Indianapolis Times, Volume 38, Number 136, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 September 1926 — Page 6
PAGE 6
COMMITTEES OF A. A. U. W. NAMEO Local Women Made Chairmen of Several Groups. Indianapolis women named chairmen of committees for the State work of the American Association of University Women by Mrs. W. R. Davidson, president of the Indiana federation, are: Mrs. Walter S. Groenough, commfttee on legislation; Miss Katherine Kaughtz, publications; Mrs. Birney D. Spradliug, publicity; Mrs. James A. Bawden, fellowship. Miss Katherine Kautz was named a member of the finance committee, and Dr. Ada E. Schweitzer, chairman of the health committee. THE ETERNAL FLAPPER Bu United Pres KANSAS CITY, Mo., Sept. 13. Girls have been flappers since Eve, according to "Ma" Sunday, wife of the Rev. W. A. Sunday, famous evangelist. Sunday spoke to 15,000 persons here yesterday. “I was a giddy little thing at 15,” said "Ma.”
SOCIAL ACTIVITIES
Mrs. E. W. Zalser entertained at the Highland Golf and Country Club for Miss Helen Erber, -who is to be a bride of this month. The decorations and appointments were in rainbow colon;. The guests wero Mesdames Frank Ball, Jr., Clarence Odell Miller, Ernest Erber, William It. Zalser, and Misses Anne and Matilda Daugherty, Vivian Stevenson, Opal Perrin, Dorothy Patterson and Elizabeth Anderson. • • • The marriage of Miss Marie Fitzgerald to Frederick J. Witherspoon took place Saturday afternoon at the home of the bride's mother, Mrs. John Fitzgerald, 111 Ridgeview Ave. Mr. Witherspoon la the son of Mrs. E. J. Witherspoon. The stairway of the home was twined with smilax and flowers. Autumn foliage filled the space before the fireplace, forming an altar before which the wedding service was read. Mrs. Thomas Stanlon of St. Louis, M©„ sang and Mrs. O. D. Fitzgerald, violinist, played. Mr, Witherspoon’s sister, Miss ZUlah "Witherspoon, and Mlsa Virginia Kingsbury attended the bride. Mis* Witherspoon was gown in yellow georgette and carried, an arm bouquet of lavender asters and yellow rosea. Miss Kingsbury wore lavender georgette fashioned with a petaifid skirt and carried pink lilies, aster* and roses. The bride, given in marriage by her brother, Robert Fitzgerald, wore a delphinium blue chiffon gown with slippers and hat to match. Her flowers were valley lilies and Mrs. Aaron Ward roses. Id tty Don and Patty Fitzgerald, niece* of the bride, were her flower girls and were dressed in dainty white frocks. Walden Middlesworth was best man and the ushers were Henry Goett and John M. Fitzgerald. After a reception following the ceremony Mr. and Mrs. Witherspoon left for a wedding trip. They will be at home after Oct. X at 111 Ridgeview Dr. Both Mr< anfl Mrs. Witherspoon were students at Butler University. The bride Is a, member of Kappa Alpha Theta sorority and Mr. Witherspoon is a member of Phi Delta Theta fraternity. Assisting Mrs. Fitzgerald at the reception were Mrs. W. E. Fitzgerald, Mrs. Rnssell T. Bosart, Mrs. Clifford E. Wagoner* and Miss Mildred Morgan* **-* The Wedding o 4 MlsS Dorothy Parkinson to Ralph E- Hneber, son of Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Hueber, 2408 N. New Jersey St., took place Sat-
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Wins Honors in Music School
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Miss Olga Krause, winner of the Bel Canto scholarship, after a course on voice emission, scored 100 in her answers to the fifty-eight questions asked. She has been a student of the Irvington Seliool of Musir for three years. Papers of Miss Irma VolJrath and Mrs. J. M. Rotz also were given praise.
urday afternoon at tho First Friends Church. Miss Haley Harald, organist, played bridal airs before the ceremony, tho wedding march from "Lohengrin” for the entrance of the bridal party, and “To A Wild Rose” during the ceremony. Miss Grace Rodgers sang "O Promise Mo” and "Because.” Don G. Ball was best man and the ushers wero Millard Beaman and John Williams. Miss Alice Hedrick attended the bride as maid of honor and little Marian Joan Sturm was flower girl. Mlsa Hedrick was gowned in yellow georgette fashioned long waisted with a full circular i flare at the bottom of the skirt. The gown wa* finished with a wide satin ribbon sash and bow. She wore a large hat of yellow georgette and silver lace and wore silver slippers and hose to match her gown. Tho bride, given in marriage by her brother. Edgar J. Parkinson, was gowned in white chiffon beaded in rhinestones, fashioned with a bolero, and wore a tiarra of rhinestones in her hair. Her bouquet was of Brides’ roses and lilies of the valley. Mr. and Mrs. Hueber have departed for a trip east. Among the out-of-town guests were Mrs. L. B. Davidson and daughter, Doris, Springfield, Ohio; Mix and Mrs. Homer F. Johnson, and daughters, Washington, Ind.; Mrs. Harry M. Davis, of Bell, Cal.; Mrs. Wesley McKinley and daughter, Beil. Cal.; Charles M. Johnston and Donald R. Mote, Washington, Ind. * * * The Pi Beta Phi of Butler University will give Its second rush party of the season at the Propylacum this evening. Guests of the fraternity will he entertained at a banquet followed by a dance. Miss Beatrice Batty Is rush captain and chairman of the entertainment committee. Her assistants are Miss Dorothy Lou Thomas, Miss Katherine Reagan and Miss Eugenia Brooks. • * Announcement has been made of the marriage of Miss Flossie Wright, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James Wright, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James Wright, to Frost D. Swisher, son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank D. Swisher, 1628 N. Alabama St. The wedding took place at the residence of the Rev. and Mrs. Louis Crafton Saturday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Swisher will be pleased to maet their friends at their new home, 317 La Salle HC, • • m The Delta Tau sorority will entertain this evening with a dinner and theater party for Miss Genevieve Stetzel, who is forepart Wednesday for Los Angeles, Cal. The guests will be Misses Leonora Klee, Ruth Munaw, Catherine Reidy, Mildred Barrett, Alice McGowan, Mildred MeGlinchey, Teresa Coleman, Anna Brewer, Sally Otterbach and Mrs. William Rosengarten and Mrs. Lester Bauer. • * * Lavelle Gossett Post, Veterans of Foreign Wars, will give a card party Tuesday evening in their hall, W. Tenth St. and King Ave. * * * Queen Esther Circle of the First Moravian Episcopal Church will serve its regular monthly supper Wednesday evening from 6 to 7:30 in the new church at Twenty-Second St. and Broadway, i1• • * The Ladles Society of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen and Engineers, No. 393, will give a card party Wednesday afternoon at their hall, Shelby St. and English Ave.
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 la printed dally, 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. SHRIMP SALAD 1 Make a dressing as follows: Into the yolk of one egg stir one cup pure olive oil drop by drop at first, then more freely as it thickens. Use a silver fork to beat the mixture. Add a pinch of salt, pepper and mustard, then two tablespoons of vinegar, a little at a time until the mixture is creamy. Pour this over one cup cold boiled dico potatoes and one cup shrimp. Decorate with canned shrimp. Mrs. Harry Dunbar, Elwren, Ind. YES. WE EAT THEM 81l Tlnirra I’rcßX WASHINGTON, Sept. 13.—America has no bananas of its own, but last year 55,483,374 big bunches were consumed in the United States, according to the Agriculture Depart\ment.
BROADCASTING IS TO BE EXTENDED New Company Has Station as Nucleus. Bn T'nlteh Pros* NEW YORK! Sept. 13.—Another step in the extension of radio broadcasting of the same program by many stations was taken today. Formation of the National Broadcasting Company. with Station WEAF, New York, as the nucleus, was announced l>y Owen D. Young of the General Electric Company and General James Harbord of the Radio Corporation of America. Tho radio corporation recently purchased from the American Telephone and Telegraph Company, station WEAF. The company >yll broadcast programs not only' through station WEAF, but will make them available to other broadcasting stations throughout the country. TEACHER’S RITES SET Funeral Tuesday for Mrs. Joeel.vn Court right. Dr. Frank S. C. Wicks, pastor of All Souls’ Unitarian Church, will officiate at funeral services Tuesday afternoon at Hisey & Titus funeral parlors for Mrs. Jocelyn Perry Courtright, for thirty years a local school teacher, who died Sunday at her home, 363 S. Ritter Ave, Burial will be in Crown Hill cemetery. Six years ago Mrs. Courtwright became principal of School 62, E. Tenth and Wallace Sts. She had long been active in civic and school affaira. She was one of the organizers of the Mutual Service Association for working girls and a member of the Altrusa Club, American League of University Women, Administrative Women’s Club of Indianapolis Schools and the Teachers’ Mutual Benefit Association. She is survived by a sister, Mrs. E. S. Denbo of Orleans, Ind., and three nephews and three nieces.
4bSyOMANs MY
MONTE CARLO francs, 15 cents to enter the marble portals of the Casino, the greatest gambling spot on earth. Fifteen cents to enter the world of True Selves. Fifteen cents for a view of what people really are when stripped of that mask which they wear for the folks at home. One can play at the storied roulette tables; one can sit in a palmshaded court, listening to the Casino orchestra play all the tunes of moonlight and rosebuds and romance, watching these stripped faces —faces of greed and anguish of fear. One hears stories to the clatter of the croupiers’ sticks, raking in the little ivory discs which mean—breaking or making of a fortune. What solid faces these croupiers wear uneventful faces! Faces of calm whether the banks have won for the house, or a tower of chips means money spilled freqn the yellow gold coffers of the Casino bank. I* • A cry, a yell, almost a moan, breaks through tho muted cadences of the orchestra violins. "That bookmaker again!” someone tells me. “He has not left this table for a month—only when tho guards drag him out at night. He cams here with bright eyes and round cheeks with a pocketbook bulging with bills. His first good time in fifteen years, he told someone. He was out to win for his wife and little girl at home. He’d played the game at tho races. He knew the ropes, he said, he would win chough to tako them home rich clothes and jewelry. Now It’s getting the better of him. He talks like a madman about getting the system. He has grown thin and pale, and when the wheel goes against him he makes that mad cry you heard judt now.”
Newest Glove
This fabric glove for fall has a cuff ornamented with brown velvet appliques outlined with embroidery.
Bert Walton Says: (Indianapolis Portrait T>oll Cos.) "Two years ago Mountain Valley Water relieved mo of headaches and nervousness due to high blood pressure. It regulated my stomach and bowols and restored mr to normal condition. There has boon no recurrence of the ailment. I can eat, sleep and work Just as I did before I took sick.’’ Prevent High Blood Pressure Many well-known local persons Use Mountain Valley Water to combat and prevent high blood pressure. Many proniiont physicians here prescribe it. Phone for u case today—and get their statements. • Mountain Valley Water 911-913 Massachusetts Avenue Phone, MAIn 1259
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Times Pattern Service PATTERN ORDER BLANK Pattern Department, Indianc polls Times. . Indianapolis, Ind- 2 6 3 6 Inclosed find 15 cents from which send pattern No Size .... .... . a . .£•.... •.... • • -j. • • \ Name . .• •• • • •as, * * **” Address -A- -aa -aCity .............. •... -i* ••• ijia* .•-•ii* -a- •••*•-
Coat Frock for School Today’s pattern is 2636. This little girl feels her importance, because the frock she is wearing is as smart as her debutante sister wears. Design No. 2636 is a tailored coat style, with fulness at sides. Introduced by means of circular godets. The colar buttons up. It will bo especially interesting to Mother, too, because it is so simple to make. A‘ straight front and back to be seamed. The circular sides stitched at perforations. The front may be overlapped, stitched and trimmed with buttons, or it may be with button holes.- Complete instructions with pattern. Price 15 cents in stamps or coin (coin preferred). Pattern cuts in sizes 6,8, 10, 12 and 14 years. The 8-year size requires 2Vi yards of 40-1 Inch material. The hot iron transfer pattern No. 718 (blue or yellow) costs 15 cents extra. Make it of pOcan brown jersey with colorful embroidery or wine red velveteen, trimmed with gold buttons and gold embroidery, and little daughter will be the admiration of her little friends. 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 ts a practical service for renders 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 In elude pattern number and size.
A girl like a rosebud from which the dew has been drained by too hot a sun threw her Ivory discs upon the green carpet with a white thin arm that trembled. Stark fear In her eyes. I could hardly believe the story. Hero it is as it was told me: She came to the Casino on her honeymoon two months ugo—“ln April when all the blue stretch of tho sea was perfumed with the mountain narcissus and the valley lilies," said our guide in poetic abandon. They were a happy, chaptering couple. He was a soldier in the olive green with the bright stripes of the Italian army. She a girl from the States, a student lfl old Florence; they had come over from Nice in "the rubberneck bus.” He asked the guide for the lowest table, the 5-franc one. It got her. The guide had given the party one hour for the Casino. At six he could not drag her away. The guide threatened. Her husband pled. The hus returned without them. "When tho guards dragged the players from the table at night her ivory discs totaled S6O. She was feverish with excitement. Begged her young husband to stay here. Made him cancel their hotel room at Nice. Took an expensive one nt Monte Carlo with the blue sea outside their window. She would pay for this and more, she said. The story is long. A month of the honeymoon went by. Fortune on the tide, ebb and flow. Tho boy-husband pleading with her by the hour to the lilt of tho croupier's cries. Then the girl came to the Casino alone. Day by day stripped of some of her gay bridal finery! Yesterday she had parted with her ring. She had no tears for it. She only watched the wheel, the ivory, tho red, the black. • * • Laughs with the tears, too. Tables spattered with the spinsters of tho parish at home, angular maiden ladies, hair twisted atop bony heads, the look of the pedagogue in their face, playing the wheel furtively, happily, abeam at winnings. Sunday school teachers, ministers, reformers. They come to see the famed place of sin. They pay their 5 francs entrance. They play the wheel once “just for fun.” They do not leave until night. They come the next day. And all the old, old women! Women like dried up brown parchment ready for a puff of wjnd! Old women with palsied hands and gasping -breath—"My children were married and grown when I was 50,” one told me between tho galloping wheel’s turns, "nobody needed ,me; the children gave lno an income; suggested that I come to the Riviera where it was sunny the year ’round; now this is all I want; sometimes I win; sometimes I lose; it keeps me busy.”
2^Xl/' 2636 J / Emb.7lß
PLEDGES AT INDIANA ARE ANNOUNCED Hu Time* Special BLOOMINGTON, Ind., Kept. 13. Pledges of seventeen Greek letter fraternities at Indiana University for the fall term have been announced here. Those pledged from Indianapolis follow; Acacia—Arthur Krause. Alpha Tau Omega—Paul Balah. Carroll Ringwalt ami George Gardner. beta Theta Pi—Vincent Rhode, Willard Nixon, Dick Fox. Bruce Martin and Torn Dyer. Delta Tau Delta—Samuel Bradford. Rorwrt Marik, William Adams and Norman Hammer. Delta Epsilon—Rader Winret and Robert McHugh. Delta Chi—Junior Ebert. Kappa Sigma—Charlc* Stoker. far mis la Chi—R. 1,. Corey. Phi Kappa Pei— Carl Hlnne. Phi Della Tlieta—Thomas Robinson. Phi Gamma Delta—John Scott Arthur Stevenson. Manley Roland. Kenneth Chrlatena. Ja>-k McCoy and Kervln Stevens Sienna Chi—John Bolyard. James Beatty, Arthur Chevrolet and James T.esh. Surma Alpha Epsilon—Thomas Quinn, n aynn Anderson anil Mayburn Lundsrraf. Sterna Alpha Mu—Sidnev Zier Mauriee Epstein, Myrnie Garnafski and Marcus Cohen. Sitrma Pi and Sigma Nu announced no pledges from Indianapolis.
A Most Remarkable Sale of t Tomorrow in Two Special Groups There n dress fee ever, occasion—a atele for seep - typo —and new trimming effects to satisfy the most discriminat- 161 I ,* ing shopper —fine workmanship, new fall colors. What more | tgj P could one expect at this low price. See them —compare ( n f A them —you will want them. —I The Greater Miller-Wohl Value Season \l Is in Full Swing! ; Vkvi>e Say it With italuesltf) S Q Z l , windows iv Windows
Fur Coat Sale $ A r\oo IN OUR BASEMENT TOMORROW /I Combinations of light and dark stripes, other patterns of brown blocks. This sale offers you an ideal opportunity to buy your fur coat at a price you I B Jy can well afford to pay. Come in and see these coats tomorrow. EVERY COAT GUARANTEED
7 Vet~ ' O UTTL '~Tk)<xy~' A STORY OF -A GIRL o/'TODAY A WORD IN TIME "I really don’t know why I am calling up Jerry all the time,’’ I reprimanded myself, "unless It is to keep him dangling, as he says. I am getting ( to be an old dog in the manger.” For all the time I was talking to Jerry I was thinking of John Meredith —thinking of those sad eyes and that sneering mouth and wondering how it would look if for once someone could make him permanently unlock it and plant upon it a smile that would not come off. I had had one glimpse of his face when he was smiling and the change was so wonderful, I could hardly believe it. As I was about to pass out of my room into the hall, I heard Mr. Symington speaking: "As I told you Jack, I got the tickets. This is some little Jamboree you are planning, Are you strong enough to stand the curious gaze of everyone in the Beaux Arts? You know it is the most fashionable restaurant in town. After hearing his friend thus place this fear subtly in his mind, I thought it was about time to make my appearance on the scene. *‘Ah!” I said, stepping into the ball. "I am glad we are going to the Beaux Arts, my dear Mr. Meredith, for it was there .that I suffered the greatest humiliation in my life. At that time, I thought I would never go there again and up until now, I never have. But tonight, however, you have unconsciously arranged it so that I shall re-bnter in triumph.” John Meredith’s face lighted up. I saw again the smile that I was always trying to call up and my heart went thumping again. He hastened to say, "I am very glad my dear Judy (you’ll let me call you Judy ns Joan does, won’t you?) if I can make you happy in the slightest degree. I never bebelieved before that I could make anyone happy and to make you joyous is something that will make me perhaps happier than anything I have ever done ini this world. "You see, I am usually a killjoy to everyone. I even hurt my beautiful mother, by insisting upon staying alive when I ’should have died at birth.” At this moment, very ostentatiously. Mr. Symington left the room. (Copyright, 1926, NEA Service, Inc.) Next: Judy Shocks John. ERECT WELCOME SIGNS To Be Paced On Leading Highways * Near City Limits. "Tourist welcome” signs will be’ placed on roads leading into this city, George Morgan, assistJßt park superintendent, announced today. "Welcome to Indianapolis. Riverside Park tourist camp. Delightful rest awaits you. 1,000,000 population in 1930. Board of Park Commissioners, J. L. Duvall, mayor,” is the wording on the signs.
Martha Lee Says PUT ATTRACTIVE COVER ON YOUR BOOK OF LIFE j Many a good book is bound in a plain cover, and often we overlook them and select the beautifully embossed volume only; to find that it contains little worth remembering.
So it is with our friends, beneath the plain surface- we often find character of sterling value, but it behooves us all to make the best impression possible, or our good qualities may be overlooked by the casual seeker, and we may lie on the shelf until the more attractive books have been selected. So while the inside of our book should contain good reading, let us also have tho cover so attractive that we will not be overlooked. Gentlemen, Speak Up! Dear Martha Lee. Would like to know where all the ‘'gentlemen’' have gone? Why do boys like to go with tho painted, cigarette smokers and suapt y dressers? Don’t they care at all lor tho home loving, sensible old-fashioned girls? Wo are two of these kind who never smoke, drink or go to f dances. We dress sensibly? and like to l/ave a good time, but in the right wav. We feel we are the kind “Disgusted Ralph” and “Back Number" are looking for. Our ages are 19 and 18. One has blue eyes and the other brown. We are considered respectable girls, but don't seem to bo popular among the boys. Is It because we avo not flappers? We have vowed wo would never be that kind. Why is it tho boys never ask us for dates? Would like to know what the boys think of this. BLUE AND BROWN EYES. When the young men you speak of are ready to get married the chances are they will look for girls like yourself and friend. In the meantime they are merely having what they think is a good time. However, it is not necessary for you to refrain from dancing and dressing as attractively as your purse will allow. Even flowers are beautifully garbed, and while a man wants his wife to be virtuous, ho perfers that she look pretty also. If men do marry flappers, it probably is because they have found beg neath the flapper make-up a dear sweet thing who is everything desirable at heart but fell for the sham which fashion dictates. A Waiting Game Dear Miss Lee: I am 18 years old and have been married for three years. I have a boy 20 months old. I have been separated from my busband for four months. About a month ago he wanted me to go back to him, anil go to Detroit, Mich., where he is working. I told him to save some money first to start on. He finally consented He wrote /me two letters during Hie first two weeks he was gone, which I answered. He has not written any slin-e. two weeks to be exact. 1 wrote another to And out what was wrong, but it was not answered. Miss Lee, do you think I should write any more? ... . 1 love him despite the way he has done. I can't understand why he doesn t write Ido not want to force mvsclf on him but lie asked me several times to go back to him. which 1 finally consented to do. and now he does me this way. What shall I do? WORRIED P. G. Perhaps your husband has moved or gone out of town temporarily. Or it may be that Jig thinks a turnabout is fair play, and is trying to keep you in suspense, as you did him. I do not approve of such an attitude, but we have to make the best of a person’s pecularities. I'think you should wait for him to answer your letters before writing more. Do not seem over anxious, but the very next time he asks you to return to him, do-not hesitate. You owe it to your child to endeavor to establish a harmonious home. An Answer Answer to Fern; # | Try to make the best of the situation by being congenial. It may be your condition will improve in time. It seems that your weight is all right
SEPT. 13, 1926
for an average height girl. Maybe you are too selfconscious. The Family Welfare Society, 335 N. Pennsylvania St., can help you get children to board. It Is necessary to obttiin an application blank from them, fill it out and return it. HELD FOR TIRE THEFT Charles Idelnn and Albert Essler, both of Greensburg, Ind., were ar* rested by deputy sheriffs for stealing an automobile tire. Idelnn pointed out the car of E. L. Zelyn, 1306 N. 1 Delaware St., as the machine from which the tire was taken. They will face charges.
Dainty Underwean for 15 cts! Those clellente, true tints she fabric had when new! You can do such tinting if you use real dye. Soft, but per. feet shades for till underthings, stockings, etc. And don’t stop with tinting! You can Diamond dye dresses, even’your old suit. The true tones in Diamond dyes make home dyeing just as perfect as any professional could do. Any material, any color—right over the old. Diamond d.ve your drapes and curtains, too. So easy, its fun—and how economical ! FREE: Your druggist will give you the- Diamond Dye Cyclopedia; valuable suggestions and easy directions, with piece-goods samples of color. Or, big illustrated hook Color Craft postpaid - write DIAMOND DIES, Dept. Nl, Burlington, Vermont. Make it NEW for IS cttl I Don’t Think of Buying BIirCCARPETS and SvUUiJ LINOLEUMS Until you've inspected our big stocks. DORFMAN RUG CO. Buy Silks by the Yard The Silk Shop No. 27 the Circle New Location 31 Monument Circle LYMAN BROTHERS
