Indianapolis Times, Volume 35, Number 148, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 November 1923 — Page 6
6
REAL YANK DINNERS INVOLVE SUNDAY ‘COMPANY MANNERS’
How About Wearing Patent Leathers Every Day in the Week? That’s the Problem, Although a Menu Is a Menu N'est Ce Pas? By POLLY HOLMES mT would be just as terrible to have to eat a company dinner every day in the week as it would to have on your “company manners" and patent leather shoes ever-- day in the week. And so, that’s somethin? else again. Would a dinner be typically American if it were a company dinner or would it have to be the kind we'd have any day in the week? Well, the domestic scientists would say, a dinner menu is a dinner menu Sunday or any other day. And remember there must be balance In any menu. N’nw we don't pretend to know-what they mean by balance, but they do. And we wouldn’t want to seem unbalanced any more than they would, should we?
Here are a few from the piles of letters that came in today. From Mrs. Dewey Bryant, old Elm St.. Greencastle, Ind.: Baked Sam. Brown Gravy Mashed. Potatoes Eseailoped Com Cold Slaw Cottas:© Cheese Hot Rolls and Butter t Custard Pl* Coffee or Tea Miss Florence Egleston, 3125 Bellefcmtalne St., sends this: . Roast Pork Loin, Dressing. Gravy Mashed Potatoes Cabbage Slaw with Pimentoes Olives Cranberry Sauce Baited Sweet Potatoes Mine Pie CoSee or Tea Mrs. Laura Metzger, 3933 College Ave., suggests: Turnip* Cooked With Country Sausage Mashed Potatoes Cottage Cheese Home-made Sauer Kraut Lye Hominy Corn Bread Home-made App’e Butter Soft Ginger Bread Pumpkin Pie With Whipped Cream Coffee or Tea Mrs. Gladys and Miss Rose Barone, 5213 Burgess Ave., got around the every day and “company dinner" by splitting the chances. Miss Rose arranging the following: Cream of Tomato Soup Fried Porterhouse Steak Mashed Potatoes. Gravy Head Lettuce with salad Dressing Creamed Peas Hot Rolls Strawberry Preserves Apple Pie with Ice Cream Coffee Mrs. Gladys Barone suggests the following Thanksgiving dinner: Oyster Cocktail with Tomato Sauce Celery Roast Turkey nnj Pressing Mashed Potatoes. Gravy Buttered Asparagus Cranberry Sauce Head Lettuce Salad Dressing Pumpkin Pie Hot Mince Pie Cream Cheese Cojee Salted Kuts 1
SOCIAL ACTIVITES
ITT] RS. WALTER MONTGOMERY, j IfVll 129 Downey Ave., entertained j ‘ * today with a luncheon-bridge ! in honor of Mrs. W. H. TefTt of Camp Bragg. N. C., who is visiting her mother, Mrs. Scott Butler. Mrs. TefTt Is on her way to Phllllpine Islands. The table at which covers were laid for twelve was arranged with a centerpiece of pink chrysanthemums. : The guests Including Mrs. Butler and Mrs. TefTt were. Mesdames Perry | Clifford, Clarice Adams, Walter Krull, j Homer McKinstray, John Atherton, I Ned McGaughey. Robert Hall. Mrs. j F*> E. Glass assisted Mrs. Montgom- ! ery. • • • An initiation luncheon was held today at the home of Edward L. Os-, borne, 845 E. Thirty-Fourth St., by! the members of the Tri Psi Sorority,! the mothers’ sorority of Delta Delta. ! Mrs. William A. Shumaker was initiated during the afternoon. The sorority colors, gold and j gen, were used In the appointments Violet and gold tapers In crystal holder twined with ferns lighted the j tables. Covers were laid for twenty-' two. aXssistin g Mrs. Osborne were Mes- j dgtnes W. T. Fugate. E. F. Barry, Ida Hamilton and Lavina Robinson. • • • Wallace W. Fox, Hollywood, Cal., Is the house guest of Mr9. Frank ii. Seay, 4707 Park Ave. Mrs. Fox, wjjo was Miss Cleo Easton of Indianapolis, wiC go later to New York to Iqln her husband and sail for Cherbourg, France. Edwin Carew, mo tkm picture producer, will meet them •41 Cherbourg and accompany them tp*Algiers, where they will film anew picture. ‘Mrs. Seay will entertain Saturday night to her honor. r• • • Autumn leave® and bittersweet will dt(porate the home of Miss Lucille Wiley, 1605 Wade Bt_, tonight when mhe and Mrs. S. V. Harding entertain With a miscellaneous shower to honor >f- Miss Eva Wiley, who is to marry ’jster Jones, Nov. 21. There will be four tables of bunco. T3e guests: Mesdames Carrie Whltstlne, Charles Schafer. Jessie Haynes, ftatherine Bessenbach, Agnes Whltsttoe, Noel Jones, Misses Martha Whitstlne, Edna and Mylo Smith, Hamilton and Margaret Wiley. hostesses were assisted by Mrs. Albert B. Wiley. • • • .Mrs. John Downing Johnson, 20 B. Eighteenth St., will entertain Saturn ■lay from 3 to 6 p. m. in honor of her daughter. Mrs. John Downing Johnson Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Johnson Jr. hjkve come recently to Indianapolis to ritnke their home.
• Mrs. E. W. Maurer, 35 N. Kealing -%we„ entertained Thursday night with a- miscellaneous shower !n honor of \&ss Fern Eastes, whose marriage to I?h Ira V. Jibb will take place Nov. 8. The decorations were in Halloween c|Sors and the gifts were wheeled in ts the honor guest In a carriage decorated with black and gold crepe paper. There were twenty-flve guests. C. E. Eastes, 318 N Bradley mother of the bride-elect, entertained Tuesday night with a miscellaneous shower for Miss Eastes. • • • Jack Hannan. who wss Miss Nan Alice Sadlier before her recent marriage, was the guest of honor Thursday night at a clever bridge and recipe shower at the home of Mrs. iSdna M. Rink. 4135 Central Ave Decorations and appointments were in Is!loween design. ■‘■The guests included Misses Mary Bipyse. Catherine Royse. Catherine .-sd!ier. Minnie Sadlier, Mary Tynan, .Agnes Tynan, Ann Borcherding, Gertrude Myers, Elizabeth Tynan, Jeanfctte Myers. Justine Fogarty, Gertrude Fogarty, Heartus Beekmon, Gaudencia Beckman. *The hostess was assisted by her j nyQther. Mrs. Edward Rink. ** • , *tri Donald Smith. 4144 College Ave., will lv* the hostess tonight for j
Mrs. Thomas H. Fitz, 5812 Lowell | Ave., suggests: Fruit Cocktail I Roast Pig- With Sage Stuffing Mashed Irish Potatoes Gravy Candied Sweet Potatoes With Toasted •Marshmallows, June Peas Creamed Asparagus Tips on Toast. Celery Cranberry Sauce Hot Bolls Frozen Fruit Salad Apple Pie With Whipped Cream Coffee From Mrs. E. F. Leonard, 511 N. Pine St., comes the following: Baked Chicken Stuffed with Dressing made from Corn Bread and Biscuits Browned Mashed Potatoes Baked Beans Candied Sweet Potatoes Celery Hot Biscuits Coffee Apple Tarts with Whipped Cream Fred Schmadtall, head chef of the Lincoln, and Gustave Vellimo, of the Cipypool, will act as Judges for the American menu contest. On second thought, that la, after you recover from the shock of the foreign sound of these names a® I had to do, ’tis better thus. Their familiarity with foreign dishes will enable them to recognize strictly American foods more easily than any of us. N’est ce pas? The contest will dose Saturday. All menus must be in by Saturday morning at 8 o'clock. Address them to the Menu Editor of the Indianapolis Times. By the way, don’t send in more than one menu. Only one from the number you send in will be presented to the judges anyhow. The winner of the $lO prize will be announced the first of the week.
a guest party given by the Phi Gamma Rho sorority. • • • Miss Lora Frances Lackey entertained Thursday night with a mask dance frolic at her home, 3042 McPherson Ave. The rooms were arranged with Halloween decorations and formed an attractive background for the thirty costumed guests. • • Catherine Merrill Post No. 9 will meet tonight in Morrison Hall at ”:30. • • • The first of a series of three card parties will be given tonight by the women of St. Catherine’s Church in their hall, Tabor and Shelby Sts. The next two affairs will be Nov. 8 and 14. • • • A regular meeting of the Bethel Club will be held Sunday afternoon at the Communal building. 17 W. Morris St. A special election will be held at this meeting to fill two vacancies on the board of directors. Plans will also be made for a dance at Thanksgiving. Dnacing will follow the meeting.
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Ohio’s $30,000 Organ Dedicated Sunday; Phillips Presents Good Balancing Act
The Ohio Theater’s concert organ, built g.t a cost of $30,000, will be inaugurated with a dedicatory recital at 12 o’clock Sunday morning at the Ohio Theater, to which the public is invited. The organ is one of the largest in the State and was designed and constructed oy Marr & Colton. Fran-k Muckenstrum, 1052 N. Mount St., assembled and installed the organ. Lester Huff, formerly organist at the Alhambra and Apollo Theaters', will be the organist for the Ohio, beginning Sunday. At the Ohio, Huff will “play the picture,” that is. he will prepare n special score for each of the featured photoplays shown at the theater, and will also direct the new Ohio Theater Orchestra, which is now being assembled. Each week Huff will also present a solo. Many of his solos will be his original conceptions and compositions. The Marr & Colton organ is a tb-ee-manual, electric action organ. The console of the organ will be hi the center of the orchestra pit and a small baby spotlight will be thrown on Huff as he plays the Instrument. The organ embodies all the grandeur of a symphony orchestra and all the delicacy of a violin solo. Every musical combination known to man will be possible on the organ. Among the tonal colors of th* organ are the families of flutes and diapasons, providing adequate foundation tones with all the percussion instruments, the bass drums, tympani and cymbals, operated by the pedals -I- -|- -|. Eric Phillips Presents a Great Balancing Act The opening act on the new bill at the Palace deserves more than mere mention. The act in question in the balancing turn of Eric Phillips and company. Among the many splendid stunts introduced Is a ladder balancing act. One of the men balances a ladder on his head, then a man and I woman calmly mounts the ladder until the two human beings are balanced on the ladder. Here is a stunt I done in splendid showmanship. It had every one on the edge of their j seats. A real act. None better in Its class. Shelia Terry, a dancer, is presenting, with the aid of two men and a maid, a sort of a musical version of : “Which One Shall I Marry?” The . chief fault with it is that It does not j give Miss Terry enough "solo" oppor- I tuhßy. She is clever on her toes. Act ! nicely mounted. Judson Cole offers some magic j stunts while he engages in police con- j versatlon inten led to make people i laugh. “Flashes From Songland” Introduces a number of singers in operatic numbers. Merrett and Mann belong to the “nut’’ variety of vaudeville entertainers. The movie feature Is “The Drlvin’ Fool.” At the Palace today, Saturday and Sunday. 'Reviewed by Waiter D. Hickman.) -I- -1- IPeggy Wood Comes for limited Stay On Tuesday night at English’s, Peggy Wood will open a two-day engagement. Just three nerformancee, In "The Clinging Vine " It was highly
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
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Upper—The keyboard of the new $30,000 pipe organ which will be dedicated Sunday at the Ohio. Lower —Lester Huff, weil-known organist, who will preside over the large organ. successful In New York and recently concluded its Chicago engagement -l- -l- -IThe attractions on view today include: Matinee Musicals recital at the Murat at 3 p. m.; “Sally," at Eng lish’s; “La France and Byron, at the Lyric; stock burlesque, at the Broadway; “Wine. Woman and Song,” at the Capitol; "The Eleventh Hour,”
at the Apollo; “Enemies of Women,” at the Ohio; "Where the North Begins,” at the Circle; ‘A Lady’s Name,” at the Isis; "The Three Musketeers,” at the Rialto; “The Common Law,” at Mister Smith's, and Fritzle Ridgeway, at Keith’s. ■tii eC lcing l ie LETTER FROM LESLIE PRESCOTT TO LESLIE PRESCOTT, CONTINUED "Beads!” echoed Sydney. "I surely thought, at the time Leslie wore them above her wedding dress and now, that they were real pearls.’’ The waiter looked at me from behind Jack chair and I was sure that ho sardonically drooped one of his yelids. I felt myself grow red and then pale and was glad that Jack exclaimed, "Great heavens, Syd, you wouldn't expect to have my wife wear thousands and thousands of dollars' worth of ptvuis, would you? We are poor people. Syd, sometimes so hard up that I don’t know where t:o get the next dollar to do somethng that I want to do very much.” "No. old follow. I had no Idea that
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HODGIN SERIOUSLY ILL Engagements of Health Board Head Are Cancelled. Dr. E. E. Hodgin. president of the city board of health, is seriously ill at his home, 2645 College Ave. All official engagements of Dr. Hodgin have been cancelled, it was said at the city hall today. you could give your wife a gorgeous string of pearls, but it would be very easy to imagine the daughter of Joseph Graves Hamilton wearing Jewels worth a king’s ransom.” This time I was almost sure that Sydney saw that waiter wink at me but I could do nothing. "They certainly are a wonderful Imitation,” he said. “I know it,” was Jack’s complacent reply. “Why, the other evening you ought to have seen the waiters scramble when N Leslie broke the string. I am quite sure that one of them must have decided that they were real pearls, for when we counted up there was one missing.” I grew hot and cold. Suppose Jack should say something about counting the string how. I wished I had not worn them. To turn the conversation I asked, perhaps a bit too eagerly, “I am sure, Sydney, that you have come over to the baby’s christening. I know when you see him you will be glad to be the godfather to the sweetest bit of human flesh thp-t was ever given to a woman." At this moment it seemed to me that a peculiar glance passed between Sydney and Jack, and Jack said gruffly, "He is a nice little duffer, but you know somebody left him on our doorstep just at the right moment when Leslie's life hung in the balance, and I believe, in fact I know, that she must love him better than hts own mother.” “That’s quite true," I interrupted, "for I am sure that under no circumstances could I have given that baby to another if I had borne him.” "You never know what you can do," interrupted Jack curtly. "Yes, I do.” I answered stubbornly. ”1 do not think very’ much of a mother who would leave her child on a stranger's doorstep." "Perhaps the mother know the circumstances, Leslie.” said Sydney. "What circumstances?’’ Into Jack's voice had crept a tone of truculency. "Why, didn’t the papers have the story that Leslie’s life was despaired of bemuse she was mourning so over losing her child, and wasn't it whls pored among her friends that it seemed as though the only course to pursue In bringing her back from death’s door was to put a baby in her arms?” (Copyright. 1923. NEA Sendee, Inc.) Next: Leslie continues her letter— Who is Junior's father?
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Martha Lee Says Little Deceptions Show Love Cheats Methods
The world is full of men and women who would be horrified at the very idea of playing in a “crooked" card game, and yet r who cheat at the biggest game of all, Love. To cheat at Love DU to cheat at life itself. ~
The man who showers .he girl he loves with gifts he cannot afford, just to win her, and then makes her get along with hardly the bare needs of life after marriage is cheating. The girl who professes deep devotion to a man, because she is discontended at home, or because she is tired of working and wants luxuries is cheating. Perhaps the man thinks he will be promoted, so that he can afford the presents. Perhaps the girl has an idea she will grow to love her husband, If he gives her all the beautiful things she craves. Nevertheless, they are cheats; they are obtaining love under false pretenses. Disillusioned Husband Dear Mia* Lee: I am 26 and have been married four years. My wife is 19.' She told me that she was 18 when we were married r didn't know her real age until three months later. She has a stepfather and did not tret along at home. She ran away and I met her. We were married soon. She didn't want her mother to know it. After three months. I got her to write to her mother. In a week or so. Bhe pot a message that her mother was dying. After she got home, I found out it was a frame-up. We were living in Texas Her mother tried to annul the marriage and couldn't, so I came to Indrnapolis and took my wife hack. We were very happy as long a* she did not get one of the heart-breaking letter* from her mother. Then she would get homesick. I got tired of that, sold my business and came to Indianapolis We lived here two year*. Her mother still kept causing trr ■ ble, o I went to Arkansas and have tee living there since. My mother-in-law kept vritlng ray wife to come home on a visit, so I let her come June 10. I got a letter from her every day for a month. They were real sweet letters. Aug. 13 she sued me for divorce. I came to Indianapolis and got her to drop the suit. She tells me now she 1* going to sue again. I love her better than I do myself and cannot make up my mind to give her up. I buy her good-looking clothe* and she ha* plenty of spending money. She has averaged a hat and a pair of shoes each month. I bought her a SIOO diamond ring, but I still have it. I have offered her every Inducement in the world, but still she holds
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FRIDA Y, NOV. 2,1923
out. I have heard there was another tcVoy/C and that her mother let him come to the., house to see her, but I don’t know for sure.' Please advise me. R. E. H. - Another case of too much in-law. This one could be scared off'’ easily, I think. I suggest that hint to her thp.t unless she stops her’, interference, you will fight any df vorce suit with a suit for of your wife’s affections. I have an' idea the threat would be effective. Your wife did not play fair, buU apparently she would be happy with you now If she had a chance. If gen ' tie words do not win over your mother-' ln-law, I think you would be justified ' in using threats of damage suits to, make her give her daughter at least a trial at happiness. You might re-’ mind her that you have much better) ground for a suit than her daughter: has for a divorce suit. (You have,unless you have not told me all jrourl story.) STOP ITCHING SKIN j ! Zemo the Clean, Antiseptic; Liquid, Gives Prompt Relief There Is one safe, dependable treat-.’ I ment that relieves Itching torture and- ; that cleanse* and soothe* the skin. Ask any druggist for a 850 or sll bottle of Zemo and apply It as directed. Soon you will find that lrri-i’ tatlons. Pimples, Blackheads, EczeituLt Blotches, Ringworm and similar skin* trouble* will disappear. Zemo, the penetrating, satisfying, liquid, 1b all that Is needed, for it; banishes most sldn eruptions, make* the skin soft, smooth and healthy.; Zemo Soap, 25o—Zemo Ointment, 50a.* —Advertisement.
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