Indianapolis Times, Volume 38, Number 49, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 July 1926 — Page 6
PAGE 6
Social: Activities entertainments WEDDINGS BETROTHALS
Mrs. William A, Shideler, who was Miss Julia Anne Hunt, was honor Suest at a charming tea Wednesday afternoon at the home of her mother, Mrs. Edwin A. Hunt, 3939 Washington Blvd. The center hall was gay with large Japanese vases of hollyhocks in pink and white and roses in the two colors were arranged in baskets in the long living room. In the dining /room, the tea table was decorated with Ophelia roses and baby’s breath and lighted with pink tapers in crystal holders. Mrs. Fred W. Glossbrenner, played a number of harp selections during the afternoon. The guests were given miniature bridal bouquets as favors. Mrs. Albert Graham of Philadelphia, Pa., hnd Mrs. George Buck of Sacremento, Cal., were out-of-town guests. Receiving with the hostess were Mesdames F. D. Shideler, William Wilson and Misses Mary Margaret Miller, Frances Hunt, Eugenia Harris, Evelyn Garrett, Henrietta Jungclaus, Frances Peters, Anna Louise Burkert, Betty Wallerich, Emily Wulfson, Agnes Hunt and Helen Robinson. • • * Thet Theta chapter of Sigma Epsilon sorority will be entertained at a four-table bridge party giveh by Misses Margaret Kern, Katherine Foster and Margaret Ittenbach at the home of Miss Kern, 3703 E. New Tork St., Friday evening. The guests will include Misses Florence Donovan, Catherine Callahan, Helen Moore, Mary Regula, Elizabeth Miller, Caroline Marks, Betty Leach, Falba Brindley, Viola Heimsen, Marjorie Miller, Mildred Harris, Audrey Barney and Mrs. Blanche Holtz. • * * Miss Esther M. Bailey, 127 W. Twenty-Ninth St., whose engagement to Cornelius Keyler has been recently 'announced, was honor guest Wednesday evening at a miscellaneous shower given at the home of Miss Anna Louise Cochrane, 3021 Kenwood Ave., by the Standard Bearers of the Capitol Avenue M. E. Church. Miss Bailey is president of the organization. The house was elaborately decorated with garden flowers, four-leaf clovers and silver horseshoes. The gifts ot Miss Bailey were pre--sented in a large rainbow parasol, placed before an immense silvered horseshoe, an expression of the good wishes of the guests for Miss Bailey. Included among the guests were Mesdames Gene Barnhill, Lawrence Eaton and the Misses Bertha Cochrane, Alice Demmick, Elizabeth Demmick, Barbara Light, Esther Owens, Ruth Owens, Stella/ Land. Laurine Doty, Gene Maxfleld, Helen Ernst, Doris McKqwan, Edith Lindstrom. Anna Suiter, Helen Hunt. Assisting were Mrs. E. P. Cochrane and Mrs. Dora E. Bailey. • * * Miss Sallle Rehard, 3339 Ruckle St., gave an informal lunchean at the Indianapolis Athletic Club Wednesday for Miss Nan Allen of Atlanta, Ga„ the house guest of Miss -Rosamond Kittle, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Sloan Kittle, 3444 N. Pennsylvania St. Mr. and Mrs. Kittle and Miss Allen will leave Sunday for the Kittle summer home at Lake Maxinkuckee. * * * A lovely bridge party was given by Miss Billie Mae Kreider of Plainfield, Ind., Wednesday afternoon In honor of Miss Marjorie Chiles, who Will be married to Noble Ropkey Saturday. The living room simulated a summer garden with stalks of pink and rose hollyhocks lining the sides. Wrist corsages were given the guests aa favors, j Guests included Mesdames Austin Clifford, Frank Chiles, Frank W. Ball, Jr.; John Scott Mann. Louis Ott Ward, Wilbur Dwight Dunkel of Rqchester, N. Y., and Misses Martha Flowers, Jeanne Bouslog, Dorothy Drake, Madeline Byrkett. Kathleen Hottel, Marjorie Oakes, Pauline Pierce, Marifrances Ogle, Dorothy Lou Thomas, Helena Seiloff, Dorothy ■ Carroll, Irma Crowe, Frances and Maurlne .faquith, Catherine Reagan, Beatrice Batty, Janet Barnard, Janet Cftpr, Wilma Dunkle, Katherine Headrick, Ruth Amelvena, Elizabeth Michenross, Monzelle Skelton, Dorothy Spooner, Margaret ' Thomas, Dorotha Weaver, Esther Tilford. Martinsville, Ind.; Mary Clerking, Greensburg. and Irma Louise Reeves of Mooresville. * * * A benefit card party will be given this evening at the German Prbtestaut Orphans Home, 1404 S. State St. Mrs. Henry Walters is
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Returns to Florida
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Mrs. Joseph Carleton Holbrook
The house guebt of her parents, Dr. and Mrs. Clark Day, 29 W. For-ty-Second St., Mrs. Joseph Carleton Holbrook, who was Miss Eleanor
chairman in charge of arrangements and will be assisted by Mesdames Edward Wiebke, Andrew Weiss and Alfred R. Leeb. • * * Lawrence N. Helm, 5154 Broadway, has returned from Maysville, Ky. En route, he stopped at Ripley, Ohio, visiting Russell Helm. * * * M’\ and Mrs. J. T. Stewart, 1127 W. Thirty-Fourth St., and Miss Marifrances Thomas, 1513 Central Ave., have returned from a motor trip to Wheeling, W. Va., and points in Pennsylvania. They were gone three weeks. • * * Mrs. A. H. M. Graves, was honor guest at a bridge party given by Mrs. Herbert Grimes, 118 W. ThirtySixth St., Wednesday afternoon. Flowers in pastel shades decorated the house. Guests to meet Mrs. Graves were Mesdames Bruce Childs. C. O. Tucker. Carl B. Shafer, Robert Sturm, W. L. Bridges, Robert Y'oung, Lawrence Huestis, John Downing, T. R. Clevenger, Robert Besty and J. W. Beasley. * * * Mr. and Mrs! Charles B. Dyer, 2033 N. New- Jersey St., after a ten days’ trip to Ocean City, N. J., and,to Philadelphia, have returned home. fc * * Mr. an/d Mrs. James Dissette and daughter of 3176 N. Pennsylvania St., left today for their summer cottage on the rronnds of the Belvedere Club, Charlevoix. MichJ They will remain until September. CIRCLE UNION TO MEET W. C. T. U. Members Urged to Attend Gathering Friday. Circle W. C. T. U. will meet Friday at; 2 p. m. at the women’s banking rooms at Fletcher American National Bank. Mrs. J. W. South, president. urged attendance of the entire membership for consideration of important business. WASH IN Tl.\<E Remove perspiration, stains as soon as you notice them because the longer they are neglected, the more difficult they are to get rid of.
Day, has returned to her home in Tampa, Fla. She came to attend the w-edding of her sister, now Mrs. Richard Harding Stout, which took place in June.
Entertains for Bride-Elect . a. Miss Billie Mae Kreider At her home in Plainfield, Ind., Miss Billie Mae Kreider was host ess Wednesday for la bridge party in honor of Miss Marjorie Chiles, who will be married Saturday to Noble Ropkey. TO MAKE HOME IN EAST Judge and Mrs. T. J. Moll Receive In Honor of Son, Bride. In a pretty setting of pink and white summer flowers, arranged throughout the house in baskets and well pockets. Judge and Mrs. T. J. Moll, 5015 Washington Blvd., received informally Wednesday evening in honor of their son and his wife, Mr. and Mrs. Jewell T. Moll, who have been spending a few days here after their marriage in Douglaston, Long Island, N. Y., June 19. Mrs. Moll was formerly Miss Gertrude Williams. (The young couple will leave for Y’ork this evening to make their home in Douglaston. RUST PROOF Ts new tinware is greased slightly and warmed slowly without burning, it will not rust. * WAFFLE HINT Never wash a waffle iron. Use a steel bristled brush to keep off the crumbs and keep in good condition.
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THE INDIANAPOLIS* TIMES
—Martha Lee Says THERE’S ATTRACTION ABOUT MARRIED LOVERS
Oh, Barpum had the right idea, all right, all right! For apparently there is a fool born every minute. And when they get to be 17, if they’re boys they fall in love with married women, and if they’re girls, they fall in love with married men!
And that of course is because they’ve in love with love, and there seems to be fatal attraction about the people who have had experience in making love, and kuo>v what to say, und how to say it, what look to use and how to use it'. And then the young people of their own age seem so callow .and impossible to them, and there is a lure about having older persons in lore with them paying them little attentions, saying subtle flatteries. And pity comes in to the cast, the same of pity the 17-year-old girl felt when in the novel she has been reading, Lady Guinevere's mistreated and handsome husband falls desperately in love with the milkmaid. “Pity for the husband, not Lady Guinevere, you may be sure.! And added to the general confusion in the heart of seventeen is usually that fatalistic tendency to believe, anyone's lovemaking, even when in the hack of the mind is the knowledge that it might be pure hokum. It's something like counting daisy petals tp test love or counting the seeds in an apple—you remember “One I love, two I love, three I love, I say; four I love with all my heart, five I ,cast away,"—and on and on! In Love With Love Dear Miss l>e: t am 17 and 1 care very much for a fellow of ~0. When na was IS lie named He now realize* Ilia mistake and so is tnlendiit* to *et * divorce. 1 do not so around this fellow
f/er^ ' OamA STORY OF A GIRL- of TODAY EVEN MAMIE SUSPECTS As we drew up in front of Mamie's the whole house was dark, and 1 wondered if she had gone out. 1 • didn't want to talk even with Mamie yet. although I might ask her help’ later. I let myself in quietly and went directly to my room, where before I slept I had made a reckless plan to help Joan out. •‘Well, I don’t know whether it is criminal blackmail or not* I said to myself, “but I am going to get that money from Mr. Robinson for his j daughter. It would be hers in a week or two anyway.” I sometimes wonder if that Is not the way many people argue with tl\pselves when they do things that they know are not exactly right. If they put it over they know the re suit will lie all right. It is the methods they pursue which might mean and punishment if they are not successful. The next morning fate was with me. Before I was up. Mantle brought me in the morning paper. There was a more or less sensational ac count of the death of Miss Cleaver at the Morton Department Store. The paper said she was dead before she arrived at the hospital. Although suicide was not even j hinted at, I was sure that T could | read between the lines and T knew that if the fatal bottle had been j found there would have been a great scandal. As yet there had been no : post-mortem. Mamie looked rather disapproving as she pointed to the story. “Judy,” she said. "Isn't this the ! woman whose name gossip has j linked with that of Mr. Robinson's 1 for years?” | "I helieve so. Mamie.'* T answered I composedly, "although I really knew j nothing nWouf. it until yesterday when one of the 'girls told me something to the effect that Robinson bad grown tired of and was trying to break up the affair.” Mamie looked rather horrified. “Is it possible. Judy, that you went out with him after you knew that? Everyone will think that he has become infatuated with you. Oh. T hope your name will not come into It.” 1 VI don't think it will, Mamie. And besides I didn't go out with Mr. Robinson.” Mamie looked at me very sternly. “Were you not In the Robinson car when-you called to me?" “Yes, hut I was alone. .Mamie.” I said reproachfully, “I don’t helieve I would suspect you even If things spoke more eloquently against you even than did a Rolls-Royce car with a Robinson monogram on the door panel.” (Copyright, 1926, NEA Service, Inc.)
Next: Money Never Buys Peace. 7 RESTORE FRESHNESS When lettuce or salad greens are wilted, wash them carefully In a pan of cold water into which two tablespoons of lemon juice or vinegar have been added. I>et stand an hour or so, then wash in cold water and they will be quite restored. SAVES SCRATCHES It is advisable to protect the bottom of a sink with a rubber mat when you have the dishpan It in. Before Baby Comes JUST bow \o case much unnecessary suffering tor yourself is one of the most Important things in the world for you to know, right now, raother^o-be! Learn the truth, folIn* tin- simple mi'll! od of an eminent |s/f L *" ■ physician who dedi- < rated his I'lirs work to this great aeeomplishment lor your benefit. , J EH Ml "I suffered only So BMP - minutes with my last Mil Child, but suffered W t%.- ; agonies with t tins' ;>r> ' us ■ 1-ildren " I3|S W.t's. O' e i I*l US- *&*, ' mother Who 11--.I 'Mother a ■aaKga{H| Kriend " MGefeußßaaSia H It; g h t from BHf this day on. and . ■V'.SaigfSSy todjSA -It childbirth HHI "Mothers Friend should he used. Write Bradfield Reg- WMti >fir>glg_—-SHI ulator Cos.. Dept. BA n 7. Atlanta. Ga., for free Booklet (sent in Plain envelope) telling many things every expectant mother should know "Mother * Friend” is sold at all good drug store*. Begin now and you will realize the wltjUom of doing so as the weeks roll by I—Advertisement-
*and hrt stays away from me. because we know pejnle might talk it wo went together before tie gets his liivorre. He seems to tare a lot for me. and. although *1 do not know what real love is. 1 car<* a great deal for him. lam not influencing him in any way whatsoever about divorcing liis wife, for I think if they stay together I will be able to forget him. as I am still young. He ts a very nice fellow. very considerate of others, lias good sense and is a steady worker. Do you think I should forget nim entirely or keci waiting as I have been? Do you think a second-hand husband is as rood as a first-hand huszand? T GOLDEN LOCKS And how can you be sure that the young man is not using you as a sort of catspaw to either force his wife’s affections, or her divorce? It looks as though he had married in haste and was repenting at leisure. And unless he has something very definite to hang a divorce on, it will take him about two "years to get free. And are you going to sit around waiting all that time for him? Especially when you admit that you do not love him though you are attracted to him? I think you'd better confine your interest to single men and boys snd go with lots of them —not just oneT It isn't necessary to forget this youngster entirely as a friend, but forget him as a lover. As , for secondhand husbands. I infer that you aren t quite sure you'd want a secondhand one. You'd rather have a brand new one. wouldn't you? Well I think you'd better prefer the brand new variety—until you are some years older at least.
GOLDEN WEDDING IS CELEBRATED Friends Surprise Mr.-and Mrs. Lucius B. Swift. In celebration of the golden wedding of Mr. and Mrs. Lucius B. Swift. 716 E. Fourteenth St., a large number of their friends surprised them Tuesday evening. About 100 guests were present and greetings in the form of letters .and telegrams from friends of Mr. and Mrs. Swift from all parts of the country were read. Mrs. Theodore Roosevelt sent a greeting expressing congratulations and referring to the friendship between the former president and Mr. Swift. Another greeting was from Prof. Jotyi T. Abel of the medical school at John Hopkins University. Mr. and Mrs. Swift were presented with several valuable books, from a group of friends.. The books, were presented by Edgar H. Evans. BUYING HINT During the summer months, purchase flour and meal in small quantities at a time, as they have a tendency to become rancid, and they are frequently attacked by worms or insects. YOUR ICE BILL Never put warm food into the refrigerator. It raises the temperature and Increases the ice bill.
Newer Efficiency jo^^Homewws Can you imagine a cleaner that is more than twice (131 r c) as efficient in the same cleaning time as The Hoover? We couldn’t either until we demonstrated for many hours the marvelous performance of The New and Greater Hoover. If you’ll phone us the day and the hour we’ll he glad to send one out and let you see this wonderful Cleaner at work on your own rugs. You’ll see a principle so new and so remarkable that all your 1 previous ideas of rug cleaning will be changed—it’s called “Positive Agitation.” You have a treat in store. SPECIAL TERMS ' $1.25 Weekly Phone Today for Demonstration VONNEGUrS j 120 E. Washington St. Lincoln 2521 j , | Ofce GREATER
Times Pattern Service PATTERN ORDER BLANK Pattern Department, ' Indianapolis Time*, Indianapolis, Ind. - 2 7 9 3 Inclosed find 16 cent* for which send pattern No. Size .... aName •••£••• * * Addreaa .•.••a * City a
'# ' ,\ 2793 / \ ' 0
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. Y'ou may obtain this pattern by j filling out the accompanying coupon, enclosing 15 cents, coin preferred, j and mailing It to the pattern depart- j ment of The Times. Delivery is made, in about one week. Be sure to write plainly and to in- j elude pattern number and size. FRECKLES Get Rid of These Ugly Spots Safely and Surely and Have a Beautiful Complexion With OTHINE ' DOTBLE STRENGTH) MONET BACK IF IT FAILS. SOLD BY DRlti AND DEPARTMENT STORES EVERYWHERE.
Sports Frock Smart sports frock stimulating the two-piece mode of washable fiat silk crepe, is shown In Design No. 2793. Fashioned of crepe ole chine, washable silk broadcloth, crepe Roma, georgette crepe, linen Jersey, shantung and Chinese damask. The pattern for this smart sporta dres can be had in sizes 16, IS years. 36, 38, 40. 42 and 44 inches bust measure. For the 36-inch size. 3'/* yards of 40-inch material is sufficient. The miniature sketches show the ease with which It can be made. After the two-piece skirt is seamed and box plaits stitched at it Is attached to the two-piece waist. The dress is practically finished, ready for callor and sleeves. Our patterns are made by the leading Fashion Designers of New Y’ork City, and are guaranteed to At perfectly. N
Recipes By Readers
NOTE —The ffimes will pay $1 for i each recipe submitted by a reader and printed in this column. One | recipe is printed daily, except Fri- 1 day. when twenty are given. Ad- j dress Recipe Editor of The Times. | Checks will be mailed to winners. Write only one recipe, name, address and date on each sheet. CASSKROLK OF TORK SHOULDER Cut slices of fresh shoulder of r pork into two or three pieces each j and sear them in hot grease. riace
CUNBURK Apply Vicks very lightly— it soothes the tortured skin. VICKS V Vapoßub Gw 17 Million Jawß tfirj Ymarh*
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JULY 8, 1920
them in ai casserole and to each ten pieces add ono-half cup stewed tomatoes. one minced onion, two teaspoons of salt, and two and threefourths cups of hot water. Bprlnkleß six tablespoons of raw rice over the" top of the meat, dot with butter and bake in a moderate oven until tender. Mrs. C. L. Hathwaj , 710 N. Main St., Martinsville, Ind. The Grape Is a Treasury # of elements necessary to health—• vltanunes, salts, iron, and other*. It has great distetic value. In Europe people seek the vineyards for the “grape cure,” eating the grapes fresh from the vine. Todd’s Tonic is based on the pure, health-giving juice of the grape, with the addition of tbnlc Ingredients of recog. nlzed worth in restoring failing appetites. Nature sometimes requires a little Judicious help. For loss of appetite and kindred Ills, take Todd's Tonic. For sale at all Haag drug stores and all other drug atores throughout the section. Todds Tonic Laxative Tablets—“A dose at night—makes everything right."—Advertisement.
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