Indianapolis Times, Volume 38, Number 110, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 August 1926 — Page 10
PAGE 10
SOCIAL ACTIVITIES
A reception of the FUr East Gun Club at the Spink-Arms Thursday night was In honor of the Rev. and Mrs. Walter G. Menzies, who have returned here after twenty-five years of missionary work In India. Frank C. fc'azelrigg was club host. A welcoming speech, expressing the organization’s appreciation of the missionaries’ work, was made by Ross H. Wallace. The Rev. and Mrs. Menzies told of the various experiences during their residence In the Orient, anil •their three chidren, Dorothy, Robert and Walter, Xgave a pageant dressed in native oriental costume. The Menzies family has been stationed at Pondra Road, Central Province, India. Tne Far East Gun Club is an organization of business and professional men <md women, formed five •years ago, to furnish ammunition for the protection of missionary stations. Since then the club has conducted various enterprises in the Far East relative to missionary work. • • • In honor of Miss Rosalind Barnes of Detroit, Mich., and Miss Nellie Levlson and Miss Sonia Zerger, both of New York. Mrs. Louis Robert Markum and Mrs. Harold E. Platt entertained today at the Lincoln with a luncheon-bridge. The guests ..included Mesdames George L. Levy, yMaJrvin H. Wiseman, Hans Cohen, E. R. Glldehaus and Leonard A. Murchison. • • • Assisted by her mother, Mrs. M. M. Kistner, 5315 Central Ave., Miss Harriet Kistner entertained at bridge Thursday afternoon. The guests included Misses Louise Sumner, Sarah Rosman, Elizabeth Johnson, Eldena Stamm, Pearl Bartley, Margaret Bell, Helen Kingham, Dorothy '.Duesenberg, Katherine Rank and -;Ruth Emingholtz. ,• ‘ The marriage of Miss Gladys Marie Woody, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. S: - •Women ( Secure ( \ against lost charm, this new 1 \ way of solving oldest hygienic / problem—offers true protect tion; discards like tissue SHEER gowns and ill-timed social or business demands hold no terror for the modern woman. The insecurity \of the old-time “sariitary pad” has been ended. “KOTEX,” anew and remarkable way, is now used by 8 in 10 better class women. It’s five times as absorbent as ordinary cotton padsl You dine, dance, motor for hours in sheerest frocks without a second’s doubt or fear. It deodorizes, too. And thus stops ALL danger of offending. Discards as easily as a piece of r tissue. No laundry. No embarrassment. You ask for it at any drug or department store, without hesitancy, simply by saying "KOTEX." Do as millions are doing. End old, insecure ways. Enjoy life every day. Package of twelve costs only a few cents. . / KOTex No laundry—discard like tissue
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William B. Woody, 5415 Wlnthrop Ave., and E. Bruce Leavitt of Hammond, 111., is announced. The wedding took place at the home of the bride’s parents, Thursday afternoon, the Rev. William B. McClaslin, officiating. Mr. and Mrs. Leavitt are on a wedding trip and will be at home in Hammond, 111., after Sept. 1. • • • At the home of her mother, Mrs. Walther, 721 Cottage Ave., Mrs. Oscar Kerbox 1 entertained Wednesday evening with a surprise miscellaneous shower for Miss Violet Tex, who will be married to Louis A. Walther, Saturday. The hostess was assisted by Mrs. Walther. Attractive decoraUons of garden flowers pink and blue and the bride-elect’s gifts were presented to her In a large hat boi, with great bows of the two colors. Guests with Miss Tex were: Mesdames Harry Walther, Luther E. Tex, Harry Bolinger, Edward Kenninger, R. H. Austin, G. U. Gross, E. A. Tex, George Gross, Lee Templeton, John Kennington and Misses Clara, Gladys and Lillian Kennlnger. Former residents of Fountain, County will hold their annual reunion at Brookside Park, Sunday at 2 p. m. Guy F. Spinning is president. Mrs. Robert E. Lee, secretary treasurer. • • * Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Macßeth, 820 N. Alabama St., have returned from an extended visit to Atlantic City. Philadelphia and other Eastern cities. • • • The George H. Thomas’ W. R. C. 20, Will meet at the new G. A. R. hal], 512 N. Delaware St* Sunday at 2 p. m. Mrs. Maud Allman, president, will preside. * * * A picnie-for the benefit of the church will be given Sunday afternoon and evening at Columbia Park by the Holy Name Society of St. Roch’s. From 5 to 7 p. m. a chicken dinner will be served. There will be a card party in the afternoon, beginning at. 3 p. m. and dancing in tne evening. Mrs. Ralph Wr Leonard and Miss Mary Leonard, 1428 N. New Jersey St., are visiting Mrs. J. Edward Hollwedel at her camp on Lake Champlain at North Here, Vt. Mrs. Hollwedel, a resident of New York City, and a sister of Mrs. Leonard, is well known in Indianapolis. * * * Mr. and Mrs. George Kitzing, 4230 Guilford Ave., and Mr. and Mrs. Beyers and son Jack of 2021 N. Harding St., are at Lake Nyona, near Rochester, Jnd., for two weeks. • •* • Camp 3, P. O. of A., will hold its regular meeting at the hall at !9’4 S. Delaware St., this evening. lrs. E. Shucraft will preside. * • • E. A. McCarty, 1309 N. Pennsylvaina St., announces a Gosport “home-coming" Sunday for Gosport and former Gosport residents. There will be a basket dinner. A program has been arranged by the Gosport Band and the Gosport quartet. „ i* * • Miss Katherine Foster, 3524 Kenwood Ave., will entertain at the regular meeting of Sigma Epsilon bridge club this evening. A picnic has been planned by the sorority for Aug. 20. Miss Florence Denovan is chairman and will be assisted by Miss Mildred Harris and Mis’s Katherine Foster. •* • • Dr. Sayres J. Miller, 3840 N. Pennsylvania St., and Frederick M. Patterson, 25 W. Twenty-Third St.,
Will Study Music in New York
Miss Victoria Montani
Leaving this week for New York City, Miss Victoria Montanl, 3245 N. Illinois St., will continue study of the harp with A. Francis Piato of the New York College of Music. This fall she will resume her vocal work with her uncle, Nicola A. Montanl, after # his return to New York from abrokd. Miss Montani, a pupil of Miss Adelaide Conte, won a vocal scholarship from the ( Irvington school of Music some tini'^^px. have gone to *Lake Dewey, Mich., for two 4 weeks. . Mr. and Mrs. \V. Mort Martin and daughter Elizabeth Jean, 3766 N. Pennsylvania St., have gone on a trip to Miagara Falls and Toronto, Canada. • • • Mr. and Mrs. Frederick McClure and son, Fred Jr., of St. Louis, Mo., are house guests of Mr. and Mrs. Donald McClure, 3480 E. Fall Creek Blvd. • • • Mrs. \V. IV. Winslow, 942 N. Meridian St., and grandson. Walker William Winslow, left Thursday for Lake Maxinkuckoe. Mr. and Mrs. Robert C. Winslow and children will leave Saturday for the lake and will stay a week. * • • Miss Ruth Cochrane, 2402 N. New Jersey St., and Miss Margaret Scroder, 2058 Central Ave., have gone to Philadelphia, New York City and Washington, staying several days in each city.
Sister Mary’s Kitchen BREAKFAST—Fresh plums, oatmeal with thin cream, frizzled dried beef, crisp whole wheat tosat, milk, coffee. LUNCHEON—Open tomato sandwich, iced cocoa. DINNER—Fried chicken country stylo, potatoes au gratln, French fried onions, cottage cheese and currant Jelly salad, apple Ice cream, corn sticks, milk, coffee. Plums make a delicious breakfast fruit. They should be served whole after careful washing. Fruit knives and finger bowls are included in the “set up" for the fruit service. Apple Ice Cream One pint milk, one pint cream, one pint whipping cream, two cups apple pulp, one and one-half cups sugar, one-eighth teaspoon salt. Combine milk and thin cream and scald in double boiler. Add sugar an<f salt and cool. Bake seven or eight tart apples. Scrape out pulp and put through a ricer. Add to cooled milk and sugar mixture and turn into freezer. Freeze to a ‘‘mush’’ and add cream whipped until stiff. Or the whipped cream can be added just before freezing. This iee cream can be frozen with or without stirring. If frozen with stirring use throe parts ice to one part salt. If frozen without stirring use four parts ice to one part of salt and let stand four hours. GARY BUILOI'MG GAINS One of in United States to Show Increase. It n I'iHted Press CHICAGO, Aug. 13.—Although July building operations throughout the country showed a net decline of 11 per cent fro mthe operations of July, 1925, twenty. States showed gains and thirteen leading cities were ahead of the 1925 figure, according to a survey, completed by S. W. Sraus & Cos. here to^ay. The report for 468 cities showed $402,845,819 was spent in July, 1925, while those same cities spent $357,831,680 this year. The loss In June this year from last year was 41 per cent. Cities sljowing increases were: Cleveland, Milwaukee, Los Angeles, Newark, N. J.; Gary, Ind.; Pittsburgh, Pa.; Portland, Ore.; Columbus, Ohio; Cincinnati, Ohio; Minneapolis, Minn.; Birmingham, Ala.; Jacksonville, Fla., and Memphis, Tenn. DID NOT PAY FOR GAS So Young Hoosiers, Returning From Florida, Get Sentences. Two Valparaiso (Ind.) young men, en route home from Florwida, were arrested, fined and sentenced here today after they attempted to get gasoline for their automobile without paying for it. The two, Fay Jones and John Bernard, both 26, spent the night at the Western Oil Refining Station, Sixty-Third St. and Colege Av,e. Ordering nine gallons of gasoline this morning, they drove away without paying. They were arrested on petit larcency charges. In municipal court each was fined $5 and poets and sentenced to five days in jail.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Times Pattern Service
PATTERN ORDER BLANK Pattern Department, Indiana poll* Times, Indianapolis, Ind. 9 7 4 1 Inclosed find 15 cents for which send pattern Na Size ...j. • Name * * Addreea •••••••••* * CRjr a—
Today’s design is 2741. FOR THE SMART MATRON 1 Dashing frock of novelty silk | crepe in lovely shade of Mary blue, , with scarf collar, cuffs and vestee I of soft blue chiffon. Design No. 2741, slim in line and tailored styling, has invereted plaits at sides, which allow freedom. of movement. Exactly as your material appears after it has been cut out is shown in small views. Note the plaits as part of front and back section! After side and shoulder seams are stitched the dress is ready for the collar and AWOMAN'S By Allene Sumner Through Normandy to Paris, “The dinners they are full madame, ’till •five o’clock this afternoon. Will you buy ticket for to eat then?” does France greet Us at high noon. We have disembarked at Cherbourg. We have battled the boat porters grabbing at our purses. We hav© collected our various luggages, and at high noon, weak and weary, sunk into our train compartment for a moment before seeking lunch. • • • “If you do not get to the diner now,” a Serbian girl In our compartment tells you, “you must wait ’till a station stop, get off the train, walk hack to the diner, eat, and get back here before the train starts again, or wait until the next stop.” Vve make our pilgrimage only' to be told by the guardian ofthe gate j that tables are booked five hours I ahead. And we eschewed a boat breakfast because that pristine meal was served at 6 a. tp. in order that the palatial spaces of our Tourist 111 cabin dining room might be ready for the French immigration officials when the boat dropped anchor. The first class lolls in downy ease until 8 o'clock on docking day, a steward takes care of their visas, but we hoi polloi are herded into the dining room two hours before the harbor official enters. ! But one's lowly estate has its advantages when tipping time comes. Only poor students and professors writers are supposed to be in this class, and the night before docking a slip is passed around, stating the decent amount of tip expected.
One dollar and a half to table steward, reads the edict. Same to stateroom steward, and deck steward who serves the dally morning bouillon and afternoon tea, same to library steward who- dishes up the writing paper and stamps and prattles on the virtues of such books as "Alice in Wonderland’’ and "East Eynn” as he takes them from the case. "They told me that' baths were booked for a week after the boat docked," a girl at our table said. "1 shall tip the bath steward nothing.” "I haven't had kny water, since the first day,” said a college lad bent for Oxford. "I'll make it a xero." ' One does not exit from steamer to tender via romantic rope ladder. Merely a tippy gangplank. • • • Now begins the great national sport betwixt American and Frenchmen. "Pourboire!” “Pourboire!" cry the boat hands on the tender to passengers on the big boat above who fling them pennies, nickels and dimes. The white chalky walls of old Cherbourg rise in the midst. .Hundreds of Cherbourgians scuttle down to the wharf on bicycles, all crying, "Pourboire." We and our four bags are hustled to customs. "Du tobac, du cigarets?” ask the mustdched customs man. We answer "Non.” "Ouvre," says he. We open the handbags. A shake of a kimona and hair brush, a sniff at a box of candy, and he marks our bags with his The two larger ones are ! marked without opening at all. ** • V Someone has settled for us the little matter of porter tipping by telling us to give about what we would in our native heath. We proffer our porter a ten franc hill, which today is about 30 cents. There rains upon us a storm of picturesque verbiage. "Pigs of Americans. Daughters of a goat. Dogs of a bandit. Can we not see how worn his shoes are from his labors. Have we no mercy for a man who has eleven children to feed. We can travel. He carries and we bleed his heart!" Only another ten franc checks the cloudburst. “You’re too easy,” says a compartment mate. “You will learn. These boat porters know that they catch Americans before they realise what a franc can buy. They get ten times what those in Paris think a lot." And dinner five hours away! Meanwhile an eye feast of lush green fields afire with poppies, wild bachelor's buttons blifeing the grass, silky-haired goats, women in the i Normandy head dress beating their washing upon the brook’s stones, gay flowers growing from mossy thatched roofs, the farmer’s twowheeled cart drawn by lumbering oxen— So this is France! The longest railway tunnel in the world is the Simplon, in Switzerland and Italy. It is twelve miles, 458 yards long?.
tie that cut in one, vestee and sleeves to be stitched at perforations. Complete instructions with pattern, price 15 cents, in stamps or coin (coin preferred). Cuts in sizes 36, 38, 40, 42, 44 and 46 inches bust measure. Size 36 requires 3 yards of 40-inch material with 1% yards of 20-inch contrasting. Our patterns are made by the leading Fashion Designers of New York City and are guaranteed to fit perfecfiS’. 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.
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Sne of our local features “Uneeda Bakers” so well ' • ' REG.U.S. PAT. OFF. FLAKE BUTTERS . Other products of “Uneeda Bakers'* P\ I ’.tVS will enable you to enjoy a pleasing [ll | ;s\ A Strictly Local Industry S variety of dainty biscuit, crackers and Ml IS | L. C The Indianapolis bakery of National cookies. JSmW n in vd UJ US* P Biscuit Company buys raw materials , £mong these are Lorna Doone-. Il]iu Ij ] ||| and supplies from the local markets and ' c ou * * ° IC3 3u 1 ifel fi 111 fH 1 I | ***■ I In I || I N gives employment to hundreds of Fig Newtons—cakes filled with lmI\W 111 > *ll iia T u r toll * Indianapolis residents. V *** S "‘ yma . ( „ . , . . NATIONAL biscuit company _ ~ " Jgli l “Uneeda Balters"
' OIJJTL'A STORY OF A GIRL, of TO DA/
Just then Joan came back on the porch from telephoning and we could say no more. She Immediately asked Jerry if he would book us passage on the next steamer early in the morning. “Os course, I will do thait, Miss Meredith, if you think you will want it, but honestly if I were you I wy>uld wait until I knew something about the settlement of the estate.” Joan looked annoyed. I imagined it was the first time in her life that a man in the same station as herself in life had not started immediately at her command to make her wishes ecme true. I hastened to explain. "You see, Joan, Mr. Hathaway seems to think it rather strange that you have not had anything said to you by anyone, not even your stepfather, about the final settling of your estate. You know you probably have many millions of dollars In' many different securities and real estate holdings, and it will take a long while to get all these in proper shape. Have you seen Mr. Elkins lately?” "Some way I have a faint recollection that Josiah Elkins is very ill,” interrupted Jerry, "and that his son has taken over as much of his business as possible. This may possibly account for Miss Meredith’s not hearing about her business.” “Well, we will find this all out in the morning,” I said. “Joan, Mr. Hathaway suggests that we visit Mr. Elkins’ office in the morning and notify them that we will expect a settlement on the 17th, which Is a day after tomorrow.” This seemed to suggest but one thing to Joan Meredith. “Then you are coming home with me, Judy, ns my companion anil business manager!” she exclaimed enthusiastically. “If you want me, dear,” I said. "I'll try to bi your companion, if that is what t.iey call them, for a while, but not your business manager. I don’t know anything about business. And I don’t think I had better go home with you tonight, for your stepfather is probably very angry with me.” I had not told Joan anything about Miss'Cleaver and I did not intend to unless it became absolutely necessary. But I knew that Mr. Robinson had probably been hunting me all day, and if he found me at his house there would be ructions. "I don’t see why you can't come home with me even if he is angry,” pouted Joan. “I would rather not tonight, dear,” T declined. “You see, Mamie does not know where I am and I will have to make some arrangements with her before I can come to you.” (Copyright, 1926, By NEA Service.) Next—The Maternal Instinct. People who suffer from hay fever can ward off attacks by living on a diet without meat.
Martha Lee Says ARE YOU THE LITTLE DOORMAT AT HOME? v Keen competition now and then is relished by the best of men—and women. Nobody loves a doormat, no matter how necessary it may be in bad weather.
And besides we get so used to doormats always being exactly where we put them that we’re liable to just take them for granted and even abuse them —because, you see* doormats are doormats, and they’ll recover nicely. And lots of people become doormats for other people in this world—with the same results. And if folks wouldn’t be such doormats for other folks, the other folks would take greater care of them — so they’d be sure to be around handy in the bad weather. All of which points to the fact that you can not cure selfishness in other people by catering-to it and humoring it. It takes a little good natured spunk now and then to make living with some people at all possible. Need Spunk* Dear Martha Lee: Can you advise two finis what to do with two Independent allows? Our ages are 17 and 18 and their ages are 20 and 23. They seem to care more tor their pool games than they do lor us. They are late every night because they say tney have to play three or four games before they can come out to see us. They never take us any place in the daytime. I don't think they could be ashamed of us. for we dnpss nice, are considered pretty and not boisterous. Os course we believe in having a good time. They seem to care for us after they get through caring for themselves and their pool games. We care a lot for these fellows. but they are puzzles to us. Please advise us what to do to make them take more interest in their dates than their games. CECELIA AND AMELIA. Sure, a little bit of their own sauce would be good for these ganders. ✓Why can*t you go swimming and get home Or have other dates earlier in the evening, and let these swains cool their heels on your front porch until you come? A few times of that and they’ll not be so anxious to play their games. They’ll, be wanting to find out just what time you are getting home, and with whom you are going out. And if they persist in being late, you might go to a movie together and just not come home until you're sure they’ve tired of waiting and have gone. Don’t be so interested in whether they come out early or late. Pretend you have something else on your minds —or someone else. Don't scold them at all for being late. Act as though you are secretly rather glad of It. Curiosity and pique will arouse their attention If nothing els'*. FORGIVES DEBTORS LONDON,—“My practice is not to be sold and no debts are to be collected,” was the unusual instruction in the will left by Dr. Wallace I Brown Croskery. The physician left
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AUG. 13, 192(5
slightly more than 9,000 pounds sterling, of which fifty pounds was ntiptilated fox the upkeep of his parrot and dog. WHAT WAS “TICKEE”? NEW YORK—A strange ticket landed Wong Young, of Mott St., in police court. The same ticket got him out. Young was accused of selling lottery tickets, but a court interpreter couldn’t tell whether it was a laundry ticket, a love letter or a'lottery slip.
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