Indianapolis Times, Volume 38, Number 17, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 June 1926 — Page 6

PAGE 6

gOGIAL Activities ENTERTAINMENTS WEDDINGS BETROTHAI ,S

Miss Esther Marie Mullis, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. R. T. Mullis, 45 W. Twenty-Seventh St., who will lie married to Donald Hadley, June 9 has chosen as matron of honor, ; her sister, Mrs. Homer T. Perry. Mrs. C. A. Barley of Mansfield, Ohio, and Mrs. Earl A. Woods will be her ; bridesmaids. Little Betty Jean Harris will be • ring bearer. Homer T. Berry will ! be best man and Joseph Sitzman and Dr. Earl A. Woods, ushers. Invitations for the wedding have been sent out. A party and linen shower for Miss Mullis will be given by Mrs. W. G. Harris, 25 Riley Ave., and Mrs. Marley, who will entertain Wednesday. Mrs. Woods will entertain in Miss Mullis’ honor Thursday, and Mrs. C. A. Borchers and Miss Ida McKim will entertain Saturday. ! Monday, Mrs. Charles Reagan will i give a luncheon with/Miss Mullis as I honor guest. Mr. and Mrs. Mullis, ! parents of the bride-elect will have j a bridal dinner on the eevning of ! June 8. ** * * Miss Winifred Warstat will enter ! tain the Alpha chapter of Tau Delta . Sigma with a rush party at her home, 6236 E. Washington St., Wednesday evening. A picnic supper will be followed by games. : The committee in charge of arrangements includes Miss Warstat, chairman, assisted by the Misses Lois Money, Dorothy Wright, Clara Mil- ■ ler, Evelyn Clancy and Margaret Wiese. ** * • The New Century Club will hold a guest day meeting at the Propylaeum, Wednesday. Mrs. Demarchus Brown will talk on “A Balcony in Jerusalem.” Mrs. Jane Johnson Burroughs will sing a group of songs. Mrs. J. W. Carr will be hostess. Mrs. Melville Moon is chairman of arrangements. ** * , Mr. amt Mrs. Blaine Miller, 3433 Washington Blvd., are entertaining two classmates of their daughter, Martha Elizabeth, from Briar Cliff 'Manor. The guests are Miss Louise Brent of Kansas City, Mo., and Miss Helen Martha Woods of St. Louis, Mo. * * * Reservations for the card party' to be given by the 38th Division auxiliary of Indiana at the home of Mrs. Herbert Leland Koontz, 3034 N.- Illinois St., Thursday afternoon

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In Musical Novelty at Irvington

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Harry J. Wangelin

• St. Matthew’s Guild of St. Mat* thew’s Episcopal Church will entertain with ’’The Irvington Follies” in the Irvington school auditorium Friday at 8:15 p. m. Paul B. Elliott, former professional director and actor, will be in charge. One of the high points' of the program will be a musical novelty by Harry J. Wangelin. Others on the program are Mrs. James Carr, pianist, and Harry Alexander and H. D. Foster, radio artists. P. MacDonald will direct the chorus.

are as follows: Mesdames Allen Fleming, Russell Bedgood, William E. Ratcliff, Ora Jackson, Charles Wilson, Hattie Ryder, M. D. Spellman, Samuel Trimble, James Berry, William Werner"', Gaylord Martin, John Klueber, J. D. Gardiner, William F. Burns, J. G. Karstadt, Wesley Pierce: George Lakey, W. E. Wells, Louis Slinger, Frank Hartsock, J. L. Heider, William W. Ward, E. P. Brennan, John P.* Cochran, Jennie Henry, J. Pennewith, ,T. M. Wall, John Wilson. C. E. Hostetter, S. B. E. Norris, Harry Simpson, A. G. Clay, Flora Oakley White, William Jasper, P. J. Clark. * * The Kappa Chi Theta sorority will have a business meeting at the home of Miss Nelda Rosb, 1734 N. Meridian St., Friday evening. • * * Mrs. Otto Worley, 22 Campbell Ave., will be the hostess for the guest day meeting of the Irvington Catholic Study Club next Friday at 2:30 p. m. She will be assisted by Mrs. C. E. Logan. Pupils of the Beriault School of Expression, Mrs. Victor Montani, harpist, and Mrs. J. A. Matthews, singer, will be on the program. The house will be decorated with spring flowers. • * * Local alumnae of Alpha Xi Delta held their spring frolic Saturday evening at the country home' of Mrs. J. Malcolm Dunn on the Brookville Road. The families of the members attended. It was the last meeting of the season. The tables were decorated with baskets of roses and ferns; balloons in the fraternity colors, double blue and gold, were at each place. Officers for the ensuing year are: Mrs. Ralph L. McKay, president; Miss Harriet Louise Hooke, corresponding secretary; Miss Ida B. AVilhite, Pan 'Hellenic delegate, and Mrs. Dunn, secretary treasurer. • * * Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Reed of Pittsburgh, Pa., Sidney Grayson of New York and Reginald Sinclair of Los Angeles, Cal., have been the house guests of Mr. and Mrs. William Avery Atkins, 1320 N. Meridian St. * * * Mrs. Mattie Brown, 2111 Bellefontaine St., will be the hostess for a benefit eari party to be given by the Alvin T. Hovey Women’s Relief Corps tonight at 8 p. m. Proceeds will be donated t 5 the Knightstown Orphans Home. * * The spring dance of the Alpha chapter of Zeta Kappa Phi sorority of the Teachers’ College of Indianapolis was held at the Woman's Department Club, Saturday evening. The rooms were decorated with Richmond roses, the sorority flower.

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VOTERS’ LEAGUE OFFICIALS TOUR State Board of Directors to Meet Wednesday. .firs. Frank H. Streightoff of Indianapolis and Miss Florence Harrison of Winnetka, 11!., secretary for the fourty region of the league of Women Voters are touring Indiana this week. Miss Harrison and Mrs. Streightoff were guests at luncheon given by the Evansville, league Monday. Today they attended the convention of the first districtat Princeton. The meeting of the State hoard of directors will be held in Indianapolis on Wednesday. Mrs. Streightoff will preside. Miss Harrison will outline with the directors the plan of work for trie summer. She will discuss possible legislation in the 1928 session. Mrs. Frank Hatfield, president of the Indianapolis braVich of the League of Women Voters and editor of the “Wor an Voter,” is to report on the enlarged June edition of the magazine. Mrs. H. R. Misener of Michigan City, program chairman will present suggestions.

—Martha Lee Says - GIRLS STILL HA VE SCALP-HUNTING HABIT

Guess it’s a hangover from fairy tales, or wild and woolly novels dealing with princesses who had so many suitors they didn’t know what to do- but the girls still stem to think they re not popular unless the sheiks are rolling up their skirt-trouser-legs and proposing every five minutes on their knees!

The young girl seems determined! to force a declaration out of her swain whether or no—like an Indian adding a scalp here and there to hi3 belt: But the boys are getting wary of this kind of indiscriminate courtship that doesn’t meant a continental! It isn't enough just to be jolly, and charming, and companionable, and interesting to young folks —la demoiselle must needs picture herself the fought-for lady of history and story and poem! That’s all right as far as It goes. Wanting to be that way makes her subtle, charming, a bit flirtatious, a little roguish, and a regulator of*heart-flutters that will stand her in good need when she finally finds the man she's going to concentrate on for a wedding ring! But —the teens are the play-time. Playmates of the teen-age often do mate up later when the early twenties bear down upon them, but proposals come faster to the girl who isn't trying to force them, who is sweet, natural, not overdone or forward. To Make Him Care Dear Mias Lee: lam a girl of 17 I have hart many boy friends*, but I?r some reason, I am not able to hold their at tenlions for any length of time. I am eongidered pretty and have an entertaining disposition. One boy friend of whom I am especially fond does not seem to rare for me. We are both happy go-lucky and seem to enjoy being together Please tell me how I can make him care for me. Why are my boy friends interested in me but a short time? vu. By “care" I suppose you mean what most young things mean—be-, ing hopelessly, even tragically in love! I don't believe the boy is In love with you—yet, or you with him. So why isn't it a fine thing to have a toy chum who can laugh when you laugh and whose society you enjoy as a playmate? He'll think more of you if you don't try to capture his heart by digging it ou<,. If you're the sort of girl he finds mental recreation to be with, then you're the girl he’ll naturally choose to be with —and propinquity is most usually the mother of romance. As for the boy friends who don’t seem to be interested In you except for a, short time, perhaps you've been using forcing methods with them, too, and laying your cards on the table too openly. Romance is still a very subtle game and since It usually hangs by a thread—or according to the most wordy novelists, by a golden hair! —you don’t get any results going after it with a hammer. So be sw'eet, natural and normal—

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

May Bride Is Now at Home

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Mrs. Wendell S. Baker Before her marriage on May 27, Mrs. Wendell S. Baker was Miss Fleeta I. Thacker, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. .G. C. Thacker, 927 English Ave. Mr. and Mrs. Baker are at home at 2830 N. Delaware St.

never overdo your stuff, and be just ! a little baffling and mysterious. Old, Old Story Dear Miss Lee: I am a girl IS rears old. I went with a boy 20 years old for a year I quit, him about a month ago. I now realize how much I love him as no other boy ran satisfy me. Please advise me how to win him back. rosF Oh dear! Get a bucket of glue and paint his door step with it. Then when he comes out he’ll have to stand still and listen to you! But seriously, Rose, how did you “win” him in the beginning? Forget that you've had a quarrel and go about patching up the friendship by pretending It's a brand new one, and be interesting and charming. Then after you've become “acquainted” all over again you can invito him to call.' Y. W. C. A. Notes Marandy's Minstrels will bo given by the Troub Memorial Ladies’ Aid Society of the South Side Turners’ Hall. 306 Prospect St., Wednesday, June 9. at 8 p. m. Mrs. W. J. Byrtia has planned the minstrels to pay the pledge of the aid society for furnishing a room at the S. Alabama St. branch of the T. W. C? A. The work of remodeling is progressing. The building fs open from 10 a. m. to 4 p. m. every day. The membership council and team workers for the Rainbow drive for new members for the S. Alabama St. branch met today at 2 p. m., at the South Side Y. W. C. A. i Tennis starts this evening at 5 p. m at Brookside Park. A permit has been g!ven to the “Y” for the use of two courts from June 1 to October 1, on Tuesday and Friday evenings. ART WORK ON DISPLAY Miss Margaret Stowers Completes Study at Institute. Miss Margaret Stowers, who is a graduate-elect of John Herron Art institute, having completed four years of study at the institute, opened an exhibition of her work in the Pettis gallery today. Twentyfive water colors will he hung. Twenty of these are portraits and five are still life compositions. Miss Stowers, a graduate of Shortridge, has been a scholarship student in the Herron school for the last three years and last year taught a class In freehand drawing for public schoflt ..teachers. She studied in the summer art school at Winona Lake last summer, having received a. scholarship given by Mrs. W. C. Smith. She expects to open a studio In the When Bljdg. in the near future. WOMAN COULD NOT SLEEP % . Her Mother-in-Law Knew A Remedy Mrs. Belle Thompson, of Georgia, was in a very weak and run-down '■ | condition for If four years. She had Sreat. difflculty in Ratine 'Mm jrgW to Blee P at n 'K ht ffi™ and even then did not s ! ee P . soundly. She would wake up again and again. /* f Besides this her ml ) | ’'- ■ ... appetite was poor. “My mothr '■ er-in-law told me of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound and Lydia E. Pinkham's Sanative Wash,” she writes. “I took six bottles of the Vegetable Compound and I was not the same woman at alii I could sleep and would get up in the morning singing and feeling fine. I am the mother of three children and always after the babies came I had to take medicines, but I can truly say that ■this last time I have only used the Sanative Wash. It does me more good than the medicines. It keeps me on ruy f ee t to care for my chil dren and I do most of my work. 1 feel it my duty to let you know how both of the medicines have helped me.”—MRS. BELLE THOMPSON. R. 2, Rossville, Georgia. 'Are you on the Sunlit Road to Better Health? —Advertisement.

CONFESSIONS OF A FAT WOMAN NQ. 20

By Idah McGlonc Gibson Now ir\ passing let me give you a concrete illustration of what I have done with myself, i have followed the regime laid down very carefully and am still following it. I think it is worth any sacrifice I have made, and again I Say to every woman that reads these words that every woman can look well unless she is deformed. It is up to the woman. If she cares more for her ease and her stomach than she does for her appearance and her health, she will eat more than she ought and take less exercise than is necessary. I am going close these very personal -confessions by adding that my friends have always marveled that I was a,ble to do so much work with the same enthusiasm I had when I commenced twenty-five years ago—an enthusiasm that I had be-

. Times Pattern Service PATTERN ORDER BLANK Pattern Department, - Indianapolla Times, Indianapolis, ind. -j O 7 f) O iTlnatfl And 15 cent* lor which send pattern No. j “ ' u - Sise MUM Name Address i City

STRAIGHTLINE SPORTS FROCK Design No. 2708 —of printed crepe silk. This straightline sports frock affects plaits at sikjs, to keep its slim silhouette. The V-neckline is accompanied by a scarf collar, which slips through slashed opening in front. The miniature figures show the plaits as part of front and back sections. Merely side and shoulder seams to sew. The collar and tie cut in. one. It's an excellent model for wool jersey. Cuts in sizes 16, j 18 years, 36. 38, 40 and 42 inches bust measure. Size 36 requires 2•% | yards of 32 or 36 inch material with ! Vi yard of 36-inch contrasting. Com- j plete instructions with pattern. Our j patterns are made by the leading Ji fashion designers of New York City I and are guaranteed to fit perfectly. Every day The Times will print ( on this page, pictures showing the ; latest up-to date fashions. This is a practical service for read-1 ers who wish to make their own clothes. You may obtain this pattern by j filling out the accompanying coupon. 1 enclosing 15 cents, coin preferred, and mailing it to the pattern department of The Times. Delivery is made in about one week. Bo sure to write plainly and to inelude pattern number and size. -.- „ -i Recipes By Reader^ NOTE—The Times will pay $1 for each recipe submitted by a reader j and printed in this column. One i recipe is printed daily, except Fri- \ day, when twenty are given. Ad- I dress Recipe Editor of The Times, j Cheeks will be mailed to winners, i Write only one recipe, name, ad- I dress and date on each sheet. ORANGE*.JELLY Place oranges in hot water for a few minutes. Pour off hot water and cool oranges in cold water. They can be peeled easily, this way. Break Into pieces. Put in kettle and add water to come about half way up to the .top of fruit. Cook until juice is extracted, then Tour pulp

GIRLS! WHY NOT Reduce Before Summer?

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gun to lose as I allowed myself to grow fat and lazy. I said to myself I was growing old. I know now that I was only growing lazy I have gone back to taking care of myself. I had thought I did not have time to do it. J know now that if I had not taken time I would have b?en a victim of overeating, overstrained nerves and under exercise. I have lost all the fat scross my shoulders. My arms have become something less columns of fat and my ankles are becoming such a size that I am having all my skirts —which have steadily grown longer since my hips peeled down—made shorter this week. I am feeling better, doing more work and looking better than! I have In two years. * to thou and do likewise. (The Er.d.)

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and Juice in a cohinder to drain. Measure equal parts of juice and sugar into kettle and boll until a little cooled on a plate begins to Jell. Place in jelly glasses and when cool cover with paraffin, Mrs. Alice Smith, 258 West Ray St. Indianapolis.

A Bathing Suit Looks Best on a Slender Figure— Try SAN-GRI-NA at Oar Expense! HARMLESS

If you are ashamed of your figure, especially in a bathing suit, why not try and take off that extra fat and look your best on the beach this immner. If your figure is overburdened byexcen weight yoo owe It to youraelf to try and reduce before the oppressing hot weather get* here—FAT people generally are the one* who •uffer most with the heat —Their fleet swell up; their clothe* feci tight and uncomfortable: they get short of breath and suffer from puffing to an almoat unbearable point—ln summer they are always tired and "all in"—Yet they might get rid of all theaa troubles by reducing—Why not reduce before the intense heat gets here. Thousand* of FAT men and women have used SAN-GRI-NA—Try it yourself today at onr expense. With our guarantee of success or money refunded you are not taking any chance. Follow the simple directions and see what it can do for you. There is no magic, no secret abont SAN-GRt-NA, your own physician can approve. (Shonld there be any doubt in his mind about the safety of this formula we will gladly mail him a free box of SAN-GRr-NA fee analysis upon his request). No redaction over night hut a steady, normal loss of generally from three to four pounds a week should he attained, leaving you stronger and healthier week after week.

y OumA STORY OF A GIRL, 3/ TdDAY A CALLER “I told .Mamie about F>uddy ordering S2OO worth of handkerchiefs from me that morning and I confess I was a little envious as I saw the tender smile that wreathed her lips. I wondered why I had never loved anyone like that, when I wanted to so much. “Buddy is going to send for Tortentio to come to Chicago and teach me. I am going to be his only pupil.” “Is Buddy also coming to Chicago to live?" 1 asked bluntly. “No. He Is going to stay in New York with his wife.” “Then he did tell me the truth." I said quite involuntarily. “He does intend to do that one decent tiling." Mamie didn't ask me what that decent thing was and I asked: “VV'hat are you going to do with your mother? What will you tell her?" “I am going to tell her that I have found a music teacher who will pay me a living wage to be his secretary, and will teach me to sing for nothing. or rather will wait for his money until I am an opera singer. “I am going to borrow twentyfive thousand dollars from Buddy, and I am going to bring home my little thirty dollars a week to mother. Then I am going to pay Tortentio his regular price. Buddy and I have figured it out that this money will keep me with strict economy for three years. By that time I will know if I can really amount to -anything as a |inger. ,“Oh, Judy, I am very, very happy,” Mamie exclaimed as she burst into a torrent of tears. "Tut, tut. What is your friend weeping about? If her eyes are as pretty as yours, my dear. It is very bad business to cloud them over with tears.” We—Mamie and I—had been so taken up with ourselves that we never noticed there was anyone else in the room. When we heard this speech, however, Mamie began hurSTOP ITCHING ECZEMA . Penetrating, Antiseptic Zemo Will Help You. Never mind how often yon have tried and failed, you can atop burning, itching E'-zema quickly by applying Zemo. In a short time usually every trace of Eczema, Tetter. Pimples, Hash, Blackheads and similar skin diseases will bs removed. For clearing the skin and making it vigorously healthy, always uso Zemo, the penetrating, antiseptic liquid. It Is the one dependable treatment for skin troubles of sll kinds. Ask your druggist for a small size 60c or large bottle sl.oo.—Advertisement.

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JUNE 1, 1926

riedly to dry her tears, and I looked up to see Mr. Hathaway Sr„ at our table. “This is *he last place I expected to see.you, Mr. Hathaway." “Why, isn’t it a good place?” “Yes, but it isn’t a stylish place, you know." “Well. Miss Dean, I own this place and a chain of about twenty others tn the city. I often g'n*to one ot them for luncheon. I like (hem better than the bigger places. How did you get along at Mortons today? Did you get your Job?” (Copyright, 1926, NKA Service, Inc.) NEXT: "lie Didn’t Mean It.” PLAI\I COMMENCEMENT Commencement exercises of the Beriault School of Expression will bo held at the Indiana Little Theatre lon Wednesday, June 9. at 8 p. m. The program follows: “Gypsy Love I Song," (Herbert), Beriault triq: ‘‘The Swan Song," (Brooks), Miss Marian S. Lewis; “Here Comes the Bride," (front "Mary (Carey,", Boaher), and “Solitudine" (Sodero), Beirault Trio; “The Highwayman," (Noyes), Miss Alma E. C. Rahe: "Bits o’ Nonsense" (adapted), Miss Thelma Dare Leisure; “Sextet" (Donizetti), Beriault trio. i A scene from tlie “Merchant of j Venice." Act 111, Scene 2, A. Wnync Holeman; "A Legend of Servlee," and “St. Peter at the Gate,” (Van Dyke), Miss Ruby Gilmer; a group of bond songs, “Just a Wearyln’ for You,” “I Love You Truly,” and "A Perfect Day,” by Victoria Montani; an address, "The Secret of the Ages," Arthur J. Beriault. and presentation of diplomas, Mrs. Arthur Beriault. The Beriault trio consists of harpist, Miss Victoria Montani; pianist, Miss Flora M. Sauer, and violinist, Miss Eleanor Jane Robert-

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