Indianapolis Times, Volume 37, Number 65, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 July 1925 — Page 5
fUESDAY, JULY 28,1925
[gO.CIAL / Activities SNTEFaTAINMENTS WEDDINGS BETROTHALS
lr-1 II RIOT CHURCH was the I scene cf a simple but charmI injf wedding ceremony, Tuesday morning, at 8:30, when Miss Doris Hiner, daughter, of Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Hiner, 4417 Central Ave., became the bride of John Scott Mann Jr.; New Bethel, Ind. The church was lighted by tapers knd thie ceremony was performed "by 'the Rev. George Dickey, in the ipresemce of the immediate families ■rid ai few intimate friends. I The ba-ide’s only attendant was Kiss !Maa-garet Stowers, who wore a Hock of orchfid crepe with, hat to Hatch .and a corsage of Columbia Htses. Robert L. Hiner, brother of Hie bride, was best man. ■ The bride wore a govyn of light fclue £hiffon. She a hat to I natch) and corsage fcf Columbia Iroseß. Following the, service, Mr. End "Mrs. Mann left bn a wedding and Will he at home in New Bethel, Ind„ after * • * Dr. John W. Slijts, 3430 Salem St., has issued invitations for the wedding of his daughter, Helen, and Charles E. Jr. of Lebanon, Ind., which v/Sll take place Aug. 12 at the Trjfcernacle Presbyterian Church at 8,t30 p. m., with the Rev. J. Ambrose Dunkel officiating. Miss Lillian Ha mis, will be maid of honoi. and Mrs. /Russell Pearce Vie it will be matron ocf honor, John Zaring will be best magi. Mis? /'Dorothy Sipe, Fifteenth St., and Central Ave., will entertain Thursday evening for Miss Slusa, and ,Dliss Lydia Bates will give a Saturday afternoon. ■* * * Mses • Mildred A. Riley, daughter of the, Rev. and Mrs. Oscar W. Riley, 222 Ohmer Ave., is attending the summer session of the Boston University, studying religious education and philosophy. Miss Riley is a graduate of Butler University. Miss Janet M, Rioeh, 5363 University Ave., is also enrolled at the university. Miss Rioch, who is a student at Butler University, is specializing in chemistry and English. * * * jjß Booster Club of Fidelity Rebeccah Hodge 227, will give a lawn social
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New Palestine Girl Recent Bride
JiKT ip X 111 f
Mrs. K. Vincent Sclioener
Before her marriage July 19, Mrs. R. Vincent Sclioener was Miss Vivian Ulrey, daughter of
Wednesday at Shelby and. Pleasant Streets. • * * Mr. and Mrs. Harry Miegse, 3219 N. Meridian Bt., are taking a trip to Yellowstone Park. * * • Miss Fleeta Heinz, whose marriage to James Hulshizer, Nitro, W. Va., will take place Aug. 11, was the guest of honor Monday afternoon at a miscellaneous shower given by Miss Bea'rice Batty, 5910 Carrollton Ave. Other guests: Misses Georgia Osborn, Margaret Schoener, Florence Terrel, aKtherlne Reagan, Jean Mander, Marjorie Chiles, Dorothy Drake, Edith Fitzgerald, Lois Vliet and Mrs. John E. Spiegel. • * * •Miss Clara Bals anTMiss Dorothy Kothe, 1942 Park Ave.,* will leave Thursday for a trip to Yellowstone Park. • * * Delaware Club will give a euchre party Wednesday evening at 39 S. Delaware St. • * • St. Anthony’s Parish Club will give a euchre, bunco and lotto party Wednesday at 2:30 and 8:30 p. m. at the hall, 379 N. Warmhn A\e. A buffet supper will be served from 5 to 7 p. m. * * • Announcement is made of the marriage of Miss Ruby M. Reed, 220 Hendrteks PI. to Herman O. Janert, son of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Janert, 1445 Union St. The wedding took place in St. Louis, Mo., July 16. Mr. and Mrs. Janert will live in Indianapolis. • • • Gamma chapter of the So-Fra Club was to hold a special meeting Tuesday evening at the home of Miss Nigel St. Final arrangements for a picnijc were to be made. • * • Swastika Club will meet Thursday evening with Mrs. A. H. Reasner, 4 1-2 Dearborn St. * * • The engagement of Miss Ann Richter, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William H. Richter, 3409 Winthrop Ave., to William L. March, son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank March, is announced. The wedding will take place Aug. 25. PARTY LEADER iYIES Bii United Press WINCHESTER, Ind., July 28. — Funeral services will be held here Wednesday for E. S Edger, 81, former leader of the Democratic party In Randolph County, who died at the home of a relative in Versailles, Ky.
William Ulrey. New Palestine, Und. Mr. and Mrs. Schoener are on tDieir, wedding trip to Niagara Falls and will live in Cleveland, Ohio.
The Tangle LETTER FROM LESLIE* PRESCOTT TO THE LITTLE MARQUISE—CONTINUED. We hao hardly got inside!our car when Jack broke out: “I’m not going to that luni dieon with that damned cad tomorrow, Syd, and you know it, so wfc y did you say that you ''ill pick nu up? You know lie makes love to aIU the women in the world, and he ca n do this for all of me, but he mustjleaye mine alone.” “Jack what are you saying?" I* asked sharply. “Are you trying insult me before Sydney?” Jack saw that he had made:a nKS-f take and he grumblingly continued^] “I didn’t say anything about you,, Leslie, I was only calling attention to the fact that Sartorisils up to his old tricks again.” “Oh,, perhaps that is what you were doing,” I commented, perfectly 1 furious, ‘but in doing so you worej also intimating that I was him to play those tricks for ,mjp benefit. ‘‘Syd, you can get from my sulky husband his plans? After what) he has just said to me, I am out of it.” I sank back in the corner of the motor and said no more until L ar- 1 rived home. Syd helped me out,, and; I ran lightly up the steps. The ’.but- > ler opened the dor. “1 waited to give you thistele-i gram, Mrs. Prescott,” he' said. My hands trembled as I tore it open. Something fold me before the letters formed themselves into words that I could read: ‘‘Bee died today at twelve o’clock. Her baby Is a fine healthy child. Will write. Sally.” I said nothing to the men. I could, not discuss poor Bee with them atf this moment. I recalled her last letter in which she expressed her fear of dying, and I nad pooh-poohed It. And now she \fas dead —end she hjid left a child. These things always seem so, unequal. We are never ready to givei up those we love. There was poori Paula who had to live and suffer for a long while and she had no why to take care of her baby—in her desperation she sends it to me, or rather to Jack. As this came into my mind* /my thoughts went fitraying off on another tangent. I thought of havy I had forgiven Jack for this great big tiling he had done, only to And him so nastily suspicious 'when I talked for little while in ) private with Melville Sartoris. Everyone will say, “Poor! Bee,” I‘ said to myself, “but I think, perhaps, that after all she is better off out of, it. She had begun to be rather unhappy in her married life, although I am sure this unhappiness came from an unfounded inferiority complex.”
I can tell you. Little Marquise, I'll never think myself inferior to any woman—at least that Is how I feel now. I am as good as any other woman and I'll keep my own* no matter how many girls try to vamp Jack.
I did not know what to do about going to the luncheon the next flay, but I Anally decided that the people who are living in this world must still go on, no matter what comes. I was glad Sally was there. She is a tower of strength In such crises. "But what Will become of the baby?" I said to myself. "I wonder If it’s a boy or. a girl.” Then I smiled a little. It Was like Sally not to mention the, baby’s sex. (Copyright, 1925, NEA Service, Inc.) TOMORROW—Letter from Sally Atherton to ILeslie Prescott. i
HOLD RAILWAY OUTING Third Annual Picnic Takes Place at Michigan City. Employes of The Indianapolis Union Railway Company held their third annual eating at Michigan City, Ind.„ Saturday and Sunday. The party traveled in a special coach and baggage car via the Monon. The program of entertainment on the train Included some novelty sketches, singing and vaudeville stunts by "Vaudeville Saunders,” Bessie L. Mikels, president of the I. IT. Railway Social Club and Messrs. Martin and Hawthorne. At Michigan City the picnickers visited the Dunes, went bathing, took launch trips on the lake and danced.
LEAK BARES BOOZE ELKHART, Ind., July f?.— Twenty-four bottles <*f Black and White whisky were- /fevealed when police opened a trunk that, sprung a, leak the station here.,
THE 'TOUIAKAPOLIS TDJES
‘Let 'em Go,' Cry Women as Two Prisoners Fight
Mrs. HuckiWitnesseS Fistic Encounter Between Inmates. Winnifred Mason Huck. former Concresswoman and the first woman to preside over the House of Representatives, irot herself sentenced to prison. Guiltless ol any crime, she 60Ufht answers to the questions— Are our prisons humane? Can a sriri. crushed by her fellow men, regain her place in society? . This is the thirteenth story, written for/ The Tinies. By Winnifred Mason Huck Former Representative to Congress, from Illinois. | ’"l IKE a bantamweight, Mary i } I stepped off from our side of 1 ■*■“* I the room. I was thankful to see she had left my scissors which she had snatched from Hazel, starting the trouble.' But I might have know that Mary, with her lithe young body, would scorn weapons. Slowly, and with appalling directness, she bore down upon Hazel, who had slandered her progenitors. No one got in her way. The prospect of a free-for-all melee was far from comforting. Mary started in with a few preliminary remarks. Other girls crowded around. Hazel was not exactly lookin/; for a fight. But Mary menat to have one. She unclenched her right/ fist long enough to give Hazel a resounding blow across the face. H/izel needed no further invitation. ,-*She was at her opponent like a cat/ “That’s it! the girl!” I. heard cries from all, "sides. Then, without a *word, one of the larger girls stepperl in to separate them. “Let 'Er.i Fight!” “Say, what are you doing?” shouted one of the * bystanders. “Keep out! A ’Ar, let ’em fight. That’s The only excitement we have around ,-here.” Then somebody whispered, “The law!” And wifthin two minutes, both 'the girls wore locked up In •‘solitary,” while the gossip-bearer who iStarted the fight went free. It was time that the girls craved even this kind of excitement. I remember one girl who was uninterested In everything around her. She was going to have a baby, and I told her I wished to make a dress for it.. But even that aroused no interest in hen. But,'one I heard her talking lof a,riot started in another linstCtution. Such animation, such spirit! And when she reached the point /where she thrust a hat-pin into a man’s leg—what a climax that was! Her eyes glittered and she was making the girls around her howl with laughter at the tale. Finance Commltee In a short time they came. It was the finance committee from the State Legislature on a Junket. I was glad that they got a whiff of that air in which seventy-five of us lived day after day. One of the members looked at me sharply. I bent my head. Would he remember the lady from Illinois? He passed on, exchanging smiles and words with the women. One girl who had been asked a few questions was the most impor* itant person In the room for the rest <of the day. That nighft. Silver, Whose pep was always overflowing, Introduced me
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to the,'bedroom riding custom. Silver had oeen moved from her room into the hall that day to make a place for;- Hazel, the scissors grabber, to d<> her "solitary.” Silver was drunk with excitement '--at not being locked in her room. Os course, there were the iron bars at the ends of the hall, but she was With four or five of us, to whom she could talk. She could go up and down knocking at the doors of the girls who were locked In. She went to the trash closet and brought out a broom. She climbed abroad and made the old broom prance and gallop up and down the hall as a six-year-old boy might do. "Six tiroes,” she laughed, as she swung iv.st me at high speed, snapping her fingers. “Six times up and down the hall. That’s the magic number, and tomorrow anew girl will come in. And I shall be able to/ride, her!”
Right to ‘‘Ride.’* Op.ce the broom had been ridden ap/i Silver had gained the right to rrdl at the new girl, she returned /the broom to the closet, and lay down on her bed. In a moment she ,was up again. “I feel kind of sick," she safd, and dropped to the floor unconscloufc. One of the girls ran to the bars at the end of the hall and called "Miss Lourey! Miss Lourey!” Another girl called from her room, “Tell Miss Lourey to let me out quick. You girls don’t know what to do. I’m the only one that can help Silver. Tell Miss Lourey to hurry!" The Train Robber It was the train robber who shouted this, a girl who had no mercy while engaged in her daring crimes, but who stood at her door in an agony of suspense lest she should not reach her friend in time. Miss Lourey arrived eventually, possibly within a minute, though it seemed centuries to me as I witched Silver fight for breath and froth at the mouth. Silver’s friend was unlocked and worked over her feverishly. I helped carry the girl to her bed. It was the first time I had ever seen any one in an epileptic fit. Miss Lourey explained that It was a common occurrence and that she would soon come to. But my knees were weak and I Found myself groping against the wall for support as I crept back to my bed. (Copyright, 1925, NEA Service, Inc.) NEXT: I learn what prison does to babies.
WHIPPING NOT ENOUGH Father Will File Charges Against Young “Gun-Tot-prs’ 1 Not satisfied with the whipping, said by police to have been administered to two 14 year old boys who pointed a gun at Leonard, 15, and Charlotte Pettit. 13, of Burgess Ave., and Juanita Lockwood 13. of 5316 Burgess Ave., Saturday. Edgar Pettit, father of Leonard and Charlotte said today he would file charges against the youthful “guntoters” In Juvenile Court. Pettit denied the police statement that one of the lads was a "spurned suitor” of his daughter. He said the children had been mere acquaintances at school.
Martha Lea Say • ARE MODERN WORKING GIRLS HOUSEMAIDS?
Queer how our mental stigmatism affects our loved ones. We don’t think it necessary to correct this stigmatism when we view our homes—we only put on our glasses to view and judge some other person’s life.
There are a great many mothers whose stigmatism ebneerning their modern daughters is amazing. If these mothers kept lodgers, for instance. would they expect besides payment for the use of the rooms an additional amount of labor in the kitchen with the dishes or in the rest of the house with dust mop and cloth? Certainly not. Any woman would, or should, be mortified to keep a slovenly house for the men and women who pay her for the space they occupy. But It does not enter the head of a mother that her modern daughter, working in an office during the day, should not have to come home to help get a dinner that she pays for, to clean the room that she occupies, and also pays for, besides doing the hundred and one things toward her personal appearance that every girl owes to herself and her position. It is only fair that the daughter who works should pay her board to her mother as well as the son—but she should have to do no more toward housework than her brother. Dear Martha Lee: I am writintr tor flx girls. However. I hnvw found tn*t thoro arr* manv more with the same oomplaint*. We are between the a gr* or 17 Sn When w 5 went to school rotiMW. knew It was our duty to help with th work and lessen the burden from our shoulders as mueh ns P , ' l, *!‘ > le. because „we realized that we made her an extra lot of trouble. But now we are all eamlnx our own way. We like to look n|ee and take rajs' cf our clothes. We want our hunif. to look clean and comfortable w-hen * ll company, and so we do our best to make them so. After spending n tiresome. lay in the office of writlr.r endless letter*. takinc’lonK dictation .anil 9line until our backs hurt, we must come home, wasn dirty dishes, iron, and clean the house from top to bottom .... . , Do you think it is rieht for u* to have to do this? We nay our board and think we have a rixht to a respeotable-looktn* home without so much work on pur part. Our mother- -o to meeting-* or to shows and think nothing of our pleasure. They eve a wonder why we feci like having a lot of friends and gohd ,lme if we work so ,iard in the daytime. It certainly makes us want to get cl 'ar away from immo. Sooh'im* If wo atay homo tnoro \n alwav* eoniolhirir to do. Give u your 0Pl BFS9 LOU. MARY. RENE. DORIS. HELEN.
Well, girls, I think you arc right. Most mothers do not remember having to work all day and come home to get their pleasure, such as it may be, in the evening. All work and no play makes Jill a dull girl, too, but mothers seem to forget it. As long as you are paying for your room and board. I do not think mother should expect you to work for her, too. If it Is just too much trouble for mother to make a bed and pick up some lingerie, and get meals for a girl who Is paying her for It, I think the girl had better move. But that Is hard for both girl and mother. Each needs and wants the society of the other, but sometimes distance lends enchantment. There Is something to be said on the other side, too, you know. Too often the girl who Is paying her way at home as well as abroad, gets the idea that
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money Aill buy anything—even to making mother’s knees bend unnecessarily. She strews her clothes around for mother to pick up; she brings her gang home for mother to clean up after; she Invites friends in for ctinner and lets mother wash up the dishes alone. That girl couldn't do that to her landlady—she's go "out on her ear ’ sure enough. Whai Is needed is a little more consideration on each side. Faith vs, Faith To Worried: To me religious prejudices are such bigoted Ideals, that I haven't very much patience With the people who censure others because the others do not think exictly as the first people do. After all, It Is enough to me that we humans have each his own kind of re llgion that he can fall back on to lift him out of himself and inspire him to higher things. That is the purpose of all religions, whether they threaten or condone. I do not see In the least why you should give up the pleasure of the company of this young man beenuse he has ln-
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hejrlted • different religion from the one you have inherited. And you should certainly see him In your o\yn home and surroundings sa well as* In his. However, you have rot known him long enough to form any definite opinion as to his character and worth ns lover or husband. While you yourself ere formtnr your own Ideas, which you mas likely hand on to your children as "the only religion” hear this in mind: Live your life cleanly, thoughtful of others, good-natured and sunny, to serve, and you wilt be living one of the finest religions that a human can have.
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