Indianapolis Times, Volume 36, Number 269, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 March 1925 — Page 6

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COMMONS IGNORES MACDONALD’S PLEA English House Votes to ‘Build Naval Base, Bv Times Snecial LONDON, March 24.—The House of Commons has voted to continue construction of the great naval base at Singapore, despite Ramsay MacDonald’s warning that to do so would both scrap the naval ratios agreed upon at the Washington disarmament confc rerice and provide a breeding spot for war. MacDonald maae a gallant stand against the Conservative majority. Col. Reginald Applln, a Conservative, dragged the United States into the debate when he declared that the construction of the Singapore base was a friendly act toward the United States, “which is in severe danger In the Philippines.” Sir Archibald Sinclair, a Liberal, said: “The argument that Singapore would be very useful to the United States in the event of a war with Japan constitutes an argument against constructing it. Such an argument might be used as a magnet to draw Great Britain Into the hostilities." Alleges He Aided in Suicide Hu United Pre* * CLEVELAND, Ohio, March 24. F’rank Liska, 42, today' still held to his story that he was “only helping his wife commit suicide," when he strangled her with a kimono Ist Erlday night. He adr e<l setting lire to the hen house .1 the back yard In which the scorched body of Mrs. Catherine Liska, 37, was found by firemen. BETTER THAN CALOMEL Thousands Have Discovered Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets Are a Harmless Substitute. Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets—the substitute for a mild but sure laxative, and their effect on the liver Is almost Instantaneous. These little ovlle-colored tablets are the result of Dr. Edwards’ determination not to treat liver and bowel complaint swith calomel. The pleasant little tablets do the food that calonel does, but have no ad after effc< ts. They don't injure tty l teeth like strong liquids or calomel. They take bold of the trouble and quickly correct it. Why cure the liver at the expense of the tecih? Calomel sometimes plays havoc with the gums. So do strong liquids. It Is best not to take calomel. Let Dr. Edwards’ O.Mve Tablets take Its place. Headaches, “dullness” ard that lazy feeling come from eoustinotion and a disordered liver. Take Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets when you feel “logy” and "heavy.” They “clear" clouded brain and “perk up" the spirits. 15c and 30c. —Advertisement.

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SIXTY YEARS AGO a young man who practiced medicine in Pennsylvania became famous and was called in consultation in many towns and cities because of his success \'n the treatment of disease. This was Dr. Pierce, who finally made up his mind, to place some of his medicines before the public, and moving to Buffalo, N. Y., put up what he called his “Favorite Prescription” and placed it with the druggists in every state. Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Proscription has long been recognized as a tonio for diseases peculiar to womankind. After suffering pain, feeling nervous, dizzy, \yeak and dragged-down by weaknesses of her sex, a woman is quickly restored to health by its use. Thousands of women testify that Dr. Pierce’s Favorite* Prescription has entirely eradicated their distressing ailments. Put up Jn both fluid and tablet form. Send 10c to Dr. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y., for trial package of tablets.— Advertisement.

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THE FIRST DINNER

By CYNTHIA GREY | ( ' 1 HERE!’’ cries Sylvia, setting the last steamI ing dish on the table. “I cooked every bit I * I of it all by myself, Tom! Don’t you think I’m smart?" Os course, Tom thinks Sylvia is smart , . . and pretty and sweet, besides. (For that Is what all young husbands think of their brides, isn't it?) For the f6od Sylvia has just set before him is not the kind of food that Mother used to make! It doesn’t look at all like any food that Tom has ever seen before in his life. Nor does it taste much like anything else that Tom has ever eaten. But he does eat it! . . . While Sylvia hangs above his chair, like, a tender guardian angel. This Is the very first dinner that Sylvia has cooked for Tom In the dear little home where he brought her after their honeymoon. And Sylvia is so proud of that dinner! Her eyes shine like stars as she looks at the snowy linen, the new silverware, and the flowers in the center of the table.

Parties, Meetings and Social Activities

Mr— —IRS. REX YOUNO of Dallas, Texas, who in visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Smith, was honor guest Tuesday at a beautifully appointed luncheon bridge at the Polly Primm tearoom given by Mrs. Chester A. Miller, 3116 Park Ave. The tables were arranged with tulips and Jonquils and lighted by pink tapers tied with tulle in pastel shades. Covers were also laid for Mesdames Charles Smith, Carl Sheets, Cecil H. Goodpasture, Carl Ayres, William Christena, Scott Deming, Herbert Teague, I. R. Whiting, Fred I. Shumaker, Walter Myers, Edward Bassett, Herbert G/ojff, James Hoburt, William Delbrook, William Ryan, Albert O. Harris, Fred Cmmerman, Miss Lindabelle Thompson and Miss Elizabeth Gross. Mrs. Miller was assisted by Mrs. CSmmerman. • ♦ • Mrs. Caroline Vajen Collins, Mrs. Charles 9. Voorhees, both of Winter Apartments, and Mrs Henry Lane Wilson will sail next month for Europe to spend the summer. * * ’• Miss Elizabeth J. Cotton was elected president of the Fortnightly Study Club Monday at the home of Mrs. Frank A. Syramea, 2722 Sutherland Ave. Mrs. Daniel T. Weir was elected vice president; Mrs. L. D. Warner, secretary; Mrs. M. E. Burkhart., treasurer; Mrs. Symmes, federation secretary; Mrs. W. B. Kirby, alternate; Mrs. Johr. L. Whtie, delegate to the Seventh District Federation of Clubs; Mrs. George Davis, alternate; Mrs. C. 9. Tieman, delegate to Local Council of Women; Mrs. J. E. Mai, alternate; Mrs. John E. Hollon, thrift chairman; Mrs. George B. Gannon, art chairman; Mrs. W. C. McMahon,

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mctlon picture chairman; Mrs. W. H. Link, health chairman. Mrs. May and Mrs. Davis told stories by Rudyard Kipling. • • • Technical High School teachers and pupils will present a program at the regular monthly meeting of the . Parent Teacher Association of the Theodore Potter Fresh Air School, at the school, 2:30 p. m., Wednesday. Miss Geraldine Hadley, head of the home economic department, will speak on “Some Phases of Home lyTartha Lee’s Column Beauty Not Enough Dear Mlm bee: I am a trirl 17 yearn old and people tell me I am very goodlook In it Lota of fellow* ask me for dates, but I never go with any one very long. I am a rood sport, and smoke, take a little drink occasionally and pel sometimes. That’s what the fellows seem to want, but when they ret it is doesn't hold them. What's wrong? PRETTY PEGGY. Yes, they seem to want the girl who pets, diinks and smokes, and perhaps they do want her, for a few dates. But they tire of her quickly —p.nd they don’t care much about bavlng'sto in*roduce her to their mothers. The men are to blame, yej. But, then, unless a girl is a “dumb Dora,” she need not depend on petting and smoking and drinking for popularity. On Bobs Pe r Miss bee; Is bobbed hair going; to stay in style? SCHOOL GIRL. ,Gjod gracious, child, how can I tell? The experts have been predicting the death of the bob for years, and it still is very much alive. During the past winter, undoubtedly, false hair has been used more than for some time, to cover the bob for dress occasions. But the bob still is much in evidence, and, even though I am not an expert, I will venture to predict it will remain no for—well, at least this summer. Starting Early Pear liss Lee: Do you. think a girl 14 years old is too young to have dates? M. B. N. Yes. Deceitful Beau Dear Miss Lee: A. fellow I know asks me for dater about three nights a week, but breaks them about half the time. He says he loves me. and acts like he doe*. He doesn't want me to have any other dates, but he goes with other girls. When he breaks the dates, he always has some excuse, but I heard the other day Tie broke them so he could go with other girls, but knew I would not d* with any other fellow because I would be watting for him. Sometime* ha doesn't call me t<j break the date. My girls friend said I wu foolish to go with Idm, but he says be loves me and I think I love him. Yvhat should I do? . MARIE K. F. Show him tho door. They day of czars is past.

DURHAM’S FOR DRAPERIES AND SHADES R. W. DURHAM CO. 134 N. Alabama St. MA In 6829 Rf ley 1133.

And she is blissfully unaware of the fact that the potatoes are watery and lumpy; that the steak does not taste like steak at all, and the bridal biscuits are living up to their famous reputation. For she is far too happy and excited to eat any- • thing herself! ( She feels that with this moment she is beginning her life job of being a Good Wife to Tom . that even now she is guarding his health and strength by her'Good Home Cooking. It is a Great Moment to Sylvia! And it is a moment that Tom will never forget, either. Years from now he may tell Sylvia how terrible her first dinner was . . . how her Good Home Cooking all but made an invalid of him In theae early days of their marriage. It will be a good Joke then. But now it would be cruel to tell Sylvia anything except that she has Mrs. Rorer and Aunt Jemima backed off the map wnen it comes to cooking. . . . , And Tom, hero that he is, tells her Just that!

Economics” and her classes will illustrate with a playlet. Miss Ruby Allison will give a reading. Music will be In charge of Miss Elizabeth Kaltz. Male quartet of the Technical Glee Club will sing. • • e The Ladies Aid Society of the First Moravian Episcopal Church will hold its monthly supper Wednesday evening at the church from 6 to 7. • • • Mrs. Caroline Oebhardt, 202 N.! Gray St., announces the marriage of her daughter, Louise, to Karl Koehler, which took place Sunday afternoon at the Burtler Memonal Reformed Church. The bride’s brother the Rev. G. H. Oebhardt officiated. The ceremony was followed by a reception at the home of the bride’s mother, after which Mr. and Mrs. Koehler left on a wedding trip through Ohio. They will be at home after May 1. s s s One hundred and twenty tables were reserved for the benefit card party given Tuesday afternoon at the Severln by the Indiana Indorsers of Photoplays. Mrs. Es. L. Burnett and Mrs. Harry McDonald were In charge. • •■ • The Woman’s Department Club auxiliary to the P. H. N. A. met for luneneon Tuesday afternoon at the home of Mrs. Boyd Templeton, 2968 Washington Blvd. Covers for fourteen were laid at a table arranged with sweet peas. • • • Mrs. E. J. Rust, 4607 Carrollton Ave., entertained the Meridian Heights Inter Se Club Tuesday afternoon. • • * The Monday Club elected officers Monday afternoon at the D. A. R. chapter house. 824 N. Pennsylvania St. Mrs. J. M. Dungan was chosen president; Mrs. Charles W. Field, first vice president; Mrs. Edgar R. Eskew, second Vice president: Mrs. J. W. Noble, recording , secretary; Mrs. Carl D. Spencer, treasurer. They will be ln.-aalled at the opening meeting next fall. Mrs. Dungan vylll appoint committees and delegates later. • • • Gamma chapter of So-Fra Club planned to kneet Tuesday evening at the home of Miss Agnes and Miss Lucille Costello, Bluff Crest. • • • The Progressive dub will meet Monday afternoon at 8 at the home of Mrs. William E. Day, 1640 N. Meridian St. The program will be on ‘The Bells of France.** • • • Seven Star Council,, fl. B. A. was to give a card party Tuesday evening at 8:30 at Eagles Hall, 43 \V. Vermont St. • • • Wlnema Special Club planned to give a card party Tuesday evening in Red Men’s Hall, Seventeenth St. and Roosevelt Ave.

ARE STORE HEAD DIES AT HOME Funeral of B, H. Herman to Be Wednesday, B. H. Herman. 74, proprietor of an art store at 120 N. Pennsylvania St., died early today at his home, Apt. 43, at 402 N. Meridian St. Mr. Herman had lived at the same address for thirty-eight years. He came to Indianapolis from Baltimore, Md., his birthplace. He was a member of Second Church of Christ, Scientist. Mrs. Herman died four weeks ago. Surviving are: Mrs. Gertrude Frank and Mrs. Una Hamburger, sisters, oi Chicago, and Louis Herman, a brt ther, of Danville, Va. L 'Hal will be in Crown Hill cemetery following funeral services at 2 p. ir.. Wednesday at Johnson & Montgomery funeral parlors.

i The Tangle LETTER FROM JOHN ALDEU PRESCOTT TO LESLIE PRESCOTT, CONTINUED. A little latler, Leslie, perhaps Jimmie Condon can carry on the business, but you know that your father I did not think he was capable or he would have put him in instead of me. Besides, It Is madness to reward a man who, like Condon, had prepared to run away with the payroll by bringing him hack and making him general manager of the firm. It will he some years betore I will fool that I can fully trust him. He is very young and very impulsive. In the meantime we cannot shut down the mill. Ijeslie, In some ways youafe one of the most Innocent women I have ever .>• To. All women are most unforgiving of those sins they know nothing about. Some old Frenchman said, “The temptation to which we think it is most sinful to succumb is the temptation which does not tempt us.” I think you Mill find this true. I thought, dear—yes, you are still the dearest woman on this earth—that you might at least come to understand that men are queer creatures, slightly monstrous perhaps, In (he eyes of the delicately minded woman. Such Is a man’s complex heart that he can love a woman with his whole soul and be untrue to her all the time. That Is the difference between a man and a woman. A man can be in love with one woman while being very much interested in another, and a woman may be interested in many men but she can only love one of them at a time. Leslie, do I have to tell you that the woman In a man's arms Is not always the woman in his heart. Have you not yet learned from the modem stories and from the lives of your friends that, however tragic a woman regards the seventh commandment, to a man it has always seemed something like the eighteenth amendment—a law that may be necessary for the other fellow, but not for one’s self. You see, dear, I am being perfectly frank and honest with you. I am not trying to gloss over anything, and yet I want, oh. how I want you .to know, that I love you with all the Intensity of the male animal as well as with all the admiration and reverence of which my soul is capable. You are mine, dear. However j much you may chafe against your j bonds, you are mine. I am proud of my possession, and strange as It may seem to you, I want you to be happy. Os course, there are times when I forget you utterly. Men have minds of only one track. When they are using it to further their business, *or any other activity whfcqh does not concern their wives, they forget them. (Copyright, 1924, NEA Service, Inc.) TOMORROW—This letter continued. Cadillac Man Talks A good year In the automobile Industry was predicted by Earle C. Howard, vice president of the Cadillac Motor Car Company of Detroit, Mich., at a dinner of Cadillac dealers from various parts gs Indiana Monday night at the Indianapolis Athletic Club.

“IDEAL” Bungalow or Apartment Outfit the (riMr.t outfit >349F win b. .lout) 1. piM#.d See thla outfit eure! all meona am the fur- Thla offer Only 53.75 weekly — you’ll

New Expression Club President

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Mrs. John A. Sink, 3820 College Ave., was recently elected president of the Expression Club, at a meeting at the home of Mrs. Har-

Art Institute Notes

An interesting exhibit of woodblock prints by Gustave Baumann is in Gallery II at the John Herron Art Institute. This exhibition Includes prints from the first portfolio of Baumann's prints, “In the Hills of Brown County,” presented by Fred S. Hetherlngton; eight or ten prints from a later Brown County set, purchased from the John Herron fund, and several from Mr. Baumann's latest set of prints from New r Mexico, lent by the H. Uober Company. An Interesting placing of French objects has been made in the corner of Gallery XXX, the room reserved for European Art. This grouping includes Claude Lorraine’s “Grand Sunset," '‘Genoa,” from the Frank C. Ball Collection; two charming eighteenth century color prints, a clock, an inlaid table, two bronzes by Barye, a Napoleon plate from the Delavan Smith bequest, several Item slent by Mrs. Kate McGowan, Ihcluding a painted cabinet and Several fans and snuff boxes; several pieces of porcelain lent by Mr. and Mrs. Will H. Latta, a French textile lent by Mrs. Henry S. Beveridge and miscellaneous Items from the permanent collection.

SsTop |PkCOLDS FOLET?NCq HONEMARvJ Established 1875 Stood TNiltsi ot T i at Stßviw ltttft OtitunoK^l REFUSE SUBSTITUTES NOLI) EVERYWHERE

—Photo by Bachrach. Mrs. John A. Sink

rison Porter Thrush. Mrs. Sink, a pianist, has long been a member of musical circles In Indianapolis.

There also Is an exhibition of jewelry designs. The concert Sunday aftemon under the auspices of the Matinee Musicale was postponed. The date will be announced later. Miss Grace Speer was to talk Sunday afternoon on the Indiana Artists Exhibition. Friday the library training class from the Indianapolis library will visit the ipuseum for a talk by the director on “Co-Related Factors In Museum Work,” and a tour of the galleries. There is an exhibition of the work of Ralph Selfredge and Hugh Poe at the Pettis galleries this coming week. Both of these young artists were winners of prizes at the Hoosier salon in the Marshall Field galleries, Chicago. Bond Issue (X K. Public service commission authorized the Rochester Telephone Company to issue $25,000 In bonds for refunding purposes.

Removes Grease and Grime Without Injury To Your Hands _

‘CHEWING’ FOR PRISONER Wife Gets Tobacco for Convicted Paper Hanger. When June Anthony of Greenfield, Ind., paper hanger, who was sentenced to ten days in jail Monday aftemon by Criminal Judge Pro Tem. Frank A. Symmes, returned to his cell today, he had plenty of chewing tobacco to last him during his term of imprisonment. After Judge Symmes fined Anthony $1 and costs for drunkenness and $1 and costs for driving under the influence of liquor, appeals from city court, Anthony’s wife went outside to purchase the tobacco. Anthony denied he was drunk. “Just Rub It On” Mothers who have precious little lives in their keeping realize the danger to delicate stomachs of so much dosing. That Is why so many milions of mothers now depend entirely upon Vicks for croup and children's colds. There is nothing to swallow —you just rub Vicks over throat and chest at bedtime and cover with a warm flannel, leaving the bedclothes loose about the neck so that the arising vapors may be freely inhaled. The child Is usually better next morning. Vicks can be used freely and often with perfect safety, even on the youngest member of the family. VICKS ▼ VA ro Rub Over /7 Million Jars Useo Yearly After Exercising Wash Out The Pores With Cuticura Soap and have a clear fresh complexion. Assisted by Cuticura Ointment, it does much to prevent pimples and keep the skin healthy. Cuticura Talcum is a perfect powder. Soap So. Ointment 88 and SOc. T alcum 38e. Sold aearrwhara. Sample each free. Addreaa: “Oattoura Laboratories Dept. IT, Malden. Mam.* WT Cuticura Sharing Stick 25c.