Indianapolis Times, Volume 37, Number 57, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 July 1925 — Page 8

8

Social Activities ENTERTAINMENTS WEDDINGS BETROTHALS

ISS ALYENE CARR, 240 Hendricks PL, will entertain with a tea Sunday afternoon in honor of her sister, Miss Kathryn Ware Carr, whose marriage to Arthur John Meng will take place July 25 at 3 p. m. at Westminster Presbyterian Church, with the Rev. H. P. Graham officiating. Miss Eleanor Moran, 270 N. Randolph St., will give a shower party Thursday evening for Miss Carr. * • * Mr. and Mrs. Paul B. Elliott, 341 N, Bolton Ave., entertained twentyfive children at a garden party on Friday afternoon in honor <&■■•' the fourth birthday anniversary of their daughter, Rosalyn Mae. Games, contests and a moving picture were on the program. * * • Social Club of Holy Trinity was to give a euchre and bunco party on Friday evening at 8:30 in the school holl on N. Holmes Ave. Everybody invited. • * • Miss Adeliade Monte, 665 E. Maple Rd., has returned from Chicago, where she attended the summer term of Madame Valeri’s vocal class. • * • Twenty members of- the Alpha Alumnae Club of the Kappa Alpha Theta sorority motored to Martinsville, Ind. Friday to meet with Mrs. E. C. Shirerran. Covers were' laid at luncheon in a log cabin on the farm. In charge of arrangements were Mrs. Asa .1. Smith, and Mrs. Chester Lawrence. •* * Miss Elizabeth Ooett, 2216 S. East St., is spending the summer at Boulder, Col., where she is attending a summer course at the University of Colorado. She will returnAug. 1. * * * Miss Anna and Miss Margaret Ott, 1943 N. Rural St., entertained Wednesday evening with a Japanese festival. Covers for thirty were laid. Among honor guests was Miss Ada Nelson, who will sail in October for Bombay, India, to serve as a missionary. At the close of the festival an annual business session of t lie young women's Sunday school class of (he Mountain Street M. E. Church was held. Miss Margaret Ott is teacher of the class. * * * Mrs. Thomas R. Kackley, 1321 N. Meridian St., has just returned from a visit with her sister, Mrs. F. H. Wadhams, at Torrington, Conn. * * * Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Kelly, 55 W, Fall Creek Blvd., leave Friday to spend a week or ten days in Chicago. Mrs. Jefferson Claypool, 1433 N. nnsylvania St., left Friday for ” • V'ew. Mich.

WASH AWAY FAT

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|Ga s Rangesj Free Connection $39.50 MESSENGER’S 201 E. Washington St.

C A t/TT on HOME OA. VHi decoration Art Objects, 20 per cent off. July Sale Now On LYMAN BROTHERS 223-225 E. Ohio St.

When you use our extended charge account plan you will be able to save money for that rainy day. THE WHY STORE 29 E. OHIO ST.

• Engagement Is Announced

V:• '\X-f : ’’ ' "' f X& ■ .JHK < *

The engagement f Miss Rachel Bray, 424 N. Sherman Dr., daughter cf Mrs. and Mrs. Perry Bray,

Mrs. Huck Ordered to Share Only Jail Bed With Suspected Killer

Obtains Brief Relief From Terror of Dope Fiends. Winnifred Mason Huck. former Confrrasswoman and the first woman to preside over the House of Representatives, got herself sentenced to prison. Guiltless of any crime, she sought answers to the questions— Are our prisons humane? Can a girl, crushed by her fellow men. regain her place in society? This is the fourth story written for The Times. By Winnifred Mason Huck Former Representative to Congress from Illinois. | HE cry came from the sisters, Dot and Marge, in unison , * I calling for the matron. They were frightened. I was unstrung, and the call went through me like a stiletto. Then I heard the matron at the cell door, saying, "Oh, they’re harmless." She was speaking of the dope fiends. There were ten cells opening into the central room. There were fourteen prisoners, and only four of us were white. Ethel, one of the four, was dead to the world in a corner cell. That left only three of us to face the negro girls, if, led by the dope fiends, they should start anything. The fiends gravitated to one another, and were soon milling about, swishing their skirts, stepping high, jerking their bodies from side to side, snapping their fingers and talking all at once in a high pitched voice. "If they /should start anything, the other colored girts would stand by us,” said Dot. "They as much afraid of them as we are.” If I had known Dot's and Marge's records, I should have felt more confidence in their ability to meet any violent situation. But it was not till months later that I learned they had been given long sentences for a beating tip they had administered to a taxi driver. Three Fiends At length the three fiends went into a cell to sit down. Dot and Marge went into their cell and slept. I sat and watched the door. From time to time the three -wildcats passed the door of our cell and peered in at us, but they offered no attack. Morning and the sandwich boy found me still on watch and weary beyond imagination. The opium-eaters lay lr grotesque heaps in a ceil, asleep or drugged. Later in the day they and Ethel were taken to the county hospital. I never knew their fates. As I sat alone the events of the night were marshaled before me. I had seen its extreme, the drug evil which, as a Congresswoman I had helped to fight. England alone produces under government auspices seventeen times as much morphine as is required by the whole world for medicinal purposes. The night in jail had demonstrated to me - where the other sixteen parts go. By indirect means I learned that I was to leave for the reformatory at Marysvillle the following day. I wondered how I would get

To Whiten Skin with Lemon

The only harmless way to bleach the skin white is to mix Kj&ljr jfSf the Juice of two lemoris with three |yi!| ounces of Orchard ]E|j£9 El White. which any ~g|B/ druggist will supft'l Shake well in a bot- / / lU tle - an<l yon have a l / 11# whole quarter-pint of the most wonderful skin whitener, softener and beautifier. Massage this sweetly fragrant lemon bleach into the face, neck, arms and hands. It can not irritate. Famous stage beauties use it to bring that clear, youthful skin and rosy-white complexion: also as a freckle, sunburn and tan bleach. You must mix this remarkable lotion yourself. It can not he bought ready to use because if acts heat immediately-after it is prepared.— Advertisement.

Miss Rachel Bray

of Noblesville, Ind.. to Wilbur Schwier has been announced. The wedding will take place in the fall.

The only bed in the Cleveland city jail.. (Inset) Mrs. Anna lAhiff. probation officer, who got permission for Mrs. Huck to sleep in it a few hours after three sleep less day and nights.

through another twenty-four hours. I knew of another cell. It was called the hospital room, because there was a bed in it. A Beal Bed! I wanted to get into that bed. I remembered it had looked clean. Four hours of sleep! That was all I wanted. There was not a spot on my body that was not sore from my attempts to lie on the planks. To go without food could not hurt me for a few days. But going without sleep was cutting into my morale, and I began to take myself seriously—which would endanger my entire project. I was nearly dead for want of sleep, I told the matron and asked her what made a prisoner eligible for the white bed in the hospital room. Only sickness. I was told. But soon a probation officer, Mrs. Anna Lahif of the municipal court, a woman of fine character and kind face, came in to talk with me. I won her interest and got the bed. I was tired, so tired, in fact, that for a time I could not sleep, but simply dozed by fits and starts. At midnight when I was still fighting for sleep, the door was opened. Two policemen and the matron were escorting a young woman into the room. She appeared to be part negro and part Chinese. She -was putting up one of the best fights I had ever seen and she did not weigh more than eighty-five pounds. Social Position She was sobbing like a child. She would not go behind those bars. What would become of her social position if the other prisoners should see her locked up? The policemen left the room. The matron searched her a good deal more thoroughly than she had searched me. I think she was looking for narcotics. Then the matron made ready to lead her out of the room_to her cell. But the little tiger would not lead, and the policemen were called upon. 1 After that I fell Into a deep sleep which lasted blessedly for nearly four hours. Then I heard a "kindly voice saying. "You don’t have to get up. You can just move oVer.” It was the matron. She was bringing in an Italian woman and her little son. who were entitled to the bed. A man had just been murdered in the Italian's house, and she was to stay in prison until the mystery was cleared up. In the goodness of my heart, or l>ossibly from some other cause. I rose, made up the bed, fluffed the n'llow turned down the cy. <-:• -

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

The Tangle LETTER FROM LESLIE PRESCOTT TO THE LITTLE MAR-QUISE-CONTINUED. I could not help, Little Marquise, remarking what close watch Syd kept upon us. Jack, as usual, wanted to talk to Syd alone, but Mr. Carton endeavored many times to make the conversation general. When the play was over and the curtain rung down, Jack rose hastily. he said, “let’s dance. This play may be true, but it leaves a bad taste in the mouth, all the same.” "Don’t you think we would better go home, Jack?” I asked. "Please don’t,” whispered Mr. Sartoris in my ear. “Let me have this last night to remember. I have been saving the best until the last, for you know I am goin', - to again dance the tango with you. I want to make up my mind that the paetry and rhythm and joyousness of that other one was real. Now it seems only a dream.” “Where are you going, Leslie?” interrupted Jack. “I thought, perhaps, that as long as Mr. Sartoris insists upon our staying a while longer, we would go to the Little Club. He say? Vom now on he will put the pai ty in my hands.” “All right,” Jack acquiesced: "We'll go there, and you and Sartoils can dance. I want to talk to Syd on two or three Important matters. One of them is, I want to get the story again from beginning to end of what happened after he left our house on the. night you lost your pearls.” My escort did not speak, but bundled us into a taxi and In a moment we were at the Little Club. I was very proud as I entered Rarely have I had the privilege of being escorted anywhere by three such good looking men: men of distinct and widely divergent types. There was Jack. big. virile, pleasure loving, kindly, if selfish. There was Sydney, only a fraction of an inch shorter than my husband, but more

assured the matron that I no longer was one bit sleepy. I was ready to go back to the other cell. There I found anew guest, a child of 15, with a rather sweet and smiling face. I sat down beside her. She had just confessed to the murder of a young man whose body even then was not yet cold. (Copyright, 1925, NEA Service, Inc.) NEXT:. Mrs. Huck is taken to Marysville. LOVELY FOR BRUNETTES Poppy and beet are two new shades of red that Paris is sponsoring. FOR SPONGE CAKE When baking a sponke cuke it is better not to grease the pan but line It with ungreased paper. HANDBAGS TO MATCH Indigo blue is anew shade that is lovely in chiffon and crepe frocks. Blue leather handbags are also noticed. YELLOW AND SILVER A yellow chiffon frock is trimmed with bands of net joined with silver embroidery.

Does It Cost You More Than

3/, r P er ho ™ to cook 7 Investigate the Detroit ' ' Vapor O/7/L £T®W(£ The stove that burns oil or kerosene in an 8%-lb. cast-iron wickless burner. Gives Gas Range Service, Efficiency at \\ the Cost I If you are using a wick oil stove now, you can save enough on fuel and wicks alone in less than 5 years to buy the largest Red Star.

—Martha Lee Says GIRL PUTS MAN’S LOVE TO OWN SELFISH USE

Anne was always a clever girl, and a popular one. She is busily engaged now in utilizing her popularity to prove her cleverness. She wants to marry Jack, the “catch” of the t.own. He shows signs of interest, but he is not to be won—oh, yes, Anne is modern enough to do her own wooing—without a struggle.

delicate in build, and more ascetic In sac had proved to be loyal, straightforward, helpful under all circumstances. He had demonstrated a capacity for friendship that I had never met in anyone else. I can only describe Melville Sartoris by externals. He is one of the handsomest men I have ever seen; large, dark eyes shaded by sleeply lids: brown hair becomingly frosted at the temples: a lean jaw and an intellectual forehead: all these lare counteracted in great measure by lips the upper one of which is shaped like a Cupid’s low, the lower one full ’u sensuous curves: a mouth of ind ion and love of pleasure. i: tQdenly it was all clear to me just why Melville Sartoris had given me that luxurious dinner and taken me afterward to see the sordid “What Price Glory?” He wanted to make me understand the duality of his nature. (Copyright, 1925, NEA Service, Inc.) TOMORROW —Letter from Leslie Prescott to the Little Marquise.

FIRST LADY W!M3 RUTH’S HEARTS Aristocrats Like Her Walks, Talks and Dresses. Ril f’-l ltrrt PrrA SWAMPSCOTT, Mass., July 17. —Mrs. Coolidge—how she walks, talks, plays and dresses —has won the heart of the north shore, that most exclusive and aristocratic summer resort in America. The first lady, thoroughly enjoying her vacation, wears simple summer gowns, but so far has avoided out and out sport clothing. On her daily walks she is usually clad in a straight one-piece dress that fits snugly her slender figure, most of her summer costumes this season have been white or gray. She has proved far more athletically inclined than the President. His walks are apt to be leisurely strolls about the grounds of White Court. She strikes out boldly across country. walking rapidly with a long lithe stride.

Boairtiful Effect Small forget-me-nots in blue velvet are scattered lavishly over the hem and sleeves of a blue chiffon frock.

Have that Clear White Skin Men Admire What woman does not know and long for the fascination of a clear, radiant skin of fine texture and ivory whiteness? Such a skin can . and almost over-night! 1 hanks to the new treatment just announced by Marie Nield, famous beauty specialist. Just try the following treatment at our risk and see the marvelous improvement in just one night; see how it banishes skin blemishes and removes the mask of a muddy. BalJow rough complexion. ’ Try this 3 Minlte Test: Before retiring, apply a thin coating of Concentrated Marsha Bleach Creme. No massage. No rubbing. The secret is in the creme. The next morning look into the mirror and behold the changenote the absence of pimples blackheads and \ freckles. Gaze on a beautiful, soft, white skin that you can hardly believe is your own—and best of all—it’s real. It’s just rour own natural youthful skin that is now hidden. Clear White Skin—or No Pay. If after 5 nights treatment with this magic creme your ! skm is not clear, soft and pink-white, return | tiie unused portion of the jar to your dealer He will refund your money. For sale at: ! Haag Drug Cos., Pettis Dry Goods j Cos., H. P. Wasson & Cos., Hook’s Do- ! pendable Drug Stores, Goldsmith's ■ Drug Stores and all good drug and de- | partment stores. , (Concentrated^ 7 "l Sleach

Allowed Old Oil Stove j|| on a Red Star Range Sold Only by HOOSIER OUTFITTING C0 r 443 E. Washlngtcr

All her life, it seems’, Anne has been pursued by Alfied. He proposes every other day. She has Sever told him he didn’t have a chance: after all. he is so useful. But it is only recently that Anne has been giving Alfred any real encouragement. He basks In her smiles, and believes the day he will win his beloved is near. Anne could tell him a thing or two on that point, but she doesn’t intend to, yet. Rivalry is good for a man. Jack is growing more attentive since Alfred is peimitted to be around more often. Anne probably will marry Jack. She is clever, as I said. , She will dismiss Alfred, with a sweet, regretful smile. He will not do anything desperate. And it probably will not occur to him, because he loces her. to blame Anne for not dismissing him long ago. The Fair Way Dear Martha Lee: I am a girl 20 years old. I have been going with a man for two years. We are not engaged, but he expects me to marry him some day I nave Just found out very definitely that I do not love him. I know I never will My sir! friend says I should not quit him because then I will have to stay home from the parties. But I want to know what you think. Would it he right for me to let him keep on thinking I am going to marry him. when I know I not? liLiJucmr^ It would not. It would be taking unfair advantage of his love. Just Friendship *?j ar Da#: X am % clrl 21 old. I have known a fellow of 19 for two year*. He drank and did not rare with whom ne ran around. he would not work Rut since he haa met me he haa given up

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drinking. h cons to work and ha* given up hia bad companion* I like this boy a* a friend and pal But hi* feeling for me 1* deeper, and I eannot return it. What can I tell him and (till keen him on the straight path? MARY ANN You must let the boy down gently,, Mary Ann. Stall, If necessary, until you feel he can be trustedsnot

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Friday and Saturday cf| Q r Mod® Bro.. BUck Satin Strap */ -jl E. Wh. Slippers * main 3851 WINDOW OQ , £Q i UNIT i ED RUG& Zj^tonjC LINOLEUM CO* JiIADLU its east WASHINGTON ST.

FRIDAY, JULY 17. 1025

to backslide. Make him eee that it Is' worth while to keep jour friendship You must he careful, of course, ilbt to give him false encouragement. But help him to an Increasing Independence of spirit and character.