Indianapolis Times, Volume 36, Number 130, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 October 1924 — Page 5
WEDNESDAY, OCT. 8, 1924
WEALTHY FARMER IS SUEDBY WIFE Too Many Women Charged to William Haverstick. Alleging she has been a dutiful, loving, congenial, patient and longsuffering wife for thirty-one year's. Mrs. Florence G. Haverstick, 5130 Broadway, asks SIOO,OOO alimony and divorce from 'William D. Haverstick, wealthy farmer north of Broad Ripple, in a Superior Court suit. Too much attention to other women was charged by Mrs. Haverstick. Haverstick indulged in "night-riding” as frequently as two or three times a week in his buggy or auto during the past eight years, 6he said. He resented her going along, she said, and twice he left her in Indianapolis at night without money, to get home as best she could. Another time he left her sitting in the car on the Circle, on Christmas day, 1922, for six hours, and it was cold, she said. The climax came, she charged, when she and her son, 30, walked in on the farmer and a woman registered at a local hotel last Saturday night. Charges were denied on behalf of Haverstick. HpE Don’t Suffer! Get a 10c package of Dr. James Headache Powders tAny kind of a headache is relieved in two minntes. Distress and pain vanish, your head clears and you are again ready for work or Druggists sell millions of "Dr. James Headache Powders” because they are safe. —Advertisement.
F jfcSfiaEEr Elfcr; BSp BgSHgBS; MSS: IK sturdy pioneers—Big with the Are that pulses through cur own veins ■sag —Big with the stirring events that conquered a continent and cemented a race. ROMANCE ADVENTURE The Cattle Kings! Sit by their camp fires when the lights are twinkling across the silent prairies. Listen to their roaring songs of love and work and fight. Hear their tales of daring deeds and loving hearts—men untamed, unconquered in adversity, strong men and lusty, men who risked all on the throw of a die and met life or death with a smile. COMING SUNDAY TO THE CIRCLE THEATRE
, Speaker —Photo by Bachrach. MRS. JOHN W. KERN. Mrs. John W. Kern, a member of the victory vote committee, will address the Democratic women's organization of Marion County Thursday night in the Democratic Club. 22 E. Vermont St. The program will include a talk by Russell Ryan and Miss Mary Moran, a pupil of Mrs. Max Leekner, will sing ‘‘The Star-Spangled Banner.” Mrs. F. H. Russ, county chairman, will preside. COUNCIL HAS LUNCHEON Mrs. B. S. Gadd Takes Presidency, Succeeding Mrs. A. J. Clark. Covers for 150 were laid at the luncheon for the Local Council of Women Wednesday at the SpinkArms observing president's day. Mrs. W. H. Blodgett presided. Mrs. A. J. Clark, retiring president, introduced Mrs. Bert S. Gadd, incoming president, and Mrs. S. R. Artman, chairman of the hospitality committee, gave the new president flowers. Community singing, led by Mrs. Frank McCaslln; a solo by Mrs. J. C. Compton, accompanied by Mrs. F. H. Russ, and dancing by little Miss Frances Eloise and Miss Bonny Jean Beale of Rushville were inI eluded in the program.
QOCIAL Activities ENTERTAINMENTS WEDDINGS BETROTHALS
mNVITATIONS have been issued by Mrs. Herman Adams and her daughter. Mrs. Clayton Panke, for a party Thursday honoring Miss Dorothy Reissner, whose marriage to Louis Hensley will take place Oct. 26. The affair will be a miscellaneous shower, the first of the bride-elect's prenuptial parties, at the home of Mrs. Adams, 2226 N. Capitol Ave. Other parties planned for Miss Reissner are Oct. 16, given by Mrs. Dale Hodges; Oct. 17, Mrs. E. E. Flickinger and her daughter, Miss Charlotte Wiesike; Oct. 18, Mrs. Verne K. Reeder, at the home of Mrs. Roland R. Reeder, and Oct. 23, Mrs. Blanton Coxen. A number of family parties have been planned and Miss Betty Bertermann will give a party for the bride-elect later. * • The marriage of Miss Jean Waterbury, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. H. L. Waterbury, 3168 Washington Blvd., to Carl F. Lauenstein took place Wednesday afternoon at 4 at the home of the bride's parents. The Rev. George Douglas Young of Tiffin, Ohio, officiated. Miss Dale Waterbury, sister of the bride, was maid of honor. Miss Christine Wilson and Miss Martha Lauenstein of Evansville, were bridesmaids. The bride, in a gown of white georgette beaded with pearls, wore a veil of tulle arranged in cap effect and carried a shower of bride's roses, forget-me-nots and white sweet peas. After an informal reception Mr. and Mrs. Lauenstein left for a short wedding trip. They will be at home after Nov. 1 at 249 YV. Forty-Fourth St. Out-of-town guests included Mr. and Mrs. Carl Lauenstein and Miss Elsa of Evansville; Mrs. Charles Jameson, Misses Katherine Ferguson, Mildred Morgan, Ruth Bahls and Elizabeth Goode of Lafayette; Mrs. Harold Cunningham of Parkersburg, W. Va., and Miss Margaret Curry of Quincy, Fla. Mrs. C. H. Pier. 3305 Ruckle St., entertained Wednesday with twelve tables of luncheon bridge, honoring her mother, Mrs. D. J. Stephenson, and sister. Miss Dorothy Stephenson, who are visiting her from Port Huron, Mich. ... Assisting her were Mrs. C. E. Pittman, Mrs. E. C. Badger, Mrs. Robert Turnbull, Mrs. John R. Ward and her two daughters. Miss Dorothy and Miss Evelyn Pier. A program of music was arranged by Mrs. Louise Schellschmidt Koehne, Miss Ella Schroder and Mrs. Carl T. Lieber for the wedding of Miss Elizabeth Kolmer and Dr. Russell P. Veit set for Wednesday night at the home of the bride’s uncle and aunt. Mr. and Mrs. John H. Aufderheide, “Meadow Crest,” Fifty-Eighth St. Out-of-town guest invited were June Ham, Marklesville, Ind.; Thelma Roe and Lucille Parks, Terre Hahte, and Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Veit and daughter Elsie of Terre Haute. * • * The marriage of Miss Helen Jenkins, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Jenkins, 922 N. Seville Ave.. to George Evans, son of William Evans, took place Tuesday night at the home of the bride's parents, the Rev. Louis Trent officiating. Robert Louis Konecke, pianist, played the bridal music and accompanied Mrs. Konecke. soloist. Attendants were Mrs. Francis Miner, sister of the bride, maid of honor, and Alva Davidson, best man. The bride wore a gown of brown crepe and carried an arm bouquet of bride roses. After an informal reception Mr. and Mrs. Evans left on a wedding trip to Washington. They will be at home at 2843 Dearborn St., after Nov. 1. Among the guests were Mr. and Mrs. David Smock, Mr. and Mrs. Louis Black of Southport; Mr. and Mrs. William Shepp of Martinsville and Lawrence Walker of Detroit.
The first meeting of the Business and Professional Women’s section of the Woman’s Department Club will he held Thursday night. The program will include the film, “Every Day Heroes,” which will precede a talk by Bertram C. Day on the work of agencies financed by the Community Fund. * • • Delta Tau Sorority will meet Wednesday night with Miss Leonore Klee, 1039 Southwestern Ave. • * • Marion County Council No. 738, Security Benefit Association, will give a euchre and bianco party Thursday evening at the I. O. O. F. Hall, Hamilton Ave. and E. Washington St. • * * Lavelle Gossett Poet Auxiliary, Veterans of Foreign Wars, will entertain with cards Thursday night in the hall, 902 N. Pershing Ave. • • • A euchre party will be held Thursday afternoon and evening in Firemen’s Hall, Shelby St. and English Ave., at 2:30 and 8:30. * • • St. Patrick’s Social Club will give a card party Friday afternoon in the hall on Prospect St. War Mathers Enterhdn Marion County chapter of American War Mothers will entertain the ■visiting women of the 309th Division of World War Veterans at a theater party Friday at the Palace Theater, through the courtesy of Herbert Jennings and Mrs. Martha J. Stubbs, vice president of the War Motheis. tIF YOU HAD^ NECK i LONQ AS THIB FELLOW AND HAD iORETHROAT "all! | DOWN ONSILINE he National Sore Throat Remedy HOULD QUICKLY RELIEVE IT ALL DRUGGISTS
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
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LETTER FROM RUTH BURKE TO LESLIE PRESCOTT, CONTINUED Os course, Leslie, you know that Julia Ansted wants to have an interest in the shop. She has made a wonderful manager, and sometimes I think it is due as much to her as to me that it has been successful. Notwithstanding, you seem to think 1 am absolutely necessary to its prosperity. What would you think of giving her a small interest in a? That would leave us in comparative independence of it. Write and tell me what you think of the plan. I don't imagine you will bo home very soon, if your love has not made you to 9 fearful of your father's condition, and he is not better than you think. My heart goes out to you and to your mother. The sufferings of those we love are perhaps the hardest things we have to bear in this world. We can suffer our own pains, our own misfortunes, our own mental hurts, because most of us have that are stout enough to bear the ills that come to us; hut always we seem to feel when we see the sufferings of those who are very dear to'us, that we must give them some impossible relief. However, my dear Leslie, you have one great solace. Your father, my dear, is a great and good man. Whatever comes, that satisfaction cahnot be taken from you. It is the greatest heritage he can leave to you. This is a very long letter, my dear, and there is still much I would like to say. But after all, when one wishes really to comfort a friend, one must talk face to face. So I will just add the words Until soon. RUTH. Letter From John Alden Prescott to Sydney Carton It's a long time, dear old chap, since I written you, and so much has happened that It seems even longer, especially as you have not answered my last letter. I had fully made up rqy mind not to go to Leslie until she had asked m$ to or in some other way signitbyf her want of me. But the fates seemed to conspire against me. You saw from Mother Hamilton's letter that I would have appeared a churl had I not come over here. Beside, 1 don t mind telling you, I never was as lonely and unhappy in my life. That damned old maid, Priscilla Bradford, has stayed on with Mother, and there iu something about her that when she is with the mater, she puts .the devi!_ Into her. I don't see how Leslie put up with her. 1 know that I wouldn't. In fact. I think her being at the house was one reason why I determined to eat humble pie and go over to Leslie. Os two evils, I dtermined to choose the lesser. Os course, I didn’t tell her I wan coming, and strange as It may seem, I had a kind of feeling I should find her sitting upstairs in a room alone, grieving—a kind of modern Marianna in the moated grange, as it were. But instead, she had gone to a party. Os course, her mother sent the car right after her, and she came in looking more beautiful* than I had ever seen her in my life, and those damned pearls about her neck! I could have snatched them from her throat, and I think I would have done so If Mother and Nora and little John had not been-there As it SAGE A! SULPHUR DARKENS GRAY HAIR Accept only "Phillips,” the original Tea and Sulphur, properly comj pounded, brings back the natural i color and lustre to the hair when faded, streaked or gray. Years ago the only way to get this mixture was to make it at home, which is mussy and troublesome. Nowadays, by asking at any drug store for "Wyeth’s Sage and Sulphur Compound,” you will get a large bottle of this famous old recipe, improved by the addition of other ingredients, at a small cost. Don't stay gray! Try it! No one can possibly tell that you darkened your hair, as it does it so naturally and evenly. You dampen a sponge or soft brush with it and draw this through your hair, taking one small strand at a time; by morning the gray hair disappears, and after another application or two, your hair becomes beautifully dark, glossy and attractive.—Advertisement.
“ Br ' INDUSTRIAL EXPOSITION, Oct. Bth and 11th Visit Booth 391 and see an interesting demonstration of E-Z-BAKE FLOUR.
was, I had to give her at least a husbandly peck. She didn’t even offer her lips to me, and I think mine were stopped somewhere about the edge of her hair, near her ear. I don't know what would have happened, for everything was decidedly strained, if that blessed baby had not caught sight of Leslie and almost hurled himself out of Nora's arms. (Copyright, 1924, NEA Service, Inc.) NEXT: THE Letter Continued. PAPERS TO BE HOSTS Delegates to Sigma Delta Chi Convention to Visit Local, Plants. A tour of Indianapolis newspaper plants, luncheon, dinner, and a business session here will conclude the 1925 national convention of Sigma Delta Chi, professional journalistic fraternity, to be held at Indiana University, Bloomington, Ind., Nov. 17 and 18, according to tentative plans. .* Sigma Delta Chi, founded at De Pauw University in 1909, is a fraternity of college men who expect to enter journalism. There are fifty chapters in leading universities in the country. Elaborate plans are being made for entertaining the college scribes. Several Indiana newspaper men will be made associate members at the convention. FIR ST VOTERS ACT IV E Democratic Chib Appoints Committees for Fall Program. Democratic First Voters Club has named these committees: Speakers—John W. Kern and Robert D. Coleman. Entertainment and Social —Rita Johnson, Dolores De Miller and Edward Raub, Jr. Publicity—Thomas Smith, Helen D. Friday and Bess Robbins. Correspondence—Cushman Hoke and Bess Robbins. Advisory—Mrs. F. H. Russ, Reginald Sullivan, Evans Woollen, Sr, Mrs. John W. Kern and Edward 13. ltaub.
River Suicide Fails Mrs. Lizzie Winans, 46, of 853 J River Ave., is at home today recov- ; oring from the effects of a plunge into White River Tuesday at the Kentucky Ave. bridge. She was pulled from the water by Eugene Dailey, 643 Coffey St., and Thomas ; Doyle, 860 Virginia Ave-, park em- j ployes. Police say that ill health prompted her act. Rhtmma<pn “Good-bye o!d crutch!** THERE IS positively no longer any excuse for suffering tho agontes of rheumatism! Especially in the autumn of your life, when the vital organs weaken, impurities multiply and linger in the muscles and joints, as never before. It is now, just now, when you cannot afford to guess. No day returns! Here is a joyous fact which can mean to you a fond farewell forever to all the miseries, the tortures, the body-twisting pains that you have suffered from the demon of rheumatism. It Is a fact that rheumatism means “blood poverty." It is a fact with the increase of red-cells in your blood, impurities are destroyed. It is a fact that S.S.S. will help Nature build these red-blood-cells! S.S.S. is one of the most powerful blood cleansers In existence. Its results in thou- j sands of rheumatic cases have been nothing short of amazing! The medicinal ingredients of S.S.S. are purely vegetable. This is very Important to remember! What can be more inspiring, more wonderful j than to see the shackles of pain released from your struggling body, swellings, lingering pains, stiffness of joints and muscles all disappear; your stomach made strong; your face pink with the old sweetheart glow, your blood enriched and your cheeks more plump as they used to be. You can do it! Take S.S.S., the gre’at destroyer of rheumatic impurities. kS. 8. 8. ft told at all good drug store* in two sites. The larger sits it more economical. O CC>akc You Feel LoJ.ttS. Ok* Yourself Atftia
Martha Lee Says Cupid Doesn’t Work According to Rules
Avery modern miss, who as much as admits that she is ready to do the wooing, although she says nothing about the actual proposing, wants to know how she should go about ensnaring the man on whom she has set her heart.
How, indeed? Love is the most inconsistent thing on earth —except, the men would say, women. Our friend, Dan Cupid, not only mates people; he mismates them, as well. He turns shy men into cave men, under *he influence of love; he makes woman-haters forget their tirades against marriage; he produces the most domesticated husbands out of the gayest bachelors. Then how is one to make general rules? It just cannot be done. Whether it is man or girl doing the wooing, he must “diagnose” the case, and proceed accordingly. Even then, there can be no guarantee of success, because — None is more inconsistent than Dan Cupid. 4 No Recipe / Dear Miss Lee: Last October I met a very handsome young fellow My folks like him very well, and I am deeply in love with him. but I feel almost sure it is onesided love. I began going with him in July, for the second time. How can I win his true love? Every night we are together we have a little quarrel. I rather think he s sore at me now, because it's two weeks since I have seen him. I can hardly stand it. BETTY. There is no “recipe” for winning love, Betty. Each case must be treated individually. However, I can give you a hint; I think it not improbable that you
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have made your love too evident, and have frightened the man away. If you don’t “keep him guessing,” at least until he declares his love, you won’t keep him at all. PATTY: For your recipes, write to The Times Washington Bureau, 1322 New York Ave., Washington, D. C.
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SPEED COP IS INJURED Cycle Collides With Truck, Officer’s Leg Broken. Motorpoliceman Clifford Beeker, 146 W. Eighteenth St., apartment 3, was suffering today with a broken left ankle, and bruises about the body, in a collision with a truck at 900 Madison Ave. Theopphilus Murray, 38, of 554 Marion Ave., driver of the trucK, was charged with assault and battery and improper driving. Beeker said he was chasing a speeder when the truck cut across ahead of him. Police charged Elmer McConnell of Oaklandon, Ind., with operating a vehicle while intoxicated. They say his auto struck one driven by Cort W. Pigg, 3043 McPherson Ave., at 236 E. New York St.
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