Indianapolis Times, Volume 36, Number 69, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 July 1924 — Page 5
TUESDAY, JULY 29, 1924
QOCIAL Activities ENTERTAINMENTS WEDDINGS BETROTHALS
- CLEVER bridge and miscelA laneous shower was given Tuesday afternoon at the Polly Prim Tea Room by Mrs. Harold Rochester Stucky for her sister-in-law, Miss Katharine Stucky, whose marriage to Herschell Holton Everett of Miami, Fla., will take place Sept. 20. In view of the fact that the brideelect will go to Miami to make her home the appointments for the party were in keeping with the journey South. After the bridge game the guests were called to the dining room by a Pullman porter. They were served at tables arranged to represent a Puljnan diner and favors were small trains filled with candy and nuts. The shower gifts were presented in various kinds of luggage brought in by a taxi driver. The guests: Misses Elizabeth Fauvre, Amelia Sanborn, Barbara King, Sara Fisher, Helen Eaglesfield, Mesdames Ernest L. Barr, Charles C. Binkley, William Martin Curphy, Francis A. Gurley, William H. Horne. John Downing Johnson, Jr., Frederick Kleinsmith, Daniel W. Layman, George W. Mahoney. Josephine S. Moore. Robert H. Morse, Jr.. Frank H. Nesbitt, Horace W. Nordyke. Bower Patterson, Kenneth Reese, William R. Scaaf, Joen E. Smith, Edward Wilder Stucky, James Livingstone Thompson, John A. White. • • Mrs. Robert W. Mcßride, 1434 Park Ave., has as her house guests, her granddaughter, Miss Jane Cooper and Miss Thalia Oliphant of New York. They will also visit Mrs. J. P. Hoster, 2531 Broadway. • • Mr. and Mrs. William Alexander, 8891 Sutherland Ave., and children, have moved to Grand Rapids, Mich, * • • Otto D. Lefler, 3924 N. Delaware St., has gone for a visit in the East. • • • Miss Gertrude Polen, 34 Layman Ave., entertained Monday night at bridge for the active chapter of Delta Delta Delta Sorority of Butler University. There were five tables of bridge. The members meet weekly during the summer. • • • Mrs. Henry L. Ayres. 4117 Park Ave., and her house guest, Mrs. R. B. Dye, of Springfield, Mo., were at home informally to about thirty-five guests, Tuesday afternoon. Garden flowers made a pretty setting for the midsummer party and Miss Elizabeth Mills assisted the hostess Mrs. Dye was the honored guest Monday night at a dinner party at the Lincoln and a theater party at English’s given by members of the Gamma Tau Chi Sorority. Mr. and Mrs. Dye and their daughter. Miss Narcy, who have been visiting Mr. and Mrs. Ayres for several days, will leave for their home Thursday. • a * Miss Elizabeth McCormick, 905 Ewing St., is spending some time with Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Smith of Greenfield, Ind.. while there Mr. and Mrs. Smith will entertain with a house party for her. Miss McCormick will visit at Turkey Run before returning home. In the fall she will go to Pendelton to assume her duties as head of the department of English in the high school. • • • Dr. and Mrs. John S. Jordan. 539 W. Twenty-Seventh St., have gone to Lake Kcontz in Northern In diana for several weeks. * * • Mr. and Mrs. Joseph P. Gallagher. 2501 Ashland Ave., have returned from a short visit at Lake Maxinkuckee. • * • Mr. and Mrs. Roy H. Graves and sons, Robert and Richard, 6012 E. Washington St., have returned from a vacation trip to Eagle Lake in Michigan. • • • Mr. and Mrs. Ned Clay and little son, Dickie and Jack, 2832 Ashland Ave., have returned from a motor trip to New York and Niagara Falls. They were accompanied by Miss Johanna Gilday and Edward Manion. * * • Mr. and Mrs. Storey Larkin, 71 Whittier PL, are on a motor trip in the east. • • • Mr. and Mrs. Adrian F. Deming, 3048 N. Delaware St., left Tuesday for a motor trip to Madison, Ind. • * • Mrs. Harry D. Weller and daughter. Miss Eudora, 2334 N. Capitol
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New Invention Takes Photographic Impression of Feet and Shows What Is Wrong With Them
By MARIAN HALE NEA Service Writer OEW YORK, July 29.—A photograph of your face, without retouching, always brings out your freckles, wrinkles and irregularities of feature. But it isn’t nearly so revealing to the trained eye as a pedographic impression of your foot, which tells every ailment you have ever had or are likely to have with your feet. Dr. William Scholl of New York, who invented the pedograph—a machine for taking a photographic impression of the feet—believes that feet should be examined regularly the same as teeth, and preventive measure taken before flat foot and broken arch actually develop. “Feet that are normal do not tire or ache from ordinary standing or walking," he adv ses, “and If they do, it is a sign either that your shoes are wrong or that you have some foot trouble. “Feet give more trouble in the Ave., have gone to Chicago and New York for an indefinite stay. • • • Mr. and Mrs. Walter Jenny, 5700 Pleasant Run Blvd., will go next month to Detroit to take a lake trip, visiting at Lake Mullett, Mich., and Racine, Wis. • • • Mr. and Mrs. Murray Dalman, 3043 N. Delaware St., and daughters, Miss Elizabeth and Miss Marjorie, left Tuesday for a motor trip to Ft. Wayne, where they will visit relatives for a week. * * • Officers elected at the meeting of the Alpha Sigma Delta Sorority Monday night at the home of Miss Betty Thompson, 52 N. Tibbs Ave., are: Miss Thompson, president; Miss Mary Gallagher, vice president; Miss Jean Cohen, secretary; Miss Angella Baker, treasurer. • • • Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Davidson, 3925 Broadway, and their daughters. Miss Norma and Miss Clarabelle, will go a week from Saturday for a motor trip through Illinoiis. • * * Independent Order of Shepherds will give a dance and card party Wednesday night in P. H. C. Hall, East and Michigan Sts. \ Camp No. 3. P. O. A., will give a card party Wednesday evening at the hall, N. Meridian St. • * • Lavelle Gossett Post, Veterans of Foreign Wars, announced a card party for Tuesday night in their hall, 902 N. Pershing Ave. • * * Myrtle Temple, Pythian Sisters, will lawn social at the corner of Barth Ave. and Pleasant Run Blvd., Wednesday night for the benefit of the Orphans Maintenance and Home Fund. EMPLOYES HAVE OUTING Taylor larpet Company Holds Picnic at Columbia Park. Fourth annual picnic of the Taylo*Carpet Company was held today at Columbia Park for employes and families. Store closed at 1 p. m. when picnickers were taken to the park in automobiles. Games, contests and dancing featured the proI gram. Tax Reduction Refused I The Fletcher Savings and Trust j Company was unsuccessful Monday in an attempt to obtain a reduction lin the tax assessment against its | branch banks on Roosevelt Ave., E. j Sixteenth St. and E. Washington | St. The State tax board heard the j appeal informally and explained that its rules forbid assessment of banks on any other value except capital stock. The parent bank showed the branch banks were losing money.
May be fine stuff when the thermometer Is down to zero— But. in midsummer, what we want is COOLING DRINKS AND FROZEN DESSERTS. And so— Our Washington Bureau has ready for you a five thousand
SUMMERTIME EDITOR, Daily Times, 1322 New York Ave.. Washington, D. C. I wait a copy of the bulletin, COOLING BRINKS AND FROZEN DESSERTS, and enclose herewith 4 cents in loose postage stamps for same: Name St. and No. or R. R.............. City **&*-a*-a State ..•............ -
PEDOGRAPH OPERATOR MEASURES A GIRL’S FOOT.
summer than the winter, and usually women have more difficulty than men.” Here are soma of his precautions: "Don't wear extremely high or extremely pointed shoes. “If you have been wearing highheeled shoes and want to change to low, make the change gradually. "Don’t wear shoes that are too tight. They shut off the circulation and cramp the muscles. “Don’t wear stockings that are toe short. They are as apt to cause deformity of the feet as short shoes. “Do not use corrosive acids to remove corns or 'Callouses. They don’t remove the cause and they eften eat into the surrounding tissues with painful results.” Here are some simple exercises that he says will strengthen the arches and exercise the toes:. "Stand with the feet parallel—rise on tiptoes and return slowly.
There Is No Deep Mystery About Being Fresh as a Daisy These Days
By WALTER D. HICKMAN r"~"|RESH as a daisy. T* I You have wanted to feel .... I that way. So have I. But how to do it? That's the question. A bunch of books have been published, but most of them are too long and too envolved. I always thought that some fellow who wasn't strong and who wasn't at one time in his life feeling as fresh as a daisy, but got that way, would write about a hundred pages telling the world how he did it. Well, it has happened. Edward James Herman of Indianapolis has written a short, and I think a practical book on how to get that daisy feeling. Herman has put soverdl simple prescriptions for health building and some man to man observations in a book called “Health Is Wealth,” published by the Reilly & Lee Company, Chicago. To get results health talks must not be lectures. That Herman knows. The beauty of this book is that one gets the feelin’ that Herman is talking face to face with the reader. He knows that I am lazy about this exercise thing and he tells me about it in this book. Os course, health is something more than just muscle development. Lot more to it, and Herman covers the field. You have confidence in him the second you run across this line or twq: “If the author had not experienced the tragedy of being a weakling at one time (weighing but ninety-six pounds at the age of 19) and, in the years which have followed, proven the simplicity of health building to his own complete satisfaction, and had not this day found his veins flowing with the sparkling blood of an athlete, his body trained for endurance and staying qualities, thia book might have never been written.” That is proof of the pudding to me. You Want Health? Although this book is 116 short pages in length, yet it covers every avenue to health. The book handles these subjects —in your room exercise, the value of walking, the health giving qualities of the bath, right thinking and its effect, food, what to eat and when. I will let Herman talk to you In his own wftrds: “There is no way in which you can invest ten minutes of your
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This relieves the rigidity in the arch and ba'l of the foot. “Place the leg over the knee and extend the toes downward, then describe a circular motion toward the inside. “Raise the foot from the floor and straignten it as far as possible, endeavoring to mßke a straight line with the foot and leg. “Exercise the toes by bending them downward against the sole, as though you were trying to pick up some object with your foot instead of your hand. “Extend the leg and flex the foot toward you as far as possible to stretch calf muscles and tendons. “Stand in your bare feet on the floor and raise the toes off the floor as far as you can toward the top of the foot, and then return them slowly to the floor. “Stand on a block of wood or a table with the toes over the edge and bend the toes downward as far as possible. This is usually painful at first but gradually the feet become accustomed to it.”
Weekly Book Review -
EDWARD JAMES HERMAN time dally that will pay you such enormous dividends as those spent in the care of your health. “* • • p en minutes a day, earnestly and seriously devoted to health building, will turn the trick. You would not think of beginning the day without first spending one minute in brushing the teeth. Is your body worth giving nine minutes of the allotted ten? If not, don’t how] when faced with a big repair bill? “Worry is the germ that shatters the nerves of men, and no man can hope to build or mend with nerves unstrung. "Speaking further of tonics, the only ‘iron’ your system needs is a pair of cast iron dumbbells: not lighter than six pounds each, and not heavier than ten. "Eat only when hungry. “To eat only when hungry is a profitable rule to follow, but few of us eat enough oranges or drink enough water, day or night. "The greatest secret of good health lies in proper selection of nourishing foods. “* * * in every glass of pure milk there is a real live, regular kick put there by nature.” I could go on and give you other extracts which hit the nail on the head. The health exercises that Herman lists will get results if we will only follow them. My advise is get hold of “Health Is Wealth” and then get busy. New books of fiction at the Public Library include “Siege,” S. H. Adams; “Dan Barry’s Daughter,” Mac Brand; "Q,” K. N. Burt; “Gentleman of Courage,” J. O. Curwood; “Fool’s Hill,” Leona Dalrymple; “Mystery of Lynne Court,” J. S. Fletcher; “Rires of Ambition,” G. F. Gibbs; “Prudence’s Daughter,” Ethel Hueston; “Summertime,” D. G. Mackail; “Frozen Trail,” A. J. Small; “Treve,” A. P. Terhune; “Thrice Told Tales,” edited by B. C. Williams. New books of poetry, drama and essays include “Realms We Fashion,” Frances Barber; "OneAct Plays From the Yiddish,” translated by Etta Block; “Man About Town,” A P. Herbert. New scientific and technical books include “Reinforced Concrete and Masonry Structures,” edited by G. A. Hool; “Tuberculosis, Nature, Treatment anrl Prevention,” L. R. Williams; “Modern Soap and Detergent Industry,” Geoffrey Martin; “Adventures of a Lion Family and Other Studies of Wild Life in East Africa,” A. A. Pienaar.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
LETTER FROM LESLIE PRESCOTT TO LESLIE PRESCOTT, CARE OF THE SECRET DRAWER, CONTI IjJUED. I was silent for a moment, little Marquise. I could not accuse my own sister, neither could I let poor Karl be blamed for something I knew he could not do. “But Jack, you must remember that Karl is now engaged to my sister and the preparations for the wedding are all made —the invitations are out, everything—” “That is just it. Whitney has found he could not go through with it, consequently he sent me this letter.” “I do not, I cannot believe it, Jack.” “Well, you will believe it when I take those damned beads and go over and twist them around his throat and choke the confession out of him." I could see. little Marquise, that we were not getting anywhere, so I simply said: “Jack, do you realize that tomorrow night we’re going to have a party in celebration of our third anniversary, and we are at this moment in the midst of the worst quarrel we have ever had? “We’ve got to settle this thing some way, or at least call a truce until after then.” Jack turned toward the window. He had been standing the entire time since he came into my room. "Os course you can do what you please, Leslie, but I shan't be here for that celebration. I'm taking those pearls back to Whitney as I told you I would and I shall expect you to give me that $6,000 I sent you, and with what I have in the bank which I intended to invest very shortly in a splendid profitmaking concern, I think I will be able to make up to him the amount of money he has spent. At least I can give him my note for thirty days for the remainder.” “Suppose when you told me about littlo Jack, when you told me that the child I loved as my own, was your child and its mother was Paula Perier, suppose when you told me this I had said: ‘All right, you do what you please. Today is my day for washing our dirty linen in public and I am going to proceed to do it.’ “If you insist upon doing this thing you have threatened, John Prescott, I will recall all the invitations, either by telephone or wire, this afternoon. I'm not going to celebrate my third wedding anniversary alone. "However, I may as well tell you that you cannot take my pearls back to Karl. They are neither yours nor his —they are mine, and I’m going to keep them. I may as well remind you, also, that little*Jack is also mine, and if you find it will be impossible for yourself to be present tomorrow evening, there will be no party, then or ever after as far as you're concerned. “If you're not standing beside me to receive our guests tomorrow night, whatever direction your rage and jealousy may take afterwards. I will never speak to you again. Jack Prescott. "I acknowledge I have made a mistake, many of them, since our marriage, but you of course understand that I had no more idea than you, when the pearls were put around my neck by my sister on my wedding day, that they were real.” (Copyright, 1924, NEA Service. Inc.) Household Suggestions Wrong Side Out Hang colored clothes wrong side out when you dry them and hang them where there is a good current of air so they may dry quickly. Put It in Jar If all the pimentos are not used when the can is opened, put them in a covered glass jar and pour olive oil over them and they will last for several days. Use Both Sides When using long-handled brushes and brooms try to use both s;des evenly, if you want them to wear the longest possible time. Winter Fabrics Fabrics for winter are thick and soft and corded effects are to be very prominent. Reversible materials in silks are very good. Bettless Frock The beltless frock is quite apt to have circular rufTles about the hem, and very plain, long sleeves. Large Hats The very large black hat, with a white water lily or cala lily dropping off one side, is the fad of the moment. Use Mild Soap Use very mild soap when cleaning white woodwork, as Strong soap turns it yellow in a short time.
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Evangeline
jj|. She is Louisiana’s prettiest. Miss Rita Blanchett of New Iberia, La., plays the title role in New Iberia’s annual production of "Evangeline.” Now she has been adjudged the most beautiful woman in the State. Sister Marys Kitchen LOSE WEIGHT Breakfast Four tablespoons stewed dried peaches, 1 bran muffin, hot water. Lunceon —Four tablespoons casserole of vegetables, Va head lettuce, 2 tablespoons jelled gooseberries, 1 cup skimmed milk. Dinner —One cup consomme, 1 soft-shell crab, % medium-sized cucumber sliced on 2 ounces lettuce, 1 slice gluten bread, Vs cup chilled fruit cup. Bedtime —One cup skimmed milk. Total calories, 1,088. Protein, 219: fat, 311; carbohydrate, 558. Iron, .021 gram. The consomme should be served to suit the weather, hot or cold, as the case may be. One large or two small crabs are planned. They should be steamed and served with melted butter. One tablespoon is allowed for the diet. Casserole of V egetables Three-pound head new cabbage, 2 cups canned tomatoes, 2 large onions, 1 teaspoon salt. V 4 teaspoon pepper, 2 tablespoons flour, 2 tablespoons butter. 4 tablespoons coarse whole wheat bread crumbs, 1 tablespoon grated cheese. Cook cabbage in boiling water in an uncovered kettle until tender. Drain and chop. Rub tomatoes through colander to remove seeds. Melt buttPr, stir in flour and add tomato puree. Cook, stirring constantly until thick and smooth. Put layer of cabboge in baking dish, add layer of onions and layer of tomato. Continue layer for layer until all is used. Cover with crumbs and sprinkle with cheese. Bake in moderate oven until cheese is brown and tomato mixture bubbles up through the crumbs. Total calories, 954. Protein, 136; fat, 28; carbohydrate, 631. Iron, .0171 gram. GAIN WEIGHT Breakfast Four tablespoons stewed dried peaches, 1 cup boiled rice. V 6 cup cream, 2 bran muffins, 1 tablespoon butter, 2 tablespoons marmalade, hot water. Mid-Morning Lunch—One large glass orange juice, 2 peanut butter sandwiches. Luncheon—One cup cream of potato soup, 2 tablespoons croutons, 4 tablespoons casserole of vegetables, 2 toasted cheese sandwiches, V 4 head lettuce with 2 tablespoons Thousand Island dressing, 1 cup whole milk, 2 tablespoons jelled gooseberries with 2 tablespoons whipped cream. Afternoon Tea—One glass “half and half,” 2 whole slices cinnamon toast. Dinneu—rpne cup consomme, 2 soft-shell crabe, 2 tablespoons lattice potatoes, 4 tablespoons lima beans in cream, V 6 medium-sized cucumber sliced on 2 ounces lettuce with 2 tablespoons French dressing, 2 slices whole wheat bread, 1 tablespoon butter, V) cup chilled fruit cup. 2 cocoanut drop cakes. Bedtime—One cup whole milk. Total calories, 4,133. Protein, 426; fat, 1,485: carbohydrate, 2,222. Iron, .0221 gram. If preferred the crabs for this diet may be crumbed and fried in deep fat. Cheese sandwiches are served with the casserole of vegetables to increase the fat. and protein nutrients in the gaining diet. The combination is quite “tasty," since cheese is used with the vegetable dish. Lima beans in cream are most friendly to the person who would gain and they supply some valuable vitamins as well.
(Copyright, 1924, NEA Service, Inc.)
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Daughter-in-Law Plays Part in That Old Joke Not infrequently the much-discussed mother-in-law problem is,'in reality, a daughter-in-law problem. It is commonly supposed that every mother is jealous of the girl her son marric • that she is afraid he will not receive the care she gave him; that she tries to assume control of her
daughter-in-law’s household. Very true —in some cases. Also very true. In many other cases, that wife is jealous of mother-in-law; that she hates any reference to a past in which this older woman knew her husband intimately, before she knew him at all; that she is suspicious of every move mother-in-law makes; that she repels every friendly advance. Daughter-in-law has the advantage, because she comes first in her husband’s thoughts. But she loses this advantage if she puts her mother-in-law on the defensive against her onslaughts, and forces her husband to stand up for the right of his own mother to love him. Mother-in-Law Spurned Doar Miss Lee: My son has beei married five months to a girl I have tried in vain to make love me. She does not give me a chance to love her, either. She finds fault with me every time I come into the bouse, and she even tries to keep my son from coming to see me. She told him "I'm not going to let any other woman boss my household, so your mother can just keep ay-ay. ' I never tried to boss her at all. My Maughter-in-law had a sister whose mother-in-law was the bossy kind and broke up her marriage. I think that is why my son s wife is so afraid of me. My son is my only child in Indianapolis and I cannot stand to be treated the way I am now. He loves me. too. and this thing is making him think hard thingß about his wife. He still loves her too much to think of giving her up for me. but I don’t know what will happen. Please advise me. MOTHER-IN-LAW. You poor dear, fighting your way against a tradition and a prejudice! Go to your daughter-in-law and ask her to give you a “sporting chance.” Explain that mothers-in-law are not all alike, any more than are daugh-ters-in-law. Tell her that you have not the slightest desire to interfere in her household; that all you want is to love her and be loved; that you had expected, when your son married, to gain a daughter, not to lose him. Fallen Hard Dear Miss Lee: I am a high school senior, barely 18. Recently I met a girl of the type I greatly admire, and am either in love or out of my head. I always had boasted I wouldn't ‘‘fair’ for a girl. When I first met her. and sometimes even now. I, a big. healthy, strong, manly boy, feel like crying, to think she is out with other boys some nights. She tells me everything about her other dates, and I would not say anything against them for the world. I try to divert myself by reading, work-
.GOOD MANNERS.
‘Going Away' Clothes
T]HE bride chooses her goin g-away dress according t.„ J to the journey she makes. If she travels by motor, she wears a small hat and a wrap of some sort over her dress or suit. If she travels by train, she wears an ordinary “traveling” dress.
Try for a Change
4 *f\xr7l HERE are you soing for VY/ your vacation?” a friend ** asked Mr. Mann of Anytown. “Same ol‘ place, Salt Creek” replied Mr. Mann. “Why don’t you ever change?** “Too much troutile finding anew place.” That’s the attitude of many vacationers. And it isn’t a particularly good one to adopt, if the proper results are to be gotten. The fundamental purpose of a vasation Is to allow a complete change of life, habits, surroundings and people. There should be a change of scenery, a change of food, change
Tomorrow, Wednesday is The Last Day of Kinney's July Shoe Clearance — s 2 s 3 —Hosiery Special— Women’s pure silk hose, all Men’s pure silk hose, black colors. Sale price, 98<t per and brown, 59<*. pair. Two Pairs, SI.OO tdtJT G R nd Oxfords \ ln ° ur chl, ‘ $1.95 to . w . ... .. 98c to $2.95 24 N. Penn.,St. $ 195 i
■.Martha Lee Says-
mr. working with my radio, etc., but my mind always goes to her. I kept telling myself. “Aw, it s only puppy love, or a passing fascination, as Martha Lee says!” But I’ve been saying that almost five months, and she’s still in my mind. I've taken two long vacations this summer, but couldn’t forget her. I’ve been with several other girls since my last date with her, but that doesn’t settle things. I don't know why I should especially forget her, as we’ve had no quarrels. I just wonder whether she’s leading me a merry race to test me, or am I under-confident. She is 17. MR. TECH. You’re hard hit, Mr. Tech, that much is certain. Why try to forget this girl, your very dear friend? That would be foolish. True love, my boy, always is an inspiration tc a. man to do big things. He wants to make the girl he loves proud of him. He works harder than ever, instead of mooning Taround. Now this probably is “puppy love.” But “puppy love” is not necessarily only “a passing fascination.” It may grow into the most beautiful love. C r it may die. Which this will do, time alone will tell. Stubborn, That’s All Dear Miss Lee: I am 22 years old and was engaged to a man two years older. We quarreled over nothing, and broke the engagement. a month ago. I have been miserable since. We both are of very determined natures, but I have almost decided to write to him. Would that be soft? We both were to blame. BROKEN-HEARTED. "Determined,” did you say? I’d call it plain stubborn. Write to him, of course. But —you’d both better become less “determined,” If you don’t want your ship of matrimony to go on the rocks shortly after it starts out. ‘Good Form' Dear Miss Lee: 1. Should an engaged girl go to see her fiance’s family, or should they come to see her first, if they live in the 6ame city? 2. What initials should a bride use for her monogram? SUMMER BRIDE. 1. The man’s family should call on an engaged girl immediately after the announcement of the engagement. 2. It is customary for a bride to use the initials of her maiden name for her monogram. However, some brides prefer to us ethe initials of her own first and last name, with the initial of her new name. For instance, Mary Jane Smith, marrying James Black, would use either M. J. S. or M. S. B. FRIENDS’ PASTOR LEAVES The Rev. W. O. Trueblood to Depart Wednesday for California. The Rev. William O. Trueblood, pastor of First Friends Church, will leave Wednesday for Whittier, Cal., where he will become pastor of the First Friends Church at that place. He will be succeeded by the Rfev. ■< Elden Mills of Brooklyn, N. Y., a recent graduate of Hartford Theological Seminary. Supply pastors will fill the local pulpit until September. The Rev. Trueblood, who has been here twelve years, delivered his last sermon Sunday. New Assistant Named Edward Rowland, executive secretary of Evansville College, has been named assistant to Robert E. Neff, registrar of Indiana University School of Medicine and superintendent of Robert W. Long Hospital. Rowlands will take up his new duties Aug. 11.
FABLES ON HEALTH
of the preparation of food. In such vacations lie psychological values that result In the greatest benefits of the vacationer. A return to the same place year after year; a meeting of the same people—all such samenesses leave little to the imagination and offer few surprises. In brief, they are all right but they are psychologically off key. The ideal vacation would be one In which all persons could go back to boyhood simplicity of mind and play; a complete making over. Since this is impossible to most folks, get the next best thing: as complete a change as is possible each year.
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