Indianapolis Times, Volume 36, Number 61, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 July 1924 — Page 3
SATURDAY, JULY 19, 1924
QOCIAL Activities entertainments WEDDINGS BETROTHALS
EHK home of Mrs. Mary a. Kay, 3849 N. Delaware St., was the scene of a pretty but simple wedding ceremorv Saturday morning when her riuughte.*, Lorena. became the l>ride bf Ruymond R. Haffner of Louisville, Ky. The Rev. Allan B. Philputt read the l ceremony. Miss Ruth Rainier, harpist, and Miss Florence Jeup played the bridal music. Mrs. John A: Miller, the brides sister, yrr-arfngr a becoming e° W!i of green georgette, with a bouQuet of Dres'en colored garden flowers, was th? only attendant. Ray copci of Louisville yas best man. The bride uais prettily gowned in white georgette over satin with a wreath of flowers in her, hair. She carried a bride’s boquet of roses and lilies of the valley. Mr. and Mrs. Haffner left fbr a wedding trip in the North after an informal wedding breakfast. ThdV will be at home after Sept. 1 in' Louisville. Mr. and Mrs. J. G. Ray of ChL. cago and Mrs. B. P. Haffner oP-Port-land. Ind.. mother of the bridegroom. were among th** guests. • * * Mrs. Robert Tansey. a recent bride from Mantoon, 111., was the honor guest at pretty kitchensshorerw r er Friday night, given by Mrs. Frank Crozier, 342 Harvard PI. Baskets of garden flowers carried out a color scheme of pink and green, which was used in all the appointments. • * * S. C. Jackson, 430 TT. Pennsylvania St., announces the engagement of his daughter. Miss Baneta, to Reed R. Myers. The wedding will take place this month. • • * Mr. and Mrs. James B. Martin, 2039 X. Talbott Ave., entertained a number of friends at garden party Friday night, following a swimming party. * • * Miss Emma Busohmann. 1244 Central Ave.. has as her guests Mr. ar.d Mrs. Claire Brown of Hollywood. Cal. Harry Buschmann arranged a dinner partV for eight at the Indianapolis Athletic Club in their honor for Saturday night. • • • Monday night will be “Kapra Night,” at the opening performance of ”The Broker. Wings.” *by the Murat Players. A number of box parties have been arranged by members of the Kappa Kappa Gamma serorit> They have taken over the pet form a for the benefit of the new $50,000 chapter at Bloomington. Dancing in the lobby between acts will add to the festivity of *he occasion. Mrs. A. S. Glossbrenner. 1553 Guilford Ave., is chairman of the •ommittee in charge, assisted by Mesdames Lyman R. Pea*s°n. Theodore Vonnegut. A. W. Boyd. John Gaylor and Miss Gail Hammond. • • Miss Helen Bushong entertained Saturday afternoon with a theater
party at the Murat honorir>g v Mrs. A. C. Pratt of Cleveland, Ohio, who .is visiting Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Kelly. 308 Maple 'Road. * • • Miss Marie Boyle. 2346 N. Talbott Ave., will go next week to visit her father. Guy A. Boyle, in Anderson. • • • Miss Catherine Phillips, 209 E. Thirty-Third St., entertained at four tables ojf bridge Saturday afternoon honorinir her house guests. Miss Gertrude Dean of Cleveland. Ohio, and Miss Helen Jane Barnett of Pittsburgh, Pa. * • • Mr. and Mrs. William P. Wilson, 5225 E. Walnut St., have invited these guests to 5 o'clock dinner Sunday evening in honor of their son. William C. Wilson, and his fiancee. Miss Edith Marguerite Davis, daugter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Davis, 5524 Julian Ave.. who are to be married July 23; Misses Elizabeth and Josephine Davis, Earl Chandler of Penville. Donovan Moffit of Greencastle, Foster Beach and Omer Davis and Mr. and Mrs. Davis. The guests are all members bridal party. ” • • •/ Mr. and Mrs. Sam L. Hahn. 1927 N. Delaware St., motored Saturday to Dayton, Ohio, for the week-end with their daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Adler. * * * Mrs. John R. Mcßoberts and daughter. Miss Margaret, 506 N. Bancroft St., have returned from French Lick, where they spent several days. * • • Mrs. Vincent B. Binager, Alma Roth Apts., has gone to Columbia and Charlotte, S. C., to visit until the first of September. • • Miss Helen Hand, the Cambridge. was to leave Sunday for Ann
The Banging of Hammers —the “squeaking” of nails—the crackle of lumber—is the opening “music” of the ✓ PETTIS SEMI-ANNUAL FURNITURE SALE TO BE 4 “STAGED” JULY 21 4
Young, Society Buds Are Busy With Summer Doings
—Photos by Baohraeh. \ LMTTLE society ladies of Indianapolis are active during the summer. Miss Mary Jane Baker, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Baker, 4901 Carrollton Ave., has just returned'from a happy trip to Grand Rapids, Mich., Where she and her mother visited her grandparents. Miss Rosalfe Nannetta Lurvey. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. David Lurvey, 3902 N. Delaware St., is Arbor. Mich., where she will attend the Fourth Regional Institute held by the National League of Women Voters, as Indiana's delegate. • • • Mrs. Harold Cunning and son; Harold Jr., will go to Sea Breeze, N. J.. in August for the rest of the summer. % ./ • • • Miss Olive Neal of Evanston, 111., has been the guest of Mr. and Mrs R. E. Strens. 5132 E. Washington St., this week. x * • • Miss Susan Grey Shedd. 3939 N Delaware St., is visiting Miss Christine Jeffers at Wawasee. * * • Mrs. Myrtle Ritzendollar and daughter. Miss Helen. 823 Wilson St., have returned home after spending a few days with friends and relatives in Frankfort. * * * ■N Miss Edith Evans and her mother. Mrs. Rowland Evans, 1630 N. Alabama St., have left on a two weeks' trip to MdHison, Ind., and Cincinnati, Ohio. • • • Women of St. Catherine's parish will give a card party, Sunday evening in the hall at Shelby and Tabor Sts. CLUB TO HOLD PICNIC Democratic Women to Hold Regular Luncheon Tuesday. The regular luncheon for business women held by the Seventh District Democratic Women’s Club will be held Tuesday at the clubhouse. 22 E. Vermont St. Committee of hostesses; Mesdames Thomas E. Christney. F. O. Westcott, Earl D. Weaver. Pearl Bunning, P. C. Kelly, C. I. Smith. Friday evening the club will have a picnic at Garfield Park to replacethe monthly evening meeting. Mrs. W. Davis, chairman of the social committee, is in charge. BENEFIT DANCE PLANNED Children’s Sunshine Club to Entertain at Riverside. The Children's Sunshine Club will entertaip with' a dance at Riverside Dance Palace July 24 for benefit of the children In the Sunnyside Sanitarium. Committee includes Mesdames John F. Engleke, Harry Kennett, Wajter Zimmerman, S. E. Ham, V. E. Butler, Louis Rosasco, Fred Wagner, Jess Soutter. The club wfil junch Wednesday at the home of Mrs. H. F. Shannhberger, 3006 N. New Jersey St. ♦'She will be assisted by Mrs. Richard K. Howe. LAD BITTEN BY DOG Police Order Animal Under Observation for Rabies. Charles Feldmeier, 11, son of Mrs. George Feldmeier. of 533 N. Lin wood St., is suffering today after being bitten by a dog Friday while visiting his aunt. ''Mrs. Pete Galbo, 245 S. Sherman Drive. According to police the lad was playing with the dog. He was bitten qji both legs and on the left arm. Polite ordered the dog kept under observation to see if a case of rabies develops.
LEFT TC) RIGHT— MISS BETTY JANE BRABENDER, MISS MARY JANE BRACK MAN, M T SS MARY JANE BAKER. MISS ROSALIE NANETTE LI'RVEV, MISS MARY ELIZABETH JONES.
finding a brand new baby brother an Engrossing summer interest. Miss Betsy Jane Brabender,
Miss Cecile Kirwan, Editor , Docs Work of Four on Womans Weekly, With 300,000 Circulation
B•> v 1 .4 Service r.IICAOO, July 19.- —Cecile A. Kirwan wanted to be an ___ editor. Two years ago she got a job on thq|pAVonian's Weekly, in Chicago, and she didn't think she be able to hold it. Today visitors are told: “Meet Miss Kirwan, editor." She is just 23. Her climb in the field of journalism lias been rapid. She always had her goal and she went after it. But withaT she is a real, feminine. womanly-eort of young Woman. She has her own apartment and there she keeps house. Cooking along with editing is hW specialty. The Woman’s Weekly has a circulation of more than 300.000 eachweek. Miss Kirwan is the editor, copyreader, makes her own art layouts, places the”advertlseme.nts; in fact, is the Woman’s Weekly. She is now doing the job of the man editor who hired her two years ago and she is also doing the work of four other people who were in the office when she first. wenU there. This editor’s chair was not easily reached by Miss Kirwan. After she g<w over her ambition of childhood tnV an acrobat in the circus, she began fitting herself for newspaper work. She attended the University of Illinois. She worked first on the D.Tily Illini. the . university paper; then the News-Gazette at Champaign. 111. There‘--she did every kind of newspaper job. Including the giving advice to the love-lorn. Her advice was taken to heart by herself. too, because she is not yet married. ''Her work took her to Tulsa, Okla . then to New York, then back to Chicago, where she walked the streets in search of "a newspaper job. Sh<> got some income as prtss -agent for an evangelist and then a friend swM she might get on the Woman’s Weekly. Her first assignment was politics, of which she said she knew- nothing. the editor’s surprise she had a good story ready pext day. Thenshe was put on the pay roll. Miss Kirwan declares any girl can do any job she wants to if she will just hang up a goal for herself and never let any one throw the switch. She doesn't think she has accomplished so much, jtfst doing her best In chosen field.
ANOTHER PLEA FILED Prisoner in Ayres Case Again Asks Reduction of' Bond. For the second time habeas corpus proceedings have been instituted in behalf of Thomas Toohey, Chicago, field on $30,000 bond on charges of burglary and auto banditry/ in investigation of recent robbery of the I. t 5. Ayres .& Cos. stoVe and the Kiefer-Stewart Drug Company. Ira M. Holmes, attorney, filed the action in Criminal Court late Friday, seeking bond Superior Judge Sidney S. Miller last week refdsed a similar plea. Toohey was arrested when in an auto outside Ayres’ the night of the robbery. He was identified by police as a Chicago gaposter. SWIM WEEK SUCCESS I-a.st Lessons Vt-p Given at Four PooJf. Leayn-to-Swim Week closed 'Friday at four pools, Y.~W. C. A., Y. M. C. A., Twenty-Sixth St. and Broad Hippie. Pupils at Willard, Douglass and Ringgold pools will complete the swimming course Saturday. The week has been highly successful, according to Miss Helen Cruse, in charge of the Red Cross life saving corps, which conducted the swimming classes. As the lessons ended, boys and girls who have learned to swim fifty feet during the week were awarded beginners’'pins. v The week’s record, according to Miss Cruse, was made by Avery Sanderson, 1404 Central Ave., who was able to swim minutes after he plunged into the pool at the Y. M. C. A. He received a beginners’ pin. / Scoutmasters in Training Six local scoutmasters left today for Culver to attend a ten day twining school. Instruction in training and leading scouts will be given. Those attending: J. M. Guest. Troop 4; Edward Fuller, Troop 2;. W. W. Woollen Jr., Troop 53; Murie Miller, Troop 82, and C. A. Dolling and R. J. Frazel, unassigned.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
of Evansville, Ind.. has been visiting her grandmother, Mrs. Ellen Ryker, 3402 Guilford Ave
Two .years she 6pt a job on the TnatSaztne and chdrit | , think shercou.ki hold today, at 23, she 33 editor and. dom4 the work nf five p*cnpie. CECILE A KIRWAN. WHO, AT 23, HAS BEEN MADE 1 EDITOR OF . A BIH NATIONAL MAGAZINE.
Exercise for Mother
| XKROISE is essential to an | 'r* expectant mother,” the * ' Mann family doctor advised Mrs. Mann when her first baby was being awtdted. ‘‘But. be careful what exercises are taken and how strenuously you undertake them. Os all exercises at such a time walking is about best. These *alks should not be too long, nor at too rapid a gait. “After the walk is ended return to the house and Ue down for about Household Suggestions Drying Lettuce Dry lettuce quickly by putting it in a cheesecloth bag and swinging the bag in a wide circle for a few moments. Oiean Chamois Skin To clean chamois skin wash it in gasoline, or in tepid water with pure soap. Painting Woodwork Fill up holes in your woodwork with putty, plaster of paris or glue. Whitens Linen Linen may be whitened by soaking in buttermilk fur two or three days and then rinsing in cold water. If it can be dried on the grass in the sun the results are almost magical. f
Miss Mary Elizabeth Jones, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. R. Ralston Jones Jr., 3631 Central Ave., is anticipating a trip to Bay View, Mich., with her grandmother. Mrs. Seymour Avery. Miss Mary Jane Brackman, little daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. G. Brackman, 4449 Guilford Ave., Is qtill filled with the wonders of a three weeks' vacation at Lake Webster.
FABLES ON HEALTH
an hour and got a good rest. If, after the rest, you find you are not refreshed, it’s a pretty good sign you, have walked too much and go a little easier the next time. “Most patients find that each day they can go a "tittle farther than previously. “Only- with the greatest care shoukr more strenuous sports, such as swimming or tennis, be undertaken. “But fresh air and recreation are Important—be sure to get them.” MURAT ACTORS-GUESTS Harold Vermily® and Claude Kimball to Dine at Y. W. One of the most pleasant social events of the summer for the Young Business Women’s Club of the Y. WC. A. will take place Friday evening in the Federation club room. The club will have as guests. Harold Vermilye and Claude Kimball, of the Murat players^. Officers of the club: Miss Myra E. Majors, president; Miss Esther Cook, vice president; Miss Clara Brocking, secretary, and Mrs. Lucile Cave Buckner, treasurer, will entertain. Mr. Vermilye and Mr. Kimball, Miss Alma Sickler, the club advisor and Miss Gertrude Sykes at a dinner part? at t>. Following the clujj meeting .he group will see "The Broken Wing” at the Murat.
Michigan Campus Goal of Voters
rnNN ARBOR, Mich., is the goal toward which the worn* 1 en voters of seven States are turning this summer. The campus of the University of Michigan offers a cool haven from the tropic heat July, and it is this campus which has been chosen as headquarters for the Institute of Government and Politics which the fourth region, in cooperation with the University of Michigan, is arranging. FYcm July 21-26, instructors from the /University of the Philippines, -©ornell University, the University of Wisconsin, the -University of Illinois, and the University of Michigan, one a
INTEREST SHOWN in jackie mm LUNCHEONAUG.7 t Children of City to Be Hosts to Boy Film Star for , a Day, Enthusiasm has met endeavors of Mrs.'T. W. Demmerly as chairman of .the luncheon for \Jackie Coogan Aug. 7 under the auspices of the Indiana Indorsers of Photoplays, The ticket sale will close Tuesday, with every table reserved. Many members of the indorsers have engaged tables for parties for their Children. This 1$ one time when the grown folks take the side lines. Each table will be filled with kiddies, presided over by one adult hostess. The speakers’ table" Will be for representatives of various children’s organizations who will act as Jackie’s reception committee. Speeches will be giv.ai by children under 16 years of ag?. Hostesses include: Mesdames O. C. Schrader. J. A. Clifton, J. W. Bachmeyer, A. J. Clark, O. C. Lukenbill, W. It Geisel, M. L. Robins. Wilfred Vestal. Clark Mallory, O. M. Kennedy, R. G. Hesseldenz, E. W. Springer, Roger M. Williams. J. M. Engle, Phillip Fishbein, Harry Albright, William S. Mcßride, W. A. Row r e. - Harry McDonald, Ed gal' Kiser, Samuel R. Artman, Alex Goodwin. Elizabeth Smith. Frank Shellhouse, Carl R. Day, Theodore Wagner, T. W. Demmerly. E. L. Burnett, Miss Harriett McCoy and Miss Elizabeth Hays. -
Sister Mary’s Kitchen
GAIN WEIGHT Breakfast One large glass orange Juice. Vi cup cooked wheat cereal, V 4 cup cream, 1 soft boiled egg, 2 pieces crisp rye toast, 3 slices French toast, 3 tablespoons mgfple slrpp. 1 or 2 cups hot water. Mid-morning lunch —Two jjeanut butter sandwiches. 1 cup milk. Luncheon—One hot cheese sandwich. Vi head lettuce with 2 table spoons French dressing, 1 cup weak fee. Four o'clock tea —One cup iced chocolate, 4 assorted sandwiches. Dinner —One cup jellied bouillon, 4 radishes, 3 ripe olives. brgiled chicken, J new potatoes +n cream, 4 tablespoons buttered string beans. 10 stalks asparagus on 2 ounees lettuce with 2 tablespoons mayonnaise, 4 tablespoons raspberry ice, 1 lafge piece angclxcake, 2 dinner rolls, 1 tablespoon butter. Updtime—One cup whole milk.x Total calories. 3.963. Protein, 491; fat, 1,540; carbohydrate, 1.932. Iron, J'225 grant. The assorted sandwiches are the rrdinary tea size. Bran bread with raisins made into plain bread and butter sandwiches, cucumber with mayonnaise, lettuce with mayonnaise and preserved ginger and cream cheese sandwich were the as sortment calculated. •''' The fattening foods are a’so the ‘‘heatening" forffls and as the weather grows warm you will find it necessary to watch your diet and count your calories with even greater rare. LOSE WEIGHT One e\ip clear chicken broth. U recipe baked asparatruS. 1 cup fresh strawberries. 4 ounces baked Wjiefish, 1 cup new airing beans, ounces nition salad, 4 tablespoons fruit cup 1 pint skimmed milk. 1 cup coffee with 1 tablespoon cream and 1 level teaspoon sugar, 9 tbin crisp pieces gluten toast. 1 whole wheat roll Total calories. 1.118. Protein. 209: fat. 377: carbohydrate. 472. Iron. .0163 gp am. It you must have coffee with sugar and cream you must add 100 calories of pure fat for the cream and about twenty-five calories of carbohydrate for the sugar and figure no iron, grams or other minerals. The coffee itself has no food value. (To my way of thinking yc-u make a bad bargain when you give up 125 precious calories for a cup of coffee with sugar and cream. These calories will provide you with six protein calories, three fat and 91 carbohydrate to say nothing of .0006 Iron grams and vitamins if you spend them for one good-sized orange. And more than that you will have 25 perfectly good calories left for radishes, spinach, onions or cabbage. A breakfast of one whole orange, one cup hot skimmed milk and one piece of crisp unbuttered gluten or whole wheat toast will prove Its worth before noon time for it will give you something lasting to work on while coffee stimulates for the time but Joes nothing more. (Copyright, 1924, NEA Service, Inc.) YV. C. T. U. Notes Tuxedo Ufiion will meet on Friday at 2 p. m. with Mrs. Elizabeth Pennjck, 435 N. Jefferson Ave. University Heights Union will meet with Mrs. Enos Snyder, Madison Rr. and Edwards Ave., on Tuesday afternoon at 2. Mrs. Alva Roberts will be in charge of devotions.
widely known specialist in his line,' will offer intensive courses in political, governmental, legislative and international problems. Primarily Intended for the women citizens of the States In the fourth region, the institute is, however, open to any one, man or woman, who is interested in the subjects it presents. It offers an exceptional opportunity to obtain really authoritative knowledge on a wide range of topics of interest to all intelligent voters. And best of all, the cost, including everything front Pullman tickets to registration fee, is less than that of an ordinary’ vacation camping trip.
—Martha Lee Says Jealousy Shows Lack of Confidence in Self
Jealousy signifies, more than anything else, back of selfconfidence. It is evidence of the much-discussed “inferiority complex.’’ A small degree of jealousy is flattering. But when it bevomas all-consuming, as it almost always does, it endangers the very love out of which it is supposed to have grown.
Fear of competition usually is the basis of jealousy. The jealous person would not admit that; in fact, usually he does not know it. Asa rule, jealousy does not accomplish its end —to inspire love, it may inspire fear, or a tenacious devotion, but not love Unless she is very weak-willed, a woman resents extreme jealousy on the part of suitor or husband. She wants to be protected, not commanded; trusted, not watched. 'Terribly Jealous Dear Miss life: I am a girl 18 years ‘old and I go with a. fellow two years older. T like him more than any other fellow I know, but he is terribly jealous. He never wants me to dance with other fellows, and now- he says he will quit jf I don't stop having other dates. Miss Lee. I don't think tliii is fair, because he has other dates and dances with other girls. But h-- says he just does that because I do and he doesn't care about them, hut he's afraid I will care about the other fellows. I don't want to stop going with other fellows, because I like some o l them, but I couldn’t bear to loss this fellow. So what should I do? SALLY. Let him go, Sajly, unless you want to give in to him ?oT*the rest of your life. There is no reason on earth why you should stop having other hoy friends for him. He must have a poor opinion of himself, if he is afraid for you to know other men. Summer Bride Dear Miss Lee: I am to be married late this month. Should my father get my bouquet, or should my fiance? Who pays for the bridesmaids' flowers and the decorations ? The wedding is to be at home. | J M. F. The bride’s father provides the decorations: the bridegroom, ftowers for the bride and her attendants. Her Neighteo Dear Martha Lee: I am a girl 16 years old. I would like very much to get acquainted with a good-looking boy two years my senior who moved into my neighborhood recently What steps would you advise me to take? BROYVIy EYES. Young boys and girls usually be come acquainted in the course of time, when they are neighbors. Formality means little to them. However. tlrit does not mean you should flirt with this boy. It means that you’re almost certain to meet him anyway, so why the rush? Broken Trust Dear Miss Lee: I ha*~ been engaged for six months and was to announce my engagement this fall. But my fiance has been acting strangely for some time, and the other day I ft(hnd out he has been having dates with ffbnther girl on nights he wasn't seeing me. It hurt more for him not to tell me than for him Ifo have the dates. I wouldn't believe it at first, but now I know it s true. I love him with all my heart. What ean I do? BROKEN-HEARTED. Be thankful you found out before marriage what a cheat he is, break the engagement, and hope he never causes another girl such heartache. GOOD MANNERS > Galore \ Invitations -
If the families of the young engaged couple are at all in the habit of entertaining, the announcement of the engagement is the ffignal always for a shower of invitations. FRIENDS AT SALEM~PARK itlmillon County Quarterly Meeting Held Hero. The Union Quarterly Meeting of Friends of Hamilton County opened today at Salem Park. Today's program jvas to be given over .to a worship period- jn the morning and a discussion of world problems and evangelistic methods in the afterboon. \ \ m A sunris eprayer meeting is scheduled for Sunday morning at 6 a. m. Bible study will be held from 9 to 10 and in the afternoon missionary work wili be considered/
Vacation Money If the lack of funds will keep you at home this summer, we, suggest making preparations now for next year’s vacation. Begin to deposit a convenient amount in an interest account here every pay day and vacation motley will have no AvorrieS for you next summer. For Example—s3.oo a week saved during the next ttvelve months will gwe you a fortnight of enjoyment on our Great Lakes with meals aud everything included—slo.oo a Aveek Avill give you a three months’ trip to Europe. Nine Convenient Offices Open Saturday Nights, 6 to S. * jFletcljtr IS'a'mngs ant tErupt Company Northwest Corner I*ennsylvania and M irket v BRANCHES AND AFFILIATED BANKS 1233 Oliver Avenue 2122 East Tenth Street 1732 Roosevelt Avenue 474 AVest AVashington Street Iti4l North JUlinois Street 4.AS East Washington Street yeaoo North Illinois Street East Washington Street / * *
LETTER FROM SALLY ATHERTON TO JAMES CONDON, CONTINUED The love part of your letter, dear Jim, was very poetic and beautiful, £.nd I think my greatest happiness was that I could not bocome so hardened that I could not appreciate it. My eyes grew misty as I read it, and I think, dear boy, that I was a little envious—for Jim, dear Jim, 1 have never had anyone to whom I could talk like that andmean it. I don’t think I’m capable of it. The utter sincerity of your* devotion. is almost religious in its fervor. That you are a worshiper at a false shrine, and that your idol is wholly of clay, does not take anything from the sublimity of your great faith. No one, it seems, from what you wrote me of the conversation that you overheard, could shatter your faithr’in me. YVill Destroy Trust Some day, Jim, however, I have feeling that I myself will destroy your trust, much as I want to keep it. I am not the superwoman that you think I am. I’m only an idol that you worship, and I shall be toppled over and broken into bits by my poor Yiuman failings, some day. I would fee! worse about this if I did not know that I will be the only thing to he broken —your heart will still be intact. f So you thought Jack Prescott looked at me as though I belonged to him? .Tim, in the language of the street, if Jack Prescott has any such thought as that, he has anoti.'r think coming. I don’t belong to any one except Sally Atherton. He amuses me; his arrogance and conceit are so colossal. Many, many times, knowing Leslie as I do, I know the wonderful plans he brings' down and retails to me as conceptions of his own, are something she has put into his head. He's a clever chap for all that, and T probably shall go to lunch and dine with him again and again, dear boy, whatever people may say. I may be martyred in the coming years for my assumption that a woman may do exactly what a man may do without any more 7‘ompunction thaj> a man, and get away with •it. But all the same. I'm geing to liye along this line as long as I do live. Hard Headed Os course I know that it is fortunate that I am hard headed, but T have schooled myself to be and to think like a man. Whenever I find myself growing in sentiment, I immediately try to be as sentimental as possilflf. A{en are always sentimental. but they haven’t much sentiment. Women, on' the other hand, are less apt to he moved by their emotions, but they have a great deal of that tepdernbss and loyalty which to me is sentiment. .-Jim. dear Jim, don’t think of me too much, for I’m not worth it. as conventional worth goes. I’m Just a woman who. is determined to succeed. determined to do the thing she wants to do. and just now that, thing i4 to be one of the best known advertising experts in the country. Come again and see me. I’ll try not to hurt you. but don’t expect me to break any engagements for you— that’s not businesslike. Affectionately, SALLY. (Copyright, 1924, NEA Service, Inc.) Next: Letter from John Alden Prescott to Sydney Carton. MORE HELP ON BONUS Two Legion Posts to Maintain Head--quarters Downtown, Former service men desiring assistance in filling out blanks for adjusted compensation may receive it from the Howard C. Root and Hayward Barcus posts of the American Legion. Beginning Monday, headquarters at 205 City Trust Bldg., will be kept open every night during the week from 6 to 10 p. m. Marion F. Hinkle will be in charge. Arrangements were completed at a joint meeting of the posts Friday night' \
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