Indianapolis Times, Volume 35, Number 219, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 January 1924 — Page 6
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Qocial Activities ENTERTAINMENTS WEDDINGS BETROTHALS
M] RS. CARLTON DANIEL and Mrs. W. A. Steir.hilber, 4134 ■ Ruckle St., entertained today \vi;h a luncheon bridge in honor of Miss Ruth Keller of Louisville, Ky., Airs Daniel's sister. The rooms were attractively arranged with baskets of sweet peas and were lighted with pink tapers in silver holders Tallies and nut cups in the same color were used on the tables, v hich were arranged for more than sixty guests. Among the guests were Mrs. L. B. Gregoire of Cleveland, and Mrs. Frank Dunn of Zionsville. The hostesses were assisted by Mrs Steinhiiber’s mother, Mrs. E. H. Brubaker, Mrs. George Heldenreioh, Mrs. Charles Binkley and Mrs. Sober Nicholson. Miss Marie Dawson Morrell, Blenheim Apartments, and Mrs. Frank Edenharter, 3345 N. Illinois St., will go to Columbus, Ind., Wednesday to give a program before, the Matinee Muslcale guest meeting. • • ■ The Indianapolis Council of Jewish women heard Mrs. William G. Sporborg of Port Chester, N. Y., first vice president of the National Council of Jewish Women this afternoon at their meeting in the Temple, Tenth and N. Delaware Sts. The round table discussion in the morning was followed by a luncheon at the Indianapolis Club. Mrs. Nathan Kahn, president, presided, and covers were laid for seventy-five. Mrs. Sporborg and Mrs. W. E. James of Anderson were honor guests. Mrs. Phillip Efroymson wa3 in charge of the luncheon.
Dr. Charles P. Emerson will address the members of the Woman's Rotary Club Monday at, the Claypool on "Modern Treatment of Diabetes.” Tills will be a guest meeting. • * * Mrs. Leo K. Fesler opened the health section of the Woman's Depart ment Club this afternoon at the club house. Dr. Frank Hutchins addressed the members on "The Purpose of the Nerve Functions.” • * • Mrs. Henry C. Thornton, retiring president of the board of directors of the Home for Aged Women, was the honor guest today at a luncheon of the board at the Woodstock Club Spring flowers decorated the table, which was arranged for twenty guests. New members of the board are Mrs. Eugene H. Darrach. Mrs. E. E. Perry and Airs. W. W. Wentz. * Airs. Horace Nordyke, 216 E. Thirtysecond St., was hostess today for the all-f’ay meeting of the Martha Haw ki X Society of the First Baptist ChuVh. Preceding the program the members sewed on garments for the children in the Crawford Orphans' Home at Zionsville In the afternoon Miss Jeanette Benedict, accompanied by Miss Margaret Evans, sang a group of solo numbers. Dr. Frederick E. Taylor spoke. Hostesses were Mesdames Carl Gibbs, William L. Home. Roy Howard, H. E. Huey. Glenn Friermood, Walter Foltz, E. A. Frey, Oscar Frenzel. William Galpin, W. A. Greyer, Wiliam H. Gordon, E. B. Hall. H. B. Harley Elizabeth Heinrlcks, E. W. Hildebrand. William J. Hogan, Earl Hollingsworth. Othniel Hitch and Miss Estell Harding. • • • A section of the Indianapolis Kappa Alpha Theta Alumna Association will ' eet tonight at the home of Mrs Howland Johnson. 4565 Broadway for a benefit card party. The proceeds will .go into the house fund for Gamma chapter of Butler University There will be fifteen tables and a light supper will be served. Assisting hostesses will be Mesdames Thomas Luckett, Allen Greer. Halford -Johnson. Eugene Sims, Rus sell Moore, Charles Binkley, Mark Van Xuys, Paul Kistler and Alisa Mildred Morgan.
Miss Madonna Barngrover, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. V. A Bamgrover, 2927 Ruckle St., who is to marry Russell V. McMurphy Sunday, was the ' honor guest at a surprise handkerchief shower Wednesday night at the home of Miss Ruth Higgins, 4426 Central Ave. The guests were the mem bars of the Phi Sigma Rho sorority. Miss Catherine McCoy was assisting hostesses. There will be a bridal dinner Sunday at noon for the bridal party and immediate relatives. The wedding will take place at 4 p. m. • • • Mrs, James A. Smith, 2218 N Meridian St., entertained today with a luncheon in Ayres tea room and box party at Keith’s in honor of Mrs Anna Humes WUdmatt of Mercer, Pa., who is visiting her sister, Mrs. C. L. Rader, 1230 N. Delaware St. Among the guests were Mrs. Rader, Mrs. M. W. Pulton and Mrs. A. B. Alexander. Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Alexander, 3431 Birchwood Ave., will entertain Mr. and Mrs. Rader, their house guest and Marshall Acker of St. Louis, Mo., at dinner Sunday. • • Theta Sigma Chi sorority will meet at the home of Miss Elizabeth Woehlecke, 22S X. Walcott St., Friday night. • * • Phi Gamma Rho sorority will meet tonight at the home of Mrs. Paul Koehler, 101 Berry Ave. White and Colors White flannel frocks embroidered with gay colors in yarn or coarse silk are very attractive. Long Waist Camisoles Long Waisted camisoles are on the market to meet the requirements of the long waisted overblouse. White Spats To wash white spafs place them on a porcelain table and scrub with a soft brush dipped in a thick lather of white esoap. Rinse with clean. warm water and absorb as much of the moisture as possible between the folds of a turkish towel Dry over a line and press with an Iron that Is not too hot. A Clean Sink You ■will not be troubled with wa-ter-bugs around the sink if you pour Into a it a cup of kerosene oil once a week and wait half an hour before tettfvc the water ran down the pipe.
What's a Tack or Two???
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THIS BRAVE TOT SWALLOWED A TACK AND WAS RUSHED FROAI HIS HOME IN ST. LOUIS TO PHIL ADELPHIA, WHERE THE OFFENSIVE TACK WAS EXTRACTED FR OM A LUNG? CLETUS MOORE, 8 MONTHS OLD, IS NOW ON HIS WA Y BACK HOME, NONE THE WORSE
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LETTER FROM LESLIE PRESCOTT TO LESLIE PRESCOTT, CARE OF THE SECRET DRAWER. At last I am home again, dear little Marquise, and I really think the annoying pearls are ofT the books of my troubles at last. I am going to send a check for $6,000. which remained after Ruth paid the blackmailer, to Struble & Struble tomorrow. Ruth made a very good deal with that waiter. I do not think I could ever have done It. She told me she really felt sorry for him. “He broke down and cried, Leslie.” she said, “when I gave him the money.” Baby Starving "I don’t really want to take this, lady, but honestly if I don’t, my wife and baby will starve to death,” he muttered brokenly. You see, little Marquise, his wife Is very ill and U.ey have anew baby. He had been let out of the restaurant and did not know whleh way to turn when he picked up the pearl. He seemed to sense that there was something wrong about it all when Jack insisted that the pearls were not real, for having seen a great many around the necks of rich patrons at smart restaurants he knew that either Jack was lying or else I had lied to him. Sometimes, little Marquise, I think we are headed toward a great upheav'hTJr. C.CRobinsort. PERSONAL ASEPSIS mT IS sadly true that disease and death are far too often the result of ignorance. I do not mean lack of education, but lack of familiarity with common health practices that result In untold woe and misery. If you can find some way of actually making the best possible health conditions a thing to be desired above 11 others, in fact to make health contagious as disease is contagious you will become worth any amount of money to the community where you live and move and spread the propa ganda of your health doctrine. Personal asepsis or a clean, careful hygienic life Is a wonderful means of elevating health standards If you don't hide your light under a bushel There are so many people who do not know the real health rules of right living that you can be a great leader whose health Influence may direct and aid thousands of your fellow citizens to a happy, healthy life of service. To get rid of the ’germs, bacteria or microbes that spoil so much of your health happiness means a constant “on guard’ agauist the faulty, unhygienic habits that so many people chrry out, all unknowingly at Mmes and again with almost criminal carelessness. You have no cause to be afraid of these almost countless germs if you keep your person healthy by propbr diet and real habits of health. Although these germs are everywhere and on everything you touch, taste or take away with you, your natural bodily health defeats their attack. You may greatly aid by keeping your mouth and teeth clean at all times. About 90 per cent of all attacks and Infection is through this gateway. Wash your hands carefully oefore eating or placing anything in your mouth. Be sure that your air supply at home, in the office or at the factory is not contaminated and unhealthy. .
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al. The poor are suspicious of us always, suspicious and envious, and we do not try to understand their points of view or sympathize with their troubles. Ruth told me the man seemed to feel that, because I was wearing ail those expensive jewels about my nook, I must be rolling In wealth. The Question He resented the fact that one woman could wear a string of beads worth thousands of dollars while another woman, and that woman his wife, was really suffering for food that would keep her body and soul together. Perhaps now, little Alarquise, you will understand this, as your fair head was among those that fell into the gory basket that the guillotine filled day after day. “The man said to me.” quoted Ruth, “that you, Leslie, were probably one of the unseeing, unthinking women that his grandfather used to talk about. The man was French and his grandfather lived in Paris dunng the revolution.” I suppose the man thought I was another Marie Antoinette who would answer If someone said he had no bread. "If you can't get bread, why do you not eat cake?” Probably you remember all that, little Marquise. I expect I am meandering on like this because I do not want to come to the real thing I have got to tel! you and that, is the awful quarrel that Jack and I had the first night I got home from New York. He was suspiciously polite to me until after dinner and then without any 'preface said, "I do not want you ever to speak to Ruth Slllngton again.” “And why not, pray?” I answered (Copyright, 1924. NEA Service, luc.) NEXT: The letter, continued— A tangle over Ruth. A Puzzle a Day Bluing Stain If bluing leaves a stain on a white fabric soak It in strong ammonia water or in kerosene and wash with naphtha soap in lukewarm water. Saving the Curtain Cover the end of your brass curtain rod with an old glove finger or a thimble and It will not catch In the net when you are running the rods through the hems.
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Martha Lee Says Formulas Fail to Solve Problems of Marriage Page after page could be written on “How to be happy though married.” And a married couple could read every page, and still end in the divorce courts.
Every marriage presents a.n individual problem. Every wife, every husband, must work out his own problem. If a husband fails to react according to the formula set out as that found to bo true in an average case, a clever wife,, instead of giving up her marriage as a bad Job, will find out what in her husband’s make-up causes his unusual reaction, and then will work out her own formula. So, too, with the clever husband. No two marriages can be made successful by.following exactly the same rules, because no two wives or husbands are exactly alike. Wife’s Solution Miss Martha Leo: Perhaps you can help me. as you have helped others. My husband wilf not go anywhere with me. It is no use to discuss that part of the problem. He Is perfectly willing- to take oaro of the children. so I can go. I dever leave work undone nor neglect things. I have (6 go by myself, and so to lecture*, musihales and good shows But expense* are limited that direction. I am well educated aru J arly love social life. I do not care for church socials and such affairs, but Uke clubs and a general clean good time. Where I live, the mothers either are busy or do not care for the social time. Can you tell me how to meet nice people and get Into something of the sort? I could do scarcely any entertaining al home on account of my husband, but I aUll beller* there is a way for sociability for me, If I could find U. A PERPLEXED WOMAN. There Is always a way for a woman who shows as much sense as you do in working out your social problem. Os course, you must be oareful not to neglect your husband. •The Y. W. C. A. has evening ccurses in cultural as well as In Industrial subjects. Parenjb-teacher clubs, too, offer an opportunity to hear occasional good talks, and to meet other women interested In the same things as those In which you are interested. And some churches have, besides the socials for which you do not care, societies which study world, as well as religious, problems. These, with an occasional show or muslcale—don't be ashamed to sit in the cheapest seats, and you can have Caere of these—should help you keep up the cultural side of your life.
Husband Seeks Solution Martha Can you or 90010 of jour reader* tell me how I oan keep mr toother? My wife haw left rue ana the babi* s alono. I have my own home. I ran jht iret a housekeper who love* children. Surely all women are not alike; it 1* only my bad lurk. Where there in a will, there la a way. I HAVE THE WILL. Indeed women axe not all alike. It seems almost incredible that one could desert her babies. Surely you can find a housekeeper who loves children. Try to get a rather elderly woman, possibly a grandmother^—a sensible one, who will love your children, but will not spoil them. She can be found, I am sure, but you must not give up too easily. Returning Courtesy Dear M inti Lee: About two month* ago, I met a young mail who was to be In thW city oniy short time, before entering oollere. iT ha* (icon very nice to mo, more like a broth-T than anything else. He 1* leaving next week and 1 wou'd like to show him that I appreciate hi* klndnnea. In some way Would It he all right to Invite several fri-ods over one evening? If o, should I tell him? R. R. It would be a hospitable way to fchow the man you have enjoyed h s fr.endshlp. You may tell h.m about the party or surprise him. aa you wish. Willing to Try Again Dear Mia* Leo: I am 19 years old and have been niarrli-d twice My first huaband di'd I have a baby boy .1 years old, by my first husband My second husband was lazy and was mean to my child. I have left him and am working to support myself and child. I recently met a man who Is very nice to both of us and who says he love* mo. Would It be proper to divorce my husband and marry the one who would love and appreciate a good woman or return to my husband and suffer as before? BLUE Nineteen, married twice and ready for a third husband That’s a record! Don't rush Into another marriage. You probably thought your husband would be good to your child, but he was not. You are still very young.
Virginia Lucas Sings Schubert’s Melodies f ~ s ' :- ;: y 4kit- ' MISS VIRGINIA LUCAS Miss Virginia Lucas, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John P. Lucas, 4217 Central Ave., sang a group of Schuberts melodies this afternoon at the meeting of the Women’s Auxiliary to the Al'enhelm. She Wits accompanied by Mrs. E. E. Ffickinger. A trio composed of Miss Susan Grey Shedd, piano, Miss Janet White. Cello, and Edwin McCormick. violin, also played a group of selections. Mrs. Frank Edenharter was in charge of the musical irogram. Hostesses were Mrs. Theodore, Schuler, Mrs. Frederika Schuler and Mrs. Bertha Scheliltoph.
Small Hats For early Spring the small hat is expected to be worn almost exclusively. Turbans have acquired several smart new angles. Straw and Satin CombihpMona of straw and satin or straw and silk are the latest ob jects of interest in mlllinary shops. Lace veils are equally popular with either. !; Lemons Bleach the Skin White | less way to bleach three ouncef°r a few cents Shake well In a bottle, and you have a whole quarter pint of the most wonderful skin whi tener. softener and bcautlfter. Massage this sweetly fragrant lemon bleach Into the face, neck, arms and handir It can not irritate Famous stage beauties use it to bring that clear, youthful skin and rosy white complexion; also to soothe red. rough or chappe<l hands and face. You must mix this remarkable bleach yourself. It can not be bought remedy to us© because it acts best immediately after It la prepared.—Advertisement
Side Train A black satin frock with a surplice from and long, tight sleeves Is caught up at the side wtih a buckle and a wide fold of the material Is allowed to drop down and form a side train. Shouider Flower - The old fashion of wearing a flower on the shoulder is being revived this season. Suede Hats Suede hats are embroidered in selfcoior and laced together wtih cords or ribbons. Velvet Applique Velvet applique, in black or white, is seen on the newest evening gowns of white crepe. Envelope Bags Large envelope bags m be carried under the arm are of black duvetyn intricately braided in soutache. Hostess Gowns Attractive hostess gowns are of pleated silk crepe de chine, trimmed with lace and long silk tassels. Black and White A stunning creation of white velvet has trimmings of black cloth appllqued In large designs and Is banded with black fox. Looks Like Bow An unusual muff is merely a huge bow of seal that gives no hint of Its mission until It is actually In use. Saucy Headgear A brimless hat that almost covers the eyes themselves is of black velvet with a wreath of flat gold roses.
$6.85 Southwest Corner Alabama and Washington $2.99 We Are Remodeling Our Front and Windows Remarkable Values at Prices That Will Astound Fur and Self Trimmed JBls COATS Jm S4O and $35 Values for l,||s Navy , Gray , Tan, Brown , Black and Taupe ~h ~ | Regular and Stout Sizes 16 to 55% Better Coats $25.00 Value _ For Larger Women || a J§ p Values Up to $75.00 Fur and Self Trimmed n 1 c T • j „ . , n . n . . n . rur and uielr Irimmed Materials, Bolivias, Brytonias, Carolos, Plush. Broad Tail, Korami. The furs are Just unpacked, direct -from New Squ“7Fitl' a Ma“- York assuring you the very latest SiSSttS 3QA.75 aSt*S*TO $0.98 Taupe. Sizes 36 to w - Blue. Sizes 16 to 58%. For Sa&nJr 58V 2 ... ;£.m (—DRESSES —| for $15.00 VALUES—Velvets, Silks, * pg Valiics Twills, Serges, Checks. Embroidered and tailored. Sizes 16 to 44, for • i/lj gmm STYLISH STOUTS’ DRESSED— That give youthful appearance. A oOF ''JltmiWS Silks > Twills and Serges. Sizes yK 44 1° 5(514. for Vt7u l-J Beaded ri • Dre> '°* ew .null and dirdlna, *1.., m, of d| A A *oe nn L‘I r - T doollty tttraw braid. Baronet S V < ■ 1 YBanSiisfSSKiß $85.00 VUo*, Uilu braid, silk combined with Jn ® I A | •• | straw; In *ll the newrat early .prlng Jf • W Value® trlmmln**: in aU the dreired color* a* well Mmmmmmm Auir. gafe <*• olld black. Regular (S.B~> and $4.96 W ~~~~~~~ „ “yq Jj. value*. FOB hi TURD AY ONLY CHILDREN’S HATS * • T~~~ \\ We have Jurt received a large t n f* * 4 amt I \ \ assortment es children’s bats ▼ la*■% s■* V I Uls I /A \Jb, (or drees and school wear KJ • LV JL •%/ j
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