Indianapolis Times, Volume 35, Number 122, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 October 1923 — Page 5

S. A. t. DINNER AND SMOKER ON FRIDAY Regular Saturday Luncheon Canceled This Week, A dinner and smoker of the Sigma Alpha Epsilon Indianapolis Alumni Association will be held Friday at 8 p. m. at the Hoosier Athletic Club. The regular Saturday luncheon will not be held. The purpose of the Friday smoker is for the attendance of men who cannot get to the Saturday luncheons. Richard M. Hennessy is chairman.

gOCIAL Activities ENTERTAINMENTS WEDDINGS BETROTHALS

PRESIDENT’S Day luncheon at the Spink-Arms in the Oriu- ental room today opened the season for the Local Council of Women. The speakers and directors tables were arranged with centerpieces of pink and -white roses and garden flowers. Green tapers in crystal holders lighted the tables. Covers for 150 guests were laid at small tables erranged with small baskets of garden flowers. l Before the luncheon resolutions of | sympathy to the family of Mrs. Mattie Butler, whose recent death was keenly felt by the council and to Mrs. Frank Lahr whose little daughter's serious illness caused her absence from the affair, were read. A musical program followed the luncheon. There were numbers by the Harmonic Club, the Workers for the Blind and the Matinee Musicale. Mrs. Gay Estabrook of the Matinee Musicale, accompanied by Mrs. Robert R. Blakeman, sang "I Wonder if Ever the Rose,” by Slatter, and "Springtide.” by Becker, with a violin obligato by Mrs. Roy Hunt. Mrs. A. J. Clark, president, presided. * • • Mrs. A. C. Dale and brother, Robert Cannon of Carthage, 111., have been the guests of Mr. and Mrs. V. V. Smith, 4642 Broadway. Mr. and Mrs. Smith, accompanied by Mr. and Mrs. Irving Blue, motored to Bloomington over the week-end. • • * Charles M. Leslie and N. D. Dean of New York City, and W. L. Dean of Hackensack, N. J., have been the guests of Mr. and Mrs. E. P. Endsley, 441 Garfield Ave. They will leave today to motor to Los Angeles. Mrs. N. D. Dean, who is visiting Mrs. Endsley, wpll join them in Los Angeles the last of the month.

Mrs. William Guthrie, the Claypool, entertained the Daughters of the (Union informally this afternoon with a tea in the hotel parlors in honor of Mrs. W. R. Stewart, president of the national organization. Mrs. Stewart will return Wednesday to her home in New York. * * • The Late Book Club observed Presidents’ day today with a luncheon at the Spink-Arms. Garden flowers deco* rated the table at which dainty place cards marked covers for twenty-five. Mrs. W. M. Clifford, outgoing president, and Mrs. Douglas A. L. Leathers, incoming president, gave short talks. • • • Dr. and Mrs. W. R. Stewart, 2439 Broadway, will entertain tonieht with a bridal dinner in honor of their daughter, Marjorie Jane, and Gilbert Hector Fuller, whose marriage will take place Wednesday night. Covers for thirty will be laid at one table in the sunroom. A color scheme of rainbow shades will be used in the decorations. A wedding cake -surmounted with a minature bride and groom will form the centerpiece. The guests: Mrs. John Fuller of Yonkers, N. Y.; Mr. and Mrs. Horace Murphy of Muncie. Mr. ar.d Mrs. J W. G. Stewart of Wabash, the Rev. and Mrs. T. 'W. Grafton. .Miss Aliena Grafton, the Rev. Warren Grafton, Mr. and Mrs. H. B. Burnet and the bridal party, which will include Miss Florence Fuller, maid of honor: Mrs. Tracy W. Ellis, Mrs. C. M. Baker, Mrs. W. B. Conner, Jr., land Miss Martha Updegraff. brides'inaids; John L. H. Fuller of Yonkers, N Y.. best man; Tracy W. Ellis. C. M. Baker, Melvin L’. Masters and Willis B. Conner, Jr., ushers: Miss Grace Black, organist, and Miss Katherine Tarney, soloist. A card party, the proceeds of which will be given the James Whitcomb Riley Hospital for crippled children, w4II be given Thursday afternoon, Oct. 11, from 2 until 5 o’clock, at the Spink-Arms Hotel, under the aussplces of the Indianapolis chapter of the Sons of Veterans Auxiliary. Mrs. Margaret Green, 3047 X.- Capitol Ave., chairman of the committee on arrangements for the party, has extended an invitation to members of all women’s clubs of the city to attend. Policeman Taken Home 111 Patrolman C. F. Beeker, 1213 N. Rural St., was taken home from his beat today when he became 111 and rahg the emergency help call to headquarters.

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Assists at Girls' Benefit Dance

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—Photo by Dexhelmer, MISS ANNE GREENBURG.

Miss Anne Greeifburg, 1121 S. Meridan St., is publicity chairman for the benefit dance Thursday night bq the Girl’s Auixliary to the Jewish Shelter House and Home for the Aged. The affair is the first of the season and will be held at the

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LETTER FROM LESLIE PRESCOTT, CARE OF THE SECRET DRAWER. I hardly knew how I got home, although I must have bden conscious enough of material things to drive my car, for I had no aceideit. I went upstairs and sat down in my own ! room, after carefully locking the door J —just why I do not know, but the idea was so stupendous that I wanted ; no interruptions while thinking about, It. How did Alice come with such a' magnificent and valuable string of pearls, and having them, why did she j give them to me? Could it he possible that she did not know the. pearls were real? I went back to the time when she pave them to me. I wanted again to understand and remember Just what she said. I remembered she had given them to me the day that she had asked me to wear “something old and something new. something borrowed and something blue.” When she handed me the pearls she said, after I had exclaimed with delight over them, that she had come across a man who had purchased them for someone that he had cared for very, very much, and then, as he had lost her. he did riot want them any more. She said she had found out how to obtain them through Betty Stokley, and knowing that Betty Stok- | ley was abroad. I jumped at the conI elusion that she had gotten these beads, as I supposed they were, from some foreigner who had arrived in this country, and becoming hard pressed for money, had sold them to her. x ßld Alice tell me the truth? Did she really find some man who was desperate because he had lost the woman for whom he bought the jewels and who was willing to sell them to her as imitation pearls? Or did j she know that the pearls were real, \ and\by driving a sharp bargain with the man. ask father for the generous ; check which he would have to 'give j for them at bargain prices? One moment I whs ready to cable ; her and then I was afraid that some ! one else would get the cable, or if she answered, someone other than i myself might get it. I wanted to- ask my father if he knew anything aobut it. but again I was afraid. It didn’t seem to me possible that dad would have kept it all to himself that he was giving me, through Alice, a string of glorious pearls: a string worth over $200,000. No, that wasn’t like dad. He always wanted his gifts appreciated at their proper value, notwithstanding he. was always very generous. I felt I could never wear the jewels again. I would be afraid every minute that someone would take them from me. I knew n(pw why it was that the man at the restaurant

Severin roof garden. Other members of the committee on arrangements: Misses Sadie Gold, Helen Marer, Gabrella Segal. Nettie Levinson, Frieda Levinson, Rosallie Koor, Esther Lefkowitz an Lillian Rosenthal.

table had been looking at me so the time that Jack wanted to kick him. He probably was a pearl connoisseur. Over $200,000! How foolish for one in my position to have such Jewels. (Copyright, 1923, NEA Service, Ing.) | NEXT: Sydney to John and John to Sydney—Remo-se. S4OO A MONTH ASKED FOR CARE OF CHILDREN Divorce Suit Is Filed Against Well Known Terre Haute Attorney. i By ( nit fit Preen TERRE HAUTE, Ind., Oct. 2.j Four hundred dollars per month for ■ the care and custody of their two I children is asked for in a suit for | divorce filed here today by Janet I Beasley against John Hoke Beasley, ! prominent attorney and financier. Mrs. Beasley charged cruel and In* j human treatment. Beasley Is a member of the law 1 firm of Beasley, Douthitt, Crowford and Beasley. He is a son of John T. Beasley, one of the best known at- | torneys in the State. Night Schools Open Wednesday j Public night schools will open in ' fourteen grade schools, two high ! schools and two foreign homes j Wednesday night, it was announced 'by the school board today. Academic | subjects, millinery, sewing, cooking, j heme economics, commercial courses, i manual training and machine shop work will be given. Classes will be held Monday, Wednesday and Friday nights.

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—Marthd Lee Says Unintelligent Love as Disastrous as No Love

The girl or boy who runs his parents’ lives not infrequently ruins his own. Accustomed to having his own way always he is unable to adjust himself to changed conditions.

His parents, loving him blindly, expect from him a like devotion. Do they get it? They do not. Instead, they get constant quarreling, complaints if the tyrant is displeased with, some detail of his life, and, Very often, deceit. The spoiled child, led to believe that anything he does is right and that anything he w r ants is his, has few’ moral scruples. Children need love, in large quantities. But it must be intelligent, not blind, love, if it is not to do more harm than good. Unintelligent Love Dear Miss Lee: I have a sister who is very (rood-looking: and attractive. She is 17 and is crazy about boys. Father won’t lot her have friends, so she goes to a srtrl friend’s house and has dates and papa and mamma don’t know It I think she is perfectly capable of holding her own, but If anything: should ever happen to her, I should always fee! responsible. Yet I know that if I tell mamma she will hate me forever. . Anything: she wants, my parents cet for her. She has been humored so much she thinks she can go with fellows whether tha folks want her to or not. She treats me as if I were not as pood as she. I soon will be 16 and many people tell me I am Just as good-looking as sbe. I sincere!} hope 1 never shall be as selfish as she is. She acts as if she were ashamed of me if I am alone But when she gets in trouble she tells me all about it. I give her a little advice and sympathy and when it is a!l over she tells me not to annoy her any longer. I have stood it about as long as X can. I hope you will be able to help me NOBODY’S BABY. Your sister needs* a hard jolt, to make her realize how selfish she is. The trouble is, she probably is so selfsatisfied that it is almost impossible to give her such a jolt. Instead of giving her sympathy, next time she gets into trouble, tell her frankly what you think of her. for the way site treats you, for her selfishness, and for her deceit to the parents who are so good to her. She probably will he very angry, but it will make her think. Trill your mother, too. but show her that to let your sister know that her deception is discovered will only drive her away from home. It is too Uite to keep her from having boy friends. The best thing for your parents to do is to let your sister have friends at home, where they can keep an eye on her. Don’t let your sister’s treatment discourage you, but live your own life regardless of how she acts. Jealous of Friend Dear Mitm Lee: My friend and I hare been angry at each other for a short white. Just to make me Jealous, he began ta’king to my lx~t friend and becoming quite fa miliar with her He also ; trying to make up with me. Should ido it’ ANXIOUS TO KNOW. You had no "strings” to this man, so you have no reason to be Jealous , just because he happens to like your j girl friend. If she is your best I friend, you should want other people j to be attracted to her. Surely, make up with him. He ! seems to h tve come his half of the i way.

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'hfTJr. C.CRobmson MILK AT HEALTH FOOD URING the past summer Some friends of mine spent their k-,-—1 vacation on a farm in northern Indiana. The two children drank nearly a quart of milk daily, and a marked gain in their weight jmd general health was the result. Thri farmer's wife said her children seldom drank milk, preferring tea and coffee. They were not well developed or markedly undernourished, but about a low medium. * Children up to 16 or 17 need a pint of milk daily, a quart if they can get it. Adults above 35 do not: other foods ■will supply their needs. Is Real Problem If to do, were as easy as to know what to do, the milk question would be easy of solution. To buy milk at 15 cents a quart, on present salaries, is the problem. Asa building food, however, milk is the most valuable of our supply sources. In 100 parts it contains 19 per cent of protein, 29 per cent carbohydrates, 52 per cent Yat, and numerous other blood-building elements. It contains more protein value than bread and more fat value than most meats. It Is also rich in carbohydrates (starch and sugar), which the body requires, and it contains lime for bone building and valuable mineral j elements Guard Against Bacteria I You must guard Against bacteria l in milk. For various reasons, prln- ! cipally uncleanliness, milk is subject i to more germs and bacteria than aj- ! most any other food. If you cannot i get pasteurized milk, try home pasteurization. Placn the milk in a bottle In a pan of water and heat to almost the boiling point, to be exact, 169 degrees Fahrenheit. Be sure to have the : water in the pan at the same height ;as the milk in the bottle. This kills all disease producing bacteria. Do not | keep the milk thus treated more than j from 24 to 36 hours, as pasteurized ; milk Is not sterile. Milk should not be taken between meals. It is highly nutritive and may Induce overweight If so taken. Those who are underweight can, of course, supplement nutrition at meals by using milk as a beverage between menls. (Copyright, 1923, NEA Service, Ino.)

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Shank Shows Youngsters City Hall

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TRAFFIOMAN TOLLE ADDRESSING CIVICS CLASS OF SCHOOL 29.

Pupils from the eighth grade civics class of school No. 29, in charge of Mrs. Sue Yeaton, their teacher, visited city hall offices and police headquarters Friday to learn something of municipal government in Indianapolis. When this delegation of Young America called on Mayor Shank, engagements, conferences, even a cabinet meeting, went by the boards, as the mayor personally took charge of a tour around all city hall offices. •

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"They are the citizens of tomorrow in Indianapolis and nothing is as important as giving them the right impression of city government,” said the mayor. During their visit Fire Chief O’Brien, Edward Mcßride, director of recreation: Elmer Gay of the board of safety, and William T. Bailey, assistant attorney, explained various phases of municipal government. * Trafficman Tolle spoke to the children at police headquarters.

half cup finely chopped cold meat, one-fourth cup dried* bread crumbs, one tablespoon butter, one dessertspoon minced parsley, one-half teaspoon salt, one-eighth teaspoon pepper, one-half teaspoon minced onion. Prepare tomatoes as In preceding rule. Mix ingredients and fill tomatoes. Bake in baking dish or ramikins. ' Scalloped Tomatoes Pare tomatoes and cut In half-inch slices. Put a layer of cracker crumbs in a well-buttered baking dish. Add a layer of tomatoes, sprinkle with minced onion and parsley arid shredded green pepper. Add a layer of cracker crumbs, dot with butter and season with salt and pepper. Add another layer of tomatoes and seasoning. Cover with cracker crumbs. Dot with butter. Beat one egg with one cup milk and pour over the whole. Bake half an hour in a moderate oven.

LOW PRICES PAID FOR MELONS Drop Shown in Vegetables on City Market, Home-grown watermelons, among the last of the season, sold at the city market today for 15 to 30 cents each. Kiefer pears and late apples were the only new fruit to appear. Grimes Golden, in evidence more than any other variety of apples, brought $1.25 to $1.50 a bushel. Peaches declined from Saturday prices of $2.50 per bushel to $2. In the vegetable stands, corn was moving so slowly several dealers took their supply back home. Those who remained were getting from 8 to 12 cents per dozen. Several tumbles In vegetable prices have occurred since Saturday. Turnips dropped from $1.25 to $1 per bushel, spinach from $1 to 75 cents, lettuce from 50 to 40 cents and Kentucky Wonder beans from $1.50 to $1.25. Head lettuce, selling at 75 cents a bushel, is just coming in. Tomatoes sold rapidly at $1 a bushel. Kale greens at 50 cents a bushel, parsnips at $1.50, button and long radishes at 20 cents a bunch, green peppers at 75 cents a bushel and red peppers at $1.25 a bushel were holding at previous prices. Jolly on Lincoln Memorial Dr. J. C. Jolly of Lake, Ind., has been reappointed to membership on the Nancy Hanks Lincoln Memorial commission by Governor McCray. Dr. Jolly will serve a four-year term. Church Officers Elected George Graves was elected chairman of the official board of the Sev- ; enth Christian Church, Udell and Annette Sts., at a qieeting Monday night. | Other officers elected: Harold Kroetz, • vice chairman,” M. L. Harris, treasi urer; Steele, clerk. F et That Shows Soon Disappears Prominent fat that comes and stays where it is not needed is a burden, a : hindrance to activity, a curb upon pleas- ' ! ure. You can take off the fat where It : shows by taking after each meal and at ■ bedtime, one Marmola Prescription TabI let. These little tablets are as effective and harmless as the famous prescription , from which they take their name. Buy and try a case today. All druggists the world sell them at one dollar for a case’or you can order them direct from the Marmola Cos.. 4612 Woodward Ave., Detroit, Mich. You can thus say goodbye to dieting, exercise and fat, and you i don’t have to use disgusting salves and i greases. —Advertisement.