Indianapolis Times, Volume 37, Number 66, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 July 1925 — Page 7

WEDNESDAY, JULY 29, 1925

QOCIAL Activities ENTERTAINMENTS WEDDINGS BETROTHALS

Mr— RS. Harold Perkins, 234 E. Twelfth St., entertained Wednesday with a bridge party in honor of her house guests, Miss Josephine Cowgill, Terre Haute, Ind., and Mrs. Horace Foster, Pittsburgh, Pa. Other guests were Mrs. Homer Cochrane, Miss Blanche White, Miss Elizabeth Fisher, Miss Eleanor Carpenter and Mrs. Howard Stieis. Miss Cowgill will return home Thursday. * * • Mr. and Mrs. Jean J. Minthorne, 3620 N. Meridian Sr.., have issued invitations for an informal supper party to be given at their home Saturday evening followed by entertainment at the Indianapolis Athletic Club. > • • Mrs. J. Harold Beck, 023 Broadway, entertained Tuesday afternoon with a luncheon and mah Jongg party in honor of her house guests, Mrs. Newell Schaper, of Kansas City, Mo., and Mrs. Clifford Barton, of Clendenin, W. Va. Other guests: Mesdames Charles Baird, James Bidgood, Hurm J. Burnett, Ray Goodwin, M. M. Campbell, Ray A. Ruth, and L. P. Ruth. * * Mrs. Louis Dochez, 543 Hibben Ave., entertained members of the executive board of the woman’s auxiliary to the postoffice clerks with a luncheon Wednesday. * * • Past Chiefs’ Association of Pythian Sisters, Myrtle Temple, will meet Thursday noon with Mrs. Gertrude Pellhem, 124 Spruce St. * * * Members cf the Franklin and "Ripley County Association will have an all-day picnic at Garfield Park Sunday, F. A. Doll, 602 "W. TwentyNinth St., president, t nnounced. Mrs. F. C. Scheper, 1612 Erookside Ave., Is secretary. • • • Security Benefit Association will entertain with bunko and euchre Thursday evening in Eagle Hall, 43 W. Vermont St. • • • Mrs. Harris P. Wetsell, 1039 Willow Dr., is visiting in New York. * * t The regular business meeting of the Sigma Phi Sorority was to be held Wednesday evening at the Spink-Arms. ** * v Mrs. M. F. Ault, 1514 Central Ave., and daughter. Mrs. E. A. Ellis, who have been the guests of Mrs. Mary H. Perfect at Lake James for ten days, have returned home. ~* * * Miss Elizabeth ■ Fisher, 2723 N. Pennsylvania St., will attend a house party at Alexandria, Ind., this weekend, given by Miss Ilone Mahoney. .* * * Mrs. Harold D. Robinson, entertained Tuesday afternoon with a

To Whiten Skin with Lemon

The only harmless way to bleach the skin white is to mix the Juice of two lemons with three ounces of Orchard White, which any druggist will supply for a few cents. Shake well in a bottle, and you have a whole quar-ter-pint of the most

wonderful skin whitener.y soften 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 be bought ready to use because it acts best immediately after it is prepared.— Advertisement. mTonight ■ to tono and strengthen tha organs of digestion and elimination, improve appetite, stop sick headaches, relieve biliousness, correct constipation. They act promptly, pleasantly, , mildly, yet thoroughly. Tomorrow Alright GOLDSMITH’S HOME-MADE PIES AND CAKES Deliciously Appetizing Take Them Home With You De Croes Pastry Shops 215 E. OHIO. 427 MASS. AVE, |G a s Rang es J Free Connection $39.50 MESSENGER’S 201 E. Washington St.

MEET AT TERRE HAUTE, County Commissioners of State to I>iscuss Problems. Twenty-third annual convention of the County Commissioners Association of Indiana will be held at Terre Haute on Aug. 18-20. The association represents the commissioners of the ninety-two counties of the State and will meet to discuss 'problems confronting tha-commissioners in the matter of taxes, road construction and maintenance, end other matters. Frederick E. Scliortemeier. secretary of State, will make an address on the evening of Aug. 18 at a banquet at the Hotel Deming.

bridge party at her home 29 S. Gladstone Ave. * luests included Misses Hilda and Meta Lieber. Margaret E. Williams, Josephine Wooling, Mesdames Philip Spong. James M. Carpenter, Dale Hodges, and Oscar Caristedt. Assisting Mrs. Robinson we.re her mfother, Mjre: MathiUda Steinmann, and her daughter, Joan. * * Mrs. G. A. Millett, 4192 Carrollton Ave., and children have returned from a four weeks' stay at Lake Barbee. • * * Mi.- s Margery Taylor of New York, came Wednesday to visit her parents, Dr. and Mrs. James 11. Taylor, 1808 N. Pennsylvania St. ♦ * * Mr. and Mrs, Homer Cochrane, 3340 <N. Meridian St., have as their gutst, Miss Jane Vorhis, Frankfort, Ind. * ♦ ♦ The Warflelgh Guest Club was entertained at luncheon Wednesday by Mrs. Frederick Flaughter, Shadeland Dr.

The Tangle Letter From v Sally Atherton to Leslie Prescott. Yes, our dear Bee Is dead. Her fears were not unfounded. She was taken sick on Thursday, and hastened to the hospital, where It was found that a Caesarian operation was necessary. She seemed to get through the operation all right, and we were greatly encouraged. She soon came out of the anesthetic and apparently there were no bad after-effects from it. The next morning, however, she calied me into her room and said solemnly: “Sally, it’s all over. I'm going to die.” “Don’t say that, Bee,” I remonstrated. “You’re getting along fine. The doctor says you’ll ,be out In a month at the latest.” I bent down to-Jdss her, and she held my face close to hers. “The doctor does not know, dear Sally.' I am sure that I will never leave this bed alive.” “Don’t you want to live, Bee?” I “Aren’t you going to make any effort to live? I’m sure It all depends upon you now. The doctor says there are no complications anywhere, and you have so much to live for—a lovely little girl, and a husband who adores you, beside a host of affection at a friends. Surely, you don't want to leave all these.” “Yes, I know that, and sometimes I think I do want to live, but I know It would be no use.” “What makes you so morbid, Bee? Why are you so sure you aren’t going to live?" I asked. ”Ase you in pa'.n?” “Not the slightest, but, Sally, I just don’t feel alive any more. It is as though I had no more interest in any of the things of this world. Why, when Dick comes in to see me it just seems an effort for me to rase my eyes to his face. Wherf they put my littl girl in my arms after I came out of the anesthetic, I* expected that wonderful thrill that I have always been told comes to a woman at that time —ana Sally, it did not come—l looked down at the little downy head pillowed on my bosom, I felt the moist mouth nuzzling about my breats, but that peculiar ecstacy composed of material and spiritual emotion was not mine. “Sally, I had no feeling but the keenest disappointment. The baby didn’t seem mine. I tried—‘oh, I tried to get hold of myself. You do not know, Sally, how I tried to understand It all. But some way it would not straighten itself out in my mind. “I had the pleasant feeling any woman would have when she feels the satin-soft skin of a newborn babe against her own, but any other sensation beyond the mere physical one is non-existent. It has all been such a disappointment. I am sure T do not have a mother’s feeling toward my baby, and I am so disappointed with myself for not being equal to It.” (Copyright, 1925, NEA Service, Tnc.) TOMORROW—Letter from Sally Atherton to Leslie Prescott.

TIGER ARRESTS MADE Police Charge Seven Had Small Amounts of Liquor. Police charged Ernie Peatson, 55, city, with transporting liquor, operating a blind tiger and driving while intoxicated late Tuesday. Patrolmen Snyder and Pettigrew said he had a half pint of bonded whisky. Others charged with operating blind tigers were: Albert Smith. 24, colored, 1307 Lafayette St.: John Dye. 32. of 835 Indiana Ave.; Ray Smock, 25, city: | Katherine Sowders, 36, of 46 N. West St., and Edward, .24, and Eva Buckner., 30, both colored, 1317 E. Twenty-Second St. TWO CHILDREN FOUND Baby Discovered by Police—Girl Taken at New Castle. Two missing children have been found police say. Mrs. Clarence Sullivan, 336 S. Hancock St., reported her son Ode 3, missing. Motor Police Moriarty and Everson reported the cbild had been found at Tenth St., and the Peoria and Eastern Railrbad tracks. Sheriff Bradway, New Castle, Ind., took Mildred Seibel, 16, of 266 N. Miley Ave., into custody and called here. Her parents went to get her. COMPANY INCORPORATED Articles of incorporation have been filed by the Demlng Battery Company, 115 E. New Tork St., with the secretary of State. Capital stock is SIO,OOO. Incorporators are Shirlie A.. Deming, Theodore peming and Dr. Frank Morriecm.

Winnifred Huck Learns What Prison Does to Innocent Babies

A Group of Prison-Bom Babies and their mothers at Marysville Reformatory. Those whose mothers are serving long terms will go into institutions as soon as they are weaned.

Winnifred Mason Huck. former Congresswoman and the first woman to preside over the House of Representatives, rot, herself sentenced to prison. Guiltless of Any crime, she sought answers to the questions— Are our orisons humane? Can a girl, crushed by her fellow men. regain her place in society? This is the fourteenth story, written for The Times. By Winnifred Mason Huck Former Representative to Congress from Illinois. “1 BOUT a week before I wis reA leased from prison, T had I-H been moved to a bed ii the lower hallway, because I kept my bed and belongings neat and visitors were more apt to visit the first floor than the second. On the day that I moved, I was called out of the art class to get my bedding. We had clean bed linen every week and clean nightgowns, underclothes and dresses twice a week. And the blankets that were given me when I arrived were clean. It was surprising how much I had accumulated and packed about my bed. Between the springs and the foot of the mattress, I had clean aprons and wool stockings. Under my pillow I had a book, an apple and my tin box. Hanging from the bedstead were two little bags I had made from scraps left from my uniform. Although I deliberately left these things in sight, not once did I lose a thing. Babies Brought in I was glad to be on the first floor, for the babies were there. Every night they were brought by the night watch to be nursed. After they had been fed, I could hear them cooing and gurgling long stories to their motheis, while their mothers replied in love’s unmlstakeable language. The first one I saw was as sweet and pretty a youngster as I had ever seen. Mis mother had brought him into the “B” corridor during the noon hour, and all the girls crowded around her. “Girls,” said the matron, as they pressed closer, “you know you are not allowed to touch the babies.” I was glad of that. I wished some persons in the outside world might be placed under the same restric-

% Mr. Frank F. Woolling’s “Baby Grand” Apartments Will Be Warm This Winter

On the Home Floor—The Sixth

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

tions, for there would be fewer nervous and sickly babies If there were fewer kissing, hugging and bouncing relatives to torment them. Special Milk The first baby I saw in the prison was eight months old. He was clean and well fed. His mother, like all the other mothers and prospective mothers, had a Jar of special milk at her place in the dining room three time a day. I was glad that they did not have to drink the skimmed, strained and worried milk which the rest of us had for our cereal and coffee. These poor mothers In Jail were separted from their babies most of the time. At stated hours each day they were allowed the. pleasure of holding their little ones and at night the babies were nursed once. But a mother was never free to go to her baby when she wanted to. Then, too, there was the thought facing them that these little Innocents must always go with the brand upon them of having been born within prison walls. The babies of those women who were serving long terms were to !bs sent to an Institution as soon as they could be weaned, or adopted by strangers. (Vying Softly “"When he Is a little older, I shall lose him forever,” said one mother, holding her baby tightly, In a storm of suppressed agony. She It was whom I used to hear crying softly in the night. There were others who wept on their pillows, mothers who had babies at home, mothers whose babies had already been talsen away and placed In hospitals. “Oh, there’s another crying bee,” said one of the girls to me, referring to a little group of mothers at the md of the hall. She talked bravely, scornfully of those who were “always getting a hurt in their pain.” “Oh. I’ll say some of those girls can fling a nasty tear,” she said, as she got into bed and dug her head into her own pillow. She never knew that I heard her crying, too, a few minutes later. Several evenings later Miss Lourey said to me as she prepareed to

They Have the ‘Heatrola * for a Heating Plant The “Estate Heatrola” is a most efficient heater, a fine looking piece of furniture, • and altogether a remarkably good heating plant for a small home. See them installed in the new “Baby Grand" homes, or call at Ayres and learn all about them. Estate Heatrolas are sold exclusively in Indianapnlis at

unlock a - door near my bed, “I hate to deliver this letter.” Mail was usually distributed at supper time. So I knew trtat this must be a death letter. No Outburst The girl’s baby had died. I waited for the outburst, as the girl, again locked in her room, tore open the envelope. None came. But in the night, when everyone else slept; I heard the quiet sobbing of the little mother who was meeting her Gethsemane. Life in prison was getting a bit monotonous in Marysville. The physical hardships and the unchanging found of dreary restrictions began to wear on me. While the life was new. I had been interested in what would happen next. But once I knew what to expect, even the charm of novelty was gone I began to wonder whether the Governor would ever pardon me, as I had counted on his doing when he learned who I was. Suppose he should not. Would 1 have to live six months in this death-in-life? Next: I get an uexpected summons. STAIRS FALL 'IS FATAL Man Receives Broken Vertebra Dies at Hospital A fall down a fifteen-foot stairway at his home Tuesday proved fatal to L. M. Hoosier, 45, colored, 415 Indiana Ave., who died at the city hospital today from a fractured vertebra. Dr. Paul F. Robinson, coroner, and deputy E. C. Tolies are investigating to learn if the fall was accidental. MUNCIE DRIVER KILLED Auto Struck by Work Train; Dies Instantly. fiu United Pri a* MUNCIE, Ind.. July 29.—Max Whitehead. 29, of Muncie, was instantly killled when his auto was struck by a work train on the Chesapeake & Ohio late Tuesday. Whilehead failed to see the train ami drove in front of it. Hie neck was broken.

Martha Lee Says THIS BIG PROBLEM OF GETTING ACQUAINTED

A lot has been written, sung and spoken of the prirl alone in New York and how she must face the problem of petting acquainted with the -righ people. But'it is no more a problem for New York girls than it is for the girls right here in Indianapolis. N

No girl who has been properly reared wants to trust to chance in the matter of meeting her future friends. She wants them to come well recommended. And she has no desire to he misunderstood in her own advances toward friendship. Asa r.iaKer of fact, persons who misunderstood genuine, frank friendliness are not the sort of poopta you care to have as friends, anyway, and they soon are dropped. But no girl can help making a deep Impression of good breeding and rearing when she is kindly, good natured, thoughtful and sunnily friendly. Every one is drawn to that type of a girl and she seldom lacks for friends But e\en she must face this modern problem if she is in a strange city. No one needs fine friends more than she. How Meet Them? Dear Martha Lee: What chance has a errl to beconw* acquainted with decent. fellow*? I work downtown and nee some I would like* to know, but like, that it- ail the rood it doe* me. . I am now living in anew neighborhood Find And it rather cmbarraeainir to ret on the car of a morning and evening *ee tne -one person* and not apeak to them What ('an I do to break this wall between i mvnelf and other* and atill atay within the hound* of certain hr*a ’h* of e*lnuett*? Do TOO think if thcr* wouldn tbe so much formality ’here would be more acquaintance* or noea that tend to degrade 'our friendship when yon do not learn to know them through nroner introduction’ To *rf> the *amr peo> e every day and not, speak seem* a silly aort of thlnff whPe to wreak to hem would be conidered rude. *o what am I to do. It la uaelea# to w ilt for Jin introduction for there is no one to do the introducing It is a tough situation, Jen, and the funny part of it is that the hoys who come into a strange town are in the same predicament. seem

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silly to Ro around like t chunk of ice when you want to be friendly and natural. As I said aoove, frank, genuine friendliness, accompanied by thoughtful kindness never harmed any girl, and has made num berless friends for several I know. But it would aeem Just 11s silly to enter a street car and go bowing and scraping to left and to right as you went to your seat. He natural If you have seen the same face a number of times I’m sure the strietest writer on etiquette could not censure you for smiling pleasantly. You atill can't go gunning for a man WOMAN NEARLY INSANE “I was nervous, could not sleep, melancholy and nearly insane at times," says Mrs. T. A. Saunders, of 711 E. Depot St., Knoxville, Tenn. “After being in this condition nearly three years I saw Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound advertised and I tookic. It tnjnle we a well woman. I gains, 1 22 lbs. In weight and haven't had a hit of trouble since. I hope it will do as much for other women as it has for me." Lydia E. Pinkram's Vegetable Compound Is the one dependable remedy for female Ills.—Advertisement.

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and pass It off without comment, but you can he ao charming and attrao tlve that the fine men will neck your company. And don't have such “expensive” manners that you scare off tha nice boys. Money doesn’t grow on trees theee days, and the boys who tr*’ struggling along aren't hankering after ependlng a young fortune on a girl every night. As for the weal thy man who will ehow you around In their Rolls-Royce, they’re either married or have their own little set. They no come out of thle circle In etory hooks and occasionally In real life, hut don't haughtily pas# up the enterprising but poor youngsters that will !>e wealthy some day. ASH TRAYS ,- nlq „ r TABERETTES CARD TRAYS LYMAN BROTHERS 728 E. Ohio 84.

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