Indianapolis Times, Volume 37, Number 125, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 September 1925 — Page 6
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gOCIAL Activities nNTEnTA I N M E N T S WEDDINGS BETROTHALS
TJ RS. CARL LOUIS ITTENjyI| BACH, 3936 Broadway, enter~__tJ tained eighty guests at a, bridge luncheon at 1 p. m. Thursday, at the Athletic Club in honor of Miss Margaret McWhorter, whose marriage to Robert J. Ittenbach will lake place Oct. 8, and Mrs. Edson 7. Wood. Jr., who was married in June. Roses and asters were used in decorations. Appointments were in orchid and rose. Out-of-town guests were Mrs. Edward Burke, Chicago, Mrs. Edward Williams, Mrs. M. V. Reynolds, and Miss Elizabeth Pettibone, Richmond, Ind. Tho hostess was assisted by Mesdames Joseph R. Raub, Harry TT H>.tiger, Fred Barrett and Arthur C. Burrell. * * * The Thursday Afternoon Reading Club met Thursday afternoon with Mrs. A. E. Carrington, 5147 Park Ave. Two papers, “The Birth of Indianapolis,” by Mrs. E. E. Sink, and “Early Industries of Indianapolis,” were read. * * * Mrs. Louise Stowers, 931 W. Thir-ty-Second St., entertained the Mystic Tie Club with a luncheon at 1 p. m. Thursday. The table was decorated with a center-piece of snapdragons. Covers were laid for Mrs. N. H. Long, president; Mrs. A. A. Wise, vice president; Mrs. Paul S. Robinson, secretary-treasurer; Mrs. Homer L. Cook, Mrs. John O. Brenne” Mrs. C. A. Dale and Mrs. David Bombarger. Mrs. Brenner was assistant hostess. The luncheon was followed by a business meeting. * * * Mrs. Harry Lichtenauer, 439 E. Forty-Ninth St., entertained the members of the Shara Lyke Club with a luncheon Thursday. Covers were laid for Mrs. Harry Lichtenaur, Mrs. Betty Lichtenaur, Mrs. Jessie Craig, Mrs. Ella Dain, Mrs. Katherine Bortsfield, Mrs. Lena Winelns, Mrs. Merl Fruits, Mrs. Goldie Cardon, Mrs. Mabel Penny, Mrs. Lillian Nelson and Mrs. Claudia Ray. * Junior section of the American Association of University women will meet Monday evening at 6 at the Mac Lean Arms Tearoom for dinner. Each member is asked to brine' a guest. Miss Justine Pritchard is (chairman of the section, Miss Jane Strain, vice chairman, Miss Gertrude Schuller secretary, and Miss Blanche Young, director;. The section will meet the first, Monday of each month and the executive committee will meet the third Monday of each month. * * * The home of Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Miles, Brookville, Ind., was the scene of a quiet wedding M 11 a. m. Thursday, when their daughter, Esther, Ibecame the bride of Paul C. Goeke. |Tho Rev. Larrimore, pastor of the Brookville Methodist Church, officiated. The only attendants were Miss June Wilson, bridesmaid, and Carl SL-ott, best man. Following the ceremony Mr. and Mrs. Goeke left on an eastern motor
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Times Pattern Service
It’s possible to make the stunning frock seen in Pattern 2543 in a single afternoon, even though you do not sew. Every detail is explained. See small sketches! Note the circular gore ready to be stitched at perforations to dress. The outline sketches are just to give you an idea of how very easy it is to make this style. Complete instructions with pattern. Cuts in sizes 16 years, 36 to 42 inches bust measure. The 36-inch size takes 3% yards of 49-inch material. Our patterns are made by the leading fashion designers of New York City, l and are' guaranteed to fit perfectly. Every day The Times will print on this page pictures showing the latest In up-to-the-minute fashions. This is a practical service for i readers who wish to make their own clothes. You may obtain this pattern by filling out the coupon below, enclosing 15 cents and mail it to the patten, department of The Times. Be sure to write plainly and to include pattern number and size.
pattern order blank Pattern Department, Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Ind. find 15 certs for which please send pattern No. 2543. Size Name Address City
trip. They will be at home after Oct. 10, at 327 E. Maple Road Blvd. • • * Miss Arline Webster, daughter of Mrs. Dai.a Webster, 131 Bosart Ave., whose marriage to Stanley Green will take place Oct. 17. will be honor guest Saturday evening at a party given by Mrs. Thomas S. Shinier, f-846 E. Washington St. Miss Alice Brady, 1051 E. Raymond St., and Miss Lucy Ward, 315 Leslie Ave., also will entertain for Miss Webster. * * The Evergreen Club entertained Wednesday evening with a surprise dinner at the Elks Club in honor of Mrs. M. C. Craig, a recent bride. Evergreens were used in decorations. Appointments were in purple and gold, the club’s colors. Covers were laid for Mesdames M. C. Craig, C. A. Elenberg, Donald E. Lunt, Donald Black. I*. R. Cooper, John I'nverzagt and Charles Wheat. * * The wedding of Miss Catherine Jehn, 638 E. Forty-Eighth St., and George Gardner Ward was solmnized at 9 a. m. Thursday at St. Joan of Arc Church, Bishop Joseph Chartrand officiating. Mass was read by the Rev. Maurice O’Conner. Palms, ferns and baskets of white flowers were used in decorations. Alfred Meyers, La Grande, Ore., sang “I Love You Truly,” "Until” and "Love's Coronation,” accompanied by Miss Marie Moore, organist. The bride’s attendants were her sister, Miss Mary Jehn, maid of honor; Miss Edna Von Luhrt.e, Cincinnati, Ohio, and Miss Dolores Volkert, Miss Jehn wore a gown of delphinium blue crepe and chiffon, rnd carried a shower bouquet of roses and delphinium. Miss Von Luhrte wore a gown of orchid taffebi, and carried Ophelia roses. Miss Volkert wore peach taffeta, and carried Mrs. Aaron Ward roses. Little Miss Mary Ellen Kennedy, flower girl, wore a frock of green chiffon over pink crepe. The bride wore a gown of bridal satin and Chantilly lace with a Chantilly lace train and a long veil arranged cap fashion with a garland or orange blossoms. She wore the gift of the bridegroom, a platinum link bracelet set with diamonds and carried a shower bouquet of bride’s roses and lilies of the valley. Arthur Haley, Chillieothe, Ohio, was best man and Victor Lemmer, Escanaba, Mich., and John Bulger, Chicago, ushers. Following a wedding breakfast served to members of the families and friends at the Spink-Arms Hotel Mr. and Mrs. Ward left on a motor trip to French Lick and other points. They will live in Chicago. • • • Mrs. Arthur L. Stout, 1321 N. Meridian St., and daughter Elisabeth will leave Saturday for New York, where Miss Stout ■will attend Ogoontz College. * • • Miss Eleanor Blaine, 1915 N. Pennsylvania St., has returned to Smith College. • • * Mr. and Mrs. Michael Hudak, entertained Wednesday evening at their home with a farewell dinner party in honor of Mrs. Martin Barber and children, 1801 N. New Jersey Sc., who will sail for Europe Oct. 3. Covers were laid for fifteen. • * * Mrs Sute Abel, 930 Southwest St., wabhonored Wednesday evening with a dinner at her home in celebration of her fifty-second birthday. A large birthday cake was the table centerpiece. * • • Miss Elizabeth Richardson, 1939 N. Pennsylvania St., was to entertain Thursday evening in honor of Miss Mary Evans, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Edgar H. Evans, 3445 NPennsylvania St., whose marriage to Si.muel Runnels Harrell will take place at 8:30 p. m., Oct. 10, at the
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Tabernacle Presbyterian Church. Attendants at the wedding w’ill be Miss Elizabeth Evans, maid-of-honor: Miss Mary Elizabeth Leighton, Chicago; Miss Elizabeth Myers, San Diego, Cal.; Misses Dorothy Marmon and Mary Hamilton, bridesmaids; Maurice Harrell, brother of the bridegroom, New York City, best man; Robert Winslow, Kurt Tantzer, Irving Sauvre, William Landers, Volney Mallott Brown and Mallott White, ushers. COLOR IT NEW WITH “DIAMOND DYES” \ Just Dip to Tint or Boil \ > to Dye > Each 15-cent package contains Pl'A, directions so \g?w simple any woman av can tint soft, dell- ft tnf j>v cate shades or |lll \v4k.|t A& dye rich, perma- [m\ 'PlfefisSjSjl net colors in lin- ] gerie, silks, rib- j V j&9r , bons, skirts, y < Y-y /fi waists, dresses, lAiSath coats, stockings, U HM sweaters, draper- artJyjF ies, cove rings, hangings—everything! Buy Diamond Dyes—no other kind—and tell your druggist whether the material you -wish to color is wool or silk, or whether it is linen, cotton or mixed goods.—Advertisement.
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
LETTER FROM LESLIE PRESCOTT TO THE LITTLE MARQUISE, CARE OF THE SECRET DRAWER-—CONTINUED. Then, little Marquise, *my dear mother said to me something w r hich impressed me very much. She said; “Men, my dear, have a most inconvenient faculty of being able to lock up disagreeable problems in some parts of their brains, and to forgetting them until they are ready to work on them again. Naturally, having sealed all these up in watertight compartments, they do not want to have seme one either opening them again or hammering on the outside in hopes of gettting in. “This is very different from us. Leslie. We women must be always mulling over our irritating little worries, while very often w'e forget all about the pleasant things of which we might be thinking.” I have found this all so very true, little Marquise. Very often I find myself thinking the most unhappy thoughts, when if I w’ould just atop to reason, I w’ould find that I have more than most people have, to make me happy. The pearls have been found, little Marquise, and I am almost sorry. I shall never wear them again, unless I feel differently about them than I do now. I fairly writhed with horror when Jack opened the case and poured those jewels Into my lap. I saw looking at me tw'o lovely girls, who I am sure, but for them, might be here today. My sister Alice’s jealousy culminated when she saw me wearing the pearls that Karl had given me. and she never got over it even when he gave her a more beautiful string And poor lit tie Zoe. who never really had a chance, died because she wanted to 3lDas3at Oiau/ ff Only ‘Weigh IjO (Pounds ‘ Oook off 50 (Pounds m SPUeehs %> diets, exercises, creams, dangerous drugs,or worthless reducing girdles PPfiad about “SAN-CRINA" fetcst'drench. way to tafe offOatNts safe and lasting
“I did not have to go through strenuous exercises nor rub myself with absurd creams, which generally put on Hesh instead ot taking it off. 1 did not wear weakening garments, nor torture myself with diets. I was fortunate enough while in Europe to hnd out the secrets with which millionaires, French actresses and beautiful women ot Paris keep their figures slender. Not only did 1 easily and gradually lose 50 pounds, but the reduction was lasting, as 1 have never gained a pound since stopping the treatment I feel and look years younger and my health has greatly improved with this wonderful discovery. No matter how fat vou are, you may do just as t did, and easily lose a fear pounds every week without any danger. Simply go to any good drug store, get it package of SAN-GRI-NA tablets (insist on these, as nothing like it hai ever been offered before to the public), take it as per directions, and watch your weight go <Lown. You can eat alf you want while you take SAN-GRT NA. TT IS GUARANTEED ABSOLUTELY HARMLESS; the formula of a French physician, and is now recommended by leading American specialists and physicians as a sale ami efffcaclous _ way - it<Treduce. On sale at ajiv good drug or department store If your druggist does not carry BAX-GRI-N’A in stock ns can get it from his whoie salcr or you can send a money order or chock for $1 50 direct to the Scientific Research Laboratories 1841 Broadway, N. Y. C.—Advertisement.
preserve for me and my children those foolish white, waxy beads. They are too horrible. 1 never want to look upon them again, little Marquise. Jack wants me to take the children and go away for a while, and I have almost decided to do ao. I find I must get the children away from their Grandmother Prescott. When she heard, however, that I was thinking of going and taking them with me, she nearly raised the roof. To tell you the truth. I wish I could go away and stay long enough to pry heriaway from this place. Yes. I know It sounds terrible for me to write this, but Jack's mother is simply impossible One moment she is the most abused woman on earth and the next she imagines herself a queen and is trying to run the whole household. If I’m out for an afternoon I come home
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Demonstrations Daily at All Our Five Branch Stores — Branch No. I—M. C. C. Schneider Hardware Cos. 2962 N. Illinois St. RAn. 7031. Branch No. 2—Fontain Square Hardware Cos. 1116 Prospect St. DR ex. 3976. Branch No. 3—Shepard Hardware Cos. Clifton St. RAn. 1357. Branch No. 4—Danner Brothers Store 2625 W. Michigan St. BEL 0240. Branch No. s—Wm. F. Koehler & Sons 2129 E. Tenth St. WEb. 2656.
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:o find my children demoralized and my servants ready to leave. Why Is it that old people must make so much trouble in a household? Jack’s mother has everything in the world that she asks for except where her wishes interfere with my servants or children, but she will not be happy, and neither will she let any one else be happy, and there you are. CoDurioht. 10!;, .'.TI Service NEXT: letter from Leslie Prescott to the Litttle Marquise, care of the Secret Drawer—Continued. ATartha Lee’s CoJPurrni She Wants to Know Dear Miss Lee: (a) When you are attending a dance and a young- man whom you have never met asks you for a dance should you refuse him or accept him and what should you (bt When introducing a young man friend to your father and mother is it proper to mention your parents name or
just say Mr. Smith meet my father and mother? (c) I have read the discussion in your column and in several other papers on the subject of entertainment, and keeping a steady, and the advice is that a good lis tener is interesting. But X find this a mistake quite often for moat of the boys I know like a girl who talks a great deai and one who is out for a good time. The quiet girl isn’t much eared for. (a.) That depends somewhat on the kind of dance. If it is in a prlv ate home and given by a friend, then, yes. If in a public hall, I don’t believe it is advisable unless you know ■who the boy is and whether he is the right kind. (b.) You say: Mother and Father, this is Mr. Smith, not Mr. Smith meet mother and father. The latter is a poor form, beside being negligent of the fact that vour mother and father are the older and more dignified persons to be considered. Always introduce the younger person to the older unless the younger is very famous or a celebrity of some sort, even then the first form is better and shows better rearing. (c.) Every rule has its exceptions. You must use your common sense,
THURSDAY, SEPT. 24, 1925
and not try the same methods on everyone. Learn to he more subtle and understanding of moods and temperaments.
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