Indianapolis Times, Volume 36, Number 208, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 January 1925 — Page 8

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Social I Activities 6 ENTERTAINMENTS I] WEDDINGS BETROTHALS fjTJj RS. T. C. HOOD. 124 E. ThirtyJjyl Second St., entertained Fri- * J day afternoon with a beautifully appointed candlelight tea in honor of her daughter-in-law, Mrs. Thomas Stanley Hood, who was Miss Helen Conway of Boston, Mass., before her recent marriage. Guests were members of the group of younger people and assisting were Mrs. Henry Thornton and Mrs. H. H. Thornton, Mrs. Robert Morse, Mrs. Henry Rlgsley, Mrs. Louis Hearle and fdiss Edna Levy and Miss Margaret Pantzer. ' • • • Mrs. Dwight E. Aultman of Ft. Benjamin Harrison gave a luncheonbridge of six tables Friday afternoon honoring Mrs. Emmett F. Branch. Guests were served at small tables lighted with red tapers in silver holders and the rooms were arranged with bowls .of red roses. • • * Mrs. McDonald Nixon, 3360 N. Meridian St., and Mrs. Percival O. Powers, 2046 N. Alabama St., entertained Friday afternoon with a beautiful luncheon bridge of twenty-four tables at the Propylaeum, 1410 N. Delaware St. - Luncheon was served at small tables which were decorated with bowls of spring flowers and about the rooms were baskets of pink roses. .. Among the guests were Mrs. Edmund Cook of Brooklyn, N. Y., who is visiting Mrs. Henry B. Milliken and Mrs. R. V. Lynch of Newcastle. Assisting the hostesses were Mesdames I. C. be Haven, Will McMasters. Roy E. Adams, Clinton D. Lasher, John T. Todd and Jewett V. Reed. . • * *. The Friday Afternoon Reading Club met Friday with Mrs. C. J. Murphy, 3868 N. New Jersey St. The program included a paper by Mrs. Ac. ;W. Case on “Women of the • * * Miss Margaret Shipp read a paper on her trip to Europe Friday afternoon at a meeting of the Over-the-Tea-Cups Club at the home of Mrs. C. W. Dicks, 1609 N. Meridian St. • * • Mrs. Benjamin Abbott Dickson, 222 E. Fifteenth St., entertained Friday afternoon with an informal tea from 3-5 in honor of her mother, Mrs. Jacqueline S. Holliday. Miss Lucy Holliday and Mrs. W. J. Holliday assisted the hostess. • • * Miss Geraldine Hanks, 2235 N. Alabama St., whose marriage to Marion Oldham will take place Jan. 31, was the honor guest Wednesday afternoon at a kitcheon shower given by Mrs. Annin L. Doerschel, 1401 N. Pennsylvania St. • * * Covers for fifteen were laid at a dinner given Thursday night by Mr. and Mrs. Walter R. Mayer, 2036 N. Using a megaphone on the corner of Washington and Meridian Sts. wouldn’t be a whisper beside the audience you can reach with a 3-line Times Want Ad 3 days for 99c.

Beauty Culture Course COMPLETE TUITION, #35 Liberal Credit Terms. Day and Evening Classes. Practical Experience on Live Models. Olive St Hair Store PBexel 4535. 1138 OLIVE ST.

FURNITURE SALE |||gi? • -4 . *. An. Accumulation of Slightly Used and Railroad Damaged Furniture, Stoves and Rugs Offered at Amazingly Low Prices for Quick Sale. j—i $1 Weekly Pays for the Bargains Bought During This Great Sale Continuing While the Great Assortment of Wonderful Bargains Last!

Steel Beds One lot of metal beds la many different finishes and designs. Full and three-quarter sizes When new they sold for WW., up to sl2. Mol! Choice Other metal beds, finished It walnut and mahogany. Choice, $7.95. Formerly sold up tr $25.

• ' —————*—= Pining Chairs One lot of fumed and golden oak dining chairs * _ that sold for t m 25 when new up to w I $6. Choice ■ Others finished in walnut and mahogany that sold for up to $lO. Choice, $2.50.

Library Tables One lot of fnll sized fumed and golden oak library tables that sold for, when new, up t n 0 C to S2O. **\ * 7 J •J Choice ■ Others finished in mahogany and walnut that- sold for up to $35. Choice, $9.75.

And Hundreds of Other Similar Bargains. Buy Now. Save Now. RHODES-BURFORD FURNITURE COMPANY 511-513 East Washington St. MA in 5363

Plan Party

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MISS BUTH LYNCH-

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MISS MARIE RIKHOFF Miss Ruth Lyneh is chairman of a bunco party to be given by the Phi Rho Chi Sorority Tuesday evening in Odd Fellow Hall, Hamilton Ave. and E. Washington S.t Miss Marie Rikhoff is assisting her. Others on the committee are Misses Helen Washam, Mildred Hunt, Margaret Lynch and Bernadette Murphy.

Delaware St., in honor of Mr. Mayer’s father, George J. Mayer, celebrating his birthday anniversary. Guests were members of the Dr. E. C. Thompson Club. • * • Mrs. David Goss, Mrs. P. F. Goodrich and Mrs. J. P. Cunningham gave reviews of books on educational problems before the educational committee of the Indianapolis branch of the American 1 Association of University Women Friday afternoon at School No. 10. The Trubado Club will meet on Saturday night in Druids Hall, 14 W. Ohio St. ■ • • • The Holy Cross D. and S. Club will give a dance Wednesday evening in the Parish hall, Oriental and Ohio Sts . In charge are Misses Mary Marley, Mary Harrold, Rose Haynes, Gertrude Strieker, and Michael Quinn, Owen McGloon, John O’Connor, Thomas Dugan and Francks Logue.

Bed Davenports One lot of bed davenports that open into fuU sized beds that ■old for, wh *i? $0.75 EX* 5 -. 57= Others that sold for up to SSO. Choice, 914.50.

Upholstered Rockers One lot- In Imitation leather that sold for, when new, „ C Q C up to $25. < Others in genuine leather that sold for, when new, up to $45. Choice, g 11.75.

Dining Suites Finished In fumed and golden oak that formerly sold for t C A up to $125. Sale price Period suites finished In walnut and mahogany that formerly sold for up to $175, 989.50.

LETTER FROM LESLIE PRESCOTT TO JOHN ALDEN PRESCOTT—NEVER MAILED. I am lonely tonight, Jack, my husband—a little bit more lonely than I have ever been before in my life. My heart hurts with longing for you, I want to feel your arms about me. I want to look into your dear eyes and see that crooked little smile that makes your mouth tell tales even before you speak. Most of all, dear, I want you to make me know, dear, that you love me. , You diet such an unkind thing to me when Alice died and it seemed to me that my heart was broken but tonight I am sending my very soul out tc you with the words, you do love me, don’t you? Don’t laugh at me, dear heart, and say of course I do. Just take me In your arms and hold me close to your heart arid tell It to me with that little catch in your voice that it had when you said to me only a little while ago “Whatever happens, dear, remember I love you and have loved you always.” Well, something did happen, Jack, and for a little while. Jack, it blotted out those words and now I am trying to .remember them but my heart grows cold with apprehension and I grow terror-stricken. My breath comes cold across my lips. My heart stops beating. Something clasps my throat. I strangle and gasp at the thought. I dare not ask, "Do you love me?” for I seem to see that indifference in your eyes that you gave me to understand was yours when you did not copie to me in my great trouble. What' do women do, dear, when they see indifference in the eyes of those they love. It seems to me that I would rather see hate for I feel that love cannot be burled so deeply under hate as under indifference. Hate is something tangible, something with which you can battle and perhaps overcome, but lndifferenoe is so cold, so calm, so pitiless. God, Jack, have you reached the point where anything that I shall do or say means nothing to you one way or the other? * I know I am silly, dear, to harrow up my emotions in this way, but I don’t want to grow calm and cold and Indifferent. I want to love you —love you. I want to still thrill when your hand touches mine. I want to still tremble when you are cross. I want to weep when you are sad. I want all the joy, for I am having all the terror of loving but above all else I want the bliss of being loved. Do other women write letters like this to their husbands? Do husbands want their wives to pour out their hearts to them in this way? I do not know and you will never know for I shall never send you this letter. But my heart was so filled wijh loneliness and longing for you that In some way I had to pour out all that was in my soul, [copyright, 1925, NEA Service, Inc.) NEXT: Long distance telephone message to Leslie Prescott. CITY WORKS DESCRIBED Delegates to the continental Congress at Washington, D. C., will be named at the February meeting of the Caroline Scott Harrison chapter of D. A. R., it was announced at a meeting Thursday at the chapter house, 824 N. Pennsylvania St. Fae Patrick, city deputy prosecutor, talked on the workings of the city government. Mrs. E. H. Darrach, regent, refuted rumor that the chapter house is for sale.

Bedroom Suites Three-piece suites in mahogany finish that merly sold up to slls. *o2!^=^ price Other three and four-piece suites tli,at formerly sold for up to $l6O, 998.

Kitchen Cabinets Genuine oak cabinets of several popular makes regularly Belling for Sale° ** SQiH price Others In white enamel that formerly sold for pp to S9B, , 924.50.

" Rugs One lot 0f.9x12 velvet and Axminsters, thoroughly cleaned and will wear like new. gold for, when _ new. up t 4 VS to $69. * | mi 9 Choice ■ 1 47x54 Velvet Rugs 91.95

TJtLE IJN DJLAJS APOLifcS TIMES . v

—-Martha Lee Says- —■— Words of Love Mean • Little Without Proof

A young girl writes: M He says lie loves me; but be won’t go to work.” A poor sort of love, that. The kind, it is, that makes women grow old before their time, slaving for men who make love divinely, but who never get to the point of providing well for their families.

These men will look into a woman’s eyes and tell her how beautiful she is, so she forgets their worthlessness. But this glamor cannot go on forever. .Some day the woman awakens to a realization that there is more than words to love, that unselfishness is vital to it, and that the man who tells her he loves her, but who doesn’t work for her, knows nothing of unselfishness. The man who shows his love only by working hard to make a home for his wife and family misses the tenderness of love. But he is far, far, more deserving of appreciation than the one who tells of his love, but never proves it. He Won’t Work' Dear lira. Lee: I hare been going with a fellow for nearly a year. Ho says he love* me, hut he will not work. I have thought of hazing a cottage to oureelTfes. but he won’t work. I lrve him better than my life. Both of us are 19. He is a nice, respectable fellow. Father likes him very much. He is trying to be a prizefighter; but he is not strong enough. A BROKEN GIRL. This boy may be respectable, but he is not self-respecting. Evidently he is even weaker in character than in body. • But he is only 19, so you need not despair. Tell him that if he really loves you he must prove it by going to work and sticking to his Job. Quite 'Old-Fashioned’ Dear Miss Lee: We are two girls IT years old. Both of us go with boys. We don’t care much about them. Some say we are old-fashoined because we don’t use rouge and lipstick and don’t wear bobbed hair. When we meet boys, if they seem to like us we don’t care much about them. We "don’t like these sheiks that teach you to drive their cars and then tell you you owe them a kiss. Do you think we will be old maids? Some young men think they are unlucky because they haven't a car. We would rather go to a movie with a nice boy than to go riding with a sheik. Please tell us what the trouble Is. Don’t boys like oldfashioned girls? KENTUCKY PALS. No, girls, I don’t think you need fear that you will be old maids. You just haven’t happened to run across the "old-fashioned” boys. There are some, but’it is true they are rather In the background, and so they may not know of you. But they’ll find you, or you’ll find them, some time. In the meantime stick it out. TOOTS: You asked for a personal reply, but neglected to send your name or address. If you will forward these to me, repeating: your

I MorrisonSl T ** Jm “ FOUNDED 1804 1 T Known for Remarkable Value Giving 1 4 WEST WASHINGTON STREET Saturday! Exceptional Values! —IN OUR NEW—BAI^dNR^EMENT FUR TRIMMED—Look and Wear Like High-Priced Garments — On Sale Tomorrow Amm w- Sport and street models. M 1 Fiw-?.k Smart new models A. CpjtpA Imhl ||l with l ar & 0 collars of ™ r NVui jXmm fine fur. %*Pj if sgF 4 \ Rich, warm fabrics. I J * wSEyrSsgf All sizes—all colors. a I fiXf Special at— w J I Hi New coats—with' |A| / f . ilKfoaa gorgeous furs on rich, 'M j * lustrous cloths. j|j B r/1/ Popular new models. B I J j / J r\\ For sport and dress. // Q J! \V Extra sizes included. * * —Morrison’s Bargain Basement. DRESS SALE! Dress Bargains That Will Tell Their Own Story—See Them Tomorrow $3 —$5 — $ 9 An assortment of Silk, Goth, Velvet and Jersey Dresses. New colors, All sizes. New styles. * , —Morrison’s Bargain Basement. I SILK HOSIERY REDUCED | 300 Pairs of discontinued lines in well-known brands of Silk Hosiepr. Black, Brown and shades of Gray. $1.50, $1.98 to $2.98 j QUftlitics. Hcduccd to • •••••*••*••••••••• * . , - - ■ . I V BARGAIN

stoiy and questions, I shall be glad to advise you. , ‘ Hookey ’ Proof By Timet Svcciai LA PORTE, Ind., Jan. 9.—Here’s a boy that is “hookey proof.” He is Ralph R. Travis, 14, son of

of Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Travis, of Kingsbury, and h e has never missed a day of school nor been tardy during the ten years of his school life. He is now a pupil in the La Porte High School and declared a model student by W. M. Stafford, principal. Ralph has maintained his attendance record despite the fact that on many occasions he has had to battle snow drifts

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and bitter cold in his long walk from Kingsbury. He started to school when 4 years old. ALUMNI ELECT OFFICERS i Wisconsin Association Prepares For Haresfoot Play. New officers of the Wisconsin Alumni Association are William Florea, president; Mrs. C. E, ScheurIng, vice-president; Edwin Cfnip, treasurer, and Miss Florence Soder, secretary. _ Plans for presentation of the Haresfoot Club play in April were discussed at the election meeting. A Founder’s Day banquet in February was announced. Members will meet for luncheon every Wednesday at noon, In Ayres’ team room.

P. H. N. A. HAS ELECTION Mrs. Henry B. Heywood Renamed President. New officers of the Public Health Nursing Association, elected for a term of two years at the annual luncheon Thursday at the Lincoln, are: Mrs. Henry B. Heywood, president; Mrs. F. R. Kautz, second vice EPSOM SALTS MALL GONE World's finest Physic now Pleasant as Lemonade / V vri’i Pure Epsom Salts has no equal in medicine for constipation, biliousness, sick headache. Doctors and nurses depend upon it because no other laxative acts so perfectly, so harmlessly on the Rowels. It *r;ever gripes or overacts. Epsonade Salts” is pure Epson* Salts made pleasant with fruit derivative salts—nothing else. It tastes like sparkling lemonade and costs only few cents a package at any drugstore. Try it! “Epsonade Salts” is guaranteed by the American Epsom Association. —Advertisement Whole World Contributes to Medicine Ginger from India —lodine from Chile —Olive Oil from Italy—Epsom Salts from England—Menthol from Japan and roots and herbs from almost every country in the world contribute their share tovord alleviating the ills of the race. No other medicine, however, compounded from roots and herbs has ever attained such a marvelous record for success as has Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. For over fifty years it has been overcoming some of the most stubborn ailipents of womanhood, and is constantly growing in popularity and favor.—Advertisement.

president; Mrs. M. C. Furscott, corresponding eecretary; Mrs. W. A. Eshbach, assistant treasurer; Mrs. Ethel P. Clark, Mrs. J. H, Gause, Mrs. Louise Hollweg, Mrs. George Haerle, Mrs. J. G. Mueller, Mrs. W. H. Adams, Miss Dorothy Darmody and Mrs. Robert Dorsey, directors.

January Rug Clearance DRASTIC REDUCTIONS ON RUGS AND LINOLEUMS 9x12 ALL-WOOL AXMINSTER RUGS, MO Qt Former Price $38.50 I 9x12 GOLD SEAL CONGOLEUM RUGS, $1 O AC Nationally Advertised Price SIB.OO V 4 Remnants of CONGOLEUM QA_ and LINOLEUM, Yard OU C Genuine HEAVY INLAID UNOLEUM, 1A Yard V 1 ® COMPLETE LINE OF BRUSSELS, VELVET* AXMINSTER AND WILTON RUGS AT GREATLY REDUCED PRICES OVER 200 PATTERNS AND ALL SIZES United Rug & Linoleum Cos. 425 EAST WASHINGTON STREET We Deliver Anywhere. Open Saturday Until 10 P. M.

SALE Electric Washers Vacuum Cleaners To clear our stock of all washers and cleaners, soiled or used during our big Christmas sales, we offer some most unusual bargains. Sale starts Saturday morning and will continue Monday until all are sold. 29 HIGH GRADE ELECTRIC WASHERS In the lot, Including some of the.famous Coffields and Trojans, as well as other makes. All carry full factory guarantee. Regular prices, $135.00 and up-. Sale prices as low as $47.50. Easy terms can be arranged. 14 ELECTRIC CLEANERS Including the Following Makes j Hoover—America—Premier (1 *4 Eclipse and Simplex ij* Regular Retail Prices are $35.00 to $65.00 Sale Prices, SIO.OO to $35.00 COME EARLY—THEY WILL MOVE FAST EURKEA SALES CO. 34 S. Meridian St Cleanor House MAin 3012

Do It Today Or Tomorrow if you really mean to make 1925 your banner year for savings, because, you can still get a full month’s interest for January, We will allow Interest from January FIRST on all deposits made on or before January TENTH. This applies to old as well as new Savings Accounts. $1 or more will make the start. We Pay on Savings The Interest You Make Depends on the Interest You Take Meyer-Kiser Bank 128 East Washington Street Open All Day Saturday, 8 A. M. to 8 P. M.

A Real Special For Tomorrow, Saturday, Only BED All Full Size Sifamons Bed \ . 1 Three MATTRESS / for ** Full Size Hirschraan f All-Cotton, Guaranteed r nt Mattress ( b M at •/ O SPRING | Ao V TV> Pa r „ c . /A Small Down Payment ■ Full Size / Ba]aßce|lPerWeok I Simmons Spring W. R.jßeard &|Co.

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Oldest Woman Dies By Timet Soecial NOBLESVILLE, Ind.. Jan. Mrs. Eliza Bechtel, 89, widow of J. J. Bechtel, Civil War veteran, was buried today. She was the oldest woman in Noblesville. One daughter, Mrs. E. 11. Mynheir, survives.