Indianapolis Times, Volume 38, Number 111, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 August 1926 — Page 2
PAGE 2
LEGION GROUP TO CHOOSE DELEGATES Auxiliary, at State Conventfon, Will Name Twelve Members to Attend National Gathering.
The State convention of the American Legion Auxiliary, at Marion, Aug. 30, will elect twelve Indiana women as delegates at the national convention of tha JLegion women’s organization at Philadelphia, Oct. 11 to 15, inclusive. The auxiliary convention is in connection with the regular Legion national meeting. Mrs. Eliza London Shepard of the Spink-Arms, national president of the American Legion Auxiliary, which has headquarters here, will take the entire local staff with her to the Philadelphia convention. The party will leave Oct. 2 and will consist of Mrs. Shepard, Mrs. Lucy Boyd, national secretary; Mrs. Emma Haden, national treasurer;
SOCIAL ACTIVITIES
Miss Mabel Neal who will be married to Bennett P. Hunter of Atlanta, Ga., next week, was the honor guest at a bridge party and miscellaneous shower given by Mrs. Francis C. Smith. 590 East Hr., Woodruff Place, Thursday evening. The guests were: Misses Pauline Neal, Mabel Goddard, Irene McLean, Remy, Anne Smith, Vance Garner, Edith Silver, Elizabeth Moore, Florence Jones, Ella Sengenberger and Mable Neal and Mesdames James Ruddell and John D. Cantrell. * * * Miss Ruth Irene Fisher, 2542 N. Delaware St., entertained with a luncheon at the Columbia Club today, followed by a theater party at English’s in honor of Mrs. C. W. Young of Hollywood. Fla. Other special guests included Miss Helen Goodnow and Miss Hazel Van Auken. * • Dr. and Mrs. A. C. Pebworth and son, Rgbert, of 2123 N. Talbott Ave., left today for a two week's stay at Lake Tippecanoe. They will be Joined by their son. who has been attending the Indiana University summer school at Winona Lake. • * • Mrs. M. Earl Robbins. 2037 Ashland Ave., has as her guests Miss Ruth Jones, Waldron, Ind.; Miss Alice Walters, West Lafayette; Mias Lillian Atwood, Petersburg. 111., and Misses Elizabeth Kegg, Margaret Stllz and Katherine Robbins of this city. * * * Dr. and Mrs. Robert W. piake, 615 Highland Dr., will leave Thursday for Philadelphia. Pa., where Dr. Blake will attend the International Dental Congress. * * * Mr. and Mrs. Edwin P. Ott, of 1719 Anbury Bt., have had as their house guests during the week. Dr. and Mrs. A. C. Ruhl of Kansas City. Mo., formerly of this city, and Mr. and Mrs. Frank Douthit of Tampa, Flat * * • Mrs. John Barton and Mrs. Ona Riley will be hostesses at a card party to be given Sunday afternoon and evening for the benefit of St. /Catherine’s Church, at the hall, Shelby and Tabor Sts. • * * Miss Mary Hess, 2933 Wood St., is spending a few days with Miss Marion Hedge of Newcastle, Ind. • • * In honor of Miss Dorothy Parkinson and Ralph L. Hueber, who will be married this till. Mr. and Mis. A. .T. Hueber entertained with a dinner at their home. 2408 N. New Jeney St., Friday evening. The table was decorated with a centerpiece of Powers and guests included Mlstes Madge McMillan, Alzena Hiatt, Alice Headrick. Martha House. Irma Schnabel and Mildred Beaman And Messrs and Mesdames C. E. Clift and .Tack Gardner. Mrs. Hueber entertained Thursday afternoon with a miscellaneous shower in honor of Miss Parkinson and the gifts In a decorated white basket were presented to the brideelect by little Rosaline Johnson. .Guests were: Mesdames Homer Johnson of Washington, D. C.; Frank Winkle, Margaret Venn, H. P. Coburn, C. O. Bray and Jacob Schulmeyer. t• • • A farewell luncheon and shower in honor of her aunt. Dr. Susan E. Collier, who will leave soon for Houston, Tex., was given Thursday afternoon by Mrs. John E. Becker at her home, 6474 College Ave. A Yoy train filled . with gifts formed the centerpiece for the table. The guests included Mesdames C. A. Brockway, John Frazer, Ruth Law and Robert Brockway. , • • • The engagement of Miss Mary Helen Wlnchell to Glenn S. Miller, son of Mrs. Robert H. Miller, was announced at a charming party given for her daughter by Mrs. G. H. Wlnchell, 35 Layman Ave., Friday evening. The wedding will take place at the Irvington Methodist Church Sept. 18. Miss Jeanette Hill played a group of piano selections during the evening. Miss Thelma / Wallace gave several readings and Miss Lucille Mock, accompanied by Miss Hill, sang, The hostess was assisted by Mrs. Miller. The guests Included Misses Kathleen Davis, Elizabeth and Jeanette Hill, Helen Coombs, Angeline and Edith Phillips, Delores Vestal, Mildred Askren, Alberta Jones, Dorothy Stewart, Thelma Wallace, Elizabeth Coleman. Lucille Mock, Dorothy Dittrich, Laura Carroll, Helen Showalter, Hortense St. Lorenz, Elizabeth Dill, Clara Volltner, Elizabeth Spurgeon. Frances Huey, Mabel Marshmeyer, Alma Marshmeyer. Irma Beerman, Elizabeth and Helen Hudson. * • * Mrs. Richard Lieber announces that a. nursery school In honor of Mies Claire Ann Shover will be s opened at 5625 N. New Jersey St., of Teachers’ College and Ottejie Rohe of Columhus, ;.&i. a student, at the Palmer school V<.S| 'etrolt, Mich., will be members
MJss Margaret Gauss, secretary to the national president; Mrs. John Akin, .State treasurer; Mrs. Glen Ashley, in charge of charter and mimeograph work; Miss Cecilia Wenz, financial clerk, and Mrs. Bert F. Hawkins. At the convention in Philadelphia reports compiled by the national officers and chairmen of the national committees will be given, amendments to the national convention considered, and officers elected. Each State department will be entitled to five delegates for each 1,000 members or major fraction thereof. In addition to this, the past national presidents who are in good standing in their own units are life delegates with a vote to be exercised with their departments.
of the teaching force. The school will be modeled after the one in Detroit and will be open to children of pre-kindergarten age, two to four and a half years. It will be open from 9:30 a. m. to 4:30 p. m. • * * A lawn fete will be held by the girls' auxiliary to the Jewish Shelter House and Aged Home at 832 Union St., Monday evening, on the grounds of the home. Proceeds will go to the building fund for the remodeling of the home, which is now in progress. The program for the evening will include dancing, refreshments and amysements at a number of booths. Miss Helen Marer, president of the auxiliary is in charge.
CITY MANAGER PLANS PROCEED Campaign Group to Be Announced —More Backers. With new influential supporters, the movement to replace the political government of Indianapolis with a city manager business administration was revived today. Plans were going forward for another meeting early In September of the executive committee sponsoring the movement, at which the campaign committee personnel will be announced. Seven citizens were added to the executive committee Friday at a I meeting of business and professional men and women at the Indianapolis Athletic Cluh. They were Frank P. Manly, L. C. Huey, Sol Schloss, L. C. .Huesmann, William D. Allison, J. K. Lilly and Mrs. Wolf SussmanCharles F. Coffin, committee chairman, announced the chairman of the campaign committee, has been selected, and that when he picks his coworkers an intensive educational campaign to acquaint the. citizens with advantages to be secured by the change will be undertaken. TWcf~WOMEN injured Were on Sidewalk; Auto Comes Over Curb; Driver Charged. Kenneth Sleser, 18, of 1302 Fletcher Ave., today faced charges of assault and battery, following an accident at, Leonard and Prospect Sts. B'riday night. Mrs. Florence Brink, 5111 N. Pennsylvania St., was injured and taken to Methodist Hospital, while Mrs. William Pettigrew, 744 N. Emerson Ave., was taken home. Police say both women were walking together on the sidewalk when Sleser’s auto ran over the curb and struck them. William Church, 71, of 1334 Naomi St., was taken home suffering from cut han.W. Motor Policemen Miller and Banks said his auto crashed into a pole at Linden and Lawton Sts. WINTERS RITES MONDAY Services Will Be Held for Bootlegger, Killed By Deputies. Funeral services for William Winters. 25, of 3855 English Ave., convicted bootlegger, fatally wounded by deputy sheriffs at his home Thursday night when he attempted to escape, will be held Monday at Shirley Brothers funeral parlors, 946 N. Meridian St., followed by burial in Crown Hill cemetery. Deputy Sheriffs Roland Snider and John Sands, who shot Winters, said he had been a fugitive from a blind tiger conviction in Criminal Court in 1923. Surviving are the widow, Mrs. Violet Winters and the father, John Winters, both of 51 Frank St. An Internal hemorrhage caused the death, according to Dr. L, C. LaMar, who performed the autopsy, Sheriff Omer Hawkins is to finish his investigation today and Coroner Paul F. Robinson expects to start his inquest Monday.
CRYSTAL TREE
This decorative bit from Paris is set in white crystal and has green tinted leaves. . V;1 it.
Bride on Trip —Sorority Delegate Returns
• \ ■ I/ft to right: Mrs. Bruce M. Graham, Miss Mary Wagoner, Miss Anna Gardner. % and Before her marriage on Aug. 5. ing ton and xsill be at home after jronvenrion the Kappa K-.| ’*v Ave. Mr. and Mrs. Graham are on from Oakland. Cal. While there, as | house * guest their” daughter, Miss a wedding trip to New York City, a delegate from Butler University I Anna Gardner, who is here from Mi- < Newport, Atlantic . City and Wash- chapter, she attended the national I ami. Fla., for the summer.
Before her marriage on Aug. 5, Mrs. Bruce M. Graham was Miss Caroline Mark, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank H. Mark, 1421 N. King Ave. Mr. and Mrs. Graham are on a wedding trip to New l’ork City, Newport, Atlantic. City and Wash-
A WOMAN'S ■ Amqad 'A By Allene Sumner PARlS—Perfume is as important to the French maid and matron as her gown or wrap. There is at least one "parfumerie’’ for every shop of robes and manteaux. And Milady on a shopping tour devotes as many hours to the proper matching of perfume to costume and her p</rsonality as we Americans give to dress or shoe selection. ** * * I learned all this when strolling along the famous Rue de La Paix with its shops afeleam and aglow like the famous bazaars of Aladdin’s day. Before me was the sign of a perfume house which has long borne a name to conjure with "among us girls” at home. Pansy Herring Pretzel and I paused before the shop from which exuded the fragrance of all the world. We counted all our crinkly little francs, which are all dolled up like a Christmas tree with pretty pictures. Then we counted all the little fat round centimes, the five centimes and the ten centimes way on up to the 50 centimes which are almost a cent. And we s%id, "their very smallest bottle at home is $5. But there would be no tax or anything like that here. Maybe if we went without lunch and —” So we went in. The shop was very bare. Just creamy walls and two great Seyres jars. One full of fragrant violet perfume. The other sparkling with an ambre lotion. • * * Hardly had the door closed behind us than the Frenchiest woman you ever saw came forth from her lair with her tottering heels, her ears all showing, her sunset red nails, ’n’ everything. And she said something which we did not understand. So we looked blank. Then the gorgeous creature led us by the hand Into a little boudoir and she sat us down in chairs as soft as swansdown, chairs which reclined, and she cooed us into a sort of mesmeric state, and clapped her handj soundly. Now came two tiny boys, dressed like pages of old, into our shadowy fragrant bower. And the two boys bore great trays, one gold and one silver, and upon each try were tiny vials of fragrance. Madame now brought silken kerchiefs. one jade colored, one violet, and, still cooing and murmuring, she bound them over our eyes. • By this time, being a hit accustomed to the climatic conditions, we deduced from the French that we could “see” the perfume better if in utter darkness. Then in swift succession began a passing of the little vials beneath our nosey wosles, whilst madams murmured the mystic names of emeraude, ambre, cerise, pechenarclsse, Jacquimot. But after the first dozen, our noses refused to work overtime. Besides, just as ope insists in this land on translating francs into dimes and dollars, and "wee wees” into plain "yeses,” so did we Insist on translating our high-born perfumes into plain .rose and violet and lily and carnation. After we had sniffed of some fifty vials, madame removed the kerchiefs and waited for our royal decisions. TffttWly pointed at a vial of rosy seized it. Looked at it Launched into heated
.THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Times Pattern Service PATTERN ORDER BLANK Pattern Department, * Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis. Ind. O si s) f) Inclosed and 15 cents for which send pattern Na o J \J Size * Name • Address *. •'*•*** . City
Cool as It Is Correct Today’s design is 2800. Figured georgette crepe daytime frock, a one-piece style that suggests the two-piece mode, box-plaits its lower front skirt section. It features a wide sash that ties in bow at center-front. Coral colored Chinese Damask; sunni crepe de chine, or beige English wool jersey, is effective for Design No. 2800. If you are 36-inch bust measure, 3 >4 yards of 36-lnch material will make this attractive model. The pattern can be had in sizes 16, 18 years, 36, 38, 40 and 42 inches bust measure You can make thils style In an hour. The box-plaits are stitched part way at perforations; lower front skirt section joined to front waist section and side and shoulder seams of dress closed. It is now completed, ready for sash. Complete Instructions with pattern. 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 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 sise. oratory which seemed to revolve about the point that such things were not for us. Madame surveyed us minutely, our hair, our eyes, our hands. Then dramatically pounced upon a bowl as yellow as the sun. ”Ah, this was ours, this coque d’or. This for the brown hair, the brown eyes, the hands of tranquility. Never, never, never must we douse our frail forms with ought else.” Wo accepted the edict and waited for the worst, asking “combien?” or “how much”? • * • Madame looked at us aghast, her eyes afire in the shadows of “the smelling room.” Surely we were not through? This perfume was for the costumes we were wearing only. We must have perfumes for all our dresses. For our colored handkerchiefs. For our theater nights. For our morning walks. To cut a long story short. America won. Pansy Pretzel and her protegee decided that they preferred the fine subtle Incense of food to that of harmonizing with custom and personality. We clutched our infant vials of coque d’or and fled. “Combien?” You guess! I,’ll nqver, never, never tell. t SHIP REPORTED AGROUND Bu United Press CORDOVA. Alaska, Aug. 14.—The Japanese merchant ship, Unkai Maru, has reported herself aground in the, tjprth P* clflc ln *• message to the United States naval radio ta- , sion at St. Paul, Alaska.
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. Write only one recipe, name, address and -date on each sheet. ARTICHOKE SALAD Peel three seedless oranges, remove pith and white membrane, aAd slice. Use an equal amount of tender white celery stalks cut Into inch lengths. Mix together with two taj blespoons of olive oil, one tablespoon lemon juice, a teaspoon of salt and one-fourth teaspoon of paprika. Heap this together lightly on a serving dish and surround with boiled hearts of artichokes cut into quarters. Mrs. Rex Ootterman, 446 White River Pkwy., W. Dr., Indianapolis. I
7 '~TJL)a,y^ A STORY OF A GIRL3/ TODAV "If you wish, Joan,” I continued, "I will go with you to your lawyer tomorrow morning so that if anything unexpected comes up I can tell someone all about it, or’at least supplement what you have to say. In things like this you know it is well to have a witness.” ”1 expect,” said Jerry, “as much as he will hate it, your brother will have to come out here and be present at the settlement. That will take some time, you know. I am somewhat at loss to know why he has not spoken of that before.” "Perhaps he has,” said Joan, as a slow blush of shame spread over her face. “There are three letters, one an airplane special at the house. But to tell the truth I was so worried about my own affairs that I did not open them. John often sends me special letters when he wants books or instruments or sorqething done for him in the city, and I thought these letters were about some of the things “that could wait until I knew what was going to happen to me. I’ll go home now and read them and let you know in the morning. “But you must know, Mr. Hathaway, that, if we find things all right and if all my brother and I have to do is tq sign a few old papers, I shall expect you to book Judy's and my Passage on the next boat.” Jerry looked at me and appealingly. I saw his hand tremble as he tried to raise the thick white coffee cup casually to his lips. There was an expression on his face that made my heart heat ,a little faster. I had never seen Jerry Hathaway when he seemed so troubled. All at once I found that there was new feeling within my soul as I watched him. I wanted to comfort him. I wanted to hold his head against my heart. I wanted to smooth his hair which had become mussed in our long ride from the city when he had been without his hat. For the first time in my short life I felt that motherly instinct that meriful Providence had planted in the soul of every woman. Until now I had been so interested in my affairs and the exciting experiments that I had been making in every day living, that the idea had never come to me that my own way was the way of every womaiij It was the fulfilling of God’s great plan. It was the great thing that makes a woman something more or less divine. It was the thing that has made great painters place a halo around the head of Mary—it was the thing which makes all men at some times in their lives look upon some woman and adore. (Copyright, 1926. NEA Service, Inc.) Next—Judy Looks Ahead.
Boy YOUR Weahng Xpparel on the AMERICAN BUDGET TWENTYI PAYMENT PLAN i l ■ —- Ho —~ chans far > amount or PAY rt* , O’A'SN rmr \ account wesk <••••• $"25.00 sl-25 t.cr, ~rb_ ,-50:00 *2^o "T 1 -‘‘."A TTsloo MJg 1| UOO.OO ss.oo mWHY STORE * W EJ ohm ns-
WOMEN ROTARIANS NAME COMMITTEES Announced by President, Miss Margaret Shipp—Weekly Luncheons to Be Resumed in October.
Beginning in October the regular weekly luncheon of the Woman’s Rotary Club will be resumed. The committee members for the year have been announced by the president, Miss Margaret Shipp. They are: ' Ways and means committee, Miss Florence S. York, chairman: Mrs. Helen Warrum Chappell, Mrs* Carolyn Crossland. Miss Stella Doeppers. Miss Lucy E. Osborn and Miss Anne White. Program: Miss Flora Drake, chairman: Mrs. Lenore Coffin. Miss Margaret Dorman, Mis. Minnie Edenbarter. Miss Helena Hibben. Miss Leborah D. Moore. Miss Kathryn Pickett. Miss Laura Royse. and Miss May Louise Shipp. Entertainment: Miss Pauline Schellschmidt, chairman; Mrs. Sarah Major Avery, Mrs. Clara N. Bates, Miss Eliza Browning, Mrs. Murrie Carr. Miss Emma Colbert. Mrs. Louise Koehne. Mrs. Elizabeth Long, and Mrs. Marie Dawson Morrell. Fraternal Fraternal: Miss Eva M. Reynolds, chairman: Mrs. Florence Alley, Mrs. Jarret Payne Bowies. Miss Jessie E. Boyce. Mrs. Ethel Clark, Miss Dorothy Cunningham. Mrs. Olive Edwards. Miss Lulu Kanagy, Mrs. Ida Langerwlsch and Miss Bess Morgan.
HOPE FOR THE LOVE OF UNDERSTANDING
There’s a love that comes after marriage that is sometimes finer, more binding, more perfect than any love that could have come before marriage.
Like a dawning that you may< stand watching, tinging the horizon with saffron and rose and mounting steadily into the flawless day. It's a love *hat comes very occasionally to kings and queens—they J whose marriages must be made in the courts and not in the hearts. I And it grows so finely—if only it is 1 encouraged a hit, handled lovingly. Its soil is association; its roots are | understanding and sympathy, and on ' its 9talk grows the perfect flower. It's the kind of love we want after I the fires of passion are cooled and 1 we settle down into the long years of | companionship and comradeship. Its disillusions are so few because its understanding is so great. Romance for the young, passionate love at mating time, perhaps, but give us the deep love that comes after marriage for the rest of the road we must travel, hand in hand! The Bluebird Dear MarUia Lee: lam Jut up against it to know what to do. I am a woman 28 years old. and in business. For the last five years, a man. two years older than I. has been asking me with patience and constancy to marry him. Now the difficulty is this. I really don't love him -—not the kind of love one naturally expects to find some day. But 1 do care for his company, and we have awfully good times together. I wouldn't want to give him up for worlds. But I don't want to ruin his happiness bv keeping him tied to my apron strings. Sometimes I think it would be a haven, and ouite wonderful, to be his wife. And again. I think I couldn't possibly give up my independence for a man whom I only like and don t love. But I'm 28. Miss Lee. and I m thinking about things. What would you say? JEAN. Well, Jean, passionate love passes away—-but understanding and companionship you would have always with you with this man. And if you could be so congenial before marriage, no doubt you will find that the comradeship will be even finer afterward. Os course, that doesn't always follow. But five years ought to be time enough to study a man who loves you through and through. And you would know. “Man was not made to live alone,” Jean, and it won't be long until you'll be finding that out —all by yourself. From what you tell me, I cannot see that you will be making a mistake in marrying this man —and perhaps there will be for you that greater thing than romance—the love that comes after marriage. PROPELLER KILLS CAPITALIST B t/ United Press WICHITA. Kan.. Aug. 14.—George Theis, Jr., prominent business man and capitalist, was killed here Friday when struck by the propeller of an airplane which had landed and was taxiing along the ground at the local airport.
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Dorfman Rug Co.QHfiQ Car pt. 207 W. Wash St. LI. and , "If it rOTeri the floor—We have it” Linoleum* We Sell the ‘United States” Perfection wfconsn pv Abdominal gk Support p Exclusively in This Town M They are fashioned to every line of thfgfe M body for ease and comfort, and at 111 M lower than others. For men and women. M Come in and look them over as you do M II when buying'clothing or other apparel. JU FOR SALE AT ALL HAAG’S Cut Price Drug Stores;
AUG. 14, 1926
Public affairs and relief: Dr. Jane M. Ketcham, chairman; Mrs. Ida Strawn Baker, Mrs. John Carey. Miss Helen Clark, Mrs. Alfred Potts, Dr. Elsie Stewart and Mrs. Edward Franklin White. Grievance: Miss Estella Franz, chairman; Mrs. Marie M. Bowen, Mrs Ada O. Frost, Miss Mary E. Hedrick, Mrs. Laura Steffens New and Miss Florence Ruby. Publicity Publicity—Mrs. Annie Parker Bross, chairman; Mrs. M. A. Blades. Mrs. James L. Gavin. Mrs. William Allen Moore and Miss Anna Nicholas. House—Mrs. Myra R. Richards, chairman; Miss Pearl Holloway and Mrs. Jessie Carpenter Kershner. Auditing—Miss Forba McDaniel, chairman; Mrs. Ella Snyder Parker and Miss Imogens Shaw. Year Book—Miss Minerva Thurston, chairman; Miss Alice Anderson. Miss Dorothy Blair, Miss Gertrude Forrest and Mrs. Josephine Frawley. Wheel—Mrs. Edna Denham Raymond, chairman; Mrs. Haute Tarkington Jameson, Mrs. Florence Webster Long, Mrs. Kate Milner Rabb and Mrs. Sue L. White. Legislative—Dr. Amelia Keller, chairman; Miss Sleanor Barker, Mls?d Florence Dillan and Miss Graeter.
Martha Lee Says
Sister Mary’s Kitchen
BREAKFAST —Baked peaches, cereal, thin cream, French toast, syrup, milk, coffee. LUNCHEON —Molded salmon salad, rye bread and butter sandwiches, stuffed baked apples, chocolate crisps, milk, tea. DINNER —Broiled beefsteak, potatoes In parsley butter, corn on the cob, string bean salad, blackberry shortcake, graham bread, milk, coffee. The cut of meat you choose for broiling depends on the size of your family. A sirloin steak 114 Inches thick will serve a family of six, a porterhouse cut the same thickness will serve four, while a club steak will serve two. a Chocolate Crisps One and one-half squares of hitter chocolate, 1-3 cup butter, 3 eggs, 1 cup sugar, 1 cup flour, 1-2 teaspoon baking powder, few grains salt, 1-2 cup chopped English walnut meats, 1-2 cup stoned and chopped dates, 1-4 teaspoon vanilla. Melt chocolate and butter over hot water. Beat eggs until very light, beating In sugar. Mix and sift flout;, salt and baking powder and add to egg mixture with melted butter and chocolate. Mix well and add nuts, dates arid vanilla. Spread on an oiled and floured dripping pan or cook* sheet and bake 15 minutes in a moderate oven. Cut in squares or strips while hot. These are equally good for a picnic or afternoon tea. (Copyright, 1926 c By NEA Service.) W. C. T. U. Notes Mrs. J. E. McGrevy, 624 Congress Ave., will be the hostess for the Mary E. Balch Union Friday at 2 p. m. Mrs. Lulu Jordan will preside. * * • Irvington Union will hold Its regular meeting Wednesday at 2 p. m. with Mrs. Lou Brown, 130 Johnson Ave., as hostess. "Americanization” will be the subject and will be discussed by Mrs. W. W. Wilson. Each member Is requested to come prepared to take part In the general discussion of this subject, following Mrs. Wilson’s talk. Special music has been arranged. *
