Indianapolis Times, Volume 35, Number 128, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 October 1923 — Page 5

TUESDAY, OCT. 9, 1923

gOCIAL Activities entertainments WEDDINGS BETROTHALS

RESIDENT’S day was observed t today by the Inter Alia Club ■ I with a luncheon at the Severin. The club colors, yellow and white, were used in the decoration of golden rod and garden flowers. The tables were lighted with yellow tapers in crystal holders. Covers for twentyfive were laid. Mrs. O. T. Behymer, outgoing president, and Mrs. H. M. Cochrane, Incoming president, gave short talks. The affair was in the hands of the program committee consisting of Mrs. C. P. Fitchey, Mrs. O. T. Behymer, Mrs. S. W. Todd, Mrs. Fred I. Jones and Mrs Volney Huff. * * • The Irvington Chatauqua Club met today at the Spink-Arms for a President’s day luncheon. A low basket of blue and cream and orange flowers decorated the table. Blue tapers in silver holders lighted the table at which covers were laid for sixteen. The ceremony of transferring the gavel and of reading -the constitution was followed by a talk on "Colonial Writers" by Mrs. Pierre Van Sickle and one on the "Knickerbockers” by Mrs. W. L. Ewing. New officers: Mrs. I. L. Miller, president: Mrs. Charles Hill, vice president; Mrs. Roy L. Kenady, secretary; and Mrs. Daniel S. Adams, treasurer. * • • Mrs. Efifie Garriott and little daughter, Jewel, of Bedford, Ky., have returned home after a week’s visit with | Mrs. Goldie Perkinson, 930 Fletcher Ave., and Mark Perry and other relatives in the city. • • * The Marion County chapter of American War Mothers will meet 2 p. m. Thursday at the Spink-Arms. Delegates will be elected to the State convention at the Spink-Arms Oct. 24-25. • • * Mrs. R. G. Spillman. 3908 Carrollton Ave., was the hostess today for a luncheon in honor of the members of the Agenda Club. Marigolds and garden flowers were used to decorate. Pink tapers In silver holders lighted the table. Covers were laid for eighteen. * • • The S. B. G. Euchre Club will meet Wednesday afternoon with Mrs. Ida Hoffman, 809 W. New York St. * • • The George H. Thomas Post, W. R. C., will entertain with a luncheon Friday at the luncheon in honor of Capt. A. J. Ball, department commander. Reservations may be made with Mrs. Katherine Mcßride Hoster, 2531 Broadway. • • * Miss Lucille Springer, 2932 Broadway, accompanied by Misses Lucille and Gwyneth Knee, will leave shortly to accompany the Stuart Walker players on their tour for the winter season. They will play the incidental music for the company. ... The home of Mr. and Mrs. Herbert H. Cummings, 421 E. Twenty-third St., was the scene of a pretty wedding Monday afternoon when their sister. Miss Pauline Cummings, became the

jyjarthaLee Her Column

Feelings Hurt Dear Misa Lee: I nave been going: with a fellow for juet a week, but during that time nig mannerly ways and actions have made me like him very much. I am 16 years old The other niyht my boy Iriend and I and another girl and her boy iriend went to a theater together. Alter we came out. as I am awfully quick tempered. I said something that hurt his ieelinjs. How can I make this boy like me. as it will nearly kill me to lose his friendship? Please don't tell me I am too young, for I am more like an older person than a young one. HEART-BROKEN RUTH No on© ever is too young to have friends, but a girl of 16 is too young to take a boy-and-girl friendship like a matter of life and death. As you seem to be to blame, and as you need something to teach you to control your ■emper, I think apology would be good for your soul. So, next time you see the boy, let him know you are sorry. Don't write to him. 'Youthful Love' Dear Priend: I and a boy friend think we love each other. Both of us are 14. We have been pals since early childhood. We used to go to shows, but not alone. Mother round out I liked him and tries to make him out as a "silly boy.” She has my word I'll never go with him again, and I certainly would not break my word But I cannot keep my mind ofT him. He is different from other boys, nicer, more polite. Don't tell me. Mts3 bee. to go with other boys and not to “stick” to one. Some bovs I just cannot stand. BOBBIE LEE. No, my dear, I don’t advise that you "go with” other boys. Instead, I suggest that you be the child you should at your age, and go with no boys. Let them be your friends and playmates. Don’t try not to think of this boy. Instead, remember him as your pal. Green-Eyed Monster Dear Miss Lee: I have been going with a very nl~e young m.in four months steady. He is very Jea’ous of me. I am only 17 and think myself too young to be tied down to one fellow. I was with him three times a week. One night he eal’ed up and learned 1 was out with another friend. He met me next day and said how sorry he was we were going to quit. He said he loved me. and I felt the same about him. He said it was my fault because I went with other fellows. I have met another friend of whom I think very much, and he seems to like me. He is 21. 1 don't know which to take for my best friend. How can I win my

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Mrs . Anthony Cook to Speak to D. A. R,

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MRS. ANTHONY WAYNE COOK. Mrs. Anthony Wayne Cook of Cooksburg. Pa., will speak Wednesday morn ng at the convent on of the Daughters of the American Revolution which opened today at Bedford. Wednesday noon there will be a luncheon and a banquet Wednesday n ght. A motor trip to French L.ck is planned for Thursday.

bride of Walker Bray, son of Mrs. Florence Bray, 1720 Ms College Ave. Before an altar of ferns and greenery arranged at the fireplace, the ceremony was read by the Rev. O. W. Fifer. Miss Ruth Rainier( harpist, played the bridal music. Mrs. Cummings, matron of honor, wore a gown cf orchid faille beaded with crystal beads and draped on the side. Miss Carrie Cummings, sister of the bride, was maid of honor. She wore a gown of orchid velvet beaded with crystal and amethyst beads. Both attendants carried arm bouquets of Mrs. Aaron Ward roses tied with silver and gold tulle. The bride was gowned in white velvet beaded with silver and wore a silver wreath in her hair. Her shower bouquet of bride’s roses and lillies of the valley, was tied with white and silver tulle streamers. A reception was held after the ceremony. The dining room was arranged with baskets of orchid garden flowers and lighted with orchid tapers in crystal holders. Assisting at the reception were Mrs. Howard Kimball and Mrs. William Ernest Cummings. Mr. and Mrs. Bray left immediately for Cleveland, Ohio, where they will be at home after Oct. 15. • • • The meeting of the Hoosier Tourists’ Club, which was to have been held Thursday at the home of Mrs. Harry Forte, has been postponed because of the death of Mrs. Clarence Hall. ... Mrs. Elmer Gay, 380 S. Emerson Ave., was the hostess this afternoon for the first meeting of the season of the Irvington Tuesday Club.

friend back? He speaks to me. Which boy would you advise me to go with? BROKENHEARTED BABY. You certainly would be foolish to give up all other boy friends for this one. He has no right to ask it. And as he seems unwilling to be your friend on any other grounds, I don't see that there’s much you can do. CAT’S WHISKERS—(I) Use common sense to overcome,jealousy. It only makes you unhappy and accomplishes no possible good. (2) The man’s statement is ridiculous. Os course "decent" girls have more than one man friend. He is trying to uphold the "double standard,” which long since has been discredited, even though, unfortunately, It still is accepted by many people. Srtalghtline Frocks Cloth of gold with very wide stripes of green, purple 4>r flame color is used to make stunning straightline evening ' frocks. “PHILLIPS” MILK OF JAGNESIA Always say “Phillips” and Refuse Imitations Protect your doctor and yourself by asking for “Phillips,” the original Milk of Magnesia prescribed by physicians for 60 years. Don’t accept a substitute for the genine “Phillips.” 26-cent bottles, also 50-cent bottles contain directions —any drug store.— Advertisement.

Daughter and ‘Side-Kick’ Declares Papa Lloyd George Is Not a Great Man, but ‘Some Daddy’

By ALEXANDER HERMAN NEA Service Staff Writer 7jryj EW YORK. Oct. 9 David \ Lloyd George, ex premier of Great Britain, and one of the Big Four who held the destiny of the world in their hands during the war, isn’t so much. Leastwise, that’s what his daughter and "side-kick’’ (British interpretation, "pal”). Miss Megan Lloyd George, tells him. “And I guess he believes it, too," she says smilingly. "I make him believe it.” Together with her mother. Dame Margaret, Megan is accompanying her famous father on his first trip through America. "If this excitement keeps up,” she said in her first American interview, “I mayn’t get the chance to see him as much as I do at home. But when I do, I'll keep right on telling him—"l don’t think he’s so great as a statesman.’ But as a father. “That’s another mat + er.” she said. “He is simply the grandest dad any girl ever had. "From early morning when I hear him splashing around in his bath, till iate at night when I go to bed, we just keep joshing each other. Pulls His Leg “ ‘Pulling my leg’ is what he likes to call it. And I have to pull some, to beat his wit! “When I get to him too often, he simply sits me on his knee, just as he used to do when I was a baby, .and gives me a talking to. But I am afraid that his five grandchildren are beginning to depose me from favor. Sometimes I think that he is an even better grandfather than father.’’ Perhaps she’ll be a grandmother some day, and then her children will make up for the lost favor? “Never,” snapped back Megan. “Thta’s one thing I’m determined about. I shan’t get married.” But it’s going to be hard to keep 'her many admirers from falling In

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LETTER FROM LESLIE PRESCOTT TO LESLIE PRESCOTT, CARE OF THE SECRET DRAWER I am putting this letter from mother, dear little Marquise, with my other documents in this drawer which you gave to me as a repository of my most secret and sacred thoughts. From it you will see how impossible it would be to bother either mother or father with demands for money at this time and you, of course, know already of Jack’s need. I am literally almost crazed with anxiety and almost broken-hearted also over Jack’s unfeeling conduct. When I received this letter yesterday from mother telling me that dad was so ill, I didn't know" what to do. I did not dare telephone to Jack at the office and explain to him what mother had written and I knew if I should telephone and ask him to come home he would not come unless I gave him an adequate reason for coming. Jack does not like me to telephone

OFTEN USEFUL IN BIG FAMILY Black-Draught Proves Valuable Remedy for Liver and Stomach Troubles, Say North Carolina Parents. Leland, N. C.—“l will write In regard to Black-Draught liver medicine, as I have been using It more than eighteen years,’’ says a letter written from this place by Mr. S. F. Mintz of R. F. D. 2. “I keep It in my home all the time, for it is mostly our family medicine. When we begin to feftl fe.verish or sluggish, with trouble from the liver or stomach, we take a dose of Thedford’s Black-Draught and the trouble is soon over I mostly buy a dollar package at a time, and it has saved me many a bill.” Mrs. Mintz says she takes BlackDraught for colds and biliousness. “It is a low country where we live,” she says, “and in the spring when 1 get up feeling sluggish and ache, nothing I eat tastes good, I know my liver needs to act and I use Black-Draught, and very spon I am feeling just fine . . . I have eight children and we make tea from Black-Draught for them when they have colds.” For more than 80 years, Thedford’s Black-Draught has been a popular, standard remedy for simple liver, stomach and bowel troubles. More than nine million packages are now sold per anryum, as a result of its >roven merit. Refuse imitations! Insist on —Advertisement.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

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MEGAN LLOYD GEORGE. HER MOTHER. DAME MARGARET, AND HER DADDV, DAVID LOYD GEORGE (RIGHT TO LEFT), PHOTOGRAPHED AS THEY LANDED IN NEW YORK FOR THE FIRST GLIMPSE OF AMERICA

love with her. For Miss Megan is a very pretty girl—blond, with hair not bobbed, a twinkling eye and a nose just turned up the least bit. She seems to use no powder or lipstick. She says she doesn’t smoke. But doesn't mind if others do. “I'm here on a holiday,” she says. “I want to see this great country. And I want to meet its people. I especially want to find out what American girls are like in their own land. "And I guess daddy does, too.” Miss Megan is through with school, which she attended both in England and France. "I’m interested in politics, or course,” she says. "I’ve been brought

to his office nor to visit him there. He is most peculiar about it. Naturally I waited until he came home that night and I was nearly sick with anxiety and fear. The first thing he said to me when he returned was, "Did you telephone your father?" For answer I silently handed him this letter of mother’s. When he finished there was not one word of sorrow for my father or one word of sympathy for me. Instead he said, “Os course you are getting ready to go home. There is a train leaving at nine tonight. Have you got a ticket?” “No dear, you see by the letter that mother expressly told me not to come. She said I would only be a trouble and that I could do nothing for father.” ”1 wasn’t thinking of your father now. It is not necessary- I know that everything possible will be done for your father and I know that you could do him no good if you were

A , Columbus • Used His iPnNm Credit— Not You? jSlsfi I iffl One °f the greatest exliist | amples ever known of a \ I lifil man 2 ettin 2 credit on his word alone was Columbus. Cr When he told Queen Isabella that he believed the W world was round and could prove it she had such faith in that she pawned her jewels and paid his exThat's something worth * thinking about. Are you doing without the fashionable clothes you need because you haven't ready cash? Come to me! I have enough faith in you to ask you for only a dollar down on a sls purchase and then a dollar a week, or $2 down on a S3O purchase and then only $2 a week. I’ll take your word that you’ll pay like Queen Isabella took Columbus’ word.

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up in it. But I don’t know if I’ll ever take it up as a career.” lakes Things Welch Sometimes' when she gets real chummy with her father, she cracks her Jokes in Welch. The Lloyd George family likes things Welch. “Even Welsh rarebit,” Megan went on, with that ever-present twinkle in her eye. "Though its Welsh origin has long been in obscurity.” As soon as she landed, she and her mother went around looking for a Welsh maid. “No shopping for us. if we can help it,” put in Mother Lloyd George. "We r re here to see the country.” But they aren’t going to see very

there. Certainly you must know that battle, murder or sudden death to them would not change things with us. Now we must look out for ourselves. lam quite sure that old Bullock lias his suspicions already. I tell you I must have that money. "Os course you can see now that it would be impossible for you to writ© and ask your mother for it, but you certainly could go to her and ex plain. Even if she is so edtppletely bound up and anxious about your father’s condition, she certainly will have some sympathy for your trouble. Os course she will understand that my trouble is your trouble, Leslie.” I could not make myself think, little Marquise, that it was my Jack who was talking. The tone of his voice was completely changed. This man who was speaking was a total stranger to me, one who was thinking only of himself and how to get rid of paying for his own wrong doing. What shall I do, little Marquise? What shall I do? (Copyright, 1923, NEA Service. Inc.) NEXT: A movie magnate writes to ajiothob—Paula Perier’s fame.

much of each other, for Lloyd George will be kept busy attending banquets and lectures: and Miss Megan and Dame Margaret will be kept busy at luncheons and receptions. , “I hope that father’s diet won't be too much disturbed,” Megan added thoughtfully. “He is rather regular in his eating.” What does he eat? “Fruit and fish mostly,” added the daughter. "With some bacon and eggs for breakfast: and some soup for dinner. Lunsheon is very light, one course of something and some coffee.” “But I guess dad is old enough to take care of himself, when we aren’t around.”

Household Suggestions

Preventing Waste Before chopping suet, melt it in the oven, strain and let It get cold. It is more easily chopped and waste is prevented. Favorite Curtains Curtains of gold or silver meshed marquisettes and voiles are very popular at this time. Dry Fruits If you lack storage apace, dry as many of your fruit and vegetables for winter use as you can.

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PUMPKIN PIE hen the frost is on the W pumpkin” most mer, folk begin to think it's time for pumpkin pie. And most of these men. who know nothing whatever about the baking of these pies, have very definite ideas on the subject. They agree that the pies should be “thick,” meaning an inch and a hlf deep: that they should be creaming and smooth and nqt too stiff, but by no means “watery.” And then they disagree when it comes to seasoning. Some like them dark with spice and others say “No mixture of strong spices in my pumpkin pie.” So for the benefit of the woman who “strives to please” these recipes are offered. Puffy Pumpkin Pie One cup sifted pumpkin, 2-3 cup sugar, 2 eggs, IYz cups milk, V 2 cup cream, 1 teaspoon ginger, Vfe teaspoon cinnamon, Vi teaspoon cloves, V 6 teaspoon salt, pastry. Beat yolks of eggs with sugar, salt and spices. Add pumpkin and milk and cream and mix thoroughly. Beat whites of eggs until stiff and dry andfold in mixture. Turn into a deep pie pan lined with rich pastry and bake In a hot oven at first and a slow oven to prevent the custard from watering. Pie With Meringue One cup sifted pumpkin, 2-3 cup sugar, 3 eggs, 2 cups milk, M teaspoon ginger, 1 teaspoon cinnamon. Vi teaspoon salt, 2 tablespoons powdered sugar, baked pie shell. Beat yolks of three eggs and whites of two with sugar until light. Add pumpkin, milk, spices and salt and cook over a slow fire util thick and smooth. Turn Into ba.rsd pie shell. Beat white of egg until stiff and dry. Beat in sugar and spread over pump-

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kin mixture. Bake eight minutes in a moderate oven to set and color the meringue. The last two recipes are sort Os special, company pies. (Copyright, 1923, NEA Service, Inc) Why Stay Fat? You Can Reduce The answer of most fat people is that it is too hard, too troublesome and too dangerous to force the weight down. Marmola Prescription Tablets overcome a:l these difficulties. They are absolutely harmtess. entail no dieting or exercise and have the added advantage of cheapness. A case is sold at $1 by all druggists the world over, or send the price direct to the Marmola Cos., 4012 Woodward Ave.. Detroit. Mich. Now that you know this, you have no ex-' use for being fat. but can reduce steadily and easily without going through long sieges of tiresome exercise and starvnfiou diet or tear of bad effects —Advertisement.

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