Indianapolis Times, Volume 38, Number 126, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 September 1926 — Page 6

PAGE 6

SOCIAL ACTIVITIES

Miiss Clara Florence Bell, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas A. Bell, recently of this city and now on Kingston, Wilkesbarre, Pa., was married today at the Indianapolis home of her parents to Ge#rge Alfred Van Dyke Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. George A. Van Dyke of Central Court, Inudianapolis. In one corner of the living room, where the light falls through a large glass-enclosed bay window, palms and ferns formed an altar before which the service was read. The bridal party advanced down an aisle between potted palms joined by lengths of white satin ribbon. Lohengrin wedding march and "Indian Love Call,” were played as bridal music by the Oppenheim trio. Dressed in a light blue silk gown, ornamented with hand-painted flow ers and fashioned with a full hoop skirt and a basque waist. Miss Eliz abeth Bell, sister of the bride, was her only attendant. She carried r> sheaf of pink roses and blue delphinium. The bride’s dress was of white satin with a basque waist and a long .full boufftint skirt made in tiers of duchesse lace. The tiarra worn upon her cap-style veil had been in her family for three generations. The bride’s flowers were roses, orchids and valley lilies. Thomas Nicholson was best man. After the reception, which followed the ceremony, the bride and bridegroom departed, on a motor trip West. They will live at 437 Wyoming Ave., Kingston, Pa., upon their return. Intimate friends and relatives present included Mr. and Mrs. Van Dyke, Sr.; Mr. and Mrs. Robert Wilson; Mr. and Mrs. Alva I!. Van Dyke, Greenville, Ind; Mrs. Anna Weber, St. Louis, Mo.; Mrs. Clara Quimlan, St. Louis, and Mrs. C. K Alexander, Cleveland, Ohio. * * * Miss Bonnie Gertrude Thormyor, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Thormyec, became the hride of George R. White at 10 this morning. The service was read by the Rev. E. J. Lester at the Beech Grove Christian Church. Baskets of asters, set among palms and ferns, formed the backgrouhd for a pretty service. Mrs. Stanley Short, an aunt of the bride, played a group of piano selections before the bridal -party entered. Miss Gertrude Lowes f>\ New Bethel, Ind., played several Yiolin solos and Mrs. Harry Stephen sang “At Dawning” and “1 Love You Truly.” Miss Vivian Short, the bridesmaid, wore a pink silk crepe dress and carried pink roses. The bride was given in marriage by her father and wore a gown of white silk crepe over satin, with a tulle veil trimmed in orange blossom.,, in a Crock of blue, little Miss Amiida Short went before the bridal party

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MRS. ED. DAUGHERTY ISO* ORCHARD AVENUE. MUSCATINE. lOWA The Woolworth Building in New York City, which towers 792 feet above the street, is the highest building in the United States. If all the bottles of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound sold in 1925 could be placed end to end, they ■would make a column as high as the Woolworth Building with enough left over to extend from Lynn, Massachusetts to Cleveland. Ohio. In many little villages as in many thriving cities along the route, who are glad to tell others about Lydia

scattering flower petals. The ringbearer was Jimmy Stehlin, dressed in black velvet and white siik, who oairied the ring in a lily. George J. Thormyer, brother of the bride, acted as best man. A reception for the members of the families followed at the home of the bride’s parents. Mr. and Mrs. White left at noon for Redwood Falls, Minn., and will be at home after Oct. 1 in Indianapolis. • • • Mrs. Cushman Hoke and \Mrs. Thomas J. Williamson were honor guests Tuesday at the home of Mrs. Irwin L. Thompson, 4110 N. Capitol Ave., who entertained in their honor with a luncheon bridge. Mrs. Williamson will depart soon to live in Columbus, Ohio, and Mrs. Hoke will leave for the winter with her husband, going to Cambridge, Mass., where he will be a student in Harvard University. With the two honor guests were Mesdames Dwight .Murphy, Roy Meredith, Frank Laird, David Lennox, Ray A. Holcomb, F. R. Gallagher, George Hanchett, E. E. Martin and Myron D, Rinker. * * * Mrs. ,T. W. Webber, 4102 E. Michigan St., entertained with a shower for Mrs. Roland Reddick, who was, before her , marriage in Cincinnati this August, Miss Dorothy Harakas. Fall roses, in orchid and white decorated the table. The ices were in the shape of hearts, orchid-tinted, with decorative, white Kewpies on top. Twenty-four guests, with Mrs. Reddick were present. Among them were Mesdames M. 'l'. Harakas, 12. Hendrick*, M. Forster, F. Fitzgerald, M. Chase. R. R. Mills, M. Harbin. T. Hawthorne; L. Kuhluilm. <i. E. Foy, the Rev. and Mrs. S. Buchanan, and Mrs. * Banksteader, and Misses Helen Harakas, Ethel Harakas, Alary Chadwell and Raybelle Kindgold. Mrs. I. Snellenberger assisted the hostess. t • * * The Dorothy Deen Euchre Club met with Mrs. Lyster, 11054 Shelby St., this afternoon at 2:30. * * V Miss Nina Lowman and Miss Claire Dittrich will entertain the Lambda Alpha Psi sorority with a buffet supper this evening at the home of Miss Nina Lowman. 2625 E. St. Clair St. The supper will follow the formal initiation of pledges, M4ss Pauline Ballenger and Miss Esther Jackson. * * * Miss Helen Schaub has announced the attendants for her wedding, to take place Sept. 8 at Christ’s Church; as follows: Mrs. Hazel Doyle, Anderson, Ind.. matron-of-honor; Miss Dorothea -Mcßride and Aliss Florence Schaub, bridesmaids. Roy Arnold will act as best man. ** * . Preceding the first of the meetings of the League of Women Voters, at which candidates of both parties will - peak to the public, Mrs. S. E. Smith, chairman, entertained the members of her committee at luncheon in her home, lull N. Pennsylvania St., today. Those present included Mesdames Harry Angell. VV. O. Bates. Adah Bush, \V. W. Critchlow, Florence Howell, Robert B. Keith, M. M. Kippenberg, Addison Parry, Ed Harmon and Miss Ida’Smith. The first pi meeting was held this afternoon a L i:3u at the Public Library, Cropsey auditorium. W. C. T. U. GIVES PICNIC Junior Department, Temperance I region, Entertained. Twenty-five children were present it a picnic given by the Central VV. C. T. U. for the junior dej*artment, known as the Loyal Temperance Legion, Tuesday in Jamison Park. Games and drills were supervised by Mrs. Charles E. Ealand, secretary of the temperance legion, and Miss Margaret Haper, entertainment committee chairman. The dinner was given by Mrs. J. Harvey Reese, Mrs. Harry M. Sloan> Mrs. W. A. White, Mrs. Austin Black and other helpers. The children rode out and back in an ambulance donated for Tuesday’s occasion by Mrs. Beit S. Gadd and belonging to her husband. The picnic was sponsored by the president, Mrs. J. W. South. COTTAGE CHEESE Thick sour cream is the best thinning ingredient to use when preparing cottage chees for immediate serving.

E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. In a recent letter, Mrs. Daugherty says, “1 was ill for four’ months before I took your medicine. I found one of your books at my front door and read it. It seemed to fit my case, so I began taking Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, and after I took the third bottle, I found relief. I am on my eleventh bottle and I don’t have that trouble any more, and feel like a different woman. I recommend the Vegetable Compound to every one I see who has trouble like mine. I am willing to answer any letters from women asking about the Vegetable Compound.”— Mrs. Ed. Daugherty, 1308 Orchard Avenue, Muscatine, lowa. Mrs. Carr Also Helped Muncie, Indiana. —“I could not get around to do my work. I took medicines and they did me no good. I had always Tieard of Lydia E. Pinkham’s medicine and I thought it would be like all the others, but I found out after I took half a bottle, as I have proved it wonderful. I am taking it yet and I can do all my work. I am feeling fine now, and it is your good medicines that have done it. I tell every woman of the good I get from taking the Vegetable Compound and from using the Sanative Wash.*—Mas. P. W. Carr. 721 West Powers St., Muncie, Indiana. \ • —Advertisement. V i

Her Wedding Away From Home

Expected for a visit here this fall. Airs. ClitT Robbins is the daughter of Mr. aruT Mrs. George Hoffman, 1302 N. I-a Salle St., and was before her marriage Miss Peggy Hoffman. She played last year on the Keith circuit and was wedded in the East. Mr. Robbins, a popular vaudeville and musical comedy star, is known oil the stage as (T.ff Nazarro.

ROMAN'S DAY

By Ailene Fnniner INTERIiA KEN, Switzerland — Alountain climbing is more fun than a circus—wh;n your feet don’t slip. When they do, you can think of funnier outdoor sports. - I speak as one having authority, for r have dumb and I have slipped and dangled from the end of a skinny rope with perdition staring me in the face a few thousand feet below. This is ro newspaper yarn, either, though we poor members of my craft are ever taken with a grain of salt. I really hadn’t the slightest idea of climbing the Jungfrau. Perhaps l had thought of cool Alpine snowy slopes two months ago. But since then I had climbed the Eiffel tower, the Arc de Triomphe, the steel of Notre Dame, St. Marks and the Cam, , paniUe, thetower of the Palazzo Vecchio, and somehow I had lost enthusiasm for climbing mountains, which do not have elevators one way at least. It all happened as things do happen. We sat on our balcony ui Interlaken looking at the Jungfrau, and we wondered if inßybe we could pick eidelweiss if we journeyed almost to bee-"towering height by pinion railway. So we got on the railway and climbed hundreds and thousands of feet until we were right in banks of snow through which the pink Alpine roses glowed like azaleas. And some folks stayed on the railway to ride an hour or so longer to the very top, but \t cost $8 more, so we decided to stay right there, which was about 8,000 feet up and should have done for any one who has an inborn passion for falling downstairs. “So,” as Lorelei Lee says so often in her novel style, “so” we got off the train and began picking purple gentians and yellow primroses and pale blue crocus in the snow, and we picked and picked, and just ahead of us there would be a clump of purple Violets as big as pansies, and just a few steps ahead of them would be a patch of lavender heather, and before we knew it we had climbed up 300 feet, and there was a glacier—the Gletsch glacier. Now we had not the slightest idea of climbing 4he glacier when we

Sister Mary’s Kitchen

Breakfast—Sliced • peaches, uncooked cereal, thin cream, creamed dried beef on graham toast, milk, coffee. Luncheon—Cold sliced veal, sliced tomatoes, whole wheat bread, tapioca*, cup pudding, milk, tea. Dinner—Fruit cup, fried chicken, milk gravy, mashed potatoes, creamed corn, cabbage and celery salad, watermelon sherbet, plain cake, milk, coffee. Keep in mind that children under ten years of age should not be allowed to eat ‘‘green corn” unless It is grated. The covering on the kernels is hard to digest and in warm weather particularly children must not have their digestons overtaxed. Tapioca Cup Pudding One and one-half cups hot milk, 2 tablespoons minute tapioca, 2 eggs, 1-3 cup granulated sugar, % teaspoon salt, \' 2 teaspoon vanilla, 2 tablespoons confectioner's sugar, 2 small bananas, bitter chocolate. Scald milk in top of double-boiler over hot water. Add tapioca and cook thirty minutes, until tapioca is transparent. Beat yolks of eggs well. Add granulated sugar and salt and beat again. Add hot milk slowly, beating constantly. Return to double boiler and cook until mixture thickens. Cool, add vanilla and pour into individual glass cups. Beat whites of eggs until stiff and dry, beating in confectioner’s sugar. Rub bananas through a sieve and add to egg whites. Pile on the tapioca custard and sprinkle with a few gratings of bitter chocolate. (Copyright, 1926, NEA Service, Inc.) MAKE COOL DRINKS Save all fruits juices and use them for flavoring your summer drinks. Cherry or strawberry juices are particularly desirable instead of plain syrup or sugar.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Times Pattern Service

PATTERN ORDER BLANK Pattern Department, Indianapolis Times. Indianapolis, Ind. 2 6 2 5 Inclosed find 15 cents fom which send pattern No Size ..................••••••••• • Name •••-••* • •••■*■• Address a • -A* •£• ••a aaj.* *a* • • • a* City ....... -a *i • *** * • '**

STRIKING JUNIOR FROCK Today's design is 2652. Plain crepe silk acts as only adornment to this smart challis frock, with now saddle shoulder and circular skirt. The collar is convertible —it buttons up. Apple-greeh linen, printed sateen, chambray. English broadcloth, gingham and tub silk are also Design No. 2652 cuts in sizes 6,1 8, 10. 12 and 14 years. The 8-year size requires 1% yards of 40-inch material with % yard of 32-inch contrasting. Pattern price 15 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 read ers who wish to make their own clothes. You n.ay 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 in elude pattern number and size.

saw that old man standing (here with his rope and his mountain pick-ax and the feather in his hat. I am saying this to square things with my family who may run and read. We just s’oo<j there, looking at the glacier, and he caine up and began throwing the rope around just, like Will Rogers does while he talks, ar.d we were tied together and with two other people, before we knew it. We tried to tell him that we were in no mood for mountain climbing, hut he just taiked and talked in Swiss language without enough holes for us to get a word in edge wise. Then we pointed to our shoes with heels that wobbled, hut he was unmoved and the line was moving. It ,was a funny kind of knot that we couldn't pick, and we were headed for the glacier. It seemed necessary to resign ourselves. Besides, I re mem tiered my great constituency and flattered myself that it would make them a thrilling headline to read. “‘Woman’s , Day Abroad’ Author Falls Down Alp. Remnants Not Yet Found.” So we climbed. Mountain climbing is fun until things happen. Queer fork-tailed bird's fly from their nests in the rocks and the flowers grow brigher and crispier from the snow and ice, and you make snowballs and pelt each other. And just then we came to a crack in the blue ice of the glacier, and the guide didn't warn me and I stepped down the crack. The bottom looked about seven miles off. A wise and generous Providence, mindful all these years, no doubt, of my fate on an Alp, had fashioned me of proportions a bit too much for the crack, and there I stuck, like Satan, midway twixt Heaven and earth. But that's not the half of it, dearie. Y*u may recall that I mentioned the rope. There's a reason. When I fell, the next gal fell, too. and landed kerplunk on my manly chest. There I dangled, and there she sat. It may sound funny, but T have been a participant to funnier things. Well, the guide he heaved and he hoved, and, I fear, swore in Swiss cheese language, but he got us back onterra firma. where I hope to remain a while longer. And the nerve of him, he charged me a double bill for falling—when it was me who dangled seven miles from he did was pull me up! I am not climbing the Alps any more, but it's a great sensation while it lasts.

Lemon Juice Whitens Skin

The only harmSnV\ loss way to bleach the skin white is to mix the juice of two lemons with jßifjrS three ounces of Or jiffilWfajß chard White, which / any druggist will 'k Kw supply for a few I \ W SswJ ' cents. Shake well l\ Wj FW/i in a bottle, and you IXiV \/ fjulj have a whole quarr " JJ m ter-pint of the most - wonderful skin wbitener, softener and beautifier. Massage this sweetly fragrant letnon bleach into the face. neck, arms and bands. It can not irritate. Famous stage beauties use It to bring that clear, youthful skin and rosy-white complexion ; also as a freckle, sunburn and tan bleach. You must mix this remarkable lotion yourself. It can not be bought ready to use because it acts best immediately after It Is prepared.—Advertisement.

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4.

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. MUSHROOM BROTH Put five cups chicken stock, one cup mushrooms (broken in pieces), one onion (thinly sliced*, one stalk celery. Salt and pepper to taste and add three cloves in a saucepan and let boll fen minutes. Add two j tablespoons gelatine (which has been soaked in one cup cold water) and dissolve well. Strain and serve in boullion cups with a spoonful of whipped cream on each. Mrs. George Schafer, 321 Hohninn St., Hunmiond, Ind. BLOOD STAINS Blood stains should be washed out first with cold water and white soap. Hot water sets them. If applied at first, though boiling will remove last traces of stain, after the first washing in gold water. CARROTS A teaspoon of sugar Improves the flavor of carrots, if added when the water begins to boll.

7 Ver* J OuLrrLa story or A GIRL of TODAY Mamie’s Tragedy “What arc you crying about, Mamie?” I asked. “Surely now that you have everything that you want and have been able to borrow $25,000 from Buddy for your musical education, you ought to be happy that he’s gone back to New York. You told me just the other day you wei'e afraid to have him stay here.” “Yes, I know,” answered Mamie, tremblingly. “ I suppose I should be very 1 hankful that he has gone. But Judy, while Buddy has gone, his wife is staying on here.” “What's that you’re saying?” "I say Mr. Robert Tremaine has gone to New York, but his wife has decided to stay here indefinitely. The night before he left Buddy told me that they had the worst quarrel they ever had in their lives." “ You see, Mamie,’ he said, ‘I have never quarreled with my wife to any extent. She never seemed to care upon how many women I showered my attentions, provided I gave her plenty of money and let her do about as she wished. You, my dear, are the only woman she has ever honored witn her jealousy. Since we’ve been in Chicago some of her dear catty friends have told her that you were here and she accused me of following you. " ‘Of course, Mamie dear, I would have followed you if I had known where you were, but I did not and I got very angry because she would not believe me.’ ’ " But, Buddy, I tqld him,” said Mamie. “ ‘You told her the truth. I ran away from you and came to Chicago. Did you tell her that?’ “ ‘Yes,’ he exclaimed. ‘And I expliclty tol l her that if she would stop long enough to think logically, in the midst of her tirade, that it was she and not I who planned the trip from Ne\ • York here. You see, I didn’t want to leave New York, for I always had the feeling that you were still in the city and. of course, being innocent of all evil intent, was much hurt to be accused.' "Oh, Judy, if you could have seen the tender smile of Buddy when he said it. I love him so: it isn't wrong for me to love him, is it? Why, the only time I ever kissed him in my life was when I bade him good-by the other day. “I cannot understand how I am going to live without him. That wife of'his does not want him. She just wants his money and his name. “When he told me about her having decided to stay here, I was so angry at her that if he had asked me. Judy. I think I would have gone back to New York with him." (Copyright, 1926. NEA Service, Inc.) NEXT: Mamie’s I hanger. BOUILLON CUBES Many cooks substitte two or three bouillon cubes for soup stock, in making mushroom soup. CHAMOIS CLOTH The high polish of the piano will benefit most from dry rubbing with a piece of chamois cloth.

These delicious dainty crackers are one of the favorites in Indianapolis. They have a flavor and a flakiness all their own which makes them particularly good with jelly or cheese and extremely dainty and tempting for afternoon tea and luncheons. Sold in the big red package bearing the N. B. C. Uneeda Trade Mark or in bulk.

——Martha Lee Says — YOU CAN’T RACE WITHOUT A GOAL

To make big strides in hte world, it is necessary to have an aim and a purpose. With that to guide you, you can move right along; without this definite aim, decided progress is difficult.

Fo rthere isn’t much point in running unless you have a goal in sight. You may not really reach the goal, but you have' something to keep you going; without it, you lose your way and your desire to run. Nothing of Interest Dear Martha Loe: I am a very miserable wife and things are yetting worse all the time it seems like. Maybe when l tell you, you will say that I ought to be asliamrd as I have a nice little home and my husband is very good, but I think l cannot stand this life this way. Every day is the same, nothing happens of interest. and we don’t seme to get ahead or anything. I’m just sick of everything- I do my own housework, but that does not interest mo anil nothing rise does. I never felt this way before I was married. I worked and went out in the evenings and time passed fast. Now a week is a month long. JUST A WIFE. Gracious me, your letter sounds like the “before taking” part of a patent medicine ad. You didn’t describe yourself physically, but I’ll wager you move like you were dragging a weight—no “pep,” no life. Am I right? You’re simply suffering front having no purpose, no incentive in life. You say housework does not interest you. Would it, if you thought of your home as a sort of background for your husband’s i business success? A man’s home life \ bears powerfully on his activities out in the world. If he’s harassed j by home conditions and a discontented wife, he’s at a disadvantage with the man who can go home to restful surroundings. Too many women overlook the fact that by merging the judgment, intelligence and charm that can go into the making of a home, they are having a I real, vital part In a "career” —their | husband’s and their own. Doesn’t his success react to your benefit? Why not make that an Incentive? And may I suggest that a little child would be a powerful factor In ad-

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9x12 RUG ECONOMY RUG CO? Congoleum Make ’’.LIU-- 213 E. Wash. St. Perfect—Borderless *

This local bakery nf National Biscuit Company, located a r Pine and Daly Streets, brings in revenue from a large part of the Middle West a portion of whioh is spent in Indianapolis market* for raw material* and other supplies.

NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY “Uneeda' Bakers"

SEPT. 1, 1926

ding interest to the “nice little home” you now scorn. Want Congenial Friends Dear Martha Lee: We are two pals, but are not flappers, but middle-axed women, in fact, we are attractive widows and could ■ret Plenty of men friends. In fact, we could set them b.v tlie wholesale, but they aro not the kind we want. Could you sux■ vi st how we could get aequalided with the kind of men we would like, as we really ret lonely at times. Please do not publish our real BELLE9 A sure-fire recipe for bringing congenial persons together would be most valuable. Wish I had it. But here’s a thought. If possible, go where the kind of persons you wish to know, frequent. Knowing nothing of your social activities, I can’t suggest specifically, hut aren't there lodges or clubs that you scan Join where you might by chance meet congenial souls? But are you sure, as your acquaintance Is already so wide, you “can have men friends by the wholesale” that there Isn’t some diamond In the rough among them? Sometimes in our Impatience we overlook real opportunities and joys right at hand.

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Some of the most pdpular sweet bit* euit baked by “Uneeda Bakers" are( Loraa Doone —a shortbread Fig Newtons —made with Smyrna Figs Vanilla Wafers—Dainty cookie* Other tempting suggestions will ba found in the Display Rack at grocer^.