Indianapolis Times, Volume 36, Number 205, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 January 1925 — Page 5
TUESDA Y, J AN. 6, 1925
SOCIAL Activities ENTERTAINMENTS WEDDINGS BETROTHALS
JT-TIRS. W. R. ENOCHS, 650 E. ■yl Thirty-Fourth St., gave a T___J pretty luncheon and mah jongg party Tuesday afternoon for eight guests. Covers were laid at one table with a centerpiece of pink roses and individual crystal holders with pink tapers. Name cards and prizes were in mah jongg effect. Guests were Frank L. Riggs, Ralph B. Whitaker, L. A. Thompson, H. P. Krull, Joseph Howell, William D. Hatfield, I. L. Craig. • Mrs. O. L. Major of Culpepper, Va., who is visiting her daughter, Mrs. R. Walter Jarvis, 2814 Washington Blvd., was the guest of honor Tuesday at a pretty luncheon and 500 party given by Mrs. Claude T. Griffith, 624 E. Twelfth St. Guests were friends of Mrs. Griffith and their mothers. The mothers were seated at one table decorated with a centerpiece of carnations and spring flowers with green ribbons running to each cover with a framed “Mother” quotation marking each place. Four green tapers in silver holders lighted the table. The other guests were seated at two small tables.
The guests included Mesdames Schwetter of Louisville, Ky.; E. C. Hardegen, M. H. Taylor, M. E. Kersey, Anna Rowlett and their daughters; Mesdames R. Walter Jarvis, Nell Kemper, Robert Pike, James Fitzgerald, Alvin Carpenter and E. F. Stemmelen. • • • A The Aftermath Club will meet Prhursday afternoon with Mrs. J. H. Brill, 8916 Carrollton Ave. • • * Fifty covers were laid at the luncheon Tuesday given by the Marion County chapter of American War Mothers at the Claypnol honoring Mrs. H. H. McClure of Kansas City, Mo., national war mother. Mrs. E. May Hahn, president, presided and an orchestra copnposed of members of the Foremen's and Policemen’s Band gave a program. Mrs. McClure outlined the program of work set as the ideal for all the units in the national organization which she is going about the country taking up with the locai units. Mrs. Hahn has appointed Mrs. Oscar Lewis, Mrs. Harry Lingenfelter, Mrs. Robert Fitch and Mrs. Sara Ufen on the committee for a reception to be held Wednesday night at the chapter headquarters, 440 N. Pennsylvania St., in honor of Mrs. McClure. • • • Mr*. William Allen Moore is general chairman for the Little Theater Society annual costume ball Jan. 23 at ths Athenaeum. Others on the committee are: Mrs. James B. Steep, tickets; Mrs. Stuart Depn, boxes and Muroiy Wickard, decorations. • • • Th> Mystic Tie Club will meet Thursday with Mrs. Pa.ul F. Robinson, 3137 Park Ave., for luncheon. Ife * * * (yMrs. E. E. Stacy, 4510 Carrollton Ave., was hostess Tuesday afternoon for the guest party of the Meridian Heights Inter-Se Club. She was assistei by Mrs. R. L. Williamson, Mrs. B. D. Yarian and Mrs. Charles A. Mueller. The rooms were arranged with fertjj and baskets of narcissus. The dining table was lighted by gold and yellcw tapers in crystal holders. There were about seventy guests. The program included a paper by Mrs, Renny Smith on "Contemporary French Literature,” two piano solos, and two musical monologues, by Mrs. C. J. Summers, who also played during the serving hour; vocal solos by Miss Beatrice Batty, accompanied by Mrs. Dorothy Bailey. Papers were read by Mrs. Helen Eaton Jacoby and Mrs. Winifred Clark Wolff at a meeting of the Fortnightly Literary Club Tuesday afternoon at the Prppylaeum. • * • Miss Edna L. Hamilton, superintendent of the Public Health Nursing Association, will give a report of the work done in the past year at the annual luncheon Thursday in the Travertine Room of the Lincoln, There will also be an election of officers and a demonstration of the work done by the nursing staff
PAINFUL CRAMPS * AFTER MEALS Texas Lady Says Everything She Ate Seemed to Disagree With Her Till BlackDraught Brought Relief. Mr*, 8. 8. McCoy, of Glen Rose, Texas, says: “Something like three yearn ago I read about Black-Draught and I was In need of medicine for Indigestion. Everything I ate seemed to disagree with me, and I would nearly cramp to death. “I had been suffering with this trouble for quite a while and the many things I tried seemed to give me no relief. “Then I began taking Black-Draught —a dose after every meal—and It gave me wonderful relief. “For three years we have not been without It in this house. It is the finest medicine for constipation and sour stomach. “When my husband gets to feeling bad las a result of costiveness and impurities In the system, he takes a dose of Thedford’s Black-Draught.” Next time you feel distress after jneais, try taking a pinch of BlackDraught, dry on the tongue, washed Hswallow of water. The others should encourage t relief by taking Blackhis easy, convenient way. and women have written ke a package of Blackig with them when travs it handy for use at the indigestion. y Sold by all druggists. —Advertisement
Recent Bride to Be Honored
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MRS. THOMAS STANLEY HOOD
Mrs. Thomas Stanley Hood, who was Miss Helen Conway of Boston, Mass., before her recent marriage, has come to Indianapolis to live. Mr. and Mrs. Hood will be at home
among crippled children with the James B. Roberts bequests. Mrs. Henry B. Hayworth will preside. • • * Mr. and Mrs. Arthur R. Baxter, 892 Middle Dr. Woodruff Place, invited guests to a dinner party at the Indianapolis Athletic Club in honor of their son Emory and Miss Ruth Fromm, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George Fromm, whose marriage will take place Wednesday night at the Central Ave. M. E. Church. Those invited were Mr. and Mrs. Charles B. Ford of Oak Park, 111.; Mr. and and Mrs. Harry Readfearn, River Forest, 111.; Mr. and Mrs. George D. Thornton, Miss Alice Baxter, Mr. and Mrs. George Fromm, Norman Baxter, Marion Baxter and Frederick Baxter. * * • Regular meeting of the Lambda Chi Friendship Circle will b held Wednesday afternoon at the chapter house, 24 S. Butler Ave. * • * Good Will Club will meet Wednesday afternoon for a euchre party at the home of Mrs. J. L. Williams, 2829 Indianapolis Ave. • * • East End Pleasure Club will have a card party Wednesday night at the home of Mrs. Mary Canaughton, 22 Hendricks Place. LETTER FROM LESLIE PRESCOTT TO BEATRICE SUMMERS, CONTINUED In answer to mother’s questioning look, I hastened to explain that to find understanding and consideration between the sexes and to be able to bring others to the place where they might also'discover these two great outstanding signposts to happiness, was a much greater achievement than to discover the north pole on earth or anew star in the heavens.
We had quite a conversation on this subject, my dear, but I have written you enough for you to appreciate my mother and for you to understand how much your letter meant to me. It is wonderful here at Atlantic City this time of year. The air is brisk enough to be bracing, and yet one does not feel the cold as one does in the city. I am probably going to stay here until my baby is bora. Ruth Burke came down with me after Alice’s funeral and she has promised that when she leaves and goes back to Albany that she will pack up the furniture in my apartment and ship it over to Pittsburgh for me. Isn’t that lovely of her? I would be very ungrateful if I did not thank Fate every day for my good friends like you and Ruth. I shall not try to move into the old home until the alterations are made. At first mother and I thought we would go out to California but we concluded that it would not be the best thing to do. I felt it would be too far away for Jack, and I knew that until he had gotten dad’s business well in hand that it would be impossible for him to think of leaving Pittsburgh for more than a day or two at a time, I wish you would tell Paula Perier for me that it is ❖ery sweet indeed of her to think of my coming baby and I will accept with pleasure any memento of my visit with her when she was in Albany that she may send me. Tell her that contrary to every one else I am hoping that my baby will be a boy, if only to confute those people who are always afraid that I will grow to hate little Jack when my own eon makes his appearance. Nothing nor no one but; himself can take one jot of my love for little Jack away from him. My friends do not seem to understand that the baby that Will soon be born will be in a way thrust upon me. While of my -own free will I made a place in my arms and in my heart for my oldest child. In some unaccountable way little Jack seems to sense this, for his love and admiration is apparently boundless. If he is not the child of my body he is something infinitely 7 .
at 221 E. Fifteenth St., after Jan. 15. Mrs. T. C. Hood, 124 E. ThirtySecond St., will entertain for her Friday.
nearer and dearer, the child of my soul. I have not heard from Sally since I have been down here. She is probably very busy and will write me as soon as she is able. Write me often. Bee. I love your letters. LESLIE. (Copyright. 1926. NEA Service, Inc.) NEXT: Letter from Sally Atherton to Ruth Burke. t Sister Mary’s Kitchen. Breakfast California grapes, cereal, thin cream, creamed dried beef on toast, cornmeal gems, honey, milk, coffee. Luncheon—Tomato bisque, croutons, roast beef salad, whole wheat bread, marmalade, fig cookies, milk, tea. Dinner Beef and oyster pie, steamed squash, pineapple and cabbage salad, graham bread, rice pudding. milk, coffee. - The luncheon salad Is made with the left-over roast from the preceding dinner. We are so prone to make hash from left-over beef, that anew way of using the scraps is well worth trying. The tomato bisque Is a hearty soup for school children or those under school age. If whole wheat bread and butter with a filling of lettuce 'is served the salad should not be served to juniors.
Tomato Bisque Two cups canned tomatoes, 1 tablespoon sugar, teaspoon soda, 1 smell onion, (5 whole cloves, 1 tablespoon chopped parsley, % 'up stale bread crumbs from soft part of loaf, 3 cups milk, 1 teaspoon salt, % teaspoon pepper, 5 tablespoons butter. Melt two tablespoons bitter In a saucepan and add onion cut in thin slices. Simmer over a low fire for five minutes. Add milk, bread crumbs, parsley and cloves and let stand, covered, over hot water for 20 minutes. Rub through a strainer. Cook tomatoes with sugar for 15 minutes. Add soda and rub through a puree strainer. Reheat milk, add tomatoes, salt, pepper and butter, and serve at once. Roast Beef Salad One and one-half cups cooked carrots, % cup cooked turnips, Y* cup string beans, % cup peas, 12 slices boiled or pickled- beets, 1 Cup diced cold roast beef, Yt teaspoon saft, % teaspoon pepper, fe wgrains mustard, Y* teaspoon powdered sugar, 3 tablespons lemon juice, 6 tablespoons oil. The carrots and turnips should be cut in neat small cubes, and the beans in matchlike strips. Combine beans, carrots, turnips and ' roast beef. Mix salt, mustard, sug..r and pepper. Add lemon juice and oil and beat well. Pour this dressing over the salad mixture and let stand in a cold place for one hour. ,If lettuce is at hand, arrange, salad on a bed of shredded leaf lettuce or crisp leaves of head, sprinkle with cooked peas, and garnish with slices of beets. This is an excellent salad for the country housewife to keep in mind because it is not ruined by the lack of lettuce as most salads are. Fig Cookies One cup brown sugar, % cup butter, 2 eggs, 1 teaspoon cinnamon, 4 tablespoons sour cream, 1 teaspoon soda, 1 cup chopped figs, flour. Cream butter and sugar and add one-half cup flpur. Add eggs well beaten. Sift one cup flour over figs and mix well. Dissolve soda in sour cream and add to the first mixture. Add cinnamon and prepared figs. Mix thoroughly and add flour to roll. Roll on a flout molding, cut with a cookie cutter and bake in a quick oven. \ (Copyright. 1924, NEA Service, Inc.) Dramatic Critic to Speak Mrs. O. D. Oliphant, dramatic critic for the Trenton (N. J.) Times, before taking her office as president of the American Legion Auxiliary, will, address the Indiana Women’s Press Club Jan. 13 at the luncheon at 12:30 at the Clay pool. , /
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
LEGION AUXILARYf HAS INSTALLATION Mrs, Charles E, Combs New President, Officers for the coming year were installed at a meeting of the State American Legion Auxiliary Tuesday momjng at the Central Christian Church. They arts; Mrs. Charles E. Combs, Bloomfield, president: Mrs. Charles N. Cook, Richmond, first vice president,; Mrs. B. S. Rose, Evansville, second vice president; Mrs. Claire P. Thurston, Indianapolis, secretary. Mrs. Helen S. Green, Garrett, treasurer; Mrs. George Mclvor, South Bend, third vice president; Mrs. O. E. Adams, Brazil, chaplain; Mrs. J. D. Boswell, Carlisle, historian v Thirteen district committee, women jgere installed and the following committee chairmen with their committees: Mrs. B. S. Rose, Evansville, rehabilitation; Mrs. Charles N. Cook, Richmond, child welfare; Mrs. Arthur Robinson, Indianapolis, legislative; Miss Esther Harris, Wabash, membership, Mrs. George Mclvor, South Bend, heredity; Mrs. Leslie Runyan, Clinton, unit activities; Mrs. J. C. Glackman, Rockport, Americanism; Mrs. Elsie Alvis, Salem, convention parade; Mrs. Helen Green, Garrett, resolutions. At a meeting of tho board in the afternoon Lyle Tabor led a discussion of the Legion Endowment Fund.
INDORSER BOARD MEETS A. 1* Hassler Tctis of Work Among Poor. A. L. Hassler, who organized the non-sectarian Sunday school for poor children, told of the growth of his work among poor families and the response to his Sunday school Tuesday morning at the board meeting of the photoplay indorsers in the Fletcher American Bank Bldg. Mrs. D. Y. Byrkitt, chairman of the library committee, reported the rapid growth of the activities at the Saturday library showing of pictures and Mrs. Charles Davidson reported that twenty-two new pictures were indorsed by the board during December. FOLEY GIVES ADDRESS Commends Supreme Court in Talk on Constitntibn. "I would rather trust the safety and happiness of the country to the nine men of the Supreme Court, whose duty for 136 years has been to protect the Constitution of the United States, than to the Congress," said M. E. Foley In an address on “The Constitution and the United States” before the Woman's Re - search Club Monday afternoon at the home of Mrs. O. W. Fifer, 1421 N. New Jersey St. Foley urged Americans to safeguard the Constitution.
EVANGELIST IS SINGER W. L. Heitz Directs Music at Church Revival Services. L. Heitz of Winona Lake, Ind., singing evangelist, is In charge of the music' at revival services at the Victory Memorial Methodist Protestant Church, Villa and Woodlawn Aves. Evangelistic services are being conducted by the Rev. Oeorge L. Farrow, pastor. *- Columbus (Ohio) Boy Found Police dispatches notified Columbus (Ohio) authorities that they are holding here a boy who says he is Carroll Wetzel, 13, of that city. Carroll said he decided to run away, according to C. W. Mitchell, railroad officer, who found him asleep at the Union Station. Beauty A Gleamy Mass of Hair 35c "Danderine” does Wonders ior Any Girl’s Hair * Girls! Try this! When combing and dressing your hair, Just moisten your hair-brush with a little *'Danderine” and brush It through your hair. The effect is startilng! You can Jo your hair up immediately and It will appear twice as thick and heavy—a mass of gleamy hair, sparkling with life and possessing that incomparable softness, freshness and luxuriance. While beautifying the hair "Danderine” Is also toning and stimulating each single hair to grow thick, long and strong. Hair stops falllfeg out and dandruff disappears. Get a bottle of "Dan&evine” at any drug or toilet counter and just see flow healthy and* youthful your hair appears after this delightful, refreshing dressing.—Advertisement.
———— Martha Lee Say a- - Guests’ Ease Comes First to Good Hostess
To bp a good hostess means more than to have meals wellserved and to see that your guests are comfortable physically. I have seen homes in which guests were given every sort of luxury, in which every detail of household management went smoothly, but in which, despite these advantages, guests seldom enjoyed themselves.
The reason was easy to see. The hostesses put themselves out to see that their guests had every physical comfort, but they did little to add to thair mental and spiritual ease. Now, I do not propose that a hostess should become a spiritual advisor for her guests. Neither do I suggest that she conduct classes In literature. Such drastic methods are not needed. The simplest and best way for her to fulfill this Important part of her duties as hostess Is to put her guests' pleasure above everything elrfe. It is unpardonable for a hostess to indulge in a family argument before her guests. Yet it is done. No woman who does that can qualify as a good hostess.
It’s the Unused Mileage You Buy!
No matter how much or how little you pay for a car you are buying one thing UNUSED MILEAGE. It’s that unused mileage that will take you out over the country roads on the fine balmy spring days that are coming, that will whisk you to and from your office. So when you look through the WANT ADS in tonight’s TIMES for that partly used car remember what you really want is miles. You’ll find a great variety of used cars in THE TIMES and from among them you can pick
Hostess Duties Dear Miss Lee: I am grolng to have two girls as visitor* the laßt of thi* month. Will you please tell me the most Important thing I should do as hostess! FLORABELLE. The most important thing for you to do Is to give your guests a sincere welcome, and to maintain a truly hospitable atmosphere throughout their visit. This means to he sure they are not subjected to the embarrassment of any family or social arguments, and not to tire yourself so much getting ready for your guests that you cannot enjoy their visit. See that their rooms are pretty and in good order. It is a nice note to have flowers in the room, and a carafe filled with cold water every
' Times Want Ads . W J . 4 ' ' —Are Salesmen That Never Loaf
Gypsy Smith jf) at this ■Ps?''*'' fellow and Fllla you might say that he's H. G. Wells, or Ibanez or Ba lzac or one ~ of those writing |f||& now driving the Jlpjllj devil out of Lon-
night. Have a plentiful supply of towels and clothes hangers. When your guests arrive give them an opportunity to rest a bit before any parties, If possible.’ Tell them what time meals are served and what the social progress is. The hostess usually entertains within a day or two after her guests’ arrival at cither an afternoon or evening party, or both. Give your guests some time to themselves. You probably will be busy with personal affairs in the morning, and they can rest, shop or do whatever appeals to them. An over-attentive hostess is about as bad as one who neglects her guests.
just the car you want at just the price you want to pay. The Times Want Ad Page is the meet in g place of “buyers” and “sellers” of good used cars. Cultivate the habit of reading the Used Car Want Ads in The Times every day. You’ll have all the facts you need to make what is known as a “good buy.” ALL TIMES Want Ads receive a full 24-hour service. Call Main 3500 before 11 a. m. and your Want Ad will appear in the Home edition at 2 p. You’ll often get results the same day.
ANNUAL LOAN ASKED An ordinance providing for a temporary loan of $200,000 for the city board of health to tide the department over until the spring installment of taxes will be introduced in city council by Joseph L. Hogue, city controller. The loan has been necessary each year and is usually passed yithout council opposition. Stop Coughs ffljijg lSLJy£| 9ejE Jitjj} mM Ipijß
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