Indianapolis Times, Volume 36, Number 47, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 July 1924 — Page 3

THURSDAY. JULY 3,1924

Social Activities ENTERTAINMENTS WEDDINGS BETROTHALS

UT-OF-TOWN guests who i) have come tjo attend the weds ding of Miss Emma Taylor, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harry J. Taylor, 3854 E. Thirteenth St., set for Thursday night on the lawn of the bride’s parents' home, are: Mr. and Mrs. William Perry. Greensburg. Ind.: Mrs. Edwin Walsh and son David, Omaha, Neb., and Mrs. Nell Lamb, Cincinnati. * * • Miss Dorothy Mueller, 390S Carrollton Ave., entertained Thursday at luncheon for her house guest. Miss Marjorie Farrel of Logansport, Ind., and the house guests of Miss Emily Riegler. Rosebuds, which were the favors, marked covers for ten and a bowl of rosebuds decorated the center of the table. The guests: Misses Laura Rankin. Wilma Miller. Virginia Pendleton, Lawrence, Kan.; Elizabeth Moore. Holton, Kan.; Mary Martin, Parsons, Kan.: Emily Riegler, Alice Logsdon and Lucy Lindley. Following the luncheon the guests were entertained at the home of Miss Biegler at five tables of bridge. Additional guests were Misses Katherine De Vaney, Sarah Frances Downs. Helen Stevens. Beatrice Moore, Dorothea Reissner. Charlotte Reissner. Marion Reed. Jean Bouslog. Dorothy Wilhelm, and Katherine Smith. Miss Biegler was assisted by her mother, Mrs. George Q. Biegler. • * • Miss Wanda Feldman and Homer Lucken of Dayton. Ohio, will be guests of Miss Emma Belle Stutz. Thirty-Second and N. Meridian Sts., over the week-end. The young people will take an all-day motor trip Friday and Miss Stutz will entertain at dinner for them at the In dianapolis Athletic Club Saturday night. • * • The Joseph R. Gordon W. R. C. No. 43 will meet at the G. A R. hall, 512 N. Meridian St., Friday afternoon for a special Fourth of July program. * * * New members of the Phi Beta Tau Sorority, initiated Wednesday night, are Misses Bessie Sanford, Leota Frame, Marguerite White, Vivian Kelso. Bonnie Roberts. Mary Kemps, Lucy Barnes. Helen \\ hip pie, Irene Stone. * * • Mrs. S. Douglas Bash. 2996 Washington Blvd., and son Robert, accompanied by Mrs. Bash's mother. Mrs. J. L. Beattey. have gone to Yellowstone Park for the summer. Mr. Bash sailed Thursday at noon for Holland, where he will take a three months' course of study in the bulb farms and flower gardens of France and Germany. * * • Mr. and Mrs. Charles T. Hanna. 4341 Central Ave., have gone on a

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LETTER FROM SALLY ATHER TOX TO BEATRICE GRIM SHAW. Hope you can come early next week for your visit, dear Bee. Leslie called me up yesterday to tell me that she was going to celebrate her wadding anniversary the last of next week, and wanted me to add my plea to hers, that you would surely be here for that interesting occasion. Just why any one should want to celebrate a wedding anniversary is something I cannot fathom. Any anniversary is bad enough, but a wedding anniversary is the worst of the bunch. I'd rather have a birthday party, and Lord knows my birthdays have been shoved into the discard for quite a few years now. You would laugh. Bee, if you could see his Royal Highness. John Alden Prescott, these days. He’s an entirely different man since his wife came home. From his actions you would think that he felt ( he had FRECKLE-FACE Sun and Wind Bring Out Ugly Spots. How to Remove Easily. Here's a chance. Miss Freckle-face, to try’ a remedy for freckles with the guarantee of a reliable concern that it will not cost you a penny un less it removes the freckles: while If it does give you a clear complexion the expense is trifling Simply get an ounce cf Othine—double strength—from any druggist and a few applications should show you how easy it is to rid yourself of the homely’ freckles and get a beautiful complexion. Rarely is more than one ounce needed for the worst case. Be sure to ask the druggist for the double* strength Othioe as this strength is sold under guarantee of money back if it fails to remove freckles. —Advertisement.

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How Often Folks Have Wished for Just This Sort of Thing When Building Their New Homes

B’> vr | Srrrict _ Tl Miss Ethel P- "' w M INXEAPOLIS, July 3. * made her ...o . ;> of blueprints. She won success by finding a need and then filling it. In her experience as an architect she heard women say, and men, too: ‘T wish I knew what our home was going to look UKe." Or: “If I knew it was going to look like that I would have changed it.” So she made models of her projected houses of blueprints, brownprints and black line prints. Being to scale, they showed almost exactly how the house would look. The prints are made in two types, the model closed showing the exterior completely and the model which can be opened showing the floor plans. Oft times she cuts the sizes of the pieces of furniture and sets them in place with pins. A model is so made that the roof can be taken off. showing the tipper floor plans, and when the ceiling out the lower floor is on view. “The actual surface and angles of roofs,” says Miss Bartholomew, “cannot be seen in a flat drawing. My roofs are accurately constructed. just as they will appear on the real home. I construct the dormers. gables, projecting bays, porches and set them in place.” Now she has more work than she can do. motor trip in the New England States. * * Mr. and Mrs. George M Corhaley, 3033 N. Delaware St., left Thursday for a trip to Yellowstone Park for two weeks. * * * Mr. and Mrs. Otto D. Lefler and family. 3924 N. Delaware St., will spend the week-end at Lake Wawasee. * * * Miss Mary Evelyn Riley, 1701 N. Caiptol Ave.. and Miss Ruth Fromm. 2514 Park Ave., will attend a house party in Brown County over the Fourth. • * • The Lankford family reunion will be held Friday at the hom° of Mr. and Mrs William Lankford. Fortieth St. and Temple Ave. Miss Marie and Miss Dolores Doyle. 118 \V. Twenty-Seventh Stentertained with a miscellaneous sffower Wednesday night for Mrs. Frank W. Durgan, a recent bride. Appointments were in lavender and pink, and favors were wedding bells and tea roses. Miss Kathryn Delaney gave several piano numbers and Miss Anna McNulty. gave a program of specialty dances. The guest: Misses Margaret Mc-

done some terrible thing in inviting me out to dinnei a few times while i his wife was away. Since her re | turn he lias gone away glumly everyday to eat his luncheon alone, an 1 every time he ‘has passed me and said: “I’m going to luncheon. Mrs. Atherton," he's given me a queer little look out of the tail of his eye, as though lie were speculating as to whether I had expected him to ask me to lunch, and was disappointed because be didn't do it. I get enough of him during the day when he is in this captious mood, without having to entertain him during the luncheon hour.. I went up to the house the other night to call on Leslie, and there seemed some sort of constraint in her manner, not toward me, but toward her husband. I wonder if she 'has anything on her mind? While I was there Ruth Ellington came in. I don’t think you have met her. I was again struck by her ! cleverness. She seems to be able to wind Leslie around her little finger, iat least Leslie has unbounded ad- ! miration for her business ability—a j business ability which rather riles I friend husband. It's a wonder Jack j Alden Prescott has any use for me ! in his office, as from what he said j the other night I could see he [ thought no woman was capable of doing business on a large scale. Ruth Ellington has demonstrated that she can do this, and with an investment that was nothing more than a shoe string. She takes a strange delight In informing Mr. Prescott how her business is growing. * I didn't stay very long. Either Leslie or Mr. Prescott is very interesting and amusing, taken alone, but when they- are together they are | impossible—at least for me. X don't think I care much for j little iourneys to the homes of my ! wedded friends. I wonder if when | you marry Dick Summers, Bee, I'll have to cut you out of my friendj ship book? I hope not, for Lord | knows there are too few names there I already. Com" down, dear. I think I need you. for 1 fee! that I am getting rather more cynical than usual. But whatever else I may do, whatever else I may think. I know that I-love you and I never have a cynical thought where you are concerned. SALLY. (Copyright, 1924. NEA Service, Inc ) NEXT: Letter from I>eslie Prescott to Leslie Prescott, care of tlic secret drawer.)

EARLES ON HEALTH BREATHE DEEP, OFTEN

- ILOT of you birds figure that I |if you take ten deep breaths ! I with your daily dozen each morning you’ve given your lungs all they've got coming to ’em,” a physical director once reminded Mr. Man of Any town. Taking a half-dozen deep breaths during an exercise and then forgetting all about it for the rest of the day, is a relatively ridiculous plan. Xot only should deep breathing exercises he taken some time during the day, but whenever the out-of-doors is reached by shut-ins it should

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MISS ETHEL BARTHOLOMEW AND ONE OF HER BLUEPRINT HOUSE MODELS.

Whorter, Josephine Ryan, Elizabeth Livingston, Alice Weed, Frieda Locke, Edna Shilling, Ludie Clark, Henrietta Hunter, Faie Slater, Lucille Sandberry, Mr. and Mrs. Chester Doyle, Mr. and Mrs. R. H. Doyle, Mrs. Frank Gay, Thomas J. Daily and Dr. Lent Clark. Preceding the party a 6 o'clock dinner for twelve was given by Mrs. Chris Doyle, mother of the honor guest, and Mrs. R. H. Doyle. The Octopus flub has announced a meeting for Thursday night at the home of Herbert Martin, 17 E. St. Joseph St. ... Miss Evelyn Postal of Bluffton. Ind., and Miss Ruth Merriken of Alexandria, Ind., were honored Wednesday night with a bunco party given by Mrs. Richard Merriken, 1202 E. Ohio St. The guests: Misses Cecil Frye, Mildred, Helena Wanner, Ruth Xesl itt and Mesdames Leigh C. Felton, Theodore Campbell, Jay McElwaine, Paul Postal, Albert SLdfelt. Louis Schneider. The hostess was assisted by her mother. Mrs. Edward-Miller. • * * Among the guests at the house party of the Den Zure Club, Inc., July 4-0, near Turkey Itun, will be Misses Helen Baker, of Chicago, Edna Sehroeder, Helen Bushong, Beulah Wright. Blanche Grlner, Florence Apple, Fay Clarke. Mildred Harris, Yerle Clarke, Gretchen Sparks, Mr. and Mrs. Leigh C. Felton. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Lingenielter, Mr. and Mrs. A. Tompkins. * * * The marriage of Miss Mary Frances Miller of Logansport, to Thomas R. Reedy, son of Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Reedy, 1332 Bellefontaine St., took place today at noon at the home of the bride's father. Miss Lillian May Heusleln of Indianapolis sang the bridal music, accompanied by Miss Ruth Reedy, sister of the bridegroom. The Rev. T. D. Trickey of port read the ceremony. Mr. and Mrs. Reedy will be at home at 1326 Bellefontaine St. after July 10. * • Miss Wilma Lee Taflinger, 1314 E. Twelfth St., and Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Herrell and son Harry were to leave Thursday night for a motor trip to Lakes Webster and Tippecanoe to spend the Fourth and the weekend. Miss Taflinger will be the guest of I). L. Bock and family of Kokomo while at Lake Tippecanoe. HOOSIER EXHIBIT OPEN Miss Evalyn Janies and Her Mother Show Paintings. An exhibition of oil and watercolor paintings by Miss Evalyn Gertrude James, A. M., and Mrs. Eva G. James of 144 Butler Ave., has just been opened to the public at the Pettis Gallery, fifth floor of the New York Store. The exhibition was recently brought here from Lafayette, Ind. It is typically a Hoosier exhibit, with landscapes of historic spots from five lridiana counties—Brown, Monroe, Marion, Boone and Tippecanoe. There are also several stilllife and flower studies. The twentyseven canvases in this collection will be on display for three weeks.

be the signal for a series of long breaths. And for the office-bound here’s a tip: Go to the open window every once in a while and get a good lung full. First, get the habit from a series of exercises: then keep at It during the day. * One physician has said that a hundred deep breaths a day would keep away tuberculosis. Also, it’s good in nervous conditions. But it's a mighty fine habit for every one to get into.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

With the Legion Auxiliary in Indiana By CLAIRE PALMER THURSTON

Mrs. Helen A. Bishop, Leicester. Mass., national president, has been at national headquarters in Indianapolis, for the last ten days, completing arrangements for the national convention in Ed. Paul, Minn., Sept. 13-19. She recently returned from an < xtended trip through the northwest, where she visited a number or auxiliary departments. She left for home Tuesday evening. At the opening session of the American Legion Monday, Sept. 13, the auxiliary delegates, officers and guests will be the guests. Monday evening there will he a reception in the new Capitol building. Tuesday there will be a parade in which every department of both organizations will participate. Tuesday evening the annual states' dinner will lie given. Each department will have a separate table and only a limited number of representatives from each State may attend. Accommodations will be limited to 1,000. Mrs. John Ptul Ragsdale, Mrs.

_iOOI) MVNNERS Don’t Use Ribbons

The formal dinner table shoult lever be decorated with ribbons o

Whiten Your Neck New Safe Way A yellow or muddy neck is now unnecessary. For now anew and harmless treatment —Golden Peacock Bleach Creme —makes your skin soft, clear and white almost overnight. This amazing new discovery is safe, sure and absolutely harmless. Yellowness, sallowness, muddiness and tan vanish as if by magic. Soon you have the clear, milky-white neck which everyone envies and admires, and which is especially necessary with bobbed hair. Make this test tonight. Three minutes before bedtime smooth some of this cool, fragrant creme on your neck and shoulders. Tomorrow morning see howthe skin has already begun to clear. Your money will be returned if you are not delighted. Get your jar now—today. Ask for Golden Peacock Bleach Creme (Concentrated). At all good Drug and Department Stores. GoMenFeacodi Bleach Creme

COURT CLERK MARRIES Mr. and Mrs. Z. T. Dungan to Spend Summer North. 81l Tinwk Special MILTON, Ind., July 3.—The marriage of Z. T. Dungan, clerk of the Indiana Supreme Court, and Mrs. Emma H. Beeson of Milton, Ind., which took place Wednesday at the home of the bride, is announced. On returning from a wedding trip in the East, Mr. and Mrs. Dungan will go to Mr. Dungan’s summer home in northern Indiana for the summer. They will be at home in Indianapolis after Oct. 1. % Household Suggestions For Onion Odor You can remove the odor of oniors from your hands after you have been forking with them by scrubbing them in clear, cold water containing a little mustard. Paint Brushes Never allow paint brushes to stand on the bristles while drying, and always wash in turpentine, followed by soap and water, before putting them away for any length of time. Pie Crusts Before putting a pie into the oven brush with milk or water so that the top crust is wet. Holes in Rugs You can mend small holes in rag carpets by stitching back and forth across the hole on the machine. Use No Soap When washing the refrigerator use tepid water containing washing soda, but never use soap. Sandpaper Cake You can remove the burned portions from bread or cake by rubbing with a fine sandpaper. Saving Wax Utilize the short ends of paraffin candles by whittling over a floor that is to be waxed.

Edna M. Bareus and Mrs. C. E. Combs recently were appointed on the liaison committee by Mis. J. C. Glackman. department president for Indiana. Mrs. H. Nathan Swaim, president of the Seventh District Council Auxiliary, called a meeting early tliis week of presidents of ’-he various units to plan a reception for Mrs. Charles X. Cook, Sixth district committee-woman from Richmond, who will visit Indianapolis in the interest of the membership campaign. The council held its monthly meeting Wednesday afternoon in the Chamber of Commerce. R< ports of the welfare work, by Mrs. G. I. Seybert and rehabilitation, by Mrs. Arthur Robinson, were given. According to National headquarters of the American Legion, Indiana sold more poppies than any other department. The Richmond unit surpassed all other units in the National organization, with 10,000 sales.

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Gossips Life Combines Good Deeds With Bad

Mrs. Blank always is first on the scene when any one is hurt or ill or in trouble of any sort. She is ready to do whatever is possible to help, from sending a bit of jelly to an invalid to sitting up all night with a death-strieken family.

She would not harm a soul deliberately for anything on earth. Yet every time she makes a call, every time she taflks to a friend over the telephone, she leaves a trail of petty gossip, sometimes with a bit of scandal. She is not malicious; she is merely unthinking. She has a mania for being the first to tell a bit of news. She is just a3 happy telling good news as bad; but, good or bad,, harmless or fraught with danger to some one's reputation, she tells it. Although she would be the first to deny a story she knew to be untrue, she would not hesitate to repeat the same story if she did not know definitely whether it was true or not. Whether the good she does offsets the harm her unbridled tongue causes is a question open to debate. She would be shocked beyond words to hear that she is considered a scandal-monger. Two Extremes Pear Misr Lee: I have been placed in a queer situation and do not know just what to do. A woman I considered a very pood frieml recently repeated some ugly gossip about me, and caused some trouble with my husband, I always knew she was considered a gossip, but thought she would tell me anything she heard about me. instead of repeating it. It wasn’t true, bu‘ the damage was done before she found it out. She said she did not mean any harm, but that did not help me much. Last week I broke my leg. I had to quit work, of course, and that makes it hard for *us to make both ends meet, much less pay for a nurse for me or any one to take care of the house. My husband does his Ik-31 to keep things straight, but he is not very good at it. n over every day and straighten up the house, brtng over our meals and help me as best she can. I don't know what to do I do need help, lv.t I hate to accept anything from her She always is doing things for peupb . but 1 cannot leel she is sincere in wanting to help me. or she n-vw would have repeated gossip about me. What do you adv.se'; WORRIED INVALID. Let her come. She is trying to miike reparations. She probably meant no harm. Some women are born gossips, and it just does not occur to them not to repeat everything they hear. Be sure when she is around you to rebuff any attempts she makes to gossip about other people, or you ; will deserve the same criticism you , give her. Frequent Dates Dear Miss Lee: 1 am a girl IP year* old lam going with a fine-looking young • man lit )p'- "id It.- ms to think a great deal -,f me and I think a great deal of him. I have three dates with him every week and om-e in a while, four. My par-

In Hot Weather the appetite has to be stimulated. LEA& PERRINS’ SAUCE will make food as appetizing in hot weather as in cold .

■M art ha Lee Say .

ents seem to think it is all right. Am I having too many dates for a girl ot my ago? BRIGHT EYES. Now, Bright Eyes, you are too young to be thinking of marriage, and it occurs to me that you are closing the gates to other boy friends pretty early in life. Unless, of course, you are having other dates, too, in which you most assuredly are having too many dates. If you are not working or going to school, you might have three dates a week without losing your bright eyes. But they should not all be with the same boy. Should She Remarry? Dear Miss Lee: Here I am at two crossroads, and I don't know which w-ay to turn. I have known a young man five years. He has lyen very good to me. and always has respected me and my baby since my husband's death two years ago. My husband thought a lot of him. too. He has asked me to marry him. My .parents object and even rave if he calls me up. He has a few bad habits. They happen to be the same as those my husband had. My husband overcame his, and I think this man will, too. Would you advise me to go ahead and marry him. because I think a lot of him and know he does of me. or would you turn him down on account of mother and father? Mamma and dad rave every time I mention going with anybody. What would you do? LONESOME? AND BLUE. Don't marry any man thinking he will get rid of bad habits. He may, but the chances are not promising. If a man does not care enough for a girl to reform to win her he probably would not do so to keep her. Your life is your own. Evidently you still are young. If you should find a man who you believe would be to your child the father he needs, and whom you truly love, I do not think your parents would be justified in trying to prevent the marriage for no reason except that they object to second marriages. Cashmeres Welcomed Cashmere plays an important part in the fall collections, as do twills and other plain wool fabrics. New Shades Rust, rose and the henna shades promise exceedingly well for fall an 1 winter, particularly for coats. Beads Trinunming Beads, lace and fur are said to be the leading trimmings on the first fall models.

VACATIONS WILL INCUIDE STUDY Women Voters to Attend Political School in July. Women voters of seven States are planning to combine vacationing with study by attending the Institute of Government and politics being arranged by the Fourth Region of the National League of Women Voters in cooperation with the University of Michigan, at Ann Arbor, Mich., July 21 to 26. Professors of political science from the University of the Philippines, Wisconsin, Michigan, Illinois, Northwestern and Cornell Universities, and experts from the Detroit Bureau of Governmental Research will present intensive courses in subjects relating to politics and Government. The Indiana League of Women Voters will send as its representative Miss Helen Rogers Hand of Indianapolis, executive secretary local leagues of the State are also planning to award scholarships to the Institute to their most interested members. # Front Trimming Front trimming frequently is used on frocks. Only the back is allowed tc- retain the long, slim beltless mode.

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