Indianapolis Times, Volume 37, Number 67, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 July 1925 — Page 8

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SOCIAL Activities ENTERTAINMENTS ' WEDDINGS BETROTHALS

r-71 ISSES PHYLLIS AND JANET ffyll DEAN of Rushville, Incl., lilil entertained charmingly with a luncheon at the Polly Primm Tearoom Thursday afternoon in honor of Miss Mary Phyllis Clarke, daugh- ■ ter of Mrs. Owen P. Clarke, 2035 N. Meridian St., whose marriage to Robert Davis Coleman will take place Aug. 5. Appointments in orchid and pink the bridal shades were used in decorating. The table centerpiece was a basket of flowers. Covers were laid for the Misses Dean, Clarke, Margery Parrish, Elizabeth Campbell, Marian Darr, of Indianapolis, Geraldine Turner, of Port Huron, Mich., who will be maid of honor at the wedding, Mrs. D. H. Dean, of Rushville, Ind., and Mrs. Clarke. Mrs. Lewis Coleman, and Miss Margaret Loer will entertain Saturday afternoon with a shower for Miss Clarke. * * * Miss Ruth Cohen, 3035 N. New Jersey St., entertained six guests at luncheon at the Polly Primm Tearoom Thursday. Appointments in orchid and pink were used and wrist bouquets of flowers were favors. • * * Mr. and Mrs. Murry Slaughter, 2201 E. New York St., entertained as guests at dinner Wednesday evening: Misses Dorothy Mallard, Agnes Van Camp, Margaret Miller, Bernadine Smith, Ida Belle Arnold, Jessie Day, Messrs. Charles Sanders, Charles Frye, Herbert Miller, Linnie Logsdon, Larry Sullivan and Gene Ryan. * * * Mrs. L. S. Fall, and daughter, Jane, 4701 E. New York St., have returned from New York where they have been for the last six weeks. * * * Miss Beatrice Sherman of New York, is visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Miller Sherman, 3851 praceland Ave. * * * George Edward Drury, New York, is visiting Mr. and Mrs. Otto Edward Anthony, 308 E. Twenty-Eighth Street. * * * Mrs. Howard Murray, 2700 E. Michigan St., will entertain Wednesday evening with a shower in honor of Miss Alice J. Murray, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Walter J. Murray, 4103 Arthington Blvd., whose marriage to Paul H. Allison will take place Aug. 8 at the home of the bride’s parents. • * * Mr. and Mrs. A. M. Jackson, 3534 E. Fall Creek Blvd., announce the marriage of their sister, Miss Helen Seidel, to Leo Selya of Boston, Mass., which took place Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Selya are on their wedding trip to Atlantic City, N. J. They will live in Boston, Mass. -* * * Mrs. Goethe Link, 4936 N. Meridian St., is expected to return Friday from South Bend, Ind., where she has been attending the woman’s State golf tournament. * * Mrs. Fred Bates Johnson, 1470 N. Pennsylvania St., is at Crystal Lake, where she will remain until Sept. 1. * * • Miss Florence Wilson, 1305 W. Thirty-second St., entertained Wednesday evening with a surprise shower in honor of Miss Mae Miller, whose marriage to Richard Rice will take place in Philadelphia, Pa. Aug. TATAR RH of head or throat is usually benefited by the vapors of— VBCIaS VARO RUB Qver 17 Million Jars Used Yearly Dons lef baby be tors ured by skin Trouble! Apply Resinol Ointment and see how quickly the itching and burning stops Resinol m Jb:

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Recent Bride on Wedding Trip

' C t %-i • .¥ , ;■ '* ' ' i I •’ x '- H

—Photo by Holland Studio. Mrs. Rudolph William Behler

Before her marriage July 18, Mrs. Rudolph William Behler, was Miss Sara Ella Hartsock, daughter of Mr*. Martha Hart-

28. A color scheme of coral and blue was used In the appointments. Gifts were concealed in a room decorated with streamers of coral and blue. Other guests: Misses Alvena Heid, Charlotte Fisher, Marie fehaner, Agatha Summers, Orpha Kraft, Alyne Carr, Thelma Sawyer, Cornelia Marshall, Mesdames George S. Madden, B. C. Miller, Virgil Miller. Miss Wilson was assisted by her mother Mrs. A. C. Wilson. * * * Dr. and Mrs. Edward Donnell, 3715 N. Meridian St., left last week for Miami, Fla., for an indefinte stay. * * * Mrs. Albert F. Eiteljorg, 3321 Washington Blvd., left Thursday on a motor trip to Michigan. The Tangle LETTER FROM SALLY" ATHERTON TO LESLIE PRESCOTT —CONTINUED. “Sally dear, I have been such a disappointment to myself,” Bee repeated. “I find I’ve been so arro-, gant and self-satisfied. I rather looked down upon you, Sally, because you openly declared you did not want children and had determined not to have them. I had determined to be a perfect—or nearly perfect—mother. “All these were dreams, and then, much to my surprise I found that when I knew I was going to have a baby, I didn’t want It at all. I could not bring those beautiful dreams back —I only saw myself growing ugly. I hated myself. I hated myself, perhaps, because I + ound out that I had always been mere vain of my form than of anything else in the world. “I found out then that I could not think of the little immortal soul that was to be entrusted to my keeping, because my mind was so engrossed In the change in my own body. I found out the superior woman that I thought I was, was only a superficial bundle of vanities —just a3 small and vain as these little moving picture girls that I had always despised.” Oh, Leslie dear, you can not understand how I felt when our dear Bee, whom you and I had both thought so

sock of North Salem, Ind. Mr. and Mrs. Behler are on their wedding trip and will he at home after Aug. 1, at 3705 E. North St.

splendid, made this pitiful confession. I tried to think it was not true. I tried to think that she was a little bit delirious. But even at that it was something so foreign to what I, who had known her all her life, thought of Bee, that it seemed to me that-1 was talking to someone e.se. The whole think struck me si queerly, that I had one of those fantastic ideks that we read of In those terrible French stories of de Maupassant, who. you know, delighted in terrifying ideas. The fantastic thought came to me that in some supernatural manner another soul had manage to get into Bee’s body when she was under the influence of the anesthetic. Don’t smile, Leslie. I know L’m rambling in a parfectly ridiculous manner, and that this idea is almost as crazy as was poor Bee’s; but I’m sending all my reactions to you that you may know how peculiarly her conversation affected me. There she was, lying perfectly calm and collected among her lacy pillows and telling me all these things as though she were talking about someone else. It really was the weirdest thing I had ever encountered. I found I could stand It no longer, so I made an excuse to leave the room. I hunted up Dick and asked excitedly: ‘Have you talked with Bee since the baby was born?” Leslie, he turned such a tragic face to mine that I fairly gasped. "Sally, Sally," he whispered in that kind of hushed voice that one might use only when One Is laboring under a strain that must Inevitably break one in the end. ’Sally,” he repeated, "what is It? Tell me what Is the matter with my wife. . “I have sent for the doctor. The only thing that I can think of Is that Bee is insane.” (Copyright, 1925, NEA Service, Inc.) TOMORROW: Letter from Sally Atherton to Leslie Prescott. FIREMEN QUELL BLAZE Spencer House Cafeteria Fire Rouses Hotel Guests. Serious fire was averted early today by prompt work of flrement wh" extinguished a blaze at the Spencer House cafeteria, 248 S. Illinois St., after a two-hour battle. According to hotel attaches the 'Are was started In three barrels of trash in the kitchen by a lighted cigaret. Guests were aroused when smoke spread into the hotel adjoining the cafeteria. Firemen estimated the damage at SSOO. YOUTH AT HOSPITAL Condition of Elmer Snyder, 16, of 1819 Ashland Ave., was reported as fair at the city hospital today. Snyder was • seriously Injured Wednesday when he was struck by an auto at Senate Ave. and Washington St. Wiliam Jones, 44, of 3843 Fletcher Ave., driver, was slated. Free to Asthma and Hay Fever Sufferers FYee Trial of Method Tliafc Anyone Can Uso Without Discomfort or Loss of Time. We have a method for tho control of Asthma, aid we want you to try it at our expense. No matter whether your case is of lomr standing or recent development, whether it is present as Chronic Asthma or Hay Fever, you should send for a free Trial of our method. No matter in what climate you live, no matter what your ate or occupation, if you aro troubled with Asthma or Hay Fever, our method should relieve you promptly. We especially want to send It to those apparently hopeless cases, where all forms of inhalers, douches, opium preparations, fumes, “patent smokes,' 1 etc., have failed. We want to show everyone at our expense, that our method is designed to end all difficult breathing, all wheezing, and all those terrible paroxysms. This free offer is too Important to neglect a single day. Write now and begin the method at once. Send no money. Simply mail coupon below. Do it Today—you oven do not pay postage. FREF. TRIAL COUPON FRONTIER ASTHMA GO.. Room 0060 Niagara and Hudson Sts., Buffalo. N. Y. Send free trial of your method to: —Advertisement.

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IT’S NEVER TOO LATE TO SWALLOW PRIDE

Youth is a time of discovery. A time of studying reactions, guess that is why little hoys destroy bird nests —and why lovers indulge in quarrel-picking contests. They are cruelly curious to see what happens.

Well, I’ll tell you what happened. Martha Lee is besieged with letters asking, “What can I do to win him (or her) back?” Because you can’t keep pulling on the human heartstrings without having some of the break. ' We quarrelled” they write. Why must they all quarrel so lengthy? Why is it not enough to be young and in love, without the desire to plumb each other's depths and find c ‘ just how much has to be done before the loved one Is thoroughly hurt? There are of course, legitimate differences of opinion, hut there ie no reason why they cannot be talked out sanely. The next time you think of a nasty retort —say something pleasant. ' Quarreling Lovers Dear Martha Lee: I have been married over a year, but my husband and I have been separated for months. I love him dearer than anything on earth, and I feel like I’d go crazy without him. I dance two or three nights a week, and while I'm dancing I forget fttm for a time, but I don’t have dates, for I think it isn’t Lots of nice fellows ask me for dates but I always tell them I’m married and refuse them. When I'm at work or at home I think of him constantly. We quarreled because he hit me. and I don’t think any gentleman would strike a woman regardless of what she does. Am I not rich t f Still, even that isn’t suifieient to make me forget him. and as I haven’t much money to spend for amusement. I don't know what to do. He said I would miss him when It was too late, so now I won’t tell him I do

HIKER VISITS SUGAR CREEK (Continued From Pag© 1)

miles to have their wool carded and woven at these mills,” continued the golf man. Inspects Old Mill I alighted from the car at the gate and walked around the old mill. Rock River is the geographical name for Sugar Creek. Immense cliffs at intervals form the banks of this picturesque stream. Some of the cliffs are said to be over two hundred feet high and the river Is known as one of the best fishing places in the State. On the banks of this stream, sheltered by the dense woodlands, the woolgrowers from ten - tates gathered, each with his little camp, while he waited the completion of the carding and weaving of his year's tyool. Some twenty years ago the retired mill owners moved from the community and the little village gradually declln: and,

1 . .

Office Building of Old Mill

The entire property now lies in waste except for the employes dormitory, which is occasionally used as a shelter for camping parties. Here and there a trail leading from the mill to the banks of the river is still discernible. Bricks falling from the fast crumbling buildings made ideal outdoor fireplaces for the camper and many is the spot marked by such usage. It la the hope of the village folk that someone may yet buy the property and redeem Yountsville’s name as a business center. I next journeyed with an insurance agento to Lafayette, where I hoped to receive mail. I had been notified by wire that the letters had been forwarded to that city the day before. Expectantly, I walked to the general delivery window and inquired. Only one letter was handed me. I explained that there should he several. A kindly looking clerk with a .I'ray mustache insisted there was but one. Finally, after much persuasion on my part, he looked in the box above and the box below and out five addressed to me. Sees Purdue I smiled up at a bystander whom I had been delaying by my insisterit stay at the window. He returned my greeing, “Beats all how much persuasion it takes to get what belongs to a person nowadays, don’t it, lady,” he called out loud enough for tho postal employe to hear. Lafayette is the home of Purdue University, and as I left the city, passing the university grounds, a haying demonstration was in progress. A business man from Gary, soon offered me a ride and with him I journeyed to Goodland, where I visited the Open Door Museum and chatted with the mayor of the town regarding out-door flower show which is making the village famous. My friend from Gary told me what many another man has said, that men hesitate to offer rides to women along the highways as often the woman takes offense at, the offer. “I offered one lady a ride yesterday who was carrying a heavy basket of apples,” he said. “Instead of thanking me and refusing the offer nicely she told me if I did not go along and mind my own business she would call her husband who was working in the field.” From then on I decided to let them all walk until I overtook you today, lady, and having read your articles and known you by sight 1 decided to offer you a lift.” The flower show at Goodland is &

■Martha Lee Says-

miss him and want to see him for few he’ll say it's too late. He would humiliate mo in public places by showing his temper ana threatening to hit me. His excuses for hilling mo wiro always that I wouldn't shut up. I believe if he loves me lie'll come to me, nnd then 1 shall make him a better wife than I did before, if I know he'll be good to me. but if he doesn’t come to me I’m going to be desperate. I shall have dates every night, for I can't stand being alone much longer. I've got to forget him 1 I can’t have him. *0 the only way I know to do it is to have dates and go out. I shall give him another chance to come to see me before I act. Can you suggest ether means of forgetting before I try mine? A DESPERATE WIFIE. Oh dear! When will young people learn to live and let live? So very many of them have bigoted ideas that they insist on foisting on everyone else. And what a large part false pride plays In everyone's life! "I love her,” says the man, “I love him” <says the girl, yet neither one will give in the other because each loves self more. In your case, I think you were wise to leave your husband when he resorted to attack to gain his end It may serve to teach him to curb his unwelcome temper. But what did you say to bring on violence? Now that you have shown him he cannot treat you as ho would an animal, don’t let foolish pride stand in the way of a reconciliation. It would be better to swallow your pride and make up than to bemean yourself making datea with other men.

unique affair. In every sense it is a home show and an outdoor show as its name implies. Tho garden club of the city encourage well-kept lawns and tho growing of iris, peonies and gladiolias. An effort is made to have the spring flowers in bloom the last of May, about Decoration Day, when the show takes place. The beautiful display is not one of cut flowers but of hundreds and hundreds of beuutlful plants growing aming well kept lawns. Every home does Its bit and hundreds of visitors wore In Goodland last Decoration day driving through the streets and enjoying the beauty of the flower In full bloom. TWO WOMEN INJURED Former Mayor of Anderson Figures in Auto Crash. Mrs. Ruby Dandridge, colored of Cleveland, Ohio, and Mrs. S. B. Butler, colored, of 615 W. TwentyEighth St., are suffering today with Injuries received Wednesday when the auto in which they were riding with Mrs. Pauline Battles, colored, of 1710 Boulevard PL, collided with auto driven by Jesse Mellett, 2461 Park Ave., former mayor of Anderson, Ind., at Fall Creek Blvd. and Meridian St. Patrolman Forest Swank, said by witnesses to have fled from Mellett’s auto after the crash, was questioned by Police Inspector John White. Swank was allowed to return to duty after he said that ha went for a doctor and upon his return found the injured persons had been removed. Swank's revolver was found in Mellett’s auto. WHOLESALERS MOVING Retail Business Encroaching on S. Meridian St. Location of retail businesses on S. Meridian St. Is gradually forcing tho wholesale and Jobbing district southward, declared speakeres at Indianapolis Real Estate Board luncheon Wednesday at the Chamber of Commerce. Felix Geddes of Havens & Geddes, wholesalers. Meridian and Georgia Sts., said higher rents and increased property values were the result of the new type of business In the district. DROWNING IS PROBED Police Told Other Boys Ducked Conductor’s Son. 811 Times Special FT. WAYNE, Ind.. July 30.—Circumstances surrounding the drowning of Albert Bell, 7, son of Elisha Bell, Nickel Plate conductor, were being investigated today. The lad’s body was found early this morning In a creek running through Lawton Park, after he had been missing since Wednesday afternoon. A man told police he had seen two boys ducking another near the creek. FEEDER LINE TO START Street Railway Will Start Now Bus Route Saturday, Anew "feeder” bus line for the Indianapolis Street Railway will bo put in operation Saturday on W. Washington St., at the end of the present car line. The feeder line will be about 1.6 miles long, and runs from the car line to Colo St., where a waiting room has been arranged in the Taber Bldg. The first bus Is to leave at 5:61 a. m. Ten-minute service will be given from 6:10 a. m. until 8:20, with twenty-minute service until 3:40 p. m. Ten-minute schedule will be resumed until 6:40 for the evening rush and then twenty-min-ute service until 11:40 p. m. FRECKLES Run and Wind Bring Out Ugly Spots. How to Remove Easily. Here's a chance. Miss Freekleface, to try a remedy for freckles with the guarantee of a reliable concern that it will not cost you a penny unless it removes the freckles; while if it does give you a clear complexion tho expense is trifling. Simply get an ounce of Othine—double strength—from any drug or department store and a few applications should should show you how easy it Is to rid yourself of the homely freckles and get a beautiful complexion. Rarely Is more than one ounce needed for the worst case. Be sure to ask the druggist for the double strength Othine as this strength Is sold under guarantee of money back if it falls to remove your freckles. — Advertisement.

Mrs. Huck, Pardoned, Faces World With $5 Between Her and Hunger

Winn If red Mason Huck. former Congresswoman and the first woman to preside over the House of Reprtsentativoa, got herself sentenced to prison. Guiltless of any crime, the sought answers to the questions— , Are our prisons humane? Can a Kiri, crushed bv her fellow men. regain her place in society? This is the fifteenth story, written for The Times. By Wlnnifred Mason Huck Former Representative to Conrrss from Illinois SUSED to wonder, as I sat in Jail, Just what I would enjoy, most on my first day of freedom. More than once I felt that good blessing. The most ethereal-minded person, placed on prison diet for a few weeks, will develop an abnormal interest In food. All the women at Marysville felt the same interest. Snatches of conversation about it used to come over the transoms of the locked rooms at nlht. “ ‘And garcon,* I'll say, 'That steak must be plenty thick, with great gobs of mushrooms and French fried potatoes.' said one of the girls. “Say,” yelled Jane Rose, from her room at my end of the hall, 'you’ve got your educated nerve to be talking like that in this place!” Then there were times when I wanted a little good music most of all, or the sight of pretty things, laces, jewels, gowns and bats, the things that always delight my soul in the shop windows. In the midst of one of these day dreams, I was told to report at the office of Miss Green. They took me to a little table on which was a piece of glass, smeared with Ink. I realized that this was tho fingerprint paraphernalia, and concentrated on attempts look at such a time. They took by history and finger prints. My heart was heating terrifically. Description I was dismissed, with the words “Report at once to Miss Lourey.” Miss Lourey led me to her room. There was my lunch on a tray. And my traveling bag and ,my own clothes were lying on the bed. I was going out! I told he" that 1 was too much excited to eat. Then I began to pet into my clothes. She looked puzzled, for I was using correct English for the first time in her presence. “In a way I am a good deal worse than the charge upon my papers,” I said, thinking how I had been deceiving everybody at Marysville. Yes, she had heard that. I was ready to believe that she had, for I had started the story myself. No Crime “But actually I have 'committed no crime,” I continued. “The Governor knows I am innocent of the charge on my commitment papers and that is the reason for my pardon. "I can tell you no more, not even my right name.” In less than an hour I was on the train going to Columbus. My pocketbook contained $3.90,

21-23 N. Illinois St., Opposite Claypool Hotel New Striped and Printed SILK DRESSES Bought Way Underprice and to Be Sold the Same Way ALL THE /jpjT) ALL THE NEW TJ verYV 1 NEW ..... ——

all that was left of a five dollar bill which had been given me according to regulations, as I left the prison. Only the first chapter of my adventure was finished. The next ones were to unclose the life that follows prison, the struggle to come back that every convict faces. No Friends I had no friends in Columbus and I wondered, vaguely, as the train rumbled on, where I would sleep that night. In Columbus I sought out tne Y. W. C. A. There were no vacant rooms, but if I was “not afraid to sleep in a room with seven strange women,” I might have a bed In the dormitory. Afraid of strange people! After my recent experiences, I felt that I should never fear anything again. I took the bed In tho dormitory and paid seventy-five cents for it. I left my bag there for the day. Two little old women had the one double bed. After supper, when they were dressing to go out. one of them missed a pair of gloves. They searched under the pillows, under the bed, in all their pockets. I went downstairs with a cold feeling around my heart. Suppose they should search my bag nnd find my Marysville "diploma.” Their Troubles At 10 o’clock I went up to bed. The girls were sitting on their beds, talking of their troubles. “Wo found tho gloves,” said the hazel-eyed girl next to mo. “Where?” I asked, only partially relloved, for the Idea had struck me that someone might have put them in my bag, either for a Joke or to save herself. “The girl who had that bed over there had them in her pocket.” “Where is she now?” I asked. “They’vo got her locked In the basement," was the answer. "Poor kid,” I thought and wondered what they would do to her. “I was the one who suspected her,” said the hazel-eyed girl. “I can tell people just by looking at them.” “You can!” said I, becoming interested. “Then do mo a favor and tell me, do I look dishonest?" Her answer, I thought, would give me a clew ns to whether they had CADETS ATTEND GAME Bands Heads Parade of C. M. T. U. Recruits to Park. Headed by a band of 140 pieces more than 1,300 cadets at the Cltlzons Military Training Cnmp nt Ft. Benjamin Harrison today paraded from Washington ' Ft. nnd Capitol Ave., to Washington Park. The ■ student-soldiers were guests at a baseball game between the Indians and the Columbus Senators. The band played at the park. FIRE LOSS IS SIB,OOO 811 T'nttril J'rrs. LOGANSPORT, Ind., July 30. Loss from a fire which destroyed a liarn and outbuildings on the farm of Walter Byers near here Wednesday night was estimated today nt SIB,OOO.

searched my bag and found my pardon. She gave me a long, searching look. I nctunlly held my breath. (Copyright, 1025 NEA Service, Inc ) Next: 1 *tiip| nty q—< ter wwfc j Date Tomorrow? Have a Clear White Skin Going some place tomorrow where you want to look your bcit t You can. A marvelous new creme —Concentrated Marsha Bleach—works almost, like magic. Just ono night's treatment brings a marvelous improvement. Sallowness, blackheads, pimples, freckles, disappear. The natural beauty of a clear, sofl, white skin is restored. Try thin 3 Minute I e retiring apply a coating of Concentrated Martha Bleach Creme. No nviv■..ice. no rubbing. Look into the mirror the next morning and you will be drlieht fully surprised at the new dear, white toft nets of your tkin. It will astonish you to tec the improved condition of any blackheads, pimples, freckles or other •kin imperfections winch you may have. Money Hark Guarantee: If your skin it not parfectly white and clear: if all your blackheads and other akin imperfections have not disappeared after five days' treatment of Concentrated Marsha Bleach, return the unused portion of the rreme to your dealer. He •tit rotund your money at once. For sale t| lliuir Drug ( <>., I’nttls llrj Goods (0.1 11. I’. tVnsson A Cos., llook’a Depenit" tilde Ilnur Stores, Goldsmith'* Drug Mores nnd all good drug nml department stores. Concentrated >0 Wp* HIT Bleach END TABLES S CANDLESTICKS LYMAN BROTHERS *23 F.. Ohio Mreet

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