Indianapolis Times, Volume 38, Number 106, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 August 1926 — Page 6
PAGE 6
SOCIAL ACTIVITIES
To announce the engagement of her daughter, Miss Elizabeth Holly, to Dr. Don Debargy Bowers of Hunt- , ington, Ind., Mrs. M. C. Holly, 2613 N. Delaware St., entertained at the Columbia Club Saturday afternoon. The wedding will take place the latter part of September. Colonial bouquets of lavender, pink and green flowers were given as favors and concealed within the bouquets were announcement cards. The appointments all were in the three colors. Mrs. Holly was assisted by her daughter, Miss Norma Jane Holly. Guests Included Mesdames Burton Mitchell, C. Merrill Miller, Charles G. Calkins, Walter Smith, Frederick Baker, Charles McArthur, William Bosson, Paul Huntslnger, B. E. Neal and Misses Lucile Ridge, Marjorie Bell, Huntington, Ind.; Mary Butler, Columbus, Ind.; Mary Pavey, Sadie May McNutt, Sarah Peden, Georgia Williams, Katherine Seibert, Latrus Beckman, Mildred Smith, Betty Craig, Dussey Duffy, Hilda Smith, Kathryn Neal, Catherine Devaney, Gertrude Fogarty, Emily Dunbar and Mildred Thorton. • * • Miss Helen Goodpasture, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Milo Goodpasture of Greenfield, became the bride of Glenn S. Kingham, son of Mr. and Mrs. James Kingham, 1301 Barth Ave.. at the Tabernacle Presbyterian Church early Saturday evening. Before an altar arranged with palms and ferns and studded with soft glowing cathedral tapers, the ceremony was performed. Paul Matthews, organist, gave a half-hour musical program as the guests were assembling, playing “Barcarolle” ("Tales of Hoffman”), “Berceuse” (Jocelyn), "Dream of Dove” (Liszt), “Salut t’Amour” (Elgar) and other selections. The wedding march from “Lohengrin” was played as the wedding party entered. The maid of honor, Miss Helen Kingham. sister of the bridegroom, was gowned in mint-grjen taffeta, trimmed'in tulle and fashioned bouffant. She Wore a picture hat of green taffeta with tulle brim and carried an arm bouquet of flowers In the Dresden shades. The little flower girl, Elnora Louise Beecher of Knightstown, was in blue georgette over pink satin and carried a French basket of pink and whit#* rosebuds. The bride, entering alone, was lovely in shell-pink chiffon, embroidered in rhinestones and crystals Trrogown had a tight basque waist, and the skirt was full, with scalloped edge. A headband of shirred shellpink tulle was embroidered with rliines ones and she carried a shower bouquet of orchids, roses and lilies of the valley. Mr. and Mrs. Kingham left for a wedding trip to Canada, and will he at'home after Aug. 4 at 5730 E. Washington St. * * • A pretty home wedding was that of Miss Edith Harshman, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jacob llarshman, 4848 Central Ave., and Pearson L. Herrington/ which took place Saturday afternoon at the home of the bride’s parents. Before the fireplace In the living room an improvised altar of palmrf, ferns and branch candelabra formed a background for the ceremony, which was performed by the Rev. J. Ambrose Dunkle. The bride’s sister and brother-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Habbe, were the only attendants. Mrs. Habbe was In pink crepe chiffon, hand painted with pink and lavender flowers. She carried an arm bouquet of Columbia roses and summer lilies. The bride was gowned In white crepe chiffon over bridal satin, embroidered in bow knots of seed pearls, with festoons of orange blossoms and
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*A CHICAGO AND RETURN Children B and Under 12 Years—s2.oo Saturday Night, August 14 Special train of all-steel equipment will leave Indianapolis 11:00 p. m., arrive Chicago 6 a. m.; returning leave Chicago (Central Station, Michigan Ave. and Roosevelt road) 6:15 p. m. Central Time (7:15 p. m. City Time) Sunday, August 15, arrive Indianapolis 11:55 p. m. BASEBALL Chicago, “White Sox” va. Detroit “Tigers” City Ticket Office, 112 Monument Circle, Phone MA in 0330, and Union Station. Phone MA In 4567. J. N. Lemon. Division Passenger Agent 810 FOUR ROUTE
point lace. She carried a bouquet of orchids, butterfly roses and lilies of the valley. Mr. and Mrs. Herrington left for a wedding trip in the East and will be at home after S*pt. 1 at the Chadford Apts., Baltimore, Md. • • • Mrs. Robert Mannfeld, 5205 E. Washington St., was hostess for a pretty midsummer bridge party and miscellaneous shower Saturday afternoon In honor of Miss Margaret McCain, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.* Theodore McCain, 123 S. Emerson Ave.,’ who will be married to J. Franklin Bruce, Aug. 19. The house was decorated with garden flowers, with a prevailing color note of pink. Ices were served In the shape of small flower pots, with j pink rosebuds growing from • the ! center. Miss McCain’s gifts were j presented to her from a decorated ] wagon, drawn by Uttle Robert Larrison Mannfeld. Mrs. Mannfeld was assisted by Mrs. Albert Mannfeld. The guests I Included Mesdames Noble C. Ropkey, John Mumford, Lorene Hickman, Russell V. Holler, Wilbur Dunkle of Rochester, N. Y., and Misses Louise Rith, Margaret Kellenbach, Helen Seward, Helen Baker, Marjorie Okes, Allegra Stewart, Mrayfrances Ogle, Mary Patia Carver, Marie Daugherty and Margaret Schoener. _• • • Mrs. Harry Voshell, 3111 Bellefontaine St., was hostess for a miscellaneous shower Saturday evening In honor of Miss Dorothy Zetta Ragsdale, who will be married by W. Herman Kortepeter in the early fall. Orchid and rose, the bridal colors, were used In the decorations and confections. Miss Martha Hoyl, a graduate of the Metropolitan School of Music, gave several readings and Miss Ann Louise Hoyl played a group of piano selections. .1 The hostess was assisted by Mesdames Grace Fulmer, Hazel Braun, Marguerite Ray, Mary Amos, Minnie Riske, and Dorfl Miller. Other guests were Mesdames J. J. O’Brien, M. A. Murphy and daughter, Gertrude, Roy Branden, S. C. Hoyl, O. E. Ragsdale, Jesse Hutsell, O. • Millender, Charles' Mlllender, Frederick Kennedy 1 ) Harry Rhoades, Roy Phillips T W. R. Lovinger, A. C. Reese, J. E. Hofazker, Guy Lewis and Joseph Wilhelm. • • • Mrs. Herbert Barnes, 915 W. Dr., Woodruff PI., entertained with a dancing party Saturday night. Honor guests were William T. Van Ness and Guy Underwood of Mechanicsburg, Ohio, who are In training at the C. M. T. C. at F*t. Benjamin Harrison. Guests Included Misses Lucine Warfel, Elizabeth Hughes, Helen
Youthful Producer Has Stage Like Regular Ones
■. : , - - ... _ ' ’ ■' ’ ~-00 , £ _*• htt imat" - ft
John Gandall and his reproduction of tlie banquet scene from “The Sw an.”
.)Vhn Gandall, 13, of 633 E. ThirtySecond St., is a regular Flo Zlegfeld Jr. He built a miniature stage several years ago and has been producing plays for tjie neighborhood children ever since . The small stage Is an exact reproduction of the regular ones found in large theaters. Lead counterbalances weight the six curtains which work smoothly on wheels. Twenty-two small six-volt bulbs furnish illumination from footlights, bank lights and the drop lights. Eight switches control the electrical mechanism and three rheostats provide light variation. Last winter the boy produced with puppets, “Treasure Island,” “Huck Finn,” “A Fashion Show,” the “Great Train Robbery” and other plays which he wrote himself. • John's father bought him a small motion picture camera and all shows are preceded by a movie reel. During the Christmas vacation two years ago the “Gandall Grand” was going strong and the basement of the Gandall home was filled nightly with eager youngsters. They were
Start Motor Tour of East
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Miss Helen I). Friday
ftVith a party of friends, Mrs. J. W. Friday and daughter, Helen D. Friday, 2242 N. Alabama St., left on a motor tour of the East today. They will spend some time at Washington, D. C., Philadelphia, Atlantic City and New York City. ! , Louise Barnes, Helen Titus, Ruth Harriet Barnes and Messrs. William Hughes? Rudolph Miller and Howard Shumaker. • • • An informal dance was given at the Kirscjpbaum Community Center, 2814 N. Meridian St., Saturday evening, by a group of Jewish organizations ,’or Jewish .boys who are C. M. T. C. cadets at Ft. Benjamin Farr Ison. The hostesses for the affair were Mesdames Samuel Hahn, Louis Wolf, Jpseph Blieden and George W. Rablnoff. • • • Mr. and Mrs. Glenn J. Plymate of Chicago were the honor guests at a unique and pretty bunco party given Saturday night by the Evergreen Club at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Donald Black, 1526 Spruce St. The hostess was assisted by Mrs. Carl Black and Mrs. Charles Wheat. Other guests were: Messrs, and Mesdames Milton Craig, Don Lunt, Paul Cooper, Jphn Unverzagt. and Charles Wheat, and Misses Mary Plymate, Ruth Tjllinghast, Charlotte Clifford, and Messrs. Louise Herdrich, Jimmie James and Charles McDaniel.
so enthusiatistic that the parents investigated. Now the children can hardly see the shows* because the parents crowd them out of the best seats In the theater. William A. Fields, manager of the Stuart Walker Company, heard of the “Gandall Grand” and aided John in reproducing the banquet scene from “The Swan,” shown last week at Keith’s Theater. The setting and theater were on display at Keith’s. Recipes By Readers ” NDTE —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. Write only one recipe, name,-'ad-dress and date on each sheet. THREE-EGG ANGEL CAKE Measure and sift together four timJb one cup of sugar, one and one-third cup of pastry flour (sifted before measuring), one-half teaspoon cream of tartar, one-third teaspoon salt, three teaspoons baking powder. Add slowly two-thirds cup of scalded milk. While’ still warm add one, teaspoon vanilla. Fold in three well-beaten egg whites. Add one tablespoon water to white before beating. Bake slowly in a moderate oven for forty-five minutes. Veh-a Fine, 3101 Jackson St., Indianapolis. PRINCESS SHOOTS CR.APS Bv T’nltrd Prrsn INTERNATIONAL FALLS, Minn., Aug. 9. —Princess Maria de Bourbon, cousin of King Alphonso of Spain, has Indulged in the famous American pastime of shooting "craps.” she admitted here. She is "roughing It” In the wilds of north woods of Minnesota. SERPENT LEATHERS Reptile leathers hold their own in the shoe world. Pumps arst cut higher of late, and heelfi are higher, too. *
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Times Pattern Service PATTERN ORDER BLANK Pattern Department, Indianapolis Time*, Indianapolis, Ind. 2 8 0 *9 Inclosed find 15 cents tor which send pattern No. Size ..j a- a Name • Address - * • City *
EXCELLENT TENNIS DRESS Today’s design is 2809. Charming sports dress effectively uses tub silk in gay border pattern. It Is a cool, comfortable style, with its Interesting V neckline and dropped shoulder sleeves. The lower front of skirt is box-plaited, providing perfect freedom for active sports. The long wide scarf collar is slipped through slashed openings. You 11 enjoy making it! The small Illustrations tell you why! After plaits are stitched In place, practically only side and shoulder seams to sew. Complete instructions furnished with pattern No. 2809, which can he had in sizes 16, 18 years, 36, 38, 40 and 42 Inches bust measure. In the 36inch size, 2% yards of 64-inch bordered material with 2 yards of Scinch ribbon is required. Price 16 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 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 tbelr 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 Tlmee. Delivery Is made In about one week. Be sure to write plainly and to Include pattern number and size.
A WOMAN'S PARIS, France. —Green almonds are to the French table what olives and picklea are to ours. Butter Is served ordinarily only upon request. Water Is also a request Item and no essential. If you insist on American prohibition in your dining, you pay for your wine or beer or cordial double because of omission. Forks and spoons and knives are giant size, the fork resembles our garden picks, and the knife might be mistaken for a sabre. Teaspoons are the size of our tablespoons. Table napkins are the size of young table cloths, and a spotless table cloth for each new table of diners does not seem the essential here that it does at home. If you find these copious references to food a bit gross, reflect upon the saying of the sage who said that ’to know a nation's stomach is to know a nation’s heart.” If he didn't say It exactly like that, he meant it, and I am rather fond of conning my own epigrams. •• • , Eating in FYench begins on the Cherbourg-to-Paris diner. A cackling waitress pushes us Into chairs and cackles some more, all of which means nothing to us. She ts probably again calling us "daughters of pigs of tfr. American.” Upon our erstwhile snowy cloth repose a plate of four sardine*, butter cut into rosebuds upon fresh oak leaves, a basket of cherries, mushy bananas, and what we learn are the green almonds found on every dining table In France. We learn what they are. as do our fellows, by the- bitter experience cf biting them as though they were peaches. The French waitresses laugh Jovially to see us. ~ • • Dining car service resembles a procession In the harem. The cackling waitresses line up, the male chief steward at their lead. He passe, down the aisle, nodding with his head at this plate and that which Is to be served. Handmaiden one dumps down the plates, huge Goliath ones. Handmaiden two hurls tt spoonful of potato and cauliflower salad upon the plate. Handmaiden three hurls a hunk of cold ham or meat loaf. Handmaiden four slings a pimento on the heap, and handmaiden five hurls a tomato. We are timed one minute, 50 centimes, for the hors d’oeuvre. Promptly, the male cock-o’-the-roost signals his handmaidens and they swoop down upon our table. One takes the top plate and puts, anew one In its place, one stops with a huge pannier of bread, a third heaps the topmost plate with omelet, the best omelet I ever ate. Juicy and packed full of spicy herbs. We are timed again. Then monsieur the chanticleer walks down, the aisle, asking “more, more?” We are a bit dazed at this specta :le of being asked if we would have more on a diner. Many accept. Then Chanticleer summons his cackling handmaiden and she dumps it on. More plates—the fourth so far. This time the phalanx of ~ five maidens lines up, one leaves a chicken leg, the second adds a spoonful of gravy, the third some peas, the fourth, some potatoes. Timed. And again the chief cock o’/the walk goes down the aisle with the second helping. Ice cream, a watery kind, with and cheese complete the feast. The bill? Twenty-five francs, which, being Interpreted, meant that day a trifle over 71 cents each. • • • One has no doubt about the tip. Chanticleer hovers oier one and breathes passionately, “The service, was she not divine? Was she not superb? Should she not have even more than 10 per cent tip? Five francs, she Is nothing at all to you. You make it ten.”
Sister Mary's Kitchen
BREAKFAST Chilled cantaloupe, preached eggs on graham toast, bran muffins, marmalade, milk, coffee. LUNCHEON —Combination potato salad, rye broad, steamed cherry pudding, milk, tea. DINNER —Baked -ham. browned potatoes, spinach In cream sauce, tomato salad, berry roly-poly, whole wheat bread, milk, coffee. Baked ham Is quite as good cold as hot. The carving knife should be very sharp and the ham cut In paper thin slices for serving. Berry Roly-poly is a delicious dessert worth keeping In mind during the berry season. Any kind of berry can be used. Berry Roly-Poly Two cups flour, 4 teaspoons baking powder, 3 tablespoons butter, 1-2 teaspoon salt, 3 4 cup milk (about), 2 cups washed and drained raspberries, 3-4 cup sugar, 2 more tablespoons butter. Mix and sift flour, salt and baking powder. Rub in 3 tablespoons butter with tips -of fingers and cut in milk to make a soft dough just stiff enough to roll on a board. Roll in a sheet about 3-8 of an inch thick. Sprinkle with berries, leaving a margin of about 1 Inch of plain dough around the edge. Sprinkle with sugar, dot with bits of butter and roll up like a jelly roll. Bake on an oiled and floured baking pan for thirty minutes in a moderately hot oven. Cut in slices and serve with sugar and cream. (Copyright, 1326, NEA Service, Inc.) MONOGRAMS POPULAR Monogrammed pins, once used exclusively for hats, are now equally smart for frocks and are very popular. CORAL COLOR Coral color, and old-fashioned shade, Is returning to prominence in the trimming of gray and putty-col-ored frocks.
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7 OuirrL'A STORY OF A girl, of today THE CRESCENT MOON Joan, however, had apparently gotten rid of most of her troubles, and she exclaimed that she was very hungry as the chicken with its mound of fluffy mashed potatoes ai)d dishes filled with peas were brought in. Jerry in the fitful candle light, as he answered politely that he was very glad, seemed cold and stern.I, who had looked forward to this evening meal with pleasure, could not eat. I realized that the world in which I had been living the last few months was not a real world, peopled by normal men and women, but a queer little corner of that world which was filled with the kind of people which one sometimes reads about in books. The thought came to me that maybe fate had allowed me to mingle with this kind of people to show me how foolish and futile were their lives. “There must he some other kinds of people,” I said to myself, and Immediately. I knew that there were other kinds—people like Mamie who could not only resist temptation in the person of the man she loved devotedly, but resist something much harder, the pleading of her own heart. I raised my head. Over Jerry’s shoulder this time I saw that crescent moon with its lone star almost clinging to its lowest point,, and I knew that the real world, the world In which most people live, was now about me and that It was full of such human beings as the motherly woman, who, with a starched apron tied around her ample waist, was waiting on us. Her faded eyes were full of kindly curiosity. She did not seem to be able to quite make out whether It was Joan or I In whom the handsome young man was interested. Joan was eating her dinner contentedly. She was so interested in herself and her own affairs that she got no Inkling of how things stood between Jerry and me. In her care for Lela she needed to have merged all that love she had had for Barry. She had forgotten that Lela had tried to hurt her. and I she told minutely of I/ela’s condition and how she was so comfortably i fixed at the hospital. She rejoiced that within a few days her property would he turned to her and she would bo able to make and her baby comfortable for life. ”1, think," she said, “that we had better tell Mr. Hathaway all about my affair with Barry. He can advise us what I had better do about thd $20,000. I feel sure that in some way Jem Smith Is mixed up In it, hut we must have no scandal until after my estate is turned over to ine." For the first time Jerry seemed interested. "Has Mr. Robinson said anything to you about when he was going to do this. Miss Meredith?” he asked. "No," she answered. “But surely he must remember the date.” (Copyright, 1926, by NEA Service.) NEXT —Joan’s Mysterious Brother. CREPE SATIN The fad for using both sides of crepe satin has produced street and afternoon dresses of elegant simplicity. No other trimming is needed than the contrast in surfaces.
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Martha Lee Says PUPPY LOVE OF YOUTH AMUSES US
And after the little years have brought wisdom, we turn to look back upon our early impressions of worth and good, and love, and wonder how it could be we were such foolish ones.
That stunning girl you love at 17, whose dainty movements thrilled you, whose cold little blue eyes j brought palpitations to your heart j and whose rosebud mouth you j thought you couldn’t live without j kissing—you realize now that her j dainty little smug face was only a ! mask for her empty head, and that her mouth was too small with selfishness, and that you wouldn't have her now around your house for worlds! Or. If you are a girl, perhaps you wonder how you could have loved that large, athletic brute with curly hair -who -called you pretty names that meant nothing, and who took your worship quite for granted, being utterly self-centered. Oh Ves, we grow out of these fantasies of youth—if we don’t make the mistake of marrying them! And how many of us sometimes sit thinking like the writer of the letter below, glad that the illusion of youthful love is gone and in its stead there is the quiet, deep affection of the Jiappily married. End of the Story Dear Miss Lee: Four years have, passed since I wrote you a letter. I was what I thought in love, in fact it was a "puppy love. The fellow was a big drinker and wrote me letters of love and wanted to go with me. His sister and I were great pals and through her X learned that he was engaged to another. I right then and there quit receiving any letters from him and told him to be true to his future wife. Later lie sent word to me that he was no longer engaged and wanted a date. This 1 gave him. Imagine my surprise three days later to,hear that ne had married. What kind of a husband would he have made me? Today T am married to a man I truly love and who really oares for me. We have been married two years and have a darling baby girl 1 year old. 1 have a little three-room house furnished not with the best of furniture, but with furniture bought with love for me. My husband has his little faults and so do I. Vie get angry, then in five minutes we are sorry ana have patched the old boat and are ready to start again on the matrimonial sea. I have a quick temper and niy husband sure knows how to cool me down by Joking me until I have to laugh. You can't be mad and laugh. So you see I am happv in the love of a true husband, who do**s not drink and who lives for big wife and baby. HAPPINESS. Thank you for your letter! And I am glad you have found your happiness. and now that you know what it means to be really in love, all the real worth of life comes home to you, doesn’t It, and you feel that God’s in His Heaven and all’s right with the world! TO HAVE ANNIVERSARY The Rev. and Mrr. Hayward to Celebrate Wedding 25 Years Ago. The Rev. and Mrs. Frederick Arthur Hayward, 3922 S. Emerson Ave., will celebrate their twentfflfth wedding anniversary at their home this evening. The Rev. Hayward Is exeoutlve secretary of the Federated Baptist Churches of Indianapolis and recently was reelected vice president of the Church Federation of Indianapolis. He also is a member of Center Lodge 23, F. and A. M. The Haywards were married In New York and later moved to Wisconsin, where the Rev. Hayward was tendered a pastorate. He was director of religious education of the Baptist Church for six years before coming to Indiana.
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AT7G. C 1926
Weddings and Engagements
The engagement of Mrs. Martha j Monfort, 3354 N. Capitol Ave., to [ Paul Bertonclne of Jamestown, N. Y., Is announced. The wedding will take place at Mrs. Monfort’s home on Aug. 12. * • • The marriage of Mias Alma H. Schroeder, daughter of Albert A. Schroedor, Meridian St. and Stump Rd., to Theodore H. Weber, which took place Aug. 4, Is announced. Mr. and Mrs. Weber will live at 6230 Ellenberger Ave. • • • Mr. and Mrs. James Lyons, 931 S, West St., announce the engagement of their daughter, Miss Mary Agnes, to Edward Joseph McCann. The wedding will take place at £k. John's Church next Wednesday morning. • * * Mr. and Mrs. William Lynch, 1323 E. Ohio St., announce the engagement of their daughter, Miss Ruth, to Edward Arzman, son of Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Arszman. The wedding will take place in October. • • * Mr. and Mrs. George Baker of mour, Ind., announce the ment of their daughter Florence, 205 N. Mount St., to Edward C. Grande, son of Mr. and Mrs. John Grande of this city. The wedding will take place Sept. 1. FOR YOUNGER GIRLS The suh-deb will like the bolero dresses of soft crepe in pastel coliors, recently sponsored by Paris. SMOCKING Most of the new sport dresses show a touch of smocking at shoulders, hips or wrists. DAYTIME FRO< K A simple daytime frock is of sunyellow crepe de chine, with geometrical patterns of hand-drawn work.
Victor Columbia Brunswick Records at Baldwin’s The Musical Center of Indianapolis On Monument Circle
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