joseph N. Huser which will take place at the Holy Cross Church. Miss Elizabeth Huser will be maid of honor and Louis C. Lauth will be best man. The Rev. Joseph F. Byrne will read the service. • • + Miss Esther Florence Amos, whose marriage to Ray H. Guthrie will take place Sept 16 at the home of the bride’s cousins. Mr. and Mrs. Howard M. Bradford, 2334 Central Ave., will have as her only attendant, Mrs. Frederick J. Nicely. Mr. Nicely will be best man. • • • At the third annual Jeremiah and Elizabeth Anne Craven reunion Sunday at the home of Everett Craven, Carmel, Ind., the following officers were elected president, C. W. Cole: vice-president. Myron Rinker; secretory and treasurer. Miss Nadine Craven. Forty guests were present. The second Sunday in September, 1924, at Center Valley, Ind., was ret for the next meeting.

Miss Dorothy Ballard, 1425 E. New York St., has left for Purdue University to enter her junior year. • • • Miss Wilma Taflinger, 1514 E. Twelfth St., accompanied by Miss Florence Strawn, will motor to Louisville, Ky„ Thursday to spend the week end. * * * Miss Ruth Sedwick. 410 S. New Jersey St., who is visiting in New York, will retifm home next week. • * * The Psi lota Sorority entertained Monday night with a rush party and a bathroom shower for Miss Mary Janet O'Reily whose marriage to Charles Jerome Murphy will take place this fall. The portjwjyas given at the home of Miss Marian Stoner. 2926 College Blue and yellow', the sorority colors, were used in the decorations. The gift swere presented to the bride-elect tied with large satin ■bows. * * * Mr. and Mrs. William E. Janicke, 615 Terrace PI., announce the marriage of their daughter. Miss Irene AT. to Russell H. Wrennick. which took place Saturday at the home of tlie officiating minister, the Rev. William Carson. Mr. and Mrs. Wrennick will be at home temporarily with Mrs. Wrennick’s parents. • • * Mr. and Mrs. Robert T. Ramsey, and son Robert Jr., 5726 Central Ave., have returned from a motor trip through northern Wisconsin. • *-* James Earl Alexander. 2838 Central Ave., left Monday for Chicago from where he will leave for a two-weeks’ cruise of the Great Lakes. • * • Miss Hilda Jane Miller of Oklahoma City, Okla.. who has been visiting Mr. and Mrs. Paul M. Miller, 609 Middle Drive, Woodruff PI., will leave tonight for Lake Forest. 111., w'here she will enter Ferry School for Girls. Announcement is made of the marriage of Miss Lucia Annette Showalter, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. Wesley Showalter, of Christiansburg, W. Va., to Stuart A. Wilson, son of Mrs. Martha A. Wilson, 4251 Park Ave., which took place Monday afternoon at the home of the bride’s parents. Mr. and M?rs. Wilson graduated from Indiana L T niversity where Mrs.

Know Thyself . By DR. CLIFFORD C. ROBINSON

TYPHOID FEVER I 1 TPHOID fever occurs most in. I summer and early fall. J _£J The typhoid bacillus seems to be somewhat irregular in susceptibility In different individuals. Its favorite range in both males and females is from 15 or 16 years old to about 35. Don’t let your summer vacation be broken up and your after life .Interfered with by contracting this disease. If your vacation is spent in the city, your chance of infection is rather remote. Cities have reduced typhoid almost to the minimum. In 1922 the extremely low rate of 3.15 for every' hundred thousand persons was averaged by the large cities of the United States. Drinking water is a common source •f typhoid infection. If you are drinking well water in a rural dis-

Local Girl Goes to Sunny South to Teach History in High School

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MISS ALARY EVELYN RILEY —Photo by 'Dexheimer.

Miss Mary Evelyn Riley, 1701 N. Capitol Ave., will leave Sept. 16 for Pensacola, Fla., w'her she will teach history in the Ugh school. While there she will make her home

jppsterMayy'sHfKITCHEN

CANNED PEARS i O you ever use canned pears for IJ salad in place of pineapple? I Do you ever use pears canned in a heavy sirup for a company dessert with nuts and whipped cream? Do you ever pickle pears and serve them with meats in the winter time? If you never have canned pears for these purposes try it this year and see if it isn’t Very much worth while. Pears for salad should be canned in a light 6irup. The cold pack method is preferred. Cold Pack Pears for Salads Wash and pare fruit and cut in halves. Remove cores. Dip in boiling water and let stand one and onehalf minutes. Dip into cold water and drain. Pack in sterilized jars, adjust rubber and pour over thin sirup. Half seal, process 20 minutes, counting the time after the w’ater begins to- boil The w'ater in the hot water bath outfit should cover the tops of the jars by at least an inch when the one-period process is used and a home-made outfit must do the work. Pickled Pears Six pounds pears, 4 cups cider vinegar,, 2 pounds sugar. 12 sticks cinnamon, 2 teaspoons whole cloves Heat vinegar, sugar and spices to the boiling point. Pare pears, cut in halves if large and core. Pour over hot vinegar and let stand over night. In the morning boil slowly until fruit is tender and clear. Pack in sterilized jars, cover with boiling sirup and seal. Thin Sirup Three cups sugar, 2 cups waterWhen water is boiling sift in sugar. This prevents scum from rising and saves time and sugar, as no skimming is necessary. When sugar is dissolved the sirup is ready to use. Pears canned for use in desserts are canned in heavy sirup. Perfectly ripe, choice fruit should_be used. The Wilson w'as a member of Phi Beta Kappa honorary fraternity. After a wedding trip in West Virginia and New York they will be at home at 4251 Park Ave. • • The Delta Zeta Psi Sorority held initiation Monday night at the home of Miss Norma France, Ashland Ave., for Misses Eileen Kerr and Mabel Wendt. * * • The Wednesday Needle Club of Myrtle Temple No. 7, Pythian Sisters, will meet Wednesday afternoon at the home of Mrs. Laura Hancock, 2834 E. Sixteenth St. • * * The Only Euchre Club will give a card party tonight in Musician’s Hall. 143 E. Ohio St.

trict. and are not sure, boil the water. Don't drink raw milk unless you wish to invite typhoid bacilli to dwell in you. Watch out for the common house fly. He is a carrier of this trouble. Avoid bathing in polluted water. Persons who have had typhoid may continue to carry the bacilli in their systems for weeks and even months. Such persons are called “typhoid carriers.” Be'-on the looitout also for this bacilli in polluted soil. Typhoid begins with a slight headache, loss of appetite and lassitude. There is some fever and restlessness at night but nothing of a pronounced nature so that one may lie on guard. This is just the trouble, you have contract ed typhoid and don’t know It. The safe way is always to have your guard up and not give this bacillus half a chance.

with Mrs. Crawford Folsom. Miss Riley has been a student at Butler College for the last two years. She is a member of Kappa Alpha Theta-

fruit is prepared anti blanched and processed the same as in the preceding rule. The sirup is boiled until a ball is formed when tried in eo*d water and the sirup clings to the spoon sluggishly instead of pouring in an even stream. Ginger pears are delicious and hard green pears which seem .worthless can be used. Ginger Pears Nine pounds pears, 6 pounds sugar, 4 cups water, 6 ounces crystalized ginger, 4 lemons. When water is boiling sift in sugar. When sugar is dissolved add pears which have beer pared and cut in thin slices. Pears discolor very quickly, so drop them into a large pan of weak salt water as they are sliced. When ready to use drain from water and let stand in clear cold water for five minutes. Drain and put In sirup. Boil until fruit begins to look transparent. Then add the grated rind of one lemon, the juice of four and the ginger cut in small bits. Cook until the. pears are clear and the mixture Is thick. Put into sterilized glasses and seal when cool. Pear Conserve Five pounds pears. 5 pounds sugar, 1 cup water, 1 pound raisins, 3 lemons, 2 oranges, 114 cups English walnuts, 1 cup preserved ginger. Pare pe:irs. Cut in thin slices. Put water and pears in preserving kettle, sift over sugar and bring very slowly to the boiling point. Simmer until pears are tender. Add raisins, seeded, juice and grated rind of lemons, juice and grated rind of oranges, nuts and ginger cut very fine. Boil for half an hour or until thick. Pour into sterilized pint jars and seal. The rind of the oranges and lemons can be parboiled through two waters, drained and cut in shreds and added with the Juice.

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Martha Lee Says- > ■ ■ ■ -- Lazy Spouse Makes Love Excuse for Many Faults

The assumption that a great deal of love will make up for many faults is not uncommon among husbands, or, for that matter, Ehnong wives, either.

Love may make the faults bearable, but it certainly is not an excuse for them. It does not keep the family in food. It does not clean the house or prepare a good meal. It does not take the place of a companion late at night. The kind of love that makes itself an excuse for anything unpleasant is selfish, unthinking. It may eryiure and be endured for a long time, but some time it is sure to break. Husband ‘Not Good Enough’ Dear Miss Lee: I am 18 years old and have been married for ter. months to a preacher’s son We have been parted two times, for two months 1 *>.st time. He will not work and he does some terrible things and has bad habits Still, he says that does not keep a man from loving any one. I cannot understand why I cannot make myself satisfied. It seems as if all the young men are alike—very smart-acting and uninteresting. They think all girls are alike, so they say. I work every day and try to forget, but cannot. His folks say. Don't waste your time on him. because he always will do this same, way " 1 am considered good-looking by every one. and am well-liked People all say the trouble is. I am just too good for .him. Please give me your advice. BROWN EYES. living you does not excuse your husband’s failure to work, and other faults. It’s n mighty lazy love that acts that way. If your husband really loves you, he will work, and will change his ways, to prove it. Make him do that. Give him a period of probation. During that time, you may either stay with him, with the understanding you will leave unless he does mend his ways before the time is up. Or leave him now, with the understanding you will return when he proves himself a real husband. Encourage him and show him you have confidence he will win out. His family’s criticism is destructive. Make yours constructive. BELL: If the parents are wellknowm to you, just write an Informal note, telling them how you rejoice in their happiness. I don’t want to give you a “form” letter, because that w'ould sound stiff. Mak® your note natural. Dainty hand-made cards may be sent to the parents of anew baby. These are considered correct and may be procured in very clever designs. Broken ‘Date’ Dear Miss Lee: T am a girl 18 years old. I have lots of admirers A few months ago I met a fellow whom I liked very ueh as he always appeared so manly. He seemed to be very mueh hi love with me until we had a quarrel one night after a dance. After that.

LETTER FROM LESLIE PRESLOTT TO BEATRIC E GRIM SHAW. DEAR BEE: I was very much interested ln®the clipping you sent me from “Filmland.” I never met Miss Perier as. just at the time I was married, she left the city for New York. I did not know she had gone West until I heard it from you. I reqjember very w'ell, however, seeing her one night at a case and she was really very beautiful, although as I think of her now' I did not see the spirituality or intellect in her face. She must have had lots of that, sex appeal that you say Dick talks about, for I noticed the eyes of every man In the room kept traveling to her table. I asked Jack if he knew her and he said, yes, quite well. That she had modeled for his artists in some of his advertising illustrations. (She ought to do very well in the movies. Do not. T beg of you, dear Bee, urfiess something comes''up that you cannot ignore, doubt in the least Dick’s love for you. You must remember. my dear, that men are queer creaturos. but my mother used to have a couplet, which she repeated very often. 1 think she said it was from Whittier, an old-fashioned poet, who is now forgotten. It went something like this: “Men are only boys grown tall, "Hearts don’t change much after all.” It Is very probable that on the surface Dick has been thrilled with the

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he did not call on me any more for three months. Later we met and a reconciliation was eff“cted. He has called on me twice since. The third time, he made an engagement to go automobile riding. He did not show up. I have not seen him since, nor lias he called to give his reason. Wlint could be his trouble? Should I call and ask him why he broke the engagement? Or should t never worry over him any longer? WORRIED. Goodness only knows w’hat his reasons are. But, whatever they may be, don't worry about him. It Is his place to make explanations, not yours to ask them. Parents Object Dear Miss Lee: I am a girl 10. I have been going with a young fellow two years. Mv people don't want me to keep company with this fellow. They say he is not the kind for me. He seems to care for me, at times, and at other times he does not. He is visiting his people in Ohio. He has been gone six weeks ard I have received six letters When he returns, he wants me to go away with him and get married. He does not want me to let my people know where I am. I love this fellow very much and am willing to marry him. My girl friend tells me I should marry him. Do you think it would disgrace my people it I did? An ejopement might not cause your family to be disgraced, but it certainly w'ould cause them sorrow. Why do they object to the young man? The fact that he wants you to break all connections with your family gives me an unfavorable impression of him. No, don’t run away. You surely would regret it, and xvould want your family. About Boarding Schools Dear Miss Lee: Is a boarding school all right to go to. if your parents ave separated? Is it clean ? 2. Do you like our schools in Indianapolis. and do the pupils have good times? LITTLE EVA. 1. The fact that a girl’s parents are separated would not make a boarding school either good or bad for her. Some boarding schools maintain a very high standard, both in regard to cleanliness and scholarship. Others, naturally, rank much lower. 2. I did not attend school in Indianapolis. However, from my observation, I should say the schools here are quite good. Indiana schools rank seventeenth in the country', but usually are ranked higher in scholarship. Schools, of course, are not primarily for good times. Besides, people make their own good times. Twills Coming When cooler weather sets in, twills will gain in favor—especially In simple tailored designs.

new kind of women they say the moving picture Jife makes of the feminine sex, but I still believe that down In every man’s heart there is a kind of love for the old-fashioned girl that can never be eradicated. This Dick has for you. I am eure. This love has reverence and respect and tenderness and regard in It. It is a love that is always In a man’s heart, once he has It, for the one woman and if we women could only understand this, how much happier we would be. If we could only understand that these flights of fancy were just on the surface and that a man comes back as surely as a homing pigeon to the place and the woman he loves, provided she will let him. provided she stays the same woman to whom he told his love, we would be much happier. There, Bee, I know you are laughing at me. I’m very good at preaching, in fact I’m preaching quite as much to myself as I am to you in this Jetter. Not that Jack has ever given me any feel.ng of unrest In the matter, but because semoway, down deep in my heart, I feel that this great happiness of mine is too good to last. Again and again I say to myself, nothing is too good to last. Only things that are too bad cannot last Jong. Do you think this is so? Lovingly, LESLIE. (Copyright, 1923. NEA Service, Inc.) NEXT: Leslie to Jack’s mother--The soft answer.

Only Three, but Dives 15 Feet

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CONFESSION SOLVES MYSTERY OF MURDER Escaped Convict Admits He Killed Merchant Three Years Ago. By United Press , CHICAGO, Sept. 11. The mysterious “lover’s lane” murder of How-; ard B. Rhodes, wealthy merchant,’ three years ago was declared solved by police today following a confession by John E. Hale, escaped convict. Detectives said Hale admitted shooting Rhodes as the latter was keeping a tryst Vith Mrs. Gladys Virginia Jacobson, who said at the time two men killed Rhodes. Hale named Hairy H. Ward, known as the "Lone Wolf” and who was hanged here in 1921 for a double murder, as his accomplice.

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