Indianapolis Times, Volume 38, Number 100, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 August 1926 — Page 6

PAGE 6

MISS PHILLIPS IS WEDDED TO ■ I.SJRESHAM Downey Avenue Christian Church Scene of Pretty Ceremony. Miss Mary Virginia Phillips, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Howard R. Phillips, 44 S. Hawthorne Lane, became the bride of James S. Greshamjson of Mr. and Mrs. A. F. Gresham, at a pretty church wedding early Sunday evening at the Downey Avenue Christian Church. Mrs. W. W. Mendenhall, organist, played a group of bridal numbers as the guests w r ere assembling and Miss Margaret Corydon, just before the entry of the bridal party, sang ‘•Love's Old Sweet Song’* and “All for You.” Maid of Honor The maid of honor, Miss Elizabeth Phillips, sister of the bride, was dressed in peach colored georgette, fashioned bouffant and with a basque waist. She wore a large velvet picture hat and carried an arm bouquet of pink roses. Best man was James Moffett. The bride wore a light blue gown of crepe romaine, made with basque waist and very full, tucked skirt, a black velvet picture hat, with deep, drooping brim and she carried a shower bouquet of buttertiy roses and lilies of the valley. Reception Held Following the ceremony, a reception was held at the of /the bride's parents. Among the out-of-town guests were Mr. and Mrs. Charles Rice of Mrs. Frank Walker and daughter Os Pontiac, Mich; Mr. and Mrs. Josspt Whitesall of Greenfield, Ind.; Dean Bacon of Detroit, Mich., and Lionel Gibson of Kalamazoo, Mich. Mr. and Mrs. Graham left immediately on a wedding trip and will be at home at Pontiac, Mich., after Aug. 16. A WOMANS AY~ By AUene Sumner PARIS, Aug. 2.—1 have pust returned from the races—the most famous races in the world. But I did not see a horse—not a single hon e. It was the world-famous Grand Prix classic at ‘Longchamps. /.he yearly race which Attracts Horse lovers the world over. I repeat, I did not see a single horse. But. oh babee—as wtrFrench ■ay. what clothes I did see! Most people, anyway,' go to the races to see clothes . and not horses. It seems that here in Paris the race track at Longchamps is only aq excuse for wearing all the clothes and diamonds and aigrettes that they wear when presented at court In England or at a White House geception at home. It seems strangely like the French who refuse butter with bread, but ■erve it as an appetizer with pickled enails and crawfish, to choose a dusty race track whither to .wear costumes which would grate a ballroonf.

My gentle readers may be Interested in my own costume for Longchamps before I launch into a description'of that which draped the Queen of Spain. I wore some brown oxfords coated with a rich layer of bois de rose mud and beige dust. My tweed coat had a plaque of green grass spots and my hat had a coy dip where Pansy Herring had accidentally sat on it at lunch. , To be really truthful, I did not assemble this chic costume for the races, but for a picnic in the Bois de Boulogne. We had just eaten the last sardine when the people began to go by. We thought tt was a fire and started following—by taxi. As ITiave said, one can ride forty-three miles for a nickel, so we made no inquiries about cost, but merely indicated that we voukefe-voused to follow the people. And so we came to Longchamps. The reason we knew we were at Longchamps was the trffci man held up his hands ten times and looked fierce, which meant that we had to pay 100 francs or he would call the “gendarme. To add insult to injury he took us to the hoi polloi gate and we had to walk back to the main entrance of nobility and mannequins, where we left our lunch basket, behind the hinJ legs of the horse of the leader of the gang which was all lined up to greet the king and queen of Spain and the president and premier of •"ranee. So that’s how I came to Longchamps In my own special costume. Kow I will say a word or so about some others. ♦ * • It gives a conservative American quite a shock at first to see gowns of sliver and gold lace, aigrettes, diamonds and emerald and sapphire bracelets, wraps of cerise and jade , brocade straying down the dusty roads to the race tracks, but no one else seemed to mincK The iqueen of Spain, who saO Wh rrP she could see both horses and the mannequins, whereas most folks could see only mannequins, wore a white lace garden frock with white fox bordered white coat and large white feathered hat. The Spanish ladies in her party wore gay summery frocks of flower prints: mostly In nasturtium and chartreuse shades. Flower crepes and chiffons predominate Everywhere. One mannequin wore a gdkvn painted with one mass of <lowm4. huge garden flowers like hollyhock and tigr>r lilies, from hem to n'eckline. Sleeveless. Many of the gowns Were bouffant and ankle length. .Some emphasized the winter vogue of maltne or tulle hem from knees to inkles.

, Date for Wedding Set

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One of the pretty mid-summer church weddings, will be that of Miss Helen V. Sullivan, who will be married to George F. Roaker at St. Patrick’s Church morning of Aug. 11. Miss Sullivan has chosen as her attendants her sister, Miss Bess Sul-'

SOCIAL ACTIVITIES

Mrs. WilliaYn W. Wilcox. Jr., of Miami, Fla., formerly Miss June Moll of this city, and Miss Ella MaUanna of Culver were the honor guests at a bridge party Saturday afternoon given by Mrs. T. J. Moll, mother of Mrs. Wilcox, at Mrs. Moll’s home, 5015 Washington Blvd. The house and porches were gay with flowers arranged in vases and baskets and the bridge appointments were in harmonizing colors. Besides Mrs. Wilcox, who is the house guest of her parents for the summer, the guests included Mesdames O. S. Hlxon, James ,J)j. Ruddeil, John A. McConnell, Kansas City, Mo.; Allen Wayne Broadstreet. Greencastle; Misses Catherine Hkrney, Mildred ©lacklidge, Esther Ru)ush? Gladys Trick. Allegra Stewart, Lindabell Thompson and Margaret Borcherding. , * • • Mrs. George Killinger, 1922 X. Pennsylvania St., gave a pretty luncheon-bridge at the Columbia Club Saturday afternoon in honor of Mrs. C. O. Waterman of Los Angeles, Cal. The table was beautifully decorated and in the center was a fiat basket of pink rosebuds. The guests were: Mesdames Max Sander, William Radcliff, John Hook, E. O. Borchert, John Royse. Frapk E. Kotteman, Addison Coddington, Frank E. Woollen and Misses Gertrude Grinsteiner and Katherine Hock. • *' • Miss Marie Fitzgerald, whose engagement to Frederick Weatherspoon has been announced and Miss Jean Brown, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ililton IT. Brown, who will be married to Clifford Wagoner next Saturday, were the guests of honor at a bridge party given by Miss VirKingsbury, 317 Downey Ave., Saturday afternoon. Miss Kingsbury was assisted by her mother, Mrs- E. C. Kingsbury, and Mrs. Russell Bosart. The guest A included Mesdtftnes John Fitzgerald, Charles Wagoner, Hilton U. Brown, Russell Bosart, Oscar Carlstedt, Charles Binkley, Arthur Baynham. Francis Sinex, Austin V. Clifford, Lyman Schell,'Misses Florence Fuller, Lakewood, Ohio; Catherine Burton, Martinsville; Julia and Jessica Brown, Dorothy Forsythe, Mary Goodwin, Zillah Witherspoon, Kathryn Wagoner, Mildred Morgan. ** • • Dr. and Mrs. Alfred Ogle, 1117 Newman St., entertained at dinner Saturday night for the follownig guests: Mrs. James R. Burns and son, Robert, of St. Louis, Mo.; Mr. and Mrs. William Y. Grove of Columbus, Ohio, and Mrs. William Todd Grove of Urbana, Ohio. • • • Mrs. George Wood. 3941 Broatlway. entertained Sunday evening in honor of Mrs. Torrence Winchester of Los Angeles, Qal. The house was decorated with garden flowers in blue and pinlt shades. During the evening. Mrs. Cecil Stalnaker gave a group of vocal numbers. The guests Included Mesdames Ervins White. Fred Foster. Raymond Relsner, Charles Kucera, Rudolph Cofling, E. S. Cummings and the Misses Annette Keller, Edith Loftin, Marie Oldham, Margaret Stossmelster. * * • Miss Caroline Mark, who will be married to Bruce Graham next Thursday, was the honor guest at a bridge party and shower given at the Hoosier Atheltic Club Friday evening by Miss Margaret Kern. The hostess was assisted by her mother, Mrs. George Kern. Guests included the Misses Viola Hermsen, Katherine Foster, Mildred Harris, Mary Regula. Audra Barney. Marjorie Miller, Elizabeth Leach. Florence Donavan and Mesdames Robert Ittenbach, Frank Mark, C. W. Young. W. C. Graham, Glenn fcitel and Roy Hotz. I* * ' Miss Charlyn Murray entertained twenty friends Saturday afternoon at her home In Island Park. Decorations carried a Japanese note and gay parasols were given as favors. Guests included Martha Fielder, Betty Culloden. Anne Mae Jones. Jent Meditch, Barbara Hosr, Ellz# both Firestine, Virginia Hoss. Joan Thorpe, Flora Bell Crawford and Mac/ Helen Whitaker. s* • • Mr. and Mrs. George Klnnaird, 2614 N. New Jersey St., will leave this week for -an extended visit In the West. They will go directly to

—Photo by Cox Studio. Miss Helen V. Sullivan

livan, maid of honor; Misses Margaret Roaker and Ann McGlnley, bridesmaids; and little Helen Estelle Forestal und Margie Murray, flower girls. Ray Monaghan will be beat man and John Sullivan and Ray Rice, ushers.

Lexington, Ky., then to Wellington. Kaa. Later, they will go to Los Angeles, Cal., to visit their son, John E. Klnnaird. They will not return until next spring. • Mr. and Mrs. David Fessler Jr., and two daughters Dorothy Jean und Edna Pearl, 3925 Spaan Ave., will arrive home this evening from Hollywood. Fla., where they were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. David Fessler for some weeks. • • • The Robert Anderson Relief Corps No. 44, will hold an Informal reception Tuesday afternoon from 2 to 4 In honor of Mrs. Grace E. Hoffmeyer, department president of the \v. R. C.: Mrs. Nellie K. Stammel, I department president of the ladies j of the Grand Army; Mrs. Edna E. j Pauley, department councellor ofl W. R. C.. and Mrs. Susanna Higgins, j department treasurer of W. R. C. 1 A short business session will precede ! the reception, which will be held at the Grand Army League head quarters, 512 N. Illinois St. • • • A/ter a visit with Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Perk. 3761 N. Meridian St.. Miss Tillie Rosentower, Chicago, has returned home. Mr. and Mrs. Perk will motor to Chicago the last of this week, to bo the guests of the Rosentower family. • • • Mr. and Mrs. Mansur B. Oakes and* family, 2121 N. Alabama St., left today for a motor trip *to Magician Lake, Mich., where they have a cottage. They will remain until September. * * * Mr. and Mrs. William G. Lash and son Walker. 2412 N. Pennsylvania St., have gone to Lone Lake. Ind. Their guest. Miss Irene Cudworth of Chicago, returned home after a visit with Miss Tarnetis Lasht • * Miss Dorothy Saffell. 42314 Broadway. is the guest of Miss Mary Shumaker of Washington. D. C., formerly of Indianapolis. Miss Saffell went to Washington after a stay In Atlantic City and Stone Harbor, N. J. • • • The Misses Irene and Helen Doll of Rock Island, 111., were the honor guests at a luncheon-bridge given by Miss Katherine Reidey at the Indianapolis Athletic Club Saturday afternoon. • • • The Queen Esther Circle of the First Moravian Episcopal Church will meet Wednesday afternoon with Mrs. Alice Slocum, 33 E ThirtyFourth St. • * The V. F. W. Club will play euchre Tuesday evening at the hall at 29 S. Delaware St. Mrs. Dora Beadle is in charge. * * * Capitol City Circle. No. 176. P. : H. C., will meet Tuesday evening at I the hall, 116 E. Maryland St. Os- 1 fleers will be installed./ FLAPPER FANNY SAYS:

H J •tNt BY MCA SSSVtCC. Ma

The proper costume to wear while eating watermelon is a bathing suit.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Recipes By Readers

NOTE —The Times will give a recipe filing cabinet for recipe submitted by a reader and printed in this column. One recipe is printed daily, except Friday, when twenty are given. Address Recipe Editor of The Times. Cabinets will be mailed to winners. White only one recipe, name, address and date on each sheet. ,PEACH ROLL Pare and cut up fine one-half dozen and sweeten liberally. Mix together one pint of flour, two teaspoons of baking powder, one-half teaspoon of salt, and one tablespoon of butter. Mix with sweet milk until it can be handled without being sticky. Roll out. spread it with the sliced peaches, and roll it up, pinching tha ends to give it a long narrow shape. Lay this in a deep baking dish, sift flour over It lightly, dpst with pulverized sugar, add a few bits of butter and one cup of boiling water. Cover w-tth a lid and bake for thirty minutes. Remove the lid and brown for five minutes. Ferve hot from the pudding dish and top with whipped . cream. The water, flour, sugar and., butter, together with the peach Juice will have formed all the sauce necessary. Mrs, M. A. Mahan, 422 E. Jeffer. son St. Tipton, Ind.

Times Pattern Service PATTERN ORDER BLANK Pattern Department. Indiana polls Times, Indianapolis, Ind. , n c a 7 Inclosed find 15 cents for which send pattern No. & \J I Site a Name . Address •.. ............ •••!••••••• • • City .

• Sports Frock (Today's design is 2507.) Novel and becoming! Design No. 2507 opens in front, showing a slip. No. 2315, that is not provided with pattern. It features a circular skirt. It is very popular for resort wear, made of Chinese damask in new jrlolet shade, printed crepe silk, green flat crepe, peach colored georgette crepe and tub silk. Note the diagram—the simplicity of the pattern. The pattern can be had in sizes 16 years. 36. 38, 40. 42 and 44 inches bust measure. Size 36 requires 274 yards of 36-inch material with >4 yard of 27-lnch contrasting material. Our patterns are made by the leading fashion designers of New York City. Every day The Times will print on this page, pictures showing tbs latest up-to-date fashions. This is a practical service for read-

Sister Mary’s Kitchen

BREAKFAST—Stewed prunes with | lemon, cereal, top milk, crisp broiled j bacon, rye toast, milk, coffee. LUNCltEON—Carrots * delicious, nut bread sandwiches, sugared cherries, caramel cookies, milk. tea. DINNER—Sliced jellied veal loaf.! baked new potatoes, creamed Swiss chard, stuffed green pepper salad, peach cobbler, whole wheat bread, milk, coffee. Sometimes the familiar vegetables so unpopular with our families gain a pleasant greeting if served in unfamaliar guises. To this end. “carrots delicious” are suggested in the luncheon menu. Carrots Delirious Eight medium sized new cafrots. 1 small onion, 1 teaspoon Salt, teaspoon pepper. 2 tablespoons butter. 1 tablespoon flour, % cup carrot stock. >4 cup milk, yolks 2 eggs, 1 tablespoon minced parsley. Wash and scrape carrots. Cut lntb thin slices. Peel and slice onion. Put prepared carrots and onion into sauce pan, cover with boiling water and qook until tender. Add salt when carrots are half done. When tender drain, reserving % cup of the water. Melt butter, stir In flour and when blended add stock. Bring to the boiling point and add carrots and pepper. Beat yolks of eggs well with milk. Stir into first mixture and cook, stirring constantly until mixtilre thickens around the vegetable. Turn into a hot vegetable dish, sprinkle with parsley and serve. fCopyright. 1926, NEA Service, Inc.) FOR WARM DAYS With the advance of summer one notices many capes of chiffon and georgette to match the frocks, {floated with fine pleats, and often collared with a very light fur. , USELESS; OF bOFRSE Lace pockets are a novel touch on the new chiffon frocks—usuajjy dyed to match the exact shade of the frock. VERY YOUTHFUL Polka dot frocks are seen everywhere— the most dashing are those of white with large red coin spots. ENGLISH FASHION The knitted topcoat is very inuch liked for sport wear, and often accompanies a silk frock of exactly the same shade. VELVET RAND An unusual hat Is a small leghorn shape, turned up in the front, banded with a crushed fold of brilliant purple velvet. FRENCH INSPIRATION Diamond shoulder straps give a formal air to a very simple evening frock of layers of rose colored chiffon. , NEWER STYLE Silk embroidered frocks, particularly these done in self tones are rivaling printed silks In popularity, K , ' . ...Td!****

Ker OwtxWajy: (jirf day

MARRIAGE AS LAST RESORT Joan and I were so busy getting' Lela ready for the hospital that It seemed no time at all before the ambulance came shrieking up to the door.. After the first burst of grief and horror Lela seemed apathetitc. She put herself absolutely in our hands. "I’ll have to go with her to the hospital,” said Joan to me. “Os course," I answered, “and I’ll come along a little while afterward when I have put the place in order." After they had left I suddenly felt physically weak. I grew frightened. I wondered if I were going to faint. I felt greatly depressed, but why I should be I could not explain to myself. With that startling truth, which is almost always stranger than Action, providence hau entered, and ignoring our plans had taken all of us and treating us like pawns had settled everything. • Everything now was going on splendidly. We really had nothing mors to fear. Jona would in a few days be of age and her stepfather, according to the terms of the will, would have to tufn her money over to her. could do what she pleased. She would probably go to Europe, at |.east 1 would advise her

•rs who wish to make their own clothes. • You may obtain this pattern by fllling 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. TANARUS, 7 2.507 J /• Slip 2315

Buy Silks by the Yard The Silk Shop No. 27 the Circle 1 Don’t Think of Baying DIIPCCARPETS and tvUUiJ LINOLEUMS Until you've Inspected our big stock*. DORFMAN RUG CO. New Location • 31 Monument Circle LYMAN BROTHERS HAAG'S Cut Price Drugs Bay TOUR Westing Apparel oe the' AMERICAN BUDGET TWENTY PAYMENT PLAN Me eer. eW*. tm, sgs or rAr **• •• V #, ~ ) T2KOO ST2S Ever, p.reW. THE WHY STORE M Cast QMs H

to do so. And I? Well, after the 1 series of thrills I had been having ] I could hardly see anything that did not look rponotonous ahead of me. I wondered If this were the end. I wondered if it were possible for a girl to carve out her own way. After all my fine ambitions and plans, was I going to be just like all the rest of my sex and settle down and marry after all? ' _ Was it going to be Jerry, just because I did not know what else to do with myself? Though I knew Jqrry was worth loving, that little speech of Mamie’s still kept bobbing up in ,my mind. And measured by it, I was sure that t did not really love him. Mamie had said to me while talking of Buddy Tremaine, “We don’t know why we love anyone. We don’t know why we love this man and do not love that man. We don’t know when love will come, neither do we know when it* will go. But there is one fact we never mistake, we know vjhen w$ are in 10.ve.” Because 1 had doubts I knew that as splendid as Jerry was, I did not j love him well enough to marry him 1 And if I did not do that, what was ; I going to do? T could hardly go 1 back to the Morton Department | Store even if I wished. At this I moment. I hoped I would never see | anyohe connected with it again. I wondered if anY other girl had mulled over al problem as I was milling over one now. If I married Gerald HathaWay, Jr., I would never j want for anything. He was rich, | good looking, nnd as far as 1 kjiew, i very much in love with me. I liked ; to be with him, what more did my : restless heart desire? . \ (Copyright, 1926, X*EA Service. Inc.) Next—. Terry Makes a Mistake.

jnVant I AcLs at * f 1 * et f eneate t 1° 1 vrvety day rcr the* a a \*ray* I Every t neater . va n re Some lhe suburb* vieu* ° u jn°<l ern other* w*** v, o u*e or 00^hVe | °° ** B °v,o *S ant W tent and of P '* C ®‘ tt > I ssc3soo 1 I Want Ads That

HEED HORNET’S STING; FIRE MAKES SMOKE

If you will keep poking at a hornest’s nest you re goring to get stung. And if you will build a fire no, matter how snyall it is, there's bound to be some snLoke. t

And the moral of all this is: mar- 1 ried men’s wives can be the worst | hornets you ever came up against; | and scandal arises like smoke on the wind with the striking of a single match. And that’s one smoke screen you can’t hide behind. Ancb if this is the way you want to play house, all right—but the consequences be your own. It’s easier to repair a broken limb than a staled and misused reputation. And it isn’t funny. Just Within the Law, is a game that lots of folks‘find amusing and exhilarating. They claim It is better than Pep, or Bran, or Toasties or Orange Juice or Ovaltine or anything else to keep the heart beats beating with Wim apd Wigor. But—it’s an awfully disappointing game after all, and doesn’t do the work as efficiently as any of the nationally advertised peppers, because it gets to be a little -scordid and a scummy and scurvy thing to do to tonic your blood stream by stealth and deceit and the unhappiness of some innocent one. And besides, when you get caught. *as you invariably do. there’s the Piper to pay, and you discover, nine times out of ten, that it wasn't worth the price. Smoke Screens Dear Martha Lee: How lucky for we eJans and Lois to have good old Martha Lee to go to for advice! The m-aeon of

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Martha Lee Says

traveling wives and philandering, husbands is on. We are besiesed on all eulos by the most adorable married men who want to show u* a (rood time while wif/ey is away But they don t look ffood to us We are iust two single air Is both 20 and lair to gaze upon— don't especially <’Are for mar ried men. but all our Bin*l< friend* aro being- attentive to someone's lonely, vacationing wife, and we don t know what to do. We have lots of time, * car end Rood homes and parents.’and we are what some would call society flappers. \Ve don t care to be po fitted out as tin other women but wt-H. you know wives are bo careless and some husbands are such dee,r sweet. irresistible, self-conceited ereatun*! They are so ardent in their love-making and mean so little of it that it seems htjhjy amusing to us girls who always intend to stav to the blessed single state of peaceful living We haven't encomraged. one single male that has tried to d.ato its up. so why is it they keep right on insisting? Whj oh. why won’t they leave us hlone to en'oy thio summer in our own careless, but perfectly lnnoce,^ VV o a HbMEimEAKER9. Wall, girls, I think they keep on insisting because they know darned well you really don’t want them to stop. You’re having a lot of fun out of it, aren’t you? But that’s a hornets’ nest and I advise yoy to quit throwing rocks- I admit It is hard for a single girl to run in competition with a wife,or a widow, but it has been done. Asa matter of fact, you probably have too much time. When heavy, heavy time hangs over your head you can redeem it by putting it to some good use. Two able-bodied girls car betweem ’em could do toward talking little, poor folk? away from the heat ior an outing ,iow and then at some water side near by. '