Indianapolis Times, Volume 36, Number 76, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 August 1924 — Page 6
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Qocial Activities ENTERTAINMENTS WEDDINGS BETROTHALS
IRS. DAVID LENNOX, 336 Berkeley Rd., entertained on c__J Wednesday afternoon with a bridge party of five tables, honoring Mrs. Allen Buskirk of Bloomington, Mrs. O. A. Hoffman and Mrs. A. L. Hopkins. Yellow and lavender garden flowers carried out the color scheme used in all the appointments. Mrs. E. L. Swanson assisted the hostess. The guests: Mesdames James Baird, C. C. Crumbaker, Cushman Hoke, John Ott, E. R. Kellum, Eugene Ong, L. W. Turner, L. S. Fall, ■William Cook, W. C. Gooddall, John Owen and Misses Kathleen Kerns of Dana, Ind.; Catherine Manchester of St. Louis, Mo.; Frances Longshore, Christine Wilson and Dorothy Bowser. • * • A luncheon bridge honoring Mrs. Marshall Knox, who recently moved to Indianapolis from Charlotte, N. C-, was given Tuesday by Mrs. George S. Olive and Mrs. Edward L. Pape at the Indianapolis Athletic Club. • • • Mrs. Clifton Jett of Paducah, Ky., who is visiting her mother, Mrs. Emma Reed. 2716 Paris Ave., invited guests for a shower Wednesday day night in honor of Miss Mildred Gage, 1049 Reisner St., whose mar riage to Robert Millar will take place this fall. The guests invited with Miss Gage, her mother, Mrs. Harry Gage and grandmother, Mrs. Anna Gage and two little sisters, Miss Wilma and Dorothy Jane Gage, were Misses t Lucille Gardner, Hallie Porter, Rica [ Spindler, Margaret Hernley, Mida Taylor, Margaret Herald, Pauline Holmes, Pearl Black, Betty J■> Qnecht, Mesdames W. E. Pearce. Otto Dongus. William Shepherd. Roy Hoppes, Rudolph Cofflng, Frank Crossland, Olive Kinderr. Oscar Stilz, John Buck and Frank Antrobus. • • • Mrs. John A. Didway. 64S E. Twenty-Third St., had as her guests Wednesday afternoon at a theater party at English’s Miss Maria Keller of Los Angeles, Cal.; Mrs. Emmett Keller and Mrs. Hobart Litteral. • • * Dr. and Mrs. Carl B. Sputh, 532 E. Thirty-Third St., have returned home after a three weeks’ vacation at Elkhart Lakes, Wis. • • • Mrs. Felix Krieg and daughter. Miss Frances, 4551 Park Ave., will leave Wednesday for New York •where they will sail Saturday on the steamship Homeric for a sixweeks’ tour of Europe. • • * Miss Mary S. Hoch of Allentown, Pa., who is visiting Miss Helen Schappe. 2903 Park Ave., will be the honor guests Thursday night at dinner at the home of Mrs. Charles M. Foster, 614 E. Twenty-Ninth St. • • * • • * Miss Lorna Griffith of St. Louis, Mo., who is the house guest 0 ; Mrs. Robert N. Dedaker, 4350 Park Ave., was the honor guest Wednesday at a pretty informal luncheon and two tables of bridge at the Highland Golf and Country Club, given by Mrs. J. L. Rodabaugh, 3702 Central Ave. The guests were served at one table artistically ai-
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At Jackie Coogan’s Service
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—Photo by Moorefleld. JACK PARKER
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HERMAN DRAKE
Among Ja>ckie Coogans' hosts and hostesses Thursday at the luncheon in th Riley Room of the Claypool will be Miss Thelma Wallace, 212 S. Audubon Rd.. representing the Camp Fire Girls;. Cedric, White, 420 Prospect St., ranged with a bowl of garden flowers. Covers were marked with dainty place cards in floral design The other guests with Mrs. Dedaker, Mrs. Rodabaugh and Miss Griffith were: Mesdames Harold Skeldon, J. C. Consoline, W. C. Suiters, Henry Stegemeier, H. W. Hobbs and E. B. Rinker. Mr. and Mrs. Rodabaugh, Mr. and Mrs. William Gage Hoag. Mr. and Mrs. Bud Kipp, and Dr. and Mrs. Rinker were to have a dinner party at the club, following the afternoon party. , * • • Mrs. Merle Ave., will entertain Mrs. John De Witt Culp of Chicago, Thursday at luncheon. Mrs. W. W. Mendenhall, 5426 Hibben Ave., entertained informally Tuesday afternoon for Mrs.
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THELMA WALLACE
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CEDRIC WHITE
navy escort, from Camp Shank, and Jack Parker, flag bearer, and Herman Drake, army escort, both of FI. Benjamin Harrison. The party is to be given under the auspices of the Indiana Indorsers of Photorlays, Mrs. T. W. Demmerly, general chairman. Culp and Wednesday night Mrs. William T. Johnson, 36 Layman Ave., invited guests for dinner honoring her. Mrs. Culp will return to her home Friday. • • • Mrs. Harol Van Vorhee6, 3204 N. Pennsylvania St., entertained Wednesday at th“ Indianapolis Aththeater party at English's in honor of Mrs. J.ohn Darmody. a recent bride. Mrs. Darmody was Miss Margaret McCullough of Cassopolis, Wis., before her marriage in June. A bowl of yellow and blue flowers formed an attractive center decoration and the place cards carried out the same color scheme. The guests: Mesdames John Kennedy, Elsworth Neal of Orlando, Fla., Ralph Boozer and Pyatt Searles. • • • Mrs. R. C. Norton, 3921 Washingtor) Blvd., will entertain for a few intimate friends of her house guest, Mrs. Henry Holton of Monroe, La,, Friday afternoon. • * • The Altar Society of St. Anthony’s Church will give a card and lotto party at the hall on N. Warmau Ave., Sunday night at 8 o’clock. Mrs. Edward Nevitt is chairman of the affair, assisted by Mesdames Charles Chesebrough, Katherine Walpole, Michael Dugan and John Connors.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
LETTER POINTS TO REAPPEARANCE OF ASIA TOE ADEPT Indianapolis Woman Receives 'Offer' From Fortune Teller, Asta the Adept, mail order wizard who could tell your fortune for twelve cents in stamps, and who recently was squelched by the United Stf tes Postoffice Department, apparently has bobbed up again in new robes. Mrs.-* William Braden. 37 W. Twenty-First St., recently wrote to Asta at the Asta Studios, 309 Fifth Ave., New York, and received the usual filderol in $ short letter. Shortly afterward, Uncle Sam got on the trail and Asta was no more. In the past week, Mrs. Braden received, without solicitation, a letter from the “Karma Studio,” 116 W. Thirty-Ninth St., New York, offering to read her future, give her advice which might alter the trend of her entire life, for the mere pittance of $2.20. The letter was strikingly similar to that of Asta. Evidently, Asta shed his skin when Uncle Sam descended upon him, moved downtown a few miles and started out to make another fortune. Dispatches say Asta, really two men who conceived the fortunetelling idea, had made more than $200,000 in a few months.
LETTER FROM LESLIE PRESCOTT TO RUTH ELLINGTON, CONTINUED Alice has systematically kept away from me. I have not seen her alone since I arrived. She looks haggard and worn. I think she is frightened to death. She probably sent that letter on Impulse. I can see, too, that 1 Karl is not very happy. What do you think I’d better do, dear? I’m almost sure that if I tell this thing about Alice, Karl will never marry her, and on the other hand. I am almost sure that if Karl marries her he will be perfectly unhappy. While Alice is my sister, she has done me a great wrong, and Karl haa ever been kind and sweet to me. By the way. there’s another complication in this tragedy of errors. Alice (you see, I keep saying Alice, although the letter was anonymous, for I know no one except Karl who could have written that letter, but Alice) did not put "personal" on the outside of the envelope, and Sally Atherton opened it. I know you don’t like Sally, but. my dear, in this case she certainly was a brick. When Jack handed the letter to me, I found a notation on the bottom of it from Sally. It read: “This letter was not marked ’personal,’ consequently I opened it. Now that I have done so. I cannot help saying that no one should pay any attention to anonymous letters. I think this note especially damnable." She not only did this, but she called me up and told me she had opened the letter, and exactly what was In It, so that I was warned be--1 fore Jack got home. Surely, you must like Sally for thife. Os course, after Jack heard my version of the story, he knew that only Alice or Karl could have jjvritten the letter. Naturally he did not dream that my sister could have done it, consequently he jumped at the conclusion it had been a deeplaid plan of Karl's to get me back to him even though I was Jack’s wife. Poor, simple-minded Karl! He wouldn’t have thought of such a thing in a thousand years. He's not clever enough. Have you seen the accounts of the wedding of Beatrice Grimshaw and Dick Summers? There’s a couple | whose married life I shall follow with great Interest. Beatrice,. of course you-know, is a young woman of great common sense, but Dick Summers is even mjire erratic than Jack. They are going out to Hollywood, where there are more pretty girls to a city block than anywhere else In the world, and Dick is right in among them. Truly. Bee will have a splendid opportunity to exercise that, common sense if she semains normal and happy. Give my regards to Walter, dear, but don't, for the love of me, tell him that I have at least by impli-
FABLES ON HEALTH Laxative Foods
I , OODS with a laxative value M were shown to Mr. Mann of L ...J Anytown as the summer days grew hotter and the prospects of upset stomach became greater. Far better than the use of artifi clal laxative Is the eating of food. Will Take Off All Excess Fat Do you know that there is a simple, harmless, effective remedy for overfatness that may be used safely and secretly by any man or woman who is losing the slimness of youth? There is; and It Is none other than the tablet form of the now famous Marmola i'teacription, known as Marmola Prescription Tablets. You can well expect to reduce steadily and easily without going through long sieges of tiresome exercise and starvation diet. Marmola Prescription Tablets are sold by all druggists the world over at one dollar for a box or you can secure them direct from the Marmola Cos., General Motors Bldg., Detroit, Mich., on receipt of price.—Advertisement. NAPRAPATHY Scientific Drugless Healing DR. R. E. CR MG 604 State Life Bldg. LI. 8715
For Fall
Here In the perfect dress for early fall. It is of black rep made over a foundation of plaid silk in red and white. The roll collar and tie are made of the silk and the simulated pockets are bound with it. Many of the new dresses for fall have their own slip, as this one has, and frequently it shows an inch or so below the gown.
GOOD MANNERS First Duty of Bride
At the end of the wedding there is one thing the bride must not forget. At soon as she is in her traveling dress she must send someone to the groom’s parents to ask them to oome and say good by'to her. cation advised you not to marry him or any other man. 1 I dqn’t know when I wiH, be home. ] When you have decided what to do, ! write me, and we will talk about the ! shop. Just now, with my own affairs in suoh a tangle, and my father in such a serious condition, I am not much account. I am only Your distracted friend, LESLIE. (Copyright, 1924, NEA Service, Inc.) TOMORROW: Letter from Sydney Carton to John Alden Prescott. i Clubs and Meetings Central W. C. T. U. will meet on Friday afternoon from 2 to 4 in the Fletcher American Bank Bldg. Mrs. J. E. Lemen will be in charge of devotions. Mrs. W. W. Reedy, president, will preside. • A card part-y will be given on Thursday afternoon and evening In St. Catherine’s Hall, Shelby and Tabor Sts. The proceeds will be used for a lawn social at the church, Aug. 22-24. * • • Division No. 7, A. O. H.. will entertain with cards and lotto on Thursday from 2:30 to 4:30 p. m. in the hall, 16)4 N. Meridian St. • • * Kolola Council No. 70, D. of P. has changed the meeting day to the first and third Fridays of the month •and will meet in the hall at 1414 W. Ohio St.
particularly at breakfast, which contains a laxative property. Parttcu larly good are stewed prunes and figs, or raw figs, and most other fruits with the exception of bananas At the other meals at least one green vegetable should be eaten during the summer days when fresh vegetables are most prevalent. In addition these foods contain the minerals and phosphates which science has found so essential tc human well-being. It might be added that such dishes as rice, cornstarch, boiled milk and fine wheat flour bread are to be avoided by persons seeking foods of laxative quality. NEW CARS ARE ORDERED Three Parlor t ars Trailers Included in Equipment. Officials of the Union Traction Company at Anderson, Ind., have placed an order for fifteen new Interurban cars. It was learned today. Order Includes three parlor trailers, and all will be equipped with the most moden features, the report said. They will be manufactured by the St. Louis Car Company of St. Louis, Mo., and will be In operation In the fall.
Martha Lee Says —— Miss 1924 Fashionable and Cool at Same Time
Perhaps women are slaves to fashion, as men insist. Even so, a good word may be said for fashion. Remember, a few years ago, when a woman would have been horrified at the thought of appearing on the street without gloves? Remember how she dressed up long-sleeved, dark, hot suits and dresses to go downtown, no matter how high the mercury might go ?
.'if you think fashion is an unkind mistress, take a glance at Milady as she leave® for a trip downtown in the summer of 1524. Gloves? She probably has some, but she’ll not take them with her. Short sleeves. Light dress, short and as cool as possible. At last, fashion has bowed to the weather man. She is not dressed in good taste? No, not always. Sometimes she weajrs a dress suited only to a bailroom. But, if she does, blame no* Lady Fashion. She does not sane tion such a costume. Even summer furs have lost their popularity. Miss 1924 can be sensible, cool and fashionable—real feat, If one remembers the costumes of the past. Next summer? Ah, fashion is fickle: but perhaps women, once they have known the delight of feeling comfortable, even in summer street costumes, will not be willing to revert to their old slavery. To Lady Fashion! Pear Miss Lee: The girls in the office where I work have had an argument about clothes, and we want you to settle it. One girl always wears dark. tong-sleeved dresses or a suit, even in hot weather, because she says it is unlady-like to come downtown In any other kind of clothes. Another girl wears good dresses that are wearing out. Some of them are almost like evening dreseee. and are sleeveless. The rest of us wear different kind of things, sports clothes, light silks, ginghams. voiles, etc. The girl that dresses up says it doesn't matter what you wear nowadays, and she wants to wear out her old clothes. tVe think she looks out of place, but we don’t see why we should bum up in hot. dark dresses and gloves, like the one girl Our boss doesn't care what kind of clothes we wear. What is your opinion? A, B. C. There was a time when it was “unladylike” to wear a street costume that was not dark and did not include gloves. But that time is past, thank goodness. It is true, a girl may appear in almost anything on downtown streets these days, without being unfashionable. But there are limits to good taste, and an evening dress as a street and working costume is past those Umts. There is a “happy medium.” Wash silks, skirts and overblouses, ginshams and voiles all malte good summer costumes. Street clothes shou.d be simply made. and, even In 1924, should r.ot be decollette, even though short sleeves are permitted. Starting Young Dear Mias Lee: I am a hey 14 years old. in the third year of high school. I have a good home and good parents, but they are rather strict and think I am 100 young to think of girls yet. Po you think k is all rgiht for me to take the girl i to the show once In a while ? H. E. S. 1 think there are so many more interesting things for a boy of 14 to do, that I cannot understand why you want to bother with girls. RUTH: Remember, my dear, that your husband is very young, as you are, and thaLyou had hurt him, too. He wanted to make a bond you could not break. Yes, I do believe he loves #ou, although, unfortunately, his love Is not, or was not, kind. Write to him and tell him what has happened. Then tell your father the truth. You must announte your secret marriage now. If your father Is angry, it will only be because he loves you, so hear with him. I am sure everything will turn out all right, in time.
Lemon Juice Whitens Skin
The only harmless way to bleach the skin white is to mix s4\ tlie J u i ce of two lemons with three ounces of Orchard /_ White, which any f\ I g BKSj druggist will supply j gW' or a * ew cen tß. >A 'v'7 M'Z'l ®bake * n a boib\Y tie, and you have a Xy’vU'-' w hole quarter-pint of the most wonderful skin whitener, softener and beautifier. Massage this sweetly fragrant lemon bleach into the face, neck, arms and hands. It can not irritate. Famous stage beauties use it to bring that clear, youthful skin and rosy-white complexion; also as a freckle, sunburn and tan bleach. You must mix this remarkable lotion yourself. It can not be bought ready to use because it agts best immediatey after it is prepared.—Advertisement.
How to build up your Weight TO be under weight often proves low fighting-power in the body. It often means you are minus nerve-power, minus reds cells in your / 20L blood, minus / ¥ yf") \ health, minus / J I vitality. It is 1 4 t~\ fcj / serious to be \ /sL'TWr rM m i nus > but V jlv the moment \SjwJ *4* Lr you increase the number of your red-blood-cells, you begin to become plus. That’s why S. S. S., since 1826, has meant to thousands of underweight men and women, a plus in their strength. Your bodyfills to the point of power, your flesh becomes firmer, the age lines that come from thinness disappear. You look younger, firmer, happier, and you feel it, too, all over your body. More red-blood-cells 1 S. S. S. will build them. tst S. S. S. is sold at all good prug stores in two sizes. Tha dKA larger sire is more economical. C C Worlds Best 'Blood Medicine.
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Cl&tftf EXCURSION SUNDAY, AUGUST 10 W^a; : HKrIySaWrMBSMMiSIM l ?i Round Trip Fares to CINCINNATI—S2.7S RUSHVILLE, SI.I9—CONNERSVILLE, $1.72 Special Train Leaves 7 a. m. Returning, Leaves .Cincinnati 7 p. m. Decatur, 111., $2.75 lake 'decatur VISIT TURKEY RUN, INDIANA STATE PARK; MARSHALL. §1,35 Special Train leaves 7 a. m. Returning, leaves Decatur 6 p. m. For Information, Call Cl rcle 4600 or MA in 4567.
Spend Sunday on Lake Michigan EXCURSION SATURDAY NIGHT, AUGUST 9 BENTON HARBOR, Mich. $3.00 ;,7 J WONDERFUL BATHING BEACHES FINE AMUSEMENT PARKS. BENTON HARBOR—In the World’s Greatest Fruit Belt— ST. JOSEPH, Train Leaves Indiaanpolis 10:00 P. M. Returning, Leaves Benton Harbor 5:30 P. M. (Central Time), Sunday, August 10. CITY TICKET OFFICE, 34 WEST OHIO ST. and UNION STATION.
BIG FOUR ROUTE Circle Tours Combining RaiL,Lake *nd Ocean yTßa^^EastX m Spend yonrsuepmer in the mountains of m New York and New England, or along m the historic New England seashore. B Circle Tours at Reduced Fares 1 0 Vary yoor vacation trip to include lake, river and ocean voy- K& 0 age#—Niagara Falk —Ttawsand Islands —St. Lawrence River CB —Montreal —Adkondacks —Lake Champlain—Lake George— H If Oreen Mountains—White Mountains —Berkshire*—New Eng- i9m H land Seashore—State of Maine—Hudeon River—New York iWO h Harbor —Washington—sea voyage, Norfolk to New York or jO Boston. Choice of many attractive rontce with stag) ever jLFtf Hoend trip fares Xocflanapoßs to New York or Boston $58.48 to $81.67. m marnfAi, N; narai /~ X W fhng dSAwwJh if UmtUQsL S) oZ. V_ JB/ Mr toikkt sod coottptet* infornwseica call or tddna City Ticks Office, M West Ohio Bfc, phoo* Circle 4300, or Union Station, fAsoe Mate 4547. J.W. Oardacx. Dir. Paw. Act, 84WestOhio8t--810 FOUR ROUTE
WEDNESDAY, AUG. 6, 19:4
AUTO PASSENGER HURT Police Investigate Story That Man Fell From Car. Michael Dalton, 45, was taken to . city hospital early today from a fractured skull, said to been received when he fell from an auto at E. Washington St. and the Belt Railroad. Detectives are investigating the story told them by Walter Cates, 509 N. Jefferson St.; Earl Peats, 1325 Villa Ave., and Ernest Haupt, 1513 S. Alabama St. They said, according to police, that the party went after ice water at an ice house near where the accident occurred and that Dalton missed his step as he left the auto and fell, his head striking the curb.
