Indianapolis Times, Volume 38, Number 64, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 July 1926 — Page 6

PAGE 6

Social Activities ENTERTAINMENTS WEDDINGS BETROTH AJ A

The Sigma Epsilon sorority gave a rush tea, In the Lincoln room of the Lincoln Sunday afternoon. Misses Viola Hermsen, Margaret Kern and Kathryn Callahan presiding at the tea table. Miss Mary Homburg sang. Hand painted handkerchiefs were given as favors. Guests Included Mesdames MHdred Owen, C. W. Young of Hollywood, Fla.. Maurice Lankford, Russell Llndemann, George Crofts and Henry King and Misses Marie Antlonette Gropp, Jane Axtell, Margaret Biggins, Kathleen Biggins, Joesphlne Biggins, Peggy Derry, Ethel Hlrte, Alberta Lee and Grace Kibble. • • Miss Jane Foltz, 2259 N. Pennsylvania St., was hostess at a bridge party for members of the Tau Theta Beta sorolty, at her home, Sunday afternoon. The sorority colors of blue and silver were used in the decorations and guests Included Misses Mary Erdley, Katherine Griffin, Louise Summers, Louise Humphreys, Ethel Dunn, Veronica Lana-, han, Hilda Clemsoip, Agnes Medsker and Mary Moore. • * * Mrs. Glenn G. Bertels. 955 N. Bradley St., gave a party and shower at her home Saturday evening In honor of Miss Fern Elizabeth Bertels, who will be married to Henry J. Hollenbeck Aug. 25. Dressed In yellow organdy, little Betty Joan Bertels presented the bride-elect her gifts In a large decorated fireside basket. The hostess was assisted by her mother, Mrs. Edith Kelso; Mrs. A. F. Bertels and Mrs. E. M. Johnson. Guests were Mesdames Walton Cloud, Kenneth Mann,| Delmore . Mikels, H. A. Knochenmus, and Earl Otey and Misses Elizabeth Spurgeon, Hortense St. Lorenz, Elsa Davidson, Oral Kelso, Ida Fuller, Hazel Bakemeier, Mary Morris and Marie Pursed. * * * In honor of her house guest, Miss Tillie Rosentower of Chicago, Mrs. Maurice Perk, 3761 N. Meridian St., entertained with a small luncheon at the Columbia Club. Saturday. A matinee party at English's followed. The Alpha Mu -chapter of Alpha C'hl Omega sorority entertained Saturday with a box party at Keith's. Members brought several guests, and the party included Misses Kathryn Strain, Bloomington: Mavis Call, Knightstown; Alice Prow, Bloomington; Louise Sharpnack, Columbus; Ruth Custer. Columbus: Pauline Adkins. Charlottesville; Adelaide Gothrla. Elkhart; Margaret Grumbaugh, Bloomington; Eleanor Benedict. Jane Adams, Mary Ann Cross. Elsther Yancy, Elizabeth Mendpnhall and Kathryn Bradfleld of Logansport. • • • The Sigma Phi Delta sorority will entertain this evening at the SpinkArms with a farewell dinner, followed by a theater party in honor of Mrs. Isabelle Hovey Keith, who will leave Aug. 1 to livd in Los Angeles, Cal. - *• * / A lovely bridge party was given by Miss June Brayton.-3740 Guilford Ave., Saturday afternoon in honor of Miss Gertrude Knaub, the house guest of Miss Dortha Thomas. 554 West Drive. Woodruff Place. Orchid and yellow formed the color scheme. Guests with Miss Knaub and Miss Thomas were Misses Pauline Acre, Cornelia Bates. Dorothy May Cole, Dorothy Reagan, Martfia Lou Kennedy, Dorothy Hine, Lucille O'Connor, Clara Norton. Georgia Belle Fleener and Lqretta Grumann. * * * Mrs. Merrill Harter Smith. 3934 Rookwond Ave., entertained informally with a small luncheonbridge party Saturday afternoon Her guests included Mrs. Haldene Griggs. Akron, Ohio, Mrs. Albert Daugherty, Muncie, Ind.: Mrs. D. Maurice Stephenson, Mrs. Robert Bastain, Mrs. Ralph Woods, Mrs. Lester Morris and Miss Christine Innis. * • • Members of the I. O. O. F. Lodge entertained with an aluminum shower Saturday, in honor of Mrs. Jacob Roberts, at the home of Miss Ardella Lansford. 423 N. Tacoma Ave. Mrs. Roberts, until her recent marriage was Miss Elsie Bruce. Mr. and Mrs. Roberts a,re at home at 1210 Sturm, Ave. + • Forty guests were entertained Saturday afternoon and evening by Mrs, Sidles E. Test a: her coUptry ‘EAST OF THE SETTING SUN’ Today in Mexico, Canada, Spain, Cuba, Haiti, B’ranee, England, Peru, Chili, Argentina, India, the Philippines, Colombia, Central America, the West Indies, and the isles of the sea. women are buying the old reliable remedy, Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable ComiJound. Here in the United States, nearly 4,000,000 bottles of this medicine are ■old in a single year. Ask your druggist.—Advertisement.

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Bride Is at Home After Trip

Mrs. George O. Holmes

After a wedding trip to Houston, Texas, Mr. and Mrs. George O. Holmes are at home at 3375 W. Tenth St. Mrs. Holmes formerly was Miss Mary J. Gray. home on the Millersville Rd. Mrs. Whitney Spiegel of Miami Fla., was honor guest. Moving pictures and a swimming party were entertainment features. • • • Mrs. Russell Mahoney, who was Miss Elma Thielman before her recent marriage, was honor guest at a luncheon and shower given at the Elks Club Saturday afternoon by Mrs. Walton C. Cash, 4208 Rookwood Ave. Guests included Mesdames Fred Wilson, Russel Mahoney, Charles Sherman, Richard Duncan, Albert Menke, Edward Martin, and E. J. Young and Misses Lucille Lltz, Katherine Kares. Edith Weber, Maxine Sellers, Gertrude Corydon, Mary Sullivan, Martha Thielman, Mary Fallon, Mildred Manlove. Grace Huffmeyer, Ethel Lehr and Mary Crane. • • • Assisted by her mother. Mrs. J. C. Gardner, Mrs. E. L. Kettering, 2164 Broadway, entertained with six tables of bunko, Tursday evening. Guests included Mrs. G. G. Meyer and Mrs. H. A. Rawls, and Misses Veda McCarter, Craft, Dorothy and Fay Houston, Katherine Allen, Harriett Gaddis, Florence Whittenberg, Laura Carroll, Laura and Marian Fiscus, Fauntel Dargent, Clara and Lucille Thompson, Roberta Bruce, Wilma Cochrane, Beatrice Stafford; Jacle Steepleton, Helen Boyer, Frances Olsen and Ruth Gardner. • • • Miss Margaret Graney, 33 N. Tremont Ave., and Miss Bess F. Harrold, 218 S. Richland St., are spending two weeks at Lake Wawassee. • • • George H. Chapman, W. R. C. 10, will meet in the new hall, 512 N. Illinois St., Tuesday at 1:30 p. m. There will be several initiations and a social hour after the business session. • • • A benefit card party will be given by the Patriotic Order of Americans, No. 4, for the orphange fund on Tuesday afternoon at the home of Mrs. Elizabeth Austin, 3514 E. Washington St. • • • Queen Esther Circle of the First Moravln Episcopal Church, College Ave., and Twenty-fifth St., will hold its regular monthly supper Wednesday evening from 5:30 to 7. Mrs. John H. Albright is president. La Velle Gossett Post, Veterans of Foreign Wars, will give a card party at the hall, King Ave. and W. Tenth St., Tuesday evening.

Sister Mary’s Kitchen

BREAKFAST—Orange juice, cereal, thin cream, soft cooked eggs, crisp whole wheat toast, milk, coffee. LUNCHEON Jellied vegetable ginger drop cookies, milk, tea. DlNNEß—Spanish steak, baked potatoes, creamed carrots, head lettuce with French dressing, Washlington cream pie with sliced peaches, graham bread, milk, coffee. The cheese sandwiches must bo carefully toasted in the oven. When made this way the cheese is just melted without being overcooked and tough. Overcooked cheese is difficult to digest and should never be served. Spanish steak offers a suggestion for a company dinner when a roast is not wanted. Spanish Steak One sirloin steak cut two and onehalf inches thick, one tablespoon salt, one teaspoon pepper, two tablespoons butter, four large onions, one quart tomatoes or six good sized fresh ones, three fourth cup grated cheese. Wipe meat with a cheesecloth wrung out of cold water. Trim edges. Heat an Iron frying pan and rub with a piece of suet cut from the steak. When the spider is very hot sear the meat quickly on both sides. There should not be-any surplus fat In the frying pan, just enough to prevent the meat from sticking during the searing. When the steak is thoroughly seared sprinkle with salt and pepper and spread with butter*. Pour about 1 qup of bolUng water In at one side of the pan and cook In a hot oven for 30 minutes. Cover with onions peeled and sliced and cook 45 minutes. Then add a layer of tomatoes pared and sliced and cook until tomatoes are tender;. Sprinkle with grated cheese and cook until cheese is melted and slightly browned on top. Serve with a gravy made from the liquor in the •pan. This will serve eight persons. (Copyright, 1926, NBA Service, Inc.)

ETHEL

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Jobyna’s Engaged

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A joke that guests at a California house party started just for the sake of amusement has turned into reality—so Jobyna Ralston, leading lady for Harold Lloyd,-is going to marry Richard Arlen, actor. Miss Ralston admits that the engagement didn’t take place until after their friends had started talking about it In fun.

Her OwtvWajy: cj/a (jirlo/^Toclay

ONLY A DANCER “He could dance." What an epitaph with which to seal the memory of a man. I never had seen Barry Cornwall, but I knew he must have had something in him or a girl like Joan would never have cared for him at all. She told me.he had all the marks of distinguished ancestry, and If that were so his mother had probably been very proud of him. He had told Joan that his mother had died while he was away at war and he had whispered, “I think her heart was broken when she saw me go.” He went away very gay and brave and served his country to the end: and he came back a poor maimed thing whose only eulogy must be, “He could dance." I looked at Joan Meredith, dainty and sweet in a frock whose simplicity spelled iponey. Truly I had learned a lot since I had come to this city; then, I perhaps knew more about good taste in dress than most girls who live in small towns, even I had to learn that there was a kind of plainness than which nothing was more expensive. Elegant simplicity! One of the ambitions that I had acquired was that at sometime I would be able to have a suit like Joan's. Restaurants such as the Beaux Arts were good schools to learn the difference between a flashy young woman who dressed to attract attention, and one of the real smart girls who wore her plain little frock with an air that made it stand out like a tall slender illy among a lot of brilliant weeds. I -rather smiled at myself for thinking these thoughts while such

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

a tragedy as Joan's was being enacted about me. Again I understood that my silly brain has always refused to think too long about troyble. Perhaps it was because I was still so young and everything that I saw or did gave me such a kick. Now, however, I was brought back by a strangled sob from Joan. In a whirl of remorse I put my arms about her. “You must pull yourself together, dear,” I said. "We must go immediately and find Lela. Think of the trouble shq is in.” “But she didn't love him as much as I, Judy,” asserted Joan. "How do you know, desir?” “Well, she must have known that Barry was a!t ldast flirting with me and she did not even appear jealous." • “You can never know, Joan, what is in another woman's heart. She knew there was a baby coming. She knew they must have money to live. She knew you could give it to her. She knew that if Barry could keep on dancing with you until after the baby came, it would be a great thing. Perhaps, my dear, she loved him so much tha; she trusted him.” Copyright, 1926, NEA Service TOMORROW: ,lem Smith. SPEED ARTIST TO TOl'R Birdie Reeve, the 18-year-old typing marvel holding a world's record for speed, will begin a tour of theastern Keith-Albee houses this month. The young lady scores twenty hits per second on her machine at the same -carrying a comedy chatter.

Sportively Speaking

Times Pattern Service PATTERN ORDER BLANK Pattern Department. Indianapolis Times. t Indianapolis, Ind. G C A O Inclosed 11 nd 15 cents for which send pattern No. O VJ Size - Name • Address - .•••a ;•••• • City a

JUNIOR FROCK WITH FLARED SKIRT today’s design is 2502. Cool and comfortable dress of printed chiffon cotton voile, Just like a grown-up style. Design No. 2502, with its two-piece circular skirt. Cm sure, will be adored by little girls of 6,3 and 10 years, and will be equally liked by mothers, who will find it so easy and economical to make. See small sketches! The 8-year size requires j>nly 2 yards of 36-inch material. Complete Instructions with pattern. Price 15 cents, in stamps or coin (coin preferred). Our patterns are by leading Fashion Designers of New York City, and are guaranteed to fit perfectly. Every day The Times will prtnt on this page, pictures showing the latest up-to-date fashions. \ This is a practical seryice 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.

Recipes By Readers

NOTE! —The Times will pay J 1 for each recipe submitted by a reader and printed in ti ls column. Ono recipe is printed daily, except Friday, when twenty are givem Address Recipe Editor of The Times. Checks will be mailed to winners. WHIPPED CREAM GELATINE To one package of strawberry gelatine (any other flavor may be used) add one pint of boiling water. Set asidb to cool; just before it starts to harden mix with the following: Take one small can of condensed unsweetened cream (do not open can) and boil in pan of water for twenty or thirty minutes. Take out and cool. Place on ice until thoroughly chilled. Then open can and whip until stiff. Mix gelatine with whipped cream and nuts if desired. Place on ice again and serve when cold. Pauline Harr, 6 E. Michigan St., Indianapolis. \ TOO MI CH SI N IN CALIFORNIA Florida papers please copy. Production on Corinne Griffith's newest First National feature, “Ashes,” was held up for several hours because of too much sunshine in Hollywood. Clouds and rain were needed for a “shot,” showing the meeting of Miss Griffith and Tom Moore during a rain storm in New York. The rain could be supplied artificially, but not so the c.'ouds, and although Production Manager Scott R. Beal picked a hazy deay for the scene. Old Sol just had to keep up to his California reputation by popping out Intermltten’ly to spoil an otherwise perfect production schedule.

English Suffrage Leader

Dame Millicent Fawcett, Order .of the British Empire, leader of the Constitutional Suffrage Party in England, enters the fight to repeal the law disqualifying women under 30 for certain offices.

&ro. f aucett.

Clubs and Sororities * Monday Miss Marguerite Hastey, 919 E. Twenty-ninth St., wll be hostess this, evening for the Gamma chapter of the Omega Nu Tau sorority. The regular meeting of the Alpha Lamba Chi sorority will be held this evening at the home of Miss Martha Cross, 3135 Kenwood Ave. Members of the Psl lota XI sorority will hold a special meeting and garden party this evening at the home of Miss Sarah Rodecker, 2034 N. Capitol Ave. The Irvington Circle of the Child Conservation League entertained with a -i>ionic for children of the members at the home of Mrs. F. L. Donnell, 690 West Dr., Woodruff Place, this afternoon. This was the last meeting until September. Tuesday The Spencer Club will meet at the home of Mrs. E. T. Joslin, 5936 University Club. A buffet luncheon, preceding a business meeting will be held at the home of Mrs. W. J. Slate, 2901 Central A.ve., who will entertain members of the Woman's Department Club auxiliary to the Public Health Nursing Associatiop. The Mother!' Club of the Boys' Club will meet at II a. m. at the old shelter house in Garfield Park for a picnic. The Alpha chapter of the So-Fra Club will have its regular meeting Tuesday evening at the.home of Miss. Gene Gatti, 334 N. Beville Ave. ’ Wednesday The regular meeting of the Kappa Jgu Eta sorority will be held Wednesday evening at the home of Miss Frances Reno, 1915 Ruckle St. Members of the Alpha Beta Phi will meet Wednesday evening with Miss Odelia Bauman. 808 E. Minnesota St. Thursday The swastika Club will meet Thursday evening at the hqme of Mrs. Paul Matthews. 15 N. Keystone Ave.

Martha Lee Says 1 IT’S NOT WORTH THE , BLISS TO BE IGNORANT*

‘'Where ignorance is bliss, ’tis folly to he wise” —so ’tis said) at any rate. But I’m not so sure. Ignorance is something likij being smugly hidden under a barrel—you don’t go any place anij you can’t see out.

Jack Holt Jr. Jack Holt’s 6-year-old sop, Jack, Jr., uppeared before the motion picture camera for the first time while enjoying a Utah location trip with his father during filming of Zane Grey's "Forlorn River’’ for Paramount.

57TS . WOMANS 8 DAY 8 Alien e Sumner" Perfume Fads Light flower, scents for the stay-at-home evening. No perfume for the golf course or the bridle path. Exotic heavy perfumes tor the drama. These are some of the latest perfume style notes from the arbitrary world of fashion. It is in better taste, says the same dogmatic gal, to match perfumes to different gowns than to use one Individual perfume for all outfits. I am sure that the sisterhood Is much relieved to be set at rest on this weighty subject. "No Time!’’ "How I envy you people who have time to do things'." is a moan that any "writing person” often hears! In my morning mall came a note from Dorothy Walwortlf Carman, author of that spicy tome “The Pride of the Town," about which I have herein raved before. Mrs. Caran writes me—“l write my books while doing my own work and taking care of my baby, too. 1 wrote my first one, ‘Faith of Our Fathers,’ while she was teething, and I wrote whole chapters of my second on top of the kitchen table with one eye on the frying pan. I wanted to write so much that nothing could stop me!” | Not Cool Weather! I am about to speak of something that is by no means “hot weather stuff!” But the plea of "Serious" cannot be denied 1 . "Serious” writes that for the first time in ten years she is to have a real vacation — "and I want to make it count. T want to know something about psyschology. What are some begins ners' books?” Blessings on you. and a pitcher of iced lemonade beside your hammock! Try Angell’s “Introduction to Psychology”; Titchener's "Beginner's Psychology”; Buckham's “Personality and Psychology”; Drever's “Psychology of Everyday Life”; Barrett's “The New Psychology.” ‘‘Book-of-the-Month” Avery novel new commercial scheme Is a Book-of-the-Month Club which should be a bonanza to busy ladies and blubs that “want to keep up." A selecting committee composed of big names in the world literary, selects each month the book of the month which is mailed to all club members. If the book received is not really desirable it can be returned for another selected from a list of several month's best books prepared by the committee. Now why didn't someone think of this before? “Strawberries on the Hill It’s berry time. Vary the timehonored shortcake with an occasional berry pudding. One quart berries, one cup sugar, one-half cup water, one egg, three tablespoons melted butter, one-half cup sugar, one-half cup milk, one cup sifted flour, three teaspoons baking powder. Put berries, sugar and water into a deep kettle, and when boiling, drop over the fruit batter which is made by beating the egg well, adding the melted butter, sugar, and milk, and the flour and baking powder. All beat well, dropped into the'kettle, and cook for twenty minutes.

Old Men and Cigarets VCigarets smoked by yotfng girls are improper; by older women. Intolerable.” Bo said General Erich Ludendorff divorcing his old wife. Rumor has it that he is to wed anew wife who Is a noted feminist and author of various books on sex subjects. Some might say something about the frying pan and the Are. "At Court** Plumes, tiaras, aigrettes whved aloft from the topknots of fifteen American maids and matrons presented at court a few days ago. Just a few minutes and the labor of months was- over. For behind each court presentation Is a story of hours of nervous energy consumed in being trained to kneel and bow gracefully. And the court costume which rnUst be just so In every detail and must cost at least • a thousand dollars is too formal for any lesser events In a court presentee’s life. But still, she can say forever after, “when I was presented at court!" Table Service The proper order for silverware upon the table laid for the formal dinner, is all knives and spoons at the right of the plate, all forks at the left. The only exception is thq oyster fork which is laid to the right. Silver Is laid in order of its use! starting from the outside and working in towards the edge. Thus, the oyster fork would precede the soup spoon if the oyster course weref served. Dessert silver is not laid on the table, but Is brought In when this course is served.

JULY 26, 1926

lgnorance is a protection to somt [ extent. But It is nothing compared 'to tho protection experience ia. Thi i latter is not only at guide to saf| • ways of travel, but insurance against ; a bottled-up circumscribed senile olj ! age. Ignorance Is only a blessing 14 ) disguise when it belong to a persofl j who would turn sour and bitter fron( | experience. Like wine that had via egered instead of grown ripe, ricli and m dlow.For every experience eve< thougn it be sad, has its value iif your life; takes its' place in your edi ucatlon; stocks up the storage houst of your mind with new fruits o| thought. There is no value In beinq blissfully unaware of life, custom, people, like blinded Indian oxen got ing round and round a narrrow, beat) en track of life, to pump frugal wai ters over a parched land. Discouraged Dear Martha Lee: I'd like to kno\4 what, if any. is the use of anything! Seems like the more we leam the more wi wish we hadn't learned. It's all so ilium!) natingly disgusting to live and loam Find' tnsr out one thing leads to finding out an] other, and pretty soon you’re in the pud! die up to your neck—and you know toi darn much, What I chiefly wish I didn I know is that there are any boys at all i| the world. I gret so sick and tired cl their prattle nad all thetr loyd talk aboi I sex and everything. I’ve quit going wit# them and taken up golf 1 what can Idl about it? BETTS. Tell ’em where to get off and Betts, don't let 'em talk vulgißJ in your presence. You don’t have Ll stand for anything obnoxious. Bui don’t give up going with the precious sheiks entirely, because you’ll misi part of your education If you do, and get all one-sided and bitter mentally! Leam to take life's lessons as thejl come. Stand your ground of course, but remember that most things cart be funny—so laugh at ’em. Take! up golf—take up bpoks, —take ui) arts, education, anything that will broaden you mentally, and help equip you for /the trail over th<t mountains —and don’t get into the rut of being just another blind ox. The Married Man KATIE: I hope you aren’t so foolish as to believe this married man serious. You keep out of trouble by keeping out of his way, and that answers your question of whether you should see him or not. Forget him. You can do it. BORROWS OWN LEG Bi/ Vnited Press OSSINING, N. Y„ July 26. Michael Kosmoski, one-legged murderer, awaiting execution In thel death house at Sing Sing prison, was loaned the use of his own wooden ieg so he could receive his sister. Kosmoskl’s leg is kept locked up because he might use it to attack a guard. NECKTIE EXPLODES Bv Vnlted Press NEW YORK, July 2flf—An exploding necktie which caused death of a French schoolboy, been made theibasis for a suit by" the youth's parents who ask $5,000 damages from the manufacturer of the cravat. The tie was made of artificial silk.

Women’s Handicap is curbed this new way of ' solving oldest Hygienic problem; gives true protection—discards like tissue

THERE is anew way in women’s hygiene that ends the insecurity of old-time “sanitary pads” and theit* unhappy days. Eight in 10 better-class wometl now use “KOTEX." Discards as easily as a piece of r tissue. No laundry. No embarrassment. Five times as absorbent as ordinary cotton pads. Deodorizes, thus ending ALL danger of offending. Obtainable at all drug and partment stores simply by “KOTEX.” You ask for it withouT hesitancy. Costs only a few cents. Proves old way a needless risk. 12 in a package. In fairness to yourself, try it, KOT€X No laundry—discard like tissue

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