Indianapolis Times, Volume 38, Number 54, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 July 1926 — Page 8

PAGE 8

Social Activities ENTERTAINMENTS WEDDINGS BETROTHALS

Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Reed, 5.60 N. Keystone Ave., announce the marriage of their daughter. Miss Ruth Reed, to Byron Emerson Commons, son of Mrs. Louise Commons, which took place at the home of “the officiating clergyman, the Rev. W, B. Farmer, Saturday evening. Miss Bertha Whetstine was bridesmaid and Donald Clark was best man. After a short wedding trip Mr. and Mrs. Commons will be at home at 3728 N. Illinois St. after July 15. * * * Mr. and Mrs. N., Borts, 2314 N. Meridian St., have -as their house guest Mrs. A. Borts of Ottawa, Canada. • * * The Phi Sigma Pi Sorority will entertain this evening at the home of Miss Margaret Semmerler, 3239 Kenwood Ave. * • • Miss Margaret Sullivan, 261 N. Rural St., was the hostess for a surprise party and shower given by the Bide-A-Wee Club Monday evening for Mrs. Dorothy Johnson, a recent bride. Special guests were Mesdames Ann Alexander. Mary Clare Towey, Genevieve Matheney and Misses Mary Dugan. Marie Dietrick anil. Minnie Weisshaar. Dr. and Mrs. Luther Williams, 3542 N. Pennsylvania St., have had as their house guests Mr. and Mrs. Marion Trip and daughter Margaret, formerly of Lagrange, 111.; Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Griswold and Miss Ruth Alden of Chicago. Mr. and Mrs. Trip will leave by motor for New York this evening, when hey will make their home. • • • Mrs. Verlyn Parker, 1015 St. Peter St., entertained this afternoon at her home. Among the guests were Mesdames Mary Martin, Blanch Goolsby, Martha Moore, Marjorie Freeland and Doris Bittmeyer. • • • Koran Temple, Daughters of the the Nile, No. 30. will present a flag to the Boy Scouts at the reservation, adjoining Ft. Benjamin Harrison, Thursday at 7 p. m. Mrs. Claude K. Either, 73 Layman Ave., will make lhe presentation. • • • Mr. and Mrs. Edward Forry, 2134 N. Alabama St., have gone to their summer home at Roaring Brook. Mich. • • • After a visit with their parents Mr. and Mrs. John J. Mahrdt, 525

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To Live at Newcastle

Before her recent marriage, Mrs. Wade W. Bouslog was Miss Laura Huffard, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. B. O. Huffard, 764 Middle

Bride Returns From Wedding Trip

Mrs. Alfred Natho

After a wedding trip which included a visit to the sesquicentennial exposition at Philadelphia and a stay at Washington, D. C., and at Atlantic City, Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Natho axe at home at 3603 Washington Blvc!. W. Dr. Woodruff PI., Mr. and Mrs. Otto C. Mahrdt have returned to their home in Hollywood, Fla. • • • Mrs. Floyd F. Vandewark of Fort Collins and daughter, Marthia Katherine, were the honor guests at a luncheon given by Mrs. Robert B. Douglas, Tuesday, at her home In Edgewood. The house was prettily decorated with summer flowers and the luncheon table was lighted with white tapers, with a fiat bowl of blue bachelor buttons as a centerpiece. Covers were laid for Mesdames Douglas, Vandawark, William H. Book, Jessie Chalifour, Howard Pattison, Misses Elizabeth Moore and Martha Katherine Vandawark. • * • Miss Grace and Miss Olive Magruder, 112 Hoyt Ave., entertained the members of the Kappa Tau Epsilon sorority, Tuesday evening, with a buffet supper. The guests Included Misses Merrill Ashley, Eva True, Belva Ogden, Fern Keach, Lucille Williams, Hermanda Agger, Ruby Frakes, Clara. Clark, Orpha Bedle, Gertrude Steffe, Ray Demaree, Margaret Hindle, Cleo Evans, Gertrude Knauss. • * * Mr. and Mrs. Edward Starbrock, 912 N. Jefferson Ave., announce the marriage of their daughter, Miss Helen Frieda Starbrock, to Robert B. Wallace, which took place Tuesday morning. Mr. and Mrs. Wallace have gone on a wedding trip and after Aug. I will be at home at 912 N. Jefferson Ave. * • • Mrs. H. L. Richardt, 410 N. Meridian St., has as her house guest her mother, Mrs. Albert Graham, of Philadelphia, Pa. • * • Miss Marjorie A. Taylor, 3715 N. Meridian St., who has been spending several weeks with relatives at St. Petersburg, Fla., has returned and is with her grandfather,’ John C. Taylor, 3721 N. Capitol Ave. * * * Mr. and Mrs. John McPherson of Long Island, N. Y„ have returned home after a visit with Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Bridgin, 1136 N. La Salle St. Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Bridgins entertained at the Hoosier Athletic Club Sunday for Mr. and Mrs. McPherson and Saturday vening, Mr. and Mrs. H. J. Bridgins entertained at their home on Arlington Ave., <for them. * * * Mrs*. Jackson Carter, 3715 N. Meridian St., and Mrs. Nona Fudge l , 2152 N. Meridian St., have returned from a ten-day stay at the Edgewater Beach Hotel, Chicago. * * * Mr. and Mrs. Alexander Cavins, Sr., 1232 N. Alabama St., have gone to Detroit, Mich., to visit their daughter, Mrs. Russell I. Richardson. TO RETAIN FLAVOR Keep coffe In bright tin or glass, tightly closed away from the light, where it can be dry and cool. THOSE LOUD CHEESES Fancy, strong smelling cheeses should be kept wrapped In tin foil, then In waxed paper and inside a crock or box In a cool place.

—Photo by C. R. Porter. Jr. Mrs. Wade W. Ito using

Drive, Woodruff Place. Mr. and Mrs. Bous og are on a wedding trip to Chicago (jnd the lakes and after Aug. 1, will be at home at Newcastle, Ind.

CONTRIBUTE TO HOSTESS’ FUND Open House for Cadets in Camp at Fort. W T ith the opening of the citizens’ military training camp at Ft. Benjamin Harrison today, the hostess' house, maintained by the Women's Overseas Service League , was opened, with Miss Ruth Balluff of Evanston, 111., as chief hostess. She was assisted by Miss Hildegarde Hilden of Cleveland, Ohio; Miss Mary Galt, Toledo, Ohio, and Indianapolis members of the league who have volunteered their services. Col. George D. Freeman, C. M. T. C., commandant, asked the league to carry on the work’ as the army lacked money. The need was met by contributions from the league, which pledged the salary of one hostess, the seventh district American Legion .auxiliary, Service Club, Service Star Legion, American War Mothers, Caroline Scott Harrison chapter, D. A. R., and Rainbow Association. &8> . WOMANS 3 DAY g Sumner'"* Turkey Breast When I was a child my eyes bunged out of my head at the tale my grandmother told me of the day when the Wild turkey darkened the sky and the wheat had failed. Platters of sliced turkey breast were the family bread, she said, and I marveled at one so blest. “But we tired of It,” she said. “We would have given all the game in the world for one slice of bread.” What She Wore! The fifty pounds included a tenpound body harness of whale-bone and buekrum, an eight-pound leather stomacher, a five-pound farthingalebone and leather pannier—fivepound shoes with ccrk soles eight Inches thick, four pounds of five petticoats, an eight-pound headdress with ruff, and a ten-pound court dress. Berries and Prunes Eugene Field, the poet, refused to, eat strawberries at parties because he said it would spoil him —he couldn’t return to his hoarding house and be content with prunes. The landlady and prune joke is out of date today. Landladies have learned, for Instance, that a fruit sponge may vary the prunes. Made like this; Two tablespoons gelatin, % cup cold water, 1 cup boiling water, % cup sugar, 1 cup grated pineapple or fresh strawberries, 3 egg whites, 1 cup whipped cream. Soak gelatin In cold water 5 minutes and dissolve In boiling water. Add sugar and ts ults and set in cool place until mixture begins to thicken, stirring occasionally. When thick beat until frothy and fold in stiffly beaten egg whites and cream. Pile by spoonfuls in sherbet glasses. Chill and serve with custard sauce. Hairpins and Tapestry The same feeling of the commonplaceness of too much luxury Is found in a fascinating new hook called “By the City of the Long Sand.” -The author, Alice Tisdale Hobart, is the wife of an oil man stationed In the city of that name in China. She writes —‘'Take from your town the things you consider necessities and put in their places the things you have always thought of as luxuries. Think of all the) prosaic things of an American town fts thrilling, and all the thrilling things as prosaic. y That is what our towns here are like. Any number of servants, but plumbing and steam heat are luxuries. We can buy ourselves curios meh as only the rich aspire to at aome, but often we cannot secure a spool of thread. All of us can afford to buy beautiful hand-made silks and mtins, but in these ten years I have never lived nearer than a day’s journey to a package of hairpins.”

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Times Pattern Service t PATTERN ORDER BLANK Pattern Department. t Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis. Ind. 2 7 9 6 find 15 cent* for which send pattern No. Size . ' 1 Name a V”* ****** * Address * ' City .*

Decidedly Effective Today’s design is No. 2796. Lofiely in its simplicity, fashioned of peach colored fiat crepe. Design No. 2796 has plaits at center-front for smartness. The tie-strings attached to trimming pieces, which are caught in underarm seams, add a decorative note. Best of all—it is so easily made. Sheer plaited inset ready to be stitched to dress] The outline sketches are exactly as your material appears after it has been cut out. It Is most attractive fashioned of June rose hhiffon, sun-ni-colored crepe de chine, figured georgette crepe, coral colored rajah silk and green and white polka-dot-ted silk crepe. The pattern is furnished in sizes 16, 18 years, 36, 38, 40, 42 and 44 inches bust measure. The 36-inch size requires 3% yards of 40-inch material. Pattern, price 15 cents, in stamps or coin (coin preferred.) Our patterns are made by the leading Fashion Designers of New York City, and are guaranteed to fit perfectly. Every day%Tlie 'Bimes will print on this page, pictures showing the latest up-to-date fashions. This is a practical service for readers who wish to make their own clothes. You may obtain this pattern by filling out the accompanying coupon, enclosing 15 cents, coin preferred, and mailing it to the pattern department of The Times. Delivery Is made in about one week. Be sure to write plainly and to Include pattern number and size.

Sister Mary's Kitchen

By Sister Mary BREAKFAST—ChiIIed melon, cereal cooked with dates, thin cream, breadcrumb omelet, crisp toast, milk, coffee.' LUNCHEON —Filled potato balls, sliced tomatoes, brown bread, prunes stuffed with peanut butter, milk, tea. DINNER—Hot meat loaf, Delmonico potatoes, creamed carrots, molded Swiss chard salad, strawberry blanc-mange, graham bread, milk, coffee. The leaves 'of <£wiss chard are cooked and molded for a salad just as spinach Is. Hard-cooked eggs can be used for garnishing and a French dressing or mayonnaise served with the salad. . Filled Potato Bails Two and one-half cups mashed potatoes, two-thirds cup milk, one egg, one cup flour, one teaspoon baking powder, one-half teaspoon salt, oneeighth teaspoon pepper, left-over choped meat, one cup white saufte. Beat egg well and add to mashed potatoes with milk, salt and pepper. Mix and sift flour and baking powder and stir Into potato mixture. Drop from tip of spoon onto a wellbuttered baking pan. Flatten slightly making a depression in the center of each ball. Combine chopped meat and white sauce and fill each cup with this mixture. Cover with potato mixture and brush over with melted butter. Bake about thirty minutes in a moderately hot oven and serve at once. , (Copyright, 1926, NEA Service, Inc.)

Recipes By Readers

NOTE —The Times will pay $1 for ach recipe submitted by a reader and printed In this column. One recipe is printed dally, except Friday, when twenty are given. Address Recipe Editor of The Times. Checks will be mailed to winners. Write only one refclpe, name, address and date on each sheet. CRESS AND RADISH SALAD Arrange cress In a shallow dish previously rubbed with a cut clove or garlic. Cut crisp, long, young radishes into match-like straws, pile topsy-turvy in center of cress, and sprinkle thickly with finely sliced rings of new onionr or finely chopped chives. Just before serving cover with French dressing. Mrs. Charles Pollard, R. F. D., C, Box 150, Indianapolis (Ben Davis). Says He Has No Sign of Asthma Now Cough and Wheeze Disappeared In 1924 and Never Returned. Readers who suffer from asthma and bronchial trouble will be interested in a letter written by Newal Hamlyn, Wanamaker, Ind. (within 10 miles of Indianapolis). He says: "After suffering severely for several months my doctor pronounced my trouble asthma. I coughed very hard and tt was so tight that 1 thought It would tear me up. I was getting weaker all the time and was losing In weight. I took cold easily, had shortness of breath and wheezed so I couldn't take a deep breath, and would choke up so that I could not sleep. I only weighed 127 pounds. I had tried everything without obtaining relief, and had been confined to my bed for a week when I started taking Nacor In September, 1924. I used three bottles of Nacor in 1924 and felt fine. All asthma symptoms left, gained until 1 now weigh 140 pounds. Sleep fine without wheezing, coughing or choking, and have I never had a return of my trouble. I , have been able to work all whiter, outdoors in all kinds of weather, and have ' never felt better in my life.’’ Hundreds of people who suffered for years from asthma, bronchitis and severe chjrpnic coughs, have told how their trouble left and n*ver returned Their letters and a bok of vital and Interesting Information about these serious diseases will be sent free by Nacor Medicine Cos., 413 State Life Building, Indianapolis, Ind. Tho xnoro serious your cjMe, thw'more Important this free Information may be to you. ri| or writ* for It today.—Advertisement

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GRAND LODGE OF SORROW Elks Dedicate $3,000,000 Temple as Memorial to World War Dead. Bv United Press CHICAGO, July 14.—The “Grand Lodge of Sorrow” convened today with approximately 150,000 members of the B. P. O. E. In attendance to dedicate the $3,100,000 temple erected in Chicago as a memorial to Elks who died In the World War. The dedication was the principal event of the sixty-second annual convention of the lodge. AVIATOR FACES TRIAL, Bv United' Press RICHMOND. Ind.. July 14. Walter Anderson, stunt aviator, Is facing trial for assault and battery because he flew so low over a golf course that players ran to refuge under trees.

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7 Ver^ ' Oum'~Tsua,yn A STORY OF -A, TODAY

DR. FLINT INTERMEWS JUDY "Now you, my dear,” said Mamio, looking at me with something that I could not explain in her face, “you, who only a few weeks ago had nothing to your name after your bag had been stolen, are talking of getting fifty thousand dollars from a man whom you hardly know as If it was perfectly easy.” “Good Lord, Judy, do you think you are a vamp? I think you have gone crazy over something you have seen at the movies.” “Do you know, Judy, how frightened you were that night when you i thought you were penniless and alone in this great big city? I think I have never seen such bewildered agony on any face In all my life.” "You will never see it again on my face. Mamie,” I told her. “I’ve learned a lot since that time. I always knew I had magnetism, and now I think I know how to use It.” “Have you learned to separate a man from fifty thousand dollars of his money? You may find that a little different from asking foi* a box of candy,” Mamie said with as much sarcasm as a girl of her temperament was capable. "That remains to be seen.” I answered as I put on my hat to go to the store. I was early, but I had a shrewd hunch that I would be asked to come to Doctor Flint’s office and I wanted to get that over before I met either Mr. Robinson or some sharp reporter, who would be sure to dig up the fact that I was one of the last people to see poor Martha Cleaver alive. Sure enough there was a cash girl at my locker, and the moment I hung up my hat she said. "Miss Dean. Doctor Flint asked if you would come to his office.” “Certainly,” I answered and followed her. Doctor Flint met vne with a very serious face as I opened the door. I could see that he was trying to smile, but he made me feel that If he smiled very long his face would crack. "Will you he seated. Miss Dean?” I sat down, but I didn’t speak a word. That got the doctor’s goat at once. Finally, after clearing his throat once or twice, the old hypocrite said most pompously. "I will not disguise from you, Miss Dean, that the Morton Department Store Is placed in ft most disagreeable position by the death of Miss Cleaver.” He stopped and waited for me to speak. "Yes?” The word was as insolent as I could make It. (Cooyflght. 1926. NEA Service, Inc.) Next—. Judy Is Insolent. GOLD COAST ROBBED Bv Faffed Press CHICAGO, July 14.—Two robbers bound David Howard, wealthy bill posting concern head, and three Negro maids in his Gold Coast home and escaped with S4OO In money and jewelery valued at $3,000.

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Martha Lee Say* THE FIRST YEAR IS . USUALLY THE HARDEST

The first hundred years are the hardest, say the wags I And the answer to that is that anything worthwhile is hard—and life is worthwhile, modern philosophy to the contrary.

But It Is true that the first year of, married life, or possibly the first two, are the hardest. That’s a time of adjustments, and readjustments, und breaking downs, and building ups, and conflict with totally new problems and family life. And anybody with a stiff neck Is going to get it snapped off—no question about it. Because If you won’t bend you must break. Neither party should be obliged to do all the changing. It’s a mutual job. "I'm not marrying his family.” says the haughty young lady—but in a way she is. Especially if they live In the same town. She has to meet his mother, his father, his peculiar Aunt Ida. his blustery Uncle Tom, his small brother and his big sister, and all his relatives, minor and major. And she must be able to accept his people, and he must be able to accept hers with gracious open mindedness, and sweet understanding. "For thy people shall be my people.” It Is a union, not only of selves, but of families. In-Laws Dear Martha Lee: I Just sot married and all my hr.aband a brother-in-law. £ia .l.tw-ln-law. call hia mother mother Now ia that right? What should I call her? She la not my mother, never could be. Should we be rxpected to call our husband's mother, "mothers la um* her name too formal? I like her very much, but 1 don’t like to hear all ofthem croiftjr around, "mjther this, and mother that. ' What would they call their own. real mother, then? To me th word belong. to one person only—and that e each person's mother. What ugI would suggest that unless you learn to adapt yourself more readily to the changing conditions that matrimony brings, that you're likely to be a mighty unhappy young lady one of these days—and before that first year is over. You show a stone wall disposition and a clanlsh narrowVptlndedness. Your mother-in-law probably Is the motherly sort of person to whom It would seem wrong not to apply the name Mother. According to all the moral meanings concerning marriage the oneness of it would Imply that your husband’s mother was your mother as well as his—if you follow me, so that you could call his mother “Mother" as well as your own. Or, If you couldn’t bring yourself to so desecrate the name, call her Mother Jones, or Smith, as the case may be, as lots of young people do; or. If she's young enough, call her by her first name, or some pet name. But don't build up prejudicial barriers by calling her Mrs. So-and-So. BABY MURDER SIFTED Body, With Head Crushed. Found Burled on Farm. Bv United Pres PERU, Ind., July 14.—Sheriff Jerry Fager and Acting Coroner V. L. Wagner are investigating discovery of a week-old baby, burled on a farm near here yesterday. The Infant was believed to have been murdered as a blow on the right side of Its head had crushed the skull. Some clothing found with the body and a small red blanket In which the Infant was wrapped are the only clews.

JULY 14, 1926

Belgium May Give King New Powers Bv United Press BRUSHING, July 14.—Full pow ers of Jurisdiction over financial and food questions are given King Albert of Belgium In a bill deposited In the chamber. The move strengthens the king's hand at a time when the condition of the Belgian franc Is causing grave concern. It is expected that the govern ment will take steps to reduce the exports of coal and the Imports of cereals In the effort to atablllse the currency.

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