Indianapolis Times, Volume 38, Number 56, Indianapolis, Marion County, 16 July 1926 — Page 10

PAGE 10

gOCIAL Activities ENTE, KTAItIMBNTS WEDDINGS BETROTH AI >9

A pretty porcli-bridgß party was given by Mrs. Marlon Eppert at the home of her mother, Mrs.vE. L. Osborne, 645 E. Thirty-Fourth / St., Thursday afternoon, in honor of Mrs. William Shideler, a recent bride. The porch and house were decorated with baskets and wall pockets of daisies and other summer flowers, and the favors corsage bouquets of*daisies, coreopsis and larkspur, tied with bows of yellow tulle. The guests included Mesdames F. J. Feeney, W. L. A. Atkinson, John H. Heiney, Joseph P. Moore, Ralph Clark and Howard Bates and Misses Florence' Carter, Genevieve McMellis, Lillian Martin ' and Ona Boyd. * * • Mrs. W. G. Evans, 4220 Graceland Ave., entertained Thursday evening for Miss Mary Jeanette Evans of Pittsboro, the house guest of Mr. and Mrs. Evans. Guests to meet Miss Evans were Mesdames H. B. Todd, Koran Ashjian, Lafayette Flifer, Ollie Todd and John Neff and Misses Naey Hall, Arax Ashjian, Jean Bodenhamer, Pearl Todd and Mary Margaret Strickler. * • • Entertaining with six tables of luncheon-bridge, Mrs. Charles A. Stanley, 637 E. Maple Rd. Blvd., and Mrs. George Houseman, 3536 N. Meridian St., were hostesses at the Columbia Club Wednesday afternoon. Covers were laid for Mesdames Hobart Litteral, John Darmody, Robert Emmett Kelly, Willard Hopkins, J. Hastings Fisk, Parker James, Charles Barth, Ferd Hollweg, Irl Frederick, Walter Rehg, Irvin Fendrick, Floyd Mattice, Thomas Close, Ray Mulvihill, Merritt Fields, Kenneth Craft, Carl Meyers, Rogers, H. J. McAnley, J. Raymond Marsh, Jesse Roush, Bruce Harley and Samuel Trotsky. ♦ * • Members of the Sigma Epsilon sorority will be entertained this evening with a bridge party a,t the home of Miss Caroline Mark, 1421 King Ave. The proceeds of the party will be donated from the Theta chapter to the mother chapter at Washington. The guests will be Mesdames Robert Ittenbaeh and Blanche Holtz and Misses Florence Donovan, Elizabeth Miller, Kathryn Foster, Margaret Kern, Mary Ryan, Helen Moore, Kathryn Callahan,/ Falba Brindley, Viola Hermsen and Marjorie Miller. The sorority will hold .a rush tea Sunday afternoon, July 25. Miss Viola Hermsen was elected chairman for plans. She will be assitsed by Miss Margaret Kern and Miss Kathryn Callahan. • * • Miss Carolyn Kelly of Mitchell, Ind., was the honor guest at a threetable bridge party given by Mrs. Raymond M, Maguire, 538 E. ThirtySecond St., Thursday evening. The house was decorated with garden flowers in white and yellow and appointments and confections were in the ' two colors. Guests included

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Miss La Verda Lamb"

After having completed the requirements for the Master of Arts degree at Columbia University in June. Miss La Verda Lamb, daughter of Mr. and Mrs, V. E. Lamb, 3222 Bellefontaine St., visited friends in Atlantic City. She returned home Thursday to spend the summer with her parents.

Mesdames Herman Galfles, Guy -O. Williamson, Ernest Dinwiddle, Nordeau Heaps, Clifford Myers, and Jesse Rouch, and *Misses Eleanor McQueen, Miami, Fla.; Kathryn King, Helen Shirley, Frances AufderheMe and Martha Wharton. Mrs. Ernest R. Becker, 5208 Central Ave., gave a bridge party at her home, Thursday, in honor of Mrs. Cass Connoway of Buffalo, N. Y., who is_house guest of Mrs. M. E. Hiner. The rooms were decorated with summer flowers, arranged in baskets. Guests included Mesdames George De Haven, James McNamara, Frank Bryan, M. J. Manniz, Charles Wiltsie, Horace McClelland, Ransom Griffin, John Rieman, Mable Steven and J. H. Hofman. \ •\* * Mrs. Sarah Wafmer, 3845 N. Capitol Ave., will receive informally all day today, observing the golden weeding of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert H. Hayslett. ** • - A lawn party for her grandchildren, Elizabeth and Jack Haggerty, of Los Angeles, Cal.,' was given Thursday afternoon by Mrs. Emma C. Haggerty at her home, 1712 N. Pennsylvania St. A program of dancing was held on the lawn 4 which was decorated with balloons. The guests were the Misses Mary Katherine Sexton, Margaret Dofld Marr”ret Faber. Louise Fogarty, Marian Newman, Betty Ann Leach, Frances Hicks, ; Courtney Whitaker, Martha Louise and Mary Jean Smith, Lucille Hickey, Madeline Speer, Messrs. Francis and Morris Fogarty and David Speer. • • * • Mrs. Hugh Green of 3630 N. ridian St., has as her house guest her sister, Miss Louise Schultz, of Chicago. Other guests of Mrs. Green’s are Miss Mary Hgngel and Miss Kathryn Beacon of South Dakota. Mrs. Green will entertain at her home on Saturday in honor of her guest. • • • The Ladies’ Auxiliary of the City Fireman Association held their outing at Broad Ripple Park Thursday afternoon. Games, swimming, and a boat ride in the evening, were features of the entertainment. Chief Jesse Hutzell, was jpaest of honor. A picnic supper was'served at 6 p. m. The committee in charge of arrangements included Mrs. Ha.rry H. Fulmer, president; Mrs. John Miller and Mrs. J. J. O'Brien. • • * Mrs. R. R. Bunch, 3152 Washington Blvd., and daughter Marjorie will go to Pence Springs, W. Va., today, (where they will ppend the remainder of the summer. • • • Miss Louise Frisbie, 125 S. Hawthorne lane, will leave Saturday for Oakland, Cal., where she will attend the Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority’s convention. * * * Mr. and Mrs. Morris Edwards, 33 N. Irvington Ave.; Mr. anad Mrs. Austin Clifford, Miss Minnie Adams and Mrs. J. W. Adams will leave shortly on a motor trip to Mackinac Island, Mich. • * * New officers of the Indianapolis Altrusa Club will be installed with appropriate ceremonies at the Columbia Club at 6:30 p. m., according to Eva Storch, secretary. Announcement of committees, which will guide the activities of the club during the coming year, will be made *by the new president, Helen Elizabeth Clayton. +. * • Camp No. 3, T. O. O. A. will meet to install officers tonight at Druids' Hall, 29 Vz S. Delaware St. • • • The George H. Thomas W. R. C. No. 20, will meet Monday at 2 p. m. in the new Grand Army Hall, at 512 N. Illinois St. Mrs. Maud Allraon, will preside. GIRL’S CAMP TO CLOSE Open Again July 31 for Weeks Period. The Camp Fire Girls’ Camp, six miles northwest of Noblesville, has been running successfully since June 19. Cfimp Alahi will close Saturday, for two weeks, while the executive. Miss Bernice Boynton, and the camp councilors attend the Camp Fire Girls training camp, at Sandusky, Ohio. i Miss Boynton, and Miss Vera Conover of Terre Haute, dietition at Camp Alahi, will spend only 'one week at the camp. VThe second week Miss Boynton will visit other camps, in northern Ohio, southern Mchigan. Miss .ABeen Carpenter of lowa City, lowa, who is swimming director at Camp Alahi, will remain two weeks at the training camp. Camp Alahi will open again July 31, for three more weeks.

CHRISTIAN CHURCH ASSEMBLY WILL OPEN ON SUNDAY Fairview Meeting Program Includes Several Prominent Speakers. The Fairview Christian Assembly which opens Sunday and will continue through July 25, will entertain speakers of prominence from all parts of the country. On July 21 /‘Woman’s Day,” the program will begin at Fairview Park at 2:30 p. m. Mrs. J. W. Stearns, prominent in women's work in St. Louis, Mo., and a former resident of this city, will discuss ‘‘Woman's Work in the Church.” Mrs. Thomas Paddock will preside, with the musical program under the direction of Mrs. Homer Dale. An attendance of 1,200 has been pledged for the Special Day program. On July 25, the communion service will be under the general (direction of the Rev. Joseph D. Armistead, Downey Avenue Christian Churoh porter. The Rev. Gerald L. K. Smith will preside over the has fellowship, inspiration, instruction and recreation as its purpose. The first rehearsal of the 600, voice choir, was held at the Central Christian Church, Wednesday night and the final rehearsal will be held at the big tent at Fairview Saturday, at 7:45 p. m. The singers will be directed by the Rev. V. P. Brock, with Mrs. Brock as accompanist, assisted by Miss Edith Loftin. Plans for the program were made by the Rev. Ephraim Lowe, the Rev. L. B. Burocker, the Rev. Homer Dale and the Rev. Smith. \

Harem Life Told in M f Cormick Action Bu United Press NEW YORK, July 16.—A fantastic story of harem life and love affairs of the late e*-sultan Mehmed VI of Turkey was told here as the law firm of Goldstein, on ' behalf of Sydney Bermafl, obtained an, order from the Surrogate’s court requiring Harold F. McCormick, Chicago millionaire, to appear for examination on Oct. 19. The examination is in connection with the investigation of present whereabouts of property said to have belonged to Mrs. Berman, who died in Los Angeles in 1923. Berman, administrator of his wife’s estate, alleged that the property is in the possession of McCormick, head of the International Harvester Company, whTffrr he charges with withholding it from him. His lawyer estimates the property, consisting of stocks, bonds, deeds and jewelry, at $5,000,000. The lawyer, Jonah Goldstein, said Mrs. German “was a daughter of Mehmed VI.” , AN ICE QUEEN Bu United Press NEW YORK, July 16.—Mrs. Harriet E. Murray admitted at a hearing before a referee investigating the Ice business in New York, that she controlled the Ice business of the Rockaways, on Long Island. She became the led queen, she said, whenj her last rival dealer sold out his business to her. OBSTINATE STAINS One of the most efficacious methods of removing perspiration stains is by rubbing with ammounia. Follow n-ith alcohol and water.

SURE, AND THE MALE’S AS DEADLY AS FEMALE

The female of the species is more deadly than the male—sometimes. Women have always been accused of being the gossip mongers of every hamlet, village, town and city in the world—but most often they get it first hand from their husbands and other male relatives.

fact, as far as loyalty in love js "concerned, a girl is a much better bet than a boy. And if girls who have big brothers don’t profit by the way these boys talk of other girls, then thrifts their own lookout. If It were possile for girls to turn into mice after a dance and follow, say a bunch of college youths back to their dormitory afterward, what a lot of interesting gossip about they would learn! For with a male cruelty. 9. boy of college age—whether he ever goes to college or not—ls going through a stage of experimentation —and not the least of these by any means are girls. Just the same as though she were a bug, hq, takes great pleasure In seeing what she would do under the given conditions of being without wings—or with the soft youthful down rubbed off, and any- girl s a fool to be caught and mentally dissected this way, “classifled.” / Classified Dear Martha Dee: I'm comingto rem to know what to do. My boy friend has aaid me which makes me very unhappy. He told other tDeruls of ours that he couni have a rood time with me any time lie wanted to bo—not the way he mcant He Wnted at a lot of thinks I wouldn’t think of dotnr. How could he tell tales when he aeemed to care for meso much. Mavbe I wasn’t Quite as wise as I should have been but I loved him and X never thought he would tell about petting parties I’ve cried and cried and I wondered i fyou could tell me what to do and how he could ever say such things when he seemed so fond of me. CERISE. Poor little kiddie. I’m sorry not to be able to offer much comfort for yours is just one of those unpleasant experiences to be valued for the lessons it teaches. And chief of these lessons is the fact that boys will “kiss and tell.” And another thing is, where there’s smoke there’s some fire, so the boy probably had something to base his tales on, even though he may have enlarged on the facts, with the pomposity of the average successful male. There’s only one way to avoid unpleasant gossip—-don’t do anything that gossip can be based on. The bait of “seeming tb <#re” Is very cheap, and most boys use it at one time or another. There seems to be a record clearing house among hoys. In this every boy in the crowd

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Model is 2788. Slender Lines Choose this model and look slim. The square neckline is particularly flattering. The French V-front effect formed by collar is an entirely new note. Plaited insets at sides give perfect freedom. It is stunning, made of black sheer crepe in combination with .Chantilly lace, orchid flat silk/crepe, striped tub silk, figured georgette crepe or pinkybeinge linen. The small views illustrate how easily Style No. 2788 can be made; practically only side and shoulder seams to sew. Complete instructions with pattern, which cuts in sizes 18 years, 36, 38, 40, 42, 44 and 46-inch bust measure. The 36inch size requires 2% yards of 40inch material, with %-yard of 18inch contrasting and 114 yards of 3%-inch ribbon for bow. Price 15 cents, in stamps or coin (coin preferred). Our patterns are rite.de by the leading Fashion Designers of New York City, and are guaranteed to flt.perfectly. Every day The Times 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

BREAKFAST —Apple sauce, cereal cooked with raisins, crisp broiled bacon, whole wheat toast, milk, coffee. LUNCHEON Macaroqibaked with cheese, lettuce sandwicTTPS, butter scotch cookies, berries, milk, tea. DINNER —Vegetable dinner, jellied fruit salad, cheese cups, graham bread, milk, coffee. A vegetable dinner is a delightful way to be economical as well as thoughtful for one’s family’s health. The modern cure for many ills Is effected through “dieting” and very often this excludes meat from our menus. Most of the best restaurants serve a ‘vegetable platter and considerable skill is shown in their arrangement. Cqlor is of some importance since thisftetermines the beapty of the dish. The texture and flavor of the vegetables must be considered since variety is important. Also the method of cooking must bo thought of. One vegetable is, buttered, one creamed, one baked and another fried or steamed. There is one detail to guard against—be sure none of the vegetables are too moist. The cream sauce should be smooth and creamy, not runny, and the buttered vegetable quite dry before buttering. Oreen pea timbales, creamed carrots, new potatoes In parsley butter, broiled tomatoes. The dinner Is planned to be on ln-

Martha Lee Says

has a black and white list of the girls they all know. Apparently lt is something to brag about —like an Indian having more scalps at his belt than his brother’s. So the only thing you can do, my dear, is to hold your little head high and ignore the gossip as though lt were not. And.in the future, distrust affection until lt Is proven. Ye Joys of Eating Dear Martha Lee: What difference. If any. is there between a aal&d fork and a deesert fork? 9hould date pudding be eaten with a fork or a spoon? How does a sniffle woman register at a hotel? MARY ANN. Lots of difference between such forks. Fundamentally and actually. A dessert fork Is a smaller reproduction of a dinner fork, and a salad fork Is squattier, and —but get a flat silver catalogue and look up the pictures of them. Date pudding Is Just as good any way you eat lt! But the fork is mightier than the spoon. In any case, watch your hostess—whichever she uses wjll be correct in her household and the queen can do no wrong! Miss Sarah Pudding, Kalamazoo, Mich., registers Just that way on ye hotel register.

To Whiten Skin with Lemon

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

The only narmless way to bleach the skin white is to mix the juice of two lemons with three ounces of Orchard White, which any drnggist will supply for a few cents. Shake well in a bottle, and you have a whole quarter pint of the most wonderful skin

1 -rr~r^ 278& (/

dividual plates from the kitchen. A timbale is placed in the center of each plate and the remaining vegetables used as a border in groups. Green. Pea Timbales One and one-half cups pea puree, two tablespoons melted butter, two eggs, three tablespoons milk, threequarter teaspoon ■ salt, two or three drops onion Juice, one-eighth teaspoon pepper. It will take about one and oiehalf pounds of peas in the pod :o make the puree. Cook peas until tender In as little water as possible, letting the water cook away. Rub through a sieve. Beat eggs until light. Beat In remaining Ingredients and turn Into six buttered timbale molds or custard cups. Place in a pan of hot water, cover with buttered paper and bake about twenty-five minutes in moderately hbt oven. Unmold to serve. (Copyright. 1926, NEA Service, Inc.)

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T/er* 7 Oam^A STORY OF A GIRL of' TODAY THE OLD HYPOCRITE Without answering anything I said to him, Doctor Flint said in a very nasty tone of voice, "I can* not understand, Miss Dean, why you did not speak to me about the bottle. You nvuMave seen It had a poison label.” I looked straight Into his face and bowed my head. He chose also to Ignore that, although he colored a bit. “I must tell you that it certainly looked rather suspicious to me when Mr. Robinson told me that you had given that bottle into hands, surely you must know that I was the one to take charge of it? “What did/you think you would, rtfake by taking it to Mr. Robinson?" I was so angry that I could hardly speak, and then I smiled inside of me. I couldn’t help It. for I had a sense of power, which to me was the most thrilling emotion I ever had. That old hypocrite was accusing me of the very thing I was intending to do. He was intimating that I was going to blackmail Robinson. I expected through that bottle, although at the time I picked It up I was perfectly Innocent of any such thought, to make Mr. David Robinson pay over to his stepdaughter $20,000 for what it and its contents meant to him. But I was not going to let that Judas browbeat me. “I didn’t think anything about It, Doctor Flint. When I came into the room after I had eaten my lunch and found Miss Cleaver on the floor in a convulsion, lt-did not take r4® a second —although I am not a doctor or even a nurse—to come to the conclusion that she had taken poison. / ‘‘You certainly were not so anxious to save he rllfe you were to get her oht of the store, for you must have known that every second that you were talking over the telephone meajit everything to her. It was then that I found the bottle and I don’t mind telling you that the reason I did not show it to you was because when'you came back from the telephone you were so afraid that I would get on to something the* you sent me out of the room as soon aq possible. / *‘l liked neither the way you treated Miss Cleaver nor my self, Doctor Flint. ‘‘l don’t think, however, that I realized that I had the bottle In my hand until I got Into the elevator. When I reached my station in the store Mr. Robinson came up to me and ragged me, because I had been away from It f< r two hours. Os cotirse. I was verj nervous over Miss Cleaver and I felt very sore on the subject. I wanted to make Mr. Robinson have a few of those ‘disagreeable moments’ that you intimate Miss Cleaver gave to the Morton Department Store by dying, and so I answered him.” (Copyright, 1926, NEA Service, Inc.) NEXT: A Clash of Wits.

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AMERICA A NATION ■, OF SALAD EATERS Department of Agriculture Points to Huge Increase In Lettuce Consumption.

Bu United Press WASHINGTON, July 16.—A real change is taking place in the diet of the American people, the Department of Agriculture revealed today. America rapidly is becoming a 'Nation of salad eaters, the department announced. This country also is taking to prunes with a now rush. - Boom In Lettuce ‘‘Consumption of lettuce, the Nation's salad crop, has Increased greatly in the last ten years," the department stated. “Lettuce shipments last season were six times those reported in 1916. “A real change in the American diet is responsible for the growing importance of this leading salad crop.” Cor lot shipments of lettuce have Increased from 4,700 to more than 30,000 since 1916 and the value of the total crop is now around $20,000,000, , California Leads California lead3 in production, with New York and Florida second and third. California produces more

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than 7.000.000 crates annually: New York nearly 2,000,000 and Florida' a fraction less. An Increase of 1,800 tons of dried i prunes waa consumed during 1925, I the department also reported. The total production of dried . prunes was 172.900 In I!J3. compared with 171,300 In 1924. California not only Is the big lettuce State>ut also the big prune Btate\ She led with 145,000 tons of the dried fruit. Idaho waa second with 15,000 tons. MORE CENTS^FOR - U. S. Nickel Demand Also Increasing, Mint Reports. Bu United Press WASHINGTON, July H-—The public demand for rne-ccnt ands vecent pieces 1a on the increaaa Coinage of one-cent ple.es Jumped from * 95.259,000 In the fiscal year 1926 to 249,427,000 In the year ending .Tune 30, 1926, Mary M. O'Reilly, assistant director of the mint, reported today. In 1925, 15,879,000 flve-cent pieces were coined and fn 1926, 62,428.100

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