Indianapolis Times, Volume 35, Number 143, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 October 1923 — Page 3
SATURDAY, OCT. 27, 1923
“NEW ENGLAND DINNER” ENTERED IN TIMES MENU CONTEST
'Harvest Hand’ Feast Also Mentioned in Search for Most Truly American Meal —$10 Prize Offered, While you are discussing typically American dinners, how about that old-fashioned farm hand dinnW during harvest time. The tables groan (so do the folks). There are two or three kinds of meats, a little of every kind of relish, piles of mashed potatoes, and pie and cake and pudding for dessert.
Mercy on us, no? At least we must have balance, American .or no American. Mrs. W. J. Marks, 3311 N. New Jersey St., suggests a New England boiled dinner with pork boiled with potatoes and cabbage, corn bread muffins, combination vegetable salad, with brown crescent sandwiches, and lemon Jell-o frylt dessert and “home made’* cake and coffee. It’s a funny thing how few foods we Americans eat that are strictly our own concoction. But if we do have something exclusive, we work it to death. , One of our greatest ten-
Price of Selfishness Is 'Future Heartaches
Brick by brick, we build our own future, putting into it the lasting material of love, beauty of character and unselfishness, or the flimsy materials of self-love and selfishness.
Too often, we grab af stolen luxuries today, forgetting that they must be paid for tomorrow. We mistake materia] comforts for the symbols of happiness. A striking illustration of mercenary selfishness has come to me in a letter from a French girl who divorced her soldier husband as soon as his fortune began to dwindle and now is seeking the easiest path. She was taught, she says, to love first herself, then God and then money. In reality, she placed herself and money on an equal plane and leaves God entirely out of the equation. Some day her bubble will burst and leave her with less than nothing. Already, she is puying in bitter cynicism. The piper of life always has to be paid, and his price is heartaches. Only the bricks of character and unselfishness can keep the winds of unhappiness from sweeping through the house of the future.
Her Motto: ‘i Love Me’ Dear Miss Lre: I enjoy reading your question and answer column very much. It It very amusing to read of people falling In lore and wondering whether love can be cultivated. When I look into my mirrow and aee my beautiful round face, my pretty little red mouth, my bunch of blue-black curie and my big violet eyes that reflect worlds of passion. I love ruyeeif for possessing acch beauty, and 1 love God for giving it to m*. and 1 love money because it buys fine pi title*. and fine feathers make nifty birds. I value men as to the extent of their purse; if it’s full. 1 love ’em. if not. poo poo. I hall from Frarce. I married an American soldier who brought me to this country three years ago I love it very much, but there Is a little too much convention, k As soon as my husbard ■ puree started ■ fading, my love started fading, and I got a W divorce. I have been going with a charming old gentleman who has oodles of money He also has a wife who has been sick fa- two years. Her lue Is uncertain, and the old bore may live a long while. Sho stands between her husband and me, else I would be living in their beautiful mansion and directing the servants. I waa employed as a maid in the home. The man couldn't help falling in love with me. ard made me stop work Now I have everything I want, but I want to be his wife, so I can be boss of everything. My first American doughboy has saved up a nice little bunch of money and wants to remarry me. The money la so tempting I think I will take him. because. "A bird in the hand is worth two in the bush.” and by the time the old woman kicks off. mil my beautiful charms may have faded. So shall I wait for him. or remarry my first mans My first mar. loves me very much. Dove is a silly Imagination, that narrows the mind. AU my life I taught to love, first, myself, then God. then money. I am 23 years old and love luxury and want more and more, it is so wonder nil. So please don’t be harsh with yohr. advice, because 1 admire you so very, verymiuch. YVONNE. The admiration of a girl like you m-ans nothing to me. You think you can buy happiness with money or physical beauty. You think love narrows one. How badly mistaken you are! No one could be more narrow than you, whose only thought Is for yourself. And some day you will awaken to find your beauty gone (it will not last long, because there Is no character behind It), your life wasted and your house of dreams fallen. You would give us Americans a very poor opinion of your country and people. Fortunately, we know of the sacrifices they have made, and so know there are not many like you. . You want no harsh advice, but it lls the only kind I can give in this case. Here it is: Break away from this old man and send him back to hit, wife’s side. Break away, too, from your present way of living. Let your first husband remain in the background for a while. Then go to work, honestly, making what you can, without depending on, your looks to “get you by.” Build yourself a soul. Think of other peopje, instead of yourself. Turn your mirrors toward the wall. That way, and only that way, will you ever attain contentment, which Is the basis of happiness. Difference in Religion Dear Miss Lee: Will you please advise me? I am an 18-year-old girl of one religious faith, in love with a 21-year-old boy of another faith. We want to marry and his mother is willing, but my parents object to him because he is not of our faith. Otherwise they are perfectly satisfied. Please help us to decide this question. LOIS. Experience of ether people shows that sometimes this question has been settled satisfactorily, and other times has caused trouble for years. It all depends on the character of the people involved. It always Is inadvisable for a girl to marry with her parents set firmly against her husband; but you may be able to overcome their objections. The main thing is to settle this question of religion between yourselves, for the future, and then stick to your decision. One thing to be determined, before your marriage, is how it would affect your children. In ther’ case, I should advise you to j wait another'year or so. In any event, " as you both are very young. • * • RESPECTFUL SHEIK—Yes. you sound respectful, and I feel sure you mean just what you say. Still, I can not accept the responsibility of granting your request. Sorry. Seeking Friends Dear Miss Lee: I am a girl very near 17 year* old. Everybody says I am good-loor-ing I drees in the latest styles. I graduated from grammer school at the age of 14. My folks could not afford to send me to high school, so I started right out to work and have been working ever since. When I first got ouS of school..the boys wors all crasy about me. Bat I Aroald al-
dencles it appears upon consulting with home economics authorities, is to overfeed our guests. An attempt to cosmopolitanize our menu perhaps, trying to combine our own concoctions with what we have inherited from our English, French, Italian and German fathers. A $lO prize is offered for the most typically American menu submitted to the Menu Editor of The Indianapolis Times before Nov. 3. Judges will be announced later.
'artha Lee Says
waits have to say: “My father does not allow me to keep company or have dates.” Four months ago, my father became an pry and told me to go and get me a fellow and quit “nagging" at him I am Just as attractive as ever: I am just the same, but I cannot get a fellow. My old friend* got tired of asking me to go with them, a* I always refused. Now that I can go they will not even speak to me. All I do is go to work, come home and go to bed If I go to a show. I have to go by myself and come home by niyself. There is no pleasure in that. Please tell me what to do DISGUESTED LILLIAN. Apparently you are making the mistake of concentrating on boy friends, instead of cultivalng girl friends. Start doing the latter, and you also will find It easier to make boy friends as you go along. But don’t try to “get a fellow” until you jare in love and want to mdrry him. Instead, enlarge your circle of friends.
Club Calendar
—Oct. 29 Woman's Rotary—Claypool Hotel. Mrs. O. 'W Pierce and Mrs. Louise Schellschmidt In charge. —Oct. 30 — Amicitia—Hostess, Mrs. H. H. Larisou, 5117 E. Washington St. Halloween party. Assistant hostesses: Mesdames Harry Tevebaugh, James Berry, Jennie Evans Brown, Richard Coleman, Hr K. Matthews. Carl Daly, Louise Broughton, Elizabeth Smith, George .Green, William Spencer. Fortnightly Literary—Propylaeum, 1410 N. Delaware St. "Interviewers and the Interviewed,” Mrs. Grace Norris Houghton; “Younger American Critics,” Mrs. Boyd Gillespie. Independent Social—Hostess, Mrs. Enos Carsten, 70 N. Addison St. —Oct. 31Inter Nos—Hosteqp, Mrs. W. W. McCrea, 2952 N. Illinois St. President’s Day. JMrs. O. M. Plttenger, honor guest. Program, report of Federation convention; music, Mrs. E. C. Rumpler; “Browning, the Man.” Mrs. B. J. Burris. —Nov. 1— Aftermath—Hostess, Mrs. T. W. Demmerly, 220 E. North St. Program, “Noah,” Mrs. E. E. Hamilton; "Sarah.” Miss Margaret Ward. —Nov. 2 Indianapolis Woman’s—Proyplaeum, 1410 St. Program, “JThe Public and the Press,” Miss Evelyn Butler; “A Close Up,” Mrs. Josephine Hyde; discussion lead by Mrs. Mary A. E. Woollen and Mrs. Sarah F. Wagner. Irvington Fortnightly Hostess, Mrs. W. H. Prescott, 15 S. Bolton Ave., assisted by Mrs. J. A. Everett. Program. “Novels of Story Interest.” Joseph Hergesheimer, Harry Leon Wilson and Mary Roberts Rinehart, discussed by Mrs. Samuel McGaughey. Mary Johnstone. Ellen Glasgow, Winston Churchill and Emerson Hough, discussed by Mrs. A. R. Robinson. —Nov. 3 Saturday Afternoon -Literary'— Hostess, Mrs. Willard Boyle, 3232 N. New Jersey St., assisted by Mrs. Earl A. Hicks. Program: Drama, “Aspects of Modem Drama,” by F. W. Chandler; "The Return of Peter Grimm,” by David Belasco, Mrs. Henry Prescott; “The Fool,” by Channlng Pollock, Mrs. David A. Hadley. W.C.T.U. Notes Artman Y. P. B. will meet at the home of Mrs. F. H. Burns, 2938 E. Washington St., Apartment 3, Thursday at 8 p. m. A candy pull will follow the business hour. University Heights W. C. T. U. will meet Tuesday at the home of Mrs. Mary Goebel, Madison Ave., University Heights. x Brightwood Union will meet Thursday at the home of Mrs. Mary Shelby, 2160 Olney St. Every member nlease be present. Mrs. Lydia Yount, 815 N. Oxford St., will be the hostess for the North East Union at her home Nov. 1. This Is a night rally meeting. The Rev. Walter C. Davis, pastor of the First English Lutheran Church will speak. The Halloween party which waa to have been held under auspices of the soldiers and sailors department at Ft. Benjamin Harrison Wednesday night, has been postponed until Nov. 2. Unions desiring to contribute sugar, cream or money are asked to send them to Mrs. Carrie Handy, 3118 Central Ave. The Anna Gordon Union will meet Monday at 2 p. m.. at the Americanization Renter, 225 Bright St.
Qroup of Charming Autumn Brides at Home in City
—Photos by Carl Bretzman, Jr. LEFT TO RIGHT: MRS. GAYLE V. POLISTER MRS. H. A. SHIDELER AND MRS. WILLIAM. A. GALE.
Mrs. Gayle V. Polister, who was Miss Elizaboth Selvage, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Selvage, 3401 Winthrop Ave., was married Wednesday night. Mr. and Mrs.
NEW MEIERS TO BE WELCOMED OK Y.W.C.A.SUNDAY Dr. Amos S. Hershey of I. U. Open Forum Speaker Friday Evening, Two outstanding events at the Young Women's Christian Association next week will be a recognition service Sunday afternoon for 400 women and girls who have joined since Sept. 11 and an open forum on Friday night with Dr. Amos S’. Hershey, head of the political science department of Indiana University, as speaker. The recognition service will be held in the green parjors at 4 p. m. by the membership department, Mrs. F. W. Wood, chairman. A greeting from the association will be given by Mrs. Fred Hoke, president of the board of directors. Miss Pearl B. Forsyth, general secretary, will be In charge ol’ devotions. A special musical number will be given by Miss Florence E. Lanham and Miss Chrlßtlne Groh. Mrs. F. F. McCrea, who was the first president of the Indianapolis Y. W. C. A., will speak on "What the Y. W. C. A. Means to Me.” The program will close with a special sc. vice in which the old and new members present will affirm their loyalty to the purpose of the Y. W. C. A. The Tadpoles will have a Halloween mask party Monday night at the home of Vera Campbell, 37 N, Keystone Ave. The student Industrial cooperation group will have supper Monday at 6 p. m. at the Y. W. C. A. building. The girls will rehearse for the play, “Colored Glasses,” which is to be given at the open house Nov. 11. The Federation meetnig Wednesday night will be a Halloween party. A “setting-up” conference of the industrial committee and the federation council will be held Saturday afternoon. The students’ council will hold its regular meeting at the association building Friday at 7 p. m. Chief business will be discussion of th# annual Christmas sale by the students council the first week in December. The Business Women's Bible class will have no meeting this week, as the Rev. Willard O. Trueblood, instructor, will be out of the city. The next meeting will be Nov. 8, from 6:50 to 7:30 p. m. Discussion of the “History of Our Printed English Bible” will be continued. The Christmas Gift class will be organized Thursday night with Miss Constance Dugdale as Instructor. This class will meet Thursdays from 7 to 9 p. m. for eight weeks. Students should enroll for the class immediately. A Girls’ Reserve Club was organized at School No. 16. Mrs. L. S. Pickard Is adviser. Officers are: Josephine Mlshowney, president; Mary Abshler, vice president; Maude Adams, secretary, and Alice Adams, treasurer. The Association of Women Bible Teachers, which meets Thursdays at 10 a. m. at the Y. W. C. A., has elected these officers: Mrs. J. W. House, president; Mra. Bert Garwood, vice president; Mrs. L. G. Poe, secretary; Mrs. W. C. Ackman, assistant secretary, and Mrs. Edward Kramer, treasurer.
The Mission Study Class will have Mrs. I. C. Furnas as leader Friday.
Music'Notes
Donn Watson, violinist of the faculty of the Metropolitan School of Music, is in Cincinnati studying under Emil Bare, Hungarian violinist. While in Hungary Bare was head of the violin department of the Budapest National Conservatory and concert master of the Royal Opera Orchestra. Watson will return Monday. J The Mu Phi Epsilon alumnae club wIU meet at the Splnk-Arms for luncheon Friday noon. A business meeting will follow. Miss Frieda Heider, soprano, gave a program for the Muncie Silks lodge Friday evening.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Pollster are at home at 4106 Byram Ave. Mrs. H. A. Shideler was Miss Georgia Barker, daughter of Mrs.
gOCIAL Activities ENTERTAINMENTS WEDDINGS BETROTHALS
.~7] RS. O. M. PITTENGER. newlylly|| elected president of the Indi- * * ana Federation of Women’s Clubs, will be the honor guest at a tea Tuesday afternoon at the Woman's Department Club, Seventeenth and N. Meridian Sts. Officers of the affiliated clubs and Seventh district and directors of the Department Club will be hostesses. Mrs. A. S. Ayres is In charge of arrangements. There will be no Invitations. • • • Mr. and Mrs. L. T. Glldden, 670 E. Seventeenth St., will entertain tonight with a bryge party. The guests wiy include Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Walker of Danville, Ind.; Mr. and Mrs. Walker Evans. Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Sims, Mr. and Mrs. William Polk, Mr. and Mrs. A. D. Pratt, Miss Vivian Stevens and, Donald Delbrook. • • • Dqlta Sigma Phi fraternity entertained Friday night with a hay ride and dinner at the home of Victor I>andls. The guests were members of the Sigma Phi Soromty. •• • \ General chairman the Kappa Alpha Theta Alumna Club bazaar Nov. 19-20 at the Woman’s Department Club are Miss Marie Field and Mrs. Henry Hombrook. Committees in charge of booths are: Apron, Miss Dorothea Reissner, and Mrs. Blatton Coxen; handkerchief, Miss Margaret Williams and Miss Jeanette Benedict; novelty, Mrs. Clayton Mogg and Mrs. Ruth Ranler; doll. Misses Meta and Hilda Lieber; candy, Miss Mildred Morgan and Mrs. Arthur Baynhatn: fancy work. Miss Betty Fisher and Miss Eleanor Carpenter. • e e Epsilon chapter of Alpha Delta Theta sorority, recently installed at Butler College, will entertain with a reception Sunday afternoon, Nov. 5, ut the chapter house, 131 S. Butler Ave., from 3 to 6. Miss Mildred Ross is in charge of the Invitation committee, Miss Lillian Selby and Miss Ruth Wooley in charge of decorations. • • • Phi Sigma Delta Sorority will entertain with a Halloween party Thursday at the home of Miss Kathleen Klaiber, 804 N. Rural St. The regular meeting will be at the home of Miss Phyllis Nordstrom, Friday evening. • • s Invitations for the annual Charity feall Nov. 30, given by the Indlanapolio Free Kindergarten and Children’s Aid Society will be Issued the first week In November. The Invitation committee consists of Mrs. J. W. Kern, chairman, Mrs. J. H. Taylor and Mrs. Ernest De Wolf Wales. • • • Hostesses to assist Mrs. W. H. Bobbitt, Mrs. Dirk, H. A. Kolff and Miss Martha Beeson at the benefit card party of the Caroline Scott Harrison Chapter of D. A. R. at the Chapter house, 814 N. Pennsylvania St., Monday afternoon will be hostesses: . G. L. Wainwright, Alfred Conklin, Alexander Cavens, Edward Ferger, U. G. Bakdr, Harold Cunning, Albert TT Bunch, Mary Knippenberg, Orlin Hudson, N. E. Harold, William Corfnelly, Walter Ford, William Kilman, J. F. Barnhill, Lewis Cline, Joel Whittaker, Thomas A. Wynn, George Feeney, Henry C. Thornton, Harold Stuckey, George T. O’Connor, Dick Richards, Dick Miller, E. D. Clark, Hood. A. B. Wagner, H. L. Wilson, J. T. Saulter, Henry C. Keteham.
Gage Hoag, J. H. Laird, Frank Planner, Clinton Lasher, George Philip Meier, Marshall T. Levy, L. O. Hamilton, F. A. Gurley, W. G. Kadle. Ephriam Inman, Vick Pennell, James L. Kalleen, Martha Yoh Marston, Cushman Hoke, Edward J. Hecker, D. L. Bash, Thomas W. DeHass, Edward L. Kruse, Robert B. Keith, James Sturgis, R. Harry Miller, Eugene H. Darrach, J. F. Edwards, Walter Marmon, John Downing Johnson, Charles A. Edwards, Wilbur Johnson, Charles F. Voyles, A. L. Beck, Edward T. Klee, Mrs. John A. Eusy, Charles Mayer Jr., lone Wilson, J. T. Peden, Burton B. Field, Lewis J. Borenstein and John B. Newpam • • • Miss Mabelle and Miss Myrtle Mayer, 2030 N. Alabama 6L, will entertain tonight with an Informal Hah*
oora Barker of Westfield, befor* her marriage Wednesday afternoon. Mrs. William Arthur Gale is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. R. P. Ob-
loween mask dance. Among guests will be Mrs. Bert E. MacDonald and her daughter, Miss Betty Jean, of Muskegon, Mich. • • • Mrs. C. H. Regula, 2062 Ashland Ave., will entertain the American War Mothers Thursday with a chill luncheon. All the War Mothers of the State are Invited. • • • College Alumna Clubs are planning meetings for completing plans for their booths at the “College Melting Pot,” the bazaar to be given Nov. 2324 at the Splnk-Arms. Indiana verslty alunma club will meet Monday evening at the home of Mrs. Robert Miller, Hampton Dr.; Radcliffe College club will meet Tuesday evening at the home of Mrs. T. C. Howe, 80 Audubon Circle; Wellesly College group will sew for their booth at an all-day meeting Wednesday at the homo of Mrs. Frances Fauvre, 41 W. Thirty-Second St.; Mount Holyoke alumnae will lunch at Ayres’ Tea Room at 12:15 p. m. Saturday. STATE SALES DISCUSSED Warden*, SuperlntendentM and Trustees Discuss Marketing. Wardens', superintendents, and boards of trustees of Indiana penal and corrective institutions conferred here today to determine a uniform method -yf marketing products made by inmates. Present were: Governor McCray, Attorney General U. S. Leah, State Examiner Lawrence F. Orr, State Prison Warden E. J. Fogarty, State Reformatory Superintendent G. A. H. Shtdeler, Indiana State Farm Superin tertdent Ralph Howard and boards of trustees for the institutions.
A Bank’s Character Discriminating persons in seeking a reliable bank for deposit 'of funds will scrutinize the list of the bank’s officers and directors to judge its character. They wish to know whether these men are reputable and experienced bankers and business men. If they are, sound management and safety may be assumed. To those desiring service in commercial banking, savings or trusts, we invite attention to the directors who are actually in control of this bank’s affairs:
HENHY C. ATKINS President E. C. Atkins & Cos. FREDERIC M AYRES President h. S. Ayres & Cos. ALBERT BAKER Baker & Daniels VINSON CARTER Company’s Vice-President ALLEN W. CONDUITT President Condultt Auto Cos. HUGH DOUGHERTY Company’s Vice-President ALBECT S. GOLDSTEIN President Goldstein Bros., Inc WILLIAM F. HAYES Capitalist CHARLES W. JEWETT Attorney ALFRED KAUFFMANN Vice-President Link Belt Cos.
Jfletdjer feabtnga anb Crufit Company Evans Woollen, President Northwest Corner Market and Pennsylvania CAPITAL AND SURPLUS TWO MILLIONS MEMBER FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
linger, 3623 N. Pennsylvania St. Her marriage took place last week. Mr. and Mrs. Gale are at home at 315 E. Maple Rd.
Clubs & Meetings Indianapolis Shrine No. 6, W. S. of J., will entertain with a card party tonight at 119 E. Ohio St. The regular meeting of the Alpha Gamma Phi. a sorority, will be held Monday night at the home of Mrs. Charles Marlett, 815 S. Illinois St. The Wednesday Needle Club, Myrtle Temple, No. 7, Pythian Sisters, will give a card party Monday afternoon At 119 E. Ohio St. The Entre Nous Club will meet at the home of Miss Florence Lighthiser, 3720 E. New York St.. Monday night. The Gao-Foi Club will hold a regular business meeting at the home of Miss Dorothy McManamon, 912 E. Twenty-second St. The Court of Honor Lodge will give a masquerade ball at the Denison Hotel tonight. The Young Ladles’ Sodality of St. Catherine’s Church will entertain with a card party Tuesday evefflng at Shelby and Tabor Sts. Miss Margaret Higgins is chairman of the committee in charge. DELIVERY IS'~TOO~LATE Employe Found With Fowls and Two Sides of Bacon. Fowls and meat were being m'wed from the Kuhn Bros. Meat Market, 407 W. Michigan St. Lieutenant Drinkut, and Patrolmen Auls and Madden, covered all the exits Friday night and when Charles Alexander, colored. 217 W. Fourteenth Bt., an employe, came out of the place, the officers thought it was too late an hour to be delivering for the company. Two sides of bacon and four dressed chickens,* were in the bag, police say.
DIRECTORS
HUGH McK. LANDON Chairman Executive Committee and Vice-President ALBERT E. METZGER Company Vice-President SAMUEL D. MILLER Miller, Dailey Thompson NICHOLAS H. NOYES Treasurer Ell Lilly A Cos. ALMUS G. RUDDELL President Oentral Rubber A Supply Cos. CASSIUS C. SHIRLEY Attorney JOSEPH H. SPELLMIRB Metropolitan Realty and Investment Cos. WILLIAM M. TAYLOR President Chandler A Taylor Cos. CHARLES N. THOMPSON Artorney EVANS WOOLLEN Company’s President
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LETTER FROM MRS. JOSEPH GRAVEB HAMILTON TO LESLIE PRESCOTT This Is the first time, my dear daughter, that I have felt I could sit down and talk to you in the way I usually do in my letters. Your father has been lying outdoors in porch swing all day. He was able to walk out of the room this morning and seemed quite like himself. I have not heard from Alice in oyer a week, Suppose she is very busy getting ready to be presented at court. Oh, my dear child, when I think of it all, it seems like a fairy tale to me. You know, my dear, I had little education and yous father even less thar I. I don’t know that I ever told you, but we spent all the evenings of the first two years after we were married poring over books and trying to learn. Os course, your father is one of the greatest steel men In the country today and I believe there is nothing about a steel mill or steel machinery that he does not know. He has learned it a,H In the hard school of experience and what he could get from books in his evenings. I was about Alice's age when you ware born, dear, and we were so very, very poor that someone who knew and liked your father in the mills persuaded his wife to send me your layette. I had to be up and around my house a little over a wee* after you were born, dear, but thank God we both were always well. I can’t pretend to describe to you all the sacrifices an<J economies that I practiced. I never dreamed that I w-ould be able to give you the splendid education that is yours and certainly I never dreamed that one of my
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daughters would be presented at fnffland’s court. Your father and I were talking about it the other night, aaid we agreed that all this Is a part of the heritage of America. Your father said: "That is the reason why I allowed Leslie to marry a comparatively poor man and why I didn’t settle a half million dollars on her at the time of marriage. I believe that every man and woman should strike out for themselves. I would not for anything In the world take away from Jc.ek and Leslie the great joy that you and I had of saving and sacrificing.” Truly It Is a joy, Leslie You w'.il come to know that when you have lived along far enough to get the right perspective on all the little upheavals Os your first years of marriage. From the tone of your letters lately, dear, I have come to the conclusion that you have been having one of those ypheavals now. I do not want to pry into your affairs, but please let me tell you that the first three years of married life are the crucial ones. In them you must really get acquainted with your husband and he with you. You must adjust yourselves to an entirely different environment and mode of living. Whenever you feel that" maybe John is not as fine and iplendid as you first imagined, do not forget that he may be having the same disappointment over you. I intended to write you a newsy letter, but instead I am preaching a little. I’ll close before I become prosy. Lovingly, MOTHER. (Copvright, 1923, NEA Service, Iric.) NEXT: Letter from Leslie Prescott to herself—The first three years.
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