Indianapolis Times, Volume 36, Number 197, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 December 1924 — Page 6

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WOMEN’S G. 0. P. CLUB INSTALLS YEAR’S OFFICERS Mrs, Vivian TANARUS, Wheatcraft, New President, Appoints Committees, Installation of new officers and talks by women at the head of the various Republican organizations were on the program for the Indiana Womens Republican Club Friday afternoon at the Claypool. New officers are Mrs. Vivian T. Wheatcraft of Whiteland, chairman of the Republican State committee, president: Mrs. R. C. Huggins, first vice president: Mrs. William Oremelsparker, Logansport. second vice president; Mrs. Dorothy M. Woods, recording secretary'; Miss Pearl Randall, corresponding secretary; Miss Viola Baxter, treasurer, nad Mrs. W. O. Bates, Mrs. Allen T. Fleming and Mrs. Frank J. Lahr. directors. Speakers were Miss Dorothy' Cunningham. Indiana national committee woman; Mrs. William H. Hart, Seventh district chairman; Mrs Arthur Robinson, Marion County chairman: Mrs. E. C. Rumpler, Seventh District Women’s Republican Club; Mrs. M. B. Spellman, Marlon County Women's Republican Club, and Miss Genevieve Bron, Statehouse Women's Republican Club. Committees for the year were appointed.

LETTER FROM BEATRICE SUMMERS TO LESLIE PRESCOTT. CONTINUED I have written ail this, Leslie, which may seem out of place in a letter which should convey to you my gTeat sympathy, simply to take your mind, if possible, away from yourself. After every upheaval in one’s life, one must adjust one's self to one's world, and the sooner one does it instead of trying to adjust one's world to one’s self, the more content ona will be. After all, Leslie, it is content that you and I want, isn’t it? Not content with our achievements, for that would mean stagnation—but content with our environments. Yes. dear, I know you are saying that I am the same philosophical analytical old Bee that you have always known. Dick says I grow to be more of a philosopher and analyst every day and he tells me that it makes for too great seriousness in my life and I retort that one of us needs it. I never can understand how a man can put away ail the seriousness and responsibilities of his busi-

jtrN (j) SAY “BAYER ASPIRIN'-^OTuYw Unless you see the “Bayer Cross” on tablets, you are not getting the genuine Bayer Aspirin proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians over 24 years for Pain Neuralgia a "* Toothache Lumbago G j Neuritis Rheumatism J /• Accept only “ Bayer” package /y / which contains proven directions. |T M % Handy “Bayer” boxes of twelve tablets pirin is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticacidester of Salicylicacid

November Wedding Announced

A it- ■ . .... w MRS. LEON SCOFFIELD

Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Booth. 3330 N. Meridian St., announce the marriage of their daughter, Vera, to Leon Scoffleld, which took place Nov. 22. Mr. and Mrs. Scoffleld are at home in Chicago.

Rest Cure Em Times Special N 1 EW YORK. Dec. 26. There is nothing like prison life for building a man up. William H. Anderson, former superintendent of the N'ew York Anti-Saloon League, who left Sing Sing, Wednesday, showed a net Increase of twenty-four and a half pounds durng his 270-day stay. He looked hail, hearty, husky, and had lost none of his old time spirit.

nees—put them completely out of his mind—and become absolutely another person at times. Dick is said to be the most "hardboiled" producing manager in the whole moving picture business but when he gets home with me or when we are out having a good time he is just a great big pleasure loving boy. Dear Leslie, I am thinking of you all the time. I love you always and hope you can come out here and at least enjoy our wonderful climate. We will try to change your thoughts to something happier. BEE. Letter From Douglas Turner to Mabie Carter. You thought you were well rid of me, you little she-devil, but this la to tell you that I am still on earth, still thinking of you, still planning how I can make you pay for what you have done for me. I may be behind stone walls, Mabie, and although the Judge said It was “for life," yet I want you to

know that some day somewhere I am going to* get even with you It Is now nearly two years, my I girl, since you sat up there in the i witness chair ami swore my life away. No one but you and I sitting I down below you, knew that when j Cal Smith brought you home in that ; car and you found me waiting for ! you, you threw yourself in my arms and hysterically told me to kill the man sitting beside you for he had injured you. I know now that you did this hej cause you wanted to save your own ' worthless life; I know now that Cal ; Smith had been your lover for over | a year and you had grown tired of . him; and I know that when you found me waiting for you and knew {that I had Intended to kill you both j because of the anonymous lo’ter that : you yourself had sent me, you were [ perfectly willing to sacrifice your lover and your husband if you could go stark free. NEXT: This letter continued. DANCE AT LONGCLIFFE Week’s Program Arranged at Hospital for Insane. The second entertrdnment of the holiday season at I.ongcllff, Northern Indiana Hospital for the Insane, Logansport, will take place tonight with a dance for patients and employes. The Ix>ngcliff Symphony Ori chestra will play. I The orchestra and patients’ choir I will give a program Sunday nfterI noon with the ‘‘LongcllfTo Follies," i Monday night. Wednesday night a f six act vaudeville by patients and ! employes will be the feature. A .six- . act tabloid will be the New Year's day celebration.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Qocial Activities ENTERTAINMENTS WEDDINGS BETROTHALS

Mr. and Mrs. Theophilus J. Moll, whose marriage William W. Wilcox of Asbury Park, Pa., is to take place Jan. 3, has chosen for her attendants Miss Mary Mutschler of Nappanee, Inch, maid of honor; Miss Helen Wilcox, Asbury, Pa.; Miss Margaret Borcherding, Indianapolis; Miss Irma Huckreide, Westchester, Pa.; Miss Hanna Keenan, Leßoy, 111., bridesmaids, and little Miss Barbara June Wilson’ of Woodruff Place, flower girl. Miss Eleanor Hanna, 1220 Park Ave., will tntortatn Saturday night with the first of Miss Moll’s bridal parties. • * • Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Atkins, 4344 N. Pennsylvania St., Invited ten guests to a dinner Friday night honoring Mr. and Mrs. Julian Hobbs, who were recently married. The guests were to attend the dance at the Woodstock Country Club later. • Mr and Mrs. Herbert A. Pinnell. 1920 X. New Jersey St., invited twenty four guests to a buffet sup per Friday night honoring their hbuse guests, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Pearce of Rushvllle. Mrs. Claire Kimder, 121 E. Nineteenth St., will entertain Saturday night with a buffet supper for Mr. and Mrs. Pearce and for Miss Helen Stoeg of Kansas City, Mo., who is visiting Mr. and Mrs. Frank Throop. • • ♦ Miss Ruth Fromm, whose marri age to Emory R. Baxter will take place Jan. 7. was the honor guest Friday afternoon at a pretty handkerchief shower and bridge of four tables, givep bv Miss Dorothy Wright, 39.77 College Ave. The guests were M;sses Mary Miller, Franklin; Mildred Brosnan, Anna C. Gardner. Irene Souel, Sarah; Frances Downs, Helen Meyers, Lu--1 eille Tyner, Helen Haight. Gertrude i Dithmer, Mary Patia Carver, Mrs. ! J,. O. Holmes of Cleveland. Mrs. ■ Ralph Lleber and Mrs. George | Fromm. Mrs. William .T. Wright, mother of the hostess, assisted her. • • * Mrs. Harold M. Trusler, 2319 Gale St., entertained Friday afternoon with a luncheon-bridge of six tallies, honoring Mrs. L. B. Thompson of Peoria. III.; Miss Blanche Thompson: of Galesburg; Mrs. Robert Stith of Louisville. Ky . Miss Adah Pierce and Miss Florence Uhl. Green candles In crystal holders tied with red tulle decorated the tables and lees were molded in file shape of small Santa Clauses and snowballs. Guests Included Mrs Robert Tin dal of. Mtincie, Miss Mary Lucille Judd of Plainfield and Mesdarnes John White. C T. KotP lowskl, Paul Nelson, Robert Bowser. Ralph Suits, William M. Moore, Richard Calkins, Charles Longmald, J. V. Vance Jr.. Paul Chlvington, Thomas Hanson, John Cady, Arthur Peil, I-outs Gatxsepohl, John Mitchell, Miss Alice Preistnu-yer, Miss Florence Bwankhouso, Miss Maude Ray. • • • Mrs .Tames Marshall. 7230 E. Ohio Ft., and Mrs. John J. Mar shall. 2319 Gale St., entertained at a theater party Frblay afternoon at Keith's Theater for .Mrs. A. E. Thompson of Peoria, IIL There were rix guests. * • • Mr. nnd Mrs. A. T T ttg'r, 1429 Sturm Ave., entertained Thursday night with a dinner party honor lug Miss Ann Sadlier and 80l Hoffman, whose marriage will take place Fun lay. Covers were laid for twenty four guests. Among them were Mr and .Mrs. William Fvgul of j Cleveland, <>hio. • • — ' WEDDING of unusual in A tcrest took place Thursday night at Christ Church when Miss Florence A. Beckett, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Wymond J. Beckett, 8117 N. Meridian St., become the bride of IL Maurice Angell, eon of Mr. and Mrs. IL A. Angell. The date was also the celebration of the bride’s mother's thirty-fifth wedding anniversary and the bride carried the same white kid prayer book that Mrs. Angell carried thirty-four years ago at her ow’ri wedding. The bride also carried a real lace handkerchief given her two years ago by Mme. Terianl-Karganava with whom sho studied volcr. In Paris and Berlin. The church chimes were played for fifteen minutes before the i ceremony and Walter Flandorff, or ! ganist, played bridal music, for the entrance of the bridal party and during the ceremony. The chance! was prettily decorated with polnsettias nnd candles and southern smllax. The bride was attended by Mrs. David Jennings, matron of honor, who wore a beautiful frock of poin- | settla red over gold cloth and carried a shower bouquet of lilies of the valley and white sweet peas. Joe Rand Beckett Jr., nephew of | the bride, carried the ring in a little I white basket. Wallace Johnson of Clinton, N. Y., was best man; Garner Hubbell of Ft. Louis, Mo., was groomsman, and ushers were Virgil Potts, Julian M. ’auvro, Clair© McTurnan, Fbiiley Ch. nbers, David Jennings and Augustus Coburn. The bride wns gowned in white velvet fashioned with straight lines and a slight drape at the aide with band of ermine trimming. Her veil was of Brussels lace fashioned cap style. Her bouquet was a shower of Easter lilies and stevla. and she vv'oro an exquisite strand of pearls and a pin set with tiny pearls, the gift of the bridegroom. The Rev. George V. Dickey read the ceremony. After the ceremony a supper and dance was held at the home of the bride’s parents. Mr. and Mrs. Beckett w'ere assisted in receiving by Mrs. 11. A. AngolL Mrs. Beckett wore a gown of champagne colored chiffon and a corsage of Mrs. Aaron Ward roses. Mrs. Angell wore a gown of French blue georgette and silver and a corsage of Mrs. Aaron Ward roses and violets. The bride and bridegroom have | gone on a wedding trip to Panama, and will he at home after Feb. 1 a L 3520 Washington Blvd. • • * Miss Elizabeth Burford, 1101 N. , Delaware St., a debutante of this season, iijvited these guests to a din-

Governor ' fipj * laß been apner party Friday night at the University Club preceding the dance at Woodstock Club given by Mr. and Mrs. William J. Hogan for their daughter, Miss Frances: Miss Mary Louise Milliken, Miss Virginia Reed, Miss Eleanor Taylor, Miss Jeanette Craft, Fisk Landers, Porter Varney, John Joss, Louis Fletcher and Harry Shephard. • • • Indianapolis Shrine No. 6, White Shrine of Jerusalem, will entertain; members and their families at a Christmas party Saturday night at the hall, 119 E. Ohio St. * • • Miss Edith Skinner, 8039 Kenwood Ave., entertained Friday afternoon with a pretty holiday party. There wore four tables of luncheon-bridge and the guests included; Mrs. J. A. Roesinger, Gary, Ind.; Mrs. Ralph Buhler, Misses Mary McGee, Lucille Sharitt, Louise Bonar, Florence Shaub, Marugerlte Omdorf, Irene Healy, Katherine Leonard, Agnes Mahoney, Kay Willet, Cecelia Adams, Georgia Heckman, Edna Sonnlfleld, • • • Mrs. Carrie Pray and Miss Flora Pray will receive informally Saturday afternoon from 3 ;o 5 at their home, 1301 N. Alabama St., honoring their guests, Mrs. M A. Fitzgerald, and her daughter. Miss Josephine, of Ann Arbor, Mich. • • • The Trubador Club will entertain : Saturday night with a euchre party in Druids’ Hall, 14 W. Ohio St, Boil Vinegar Place a cup of vinegar on the stove and let it boll while you are cooking, onions and there will be no objectionable odor. Lon g Scarfs Scarfs worn with the new frocks are very long and often banded tvlth 11 uffy fur.

, Ji 'B i at., iihthttti i>■■miniTiimuUT"! JUIUI!HI ■It,Jl Elßfl

January Clearance Sale Tomorrow, Saturday, 8:30 A. M. This store, hut on© year old, has already won the confidence of the buying public of, Indianapolis to an extent that our success is the talk of the town. For this public confidence we are truly grateful and believe that it has been earned mainly because we have eonel usively demonstrated that WE SAY IT WITH VALUES.

“ Dresses i Values Up to $65 -j 3j| s -J g.ss vy j 5 22= *2B= MATERIALS Satin Faced Canton —Crepe Back Satina Charmeuse Satins—Romalne Crepe Georgettes—Cloth Dresses—Etc. Frlngod Models — New Pleated Motifs— Tunics and Basques—• Tailored and Straight Line—Eto. COLORS AND SIZES ALL COLORS INCLUDED. MISSES’—WOMEN’S—STOUTS Save From 25 % to I ![ 40% in This Sale Pi

WOMEN’S FELT FOOTWEAR Selling at pumps, fancy straps, etc. Fine first qualQQ t QA lty footwear In nil OfSn the newest and most w,,w T wanted patterns.

r — 1 200 SKIRTS A|| an 150 DRESSES a nn COATS on Wool skirts. Plaid skirts. P / .50 Now styles. Now colors. V On lot of ('oat* Herrtnarbonea. Pleated skirts. Values to """~ New materials. Limit 3 lixht and dark invisible piatds. ■ $5.00 to a customer. Whlle 60 laßt AND OUR BASEMENT OFFERS THESE UNHEARD OF VALUES 100 COATS Q 0 200 SILK DRESSES a no 75 COATS *4 Aoo Th~ ... w„„ _SS(.BB A,I,A, 05 "isK?- ISX“* I 4.60 T near are wool cooia. oonio ■ Included in this group. Out- ES— trimmed Bohvias. These B |JZ2=: fur trimmed. Colore are the VMf standing values at regular values tan not bo dupli- ■ seasons most popular. prices. Super-values at .... cated. DON’T MISS THIS SALE vIZX'l' They point the way to the foremost sale in the entire city. Act at once buy now. A small deposit will hold any purchase until wanted.

Martha Lee Says Paste These on Your Dressing Table Mirror

‘ Instead of fretting about the sylphlike figure and rose-leaf complexion of your husband’s new stenographer, do you own daily dozen religiously and see that your own complexion is beyond criticism. If you see red every time your husband admires another woman, you admit you have an Inferiority complex. “Jim cays he’d love me if I were the homeliest woman in the world,” Alice Moss said today, “but I don’t Intend to risk finding out whether he means It.” Mother nature, like other women, knows that beauty Is only skin deep, but she seems happiest when she puts on' her new spring clothes, or dons the becoming autumn costumes. Jack Jones’ wife bought him a woolen scarf for Christmas in that shade of brown that Is so very be coming—to her. Alfred Green, formerly shunned as a high-brow, now is called a “walking dictionary." and can’t fill his engagements, since the crossword puzzle wave struck town. Gossip Strikes Dear Mlaa Lee- Please tell me what to do. I hAve been married three yearn and I love my husband but two weeks ajfo. while my husband was at work, a man I uned to *ro with came to see me. I didn't want him anti I rn;uie him r> as soon ns he could But some of the neighbors saw him to and told mv husband, and he is threatening to divorce me. This man made love to me. but I told him I loved my hut-band and would not listen to him. Isn’t there anything I can do to convince mv husband I did not invite this old friend’ And what ran I do to stop the neighbors from talking bo about me? UNHAPPY WIPE. The most effective way to stop gossip la to ignore it. old friend came to your home uninvited once, and that home Is in danger now, as a result. Invite hlrn there now, and make him tell your husband the truth. Engagement Gift I)r Martha Lpo: I htrf a friend who ha* anxiouiv'**! her rnnwiwnl Is It proper to send an engagement present? If so, what? M. 1,. C. It is oorr<*-t to pend an engagement present, which usually is something personal, or linen fir the home. You might send lingerie, guest or tea towels, handkerchiefs, some appointment for her dressing table,

such as perfume bottles, or a boudoir lamp. Love Fades Pear Miss Lee; Two rears ago I became engaged to a bov lust before he left for another city to live. We were botli 19. I thought I loved him. but now I know I love another man. I never broke the engagement, because we never mentioned it In our letters and I thought he had forgotten, too. But now he save he Is coming back to marry me. I did not tell him about the other man. In my letters, because I did not want to hurt him. In case he stiii loved me. I cannot marrv him. because I am engaged to this other man. Please advise me what to do. WORRIED. Do the only honorable thing—write the man, before he leaves home, that you are engaged to another man. Explain that you took it for granted the engagement was broken, since he never mentioned It. The fact that he never said any-

Gifts That Count from THE GIFT SHOP 32 SOUTH PENNSYLVANIA

Our /January f Sale j I Starts Tomorrow, Saturday Our entire stoek of Furniture and Rugs will be included in this sale. If you contemplate buying it will pay you well to see this offering. W. R. BEARD & CO. 453 E. WASHINGTON

Coats Values Up to $69.50 s 2B= j J&rWk *42= ff ‘l9 M MATERIALS H sjUfliwjf Velva Suede —Kashmana— —mV Ormandale —Pile Fabric fer®* Lustrosa—And Others— Beaver and Muskrat Trim*— fjjgfi COLORS AND SIZES MISSES’—WOMEN’S—STOUTS It Will Pay You to Buy Now. jfy These Values Can Not Be Dupli- jA\ cated Later On. Small Deposit j Is All We Require. Kp

Mid-Winter and Early Spring h-a-t-s mm Just arrived In time for this sale—4 /■llT large assortment . of taffotn nnd brn /g /g mood combinations, m "IS -fc&fcfr - ‘ : \\ ,\\ Wirn ymi ■ 11.0. e i.f ■ *f H 1 111 111 lovely hats you will Values \ ) \ '/ llLLllk ho sure to want two H From P-—Aa j jli-A vT / or more at till* low $3.00 g/ / All popular shades— Several different styles and Coral —Hennfc— shapes from which to Blue, etc. choose. WE ADVISE EARLY SELECTION

FRIDAY, DEC. 26, 1924

thing about It is significant. It may mean that he, too, has discovered it was a mistake, but is playing square and is giving you the chance to make the break, if any is to be made. Kinney Given King ! Jeremiah Kinney, supervisor of dej tectives, is the proud possessor of a j large diamond-set Elks ring given 1 him Thursday by members of the de- | tective department. CHAPPED HANDS chilblains, frostbite—just rub on soothing, cooling, healing ! VICKS ▼ Va Rub Over 17 Million Jarm Uted Yearly Complete Beauty Culture Course Tuition, $35 Day and Evening Classes, Actual practice on live models. Students do marcelling free of charge. i LEARN WHERE EXPERTS MAKE EXPERTS "Earn While You Learn.** Diplomas Awarded. OLIVE STREET HAIR STORE | DRex. 4535. 1138 Olivo St.