Indianapolis Times, Volume 38, Number 140, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 September 1926 — Page 16
PAGE 16
SOCIAL ACTIVITIES
A pretty church wedding: was celebrated when Miss Catherine Scheib, daughter of Mrs. Ida Scheib, 2162 S. Bast St., became the bride of John Friel at St. Catherine’s Church ear'y Thursday morning. The Rev. A. V. Deery officiated. The altar was beautiful with a background of ferns and palms, lighted by tall cathedral tapers. Miss Kathryn Budenz, organist, played the Mendelssohn wedding' march. During the ceremony, Miss Mabelle Gordon, violinist, and Miss Budenz softly played, "O Promise Me” and “Believe Me If All Those Endearing Young Charms.” Mrs. Edward Brennan sang Millard’s “Ave Maria” at the offertory and at communion. Mrs. Maurice Carroll sang “Thou for Whom I’ve Been Sighing.” , Miss Catherine Frlel, maid of honor, and sister of the groom, was gowned' in orchild taffeta, fashioned with basque waist and bouffant skirt. Gold metallic lace formed the trimming and she wore a gold wreath and carried pink Aaron Ward roses. Miss Margaret Higgins, bridesmaid, wore peach-colored taffeta, made bouffant, and carried an arm bouquet of cream-colored roses. Miss Helen Wlwi was dresssed in Jade green and her circular skirt was trimmed in silver metallic lace. Her flowers were American Beauty roses. Charles Friel was best man and Alvin Wonders, groomsman. Frank Friel and George Scheib acted as Ushers. _ , The bride was lovely in a gown of white bridal satin, fashioned with basque waist and full skirt. A design of seed pearls was used as trimming and she wore a draped tullG veil. Her bouquet was of bride roses with a shower of- knotted satin ribbon. Following the ceremony, there was a reception at the home of the bride’s mother. Covers were laid for 100 guests. The house was decorated with flowers in pasteal shades and a three-tier wedding formed the centerpiece at the table. Out-of-town guests were James Daugherty, Mr. and Mrs. Michael Hagerty, Mrs. Mary Grover, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Thompson of Terre Haute; Mrs. M. McGregor of Gary, Ind., and Mrs. K. Paesch of Pittsburgh, Pa. Mr. and Mrs. Frlel left on a motor trip through the South. After Oct. 1, they will be at home at 1819 B. Minnesota St. • • • President’s Day of the Hoosier Tourists’ Club was celebrated with a luncheon Thursday, given by Mrs.
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WOMEN by the millions are discarding the old-time ‘‘sanitary pad” for anew and scientific way. A way that offers protection unknown before. A way, too, that solves the old embarrassment of •disposal. It is called “KOTEX.” Eight in 10 better-class women now employ it. V Discards as easily as a piece of r tissue. No laundry. No embarrassment. It’s five times as absorbent as ordinary cotton pads! You dine, dance, motor for hours In sheerest frocks without a second’s doubt or fear. * * It deodorizes, too. And thus ends ALL danger of offending. 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. KOTCX No laundry—discard like tissue
PETTIS DRY GOODS CO. The New York Store —Est. 1853
Now in Progress Pettis Semi-Annual Rug Sale!
Never Were Our Assortments So Complete or Our Prices So Moderate as Now. The Most Interesting Rug Story We Have Ever Told In all our years—nearly 73 to be exact —as Indianapolis merchants, we/ have never held a sale like this. Wei have never had such a great quantity, such an assortment of the very rugs and patterns you will take such joy in ' selecting. Pettis is known for doing big things in a big way; this store is known for its splendid merchandising principles. Now —here, right before you is one of the startling offers of the season.
M. Ross Masson and Mrs. O. M. Cosner at the home of Mrs. Massoq, 6610 Washington Blvd. # Bouquets of asters and zenlas decorated the tables, lighted with plqk tapers. The new president, Mrs. C. C. Spurrier, gave an address of welcome and Mrs. T. B. Halls, Jr., read a paper on the ‘Topography of Africa.” The honor guests were Mrs. Ida Van Dorin, Mrs. Frank Williams and Miss Hattie Cosner of Bedford. Twenty-five guests were entertained. • • ♦ A bridge and bunco party was given at her home Thursday by Mrs. John G. Murname, 4830 Guilford Ave. The guests were: Mesdames Mjelvin ~ Sutton, Charles Sutton, Daniel Prosser, Grover Miller, Robert O’Neil, Charles Jackson, Harry Rockstroh and Miss Martha Rabm of Brooklyn, Ind. * * • A “welcome home” luncheon and bridge party was given at the Columbia Club today by Mrs. W. D. Dong and Mrs. Percy Johnson in honor of Mrs. Charles Gemmer, who has returned from Alaska and Mrs. Tilden Greer, who has been in Europe. After luncheon the guests were entertained at cards at the home of Mrs. Long, 2110 N. Delaware St. Guests Included Mesdames J. E. Reagan, L. A- Mansfield, Arthur Bradshaw, Ronakl Foster, T. E. Myers, Henry Dollman, W. E. Henkel, Harvey Martin, W. F. Craig, Frank Wampler, James Fischer and Bert Boyd. • * • Mrs. W. C. Smolensk! of Denver, Colo., was honor guest at an afternoon bridge given Thursday by Mrs. D E. Gruber, 3141 N. Illinois St. The house was gay with fall flowers, and small bouquets in crystal holders decorated the tßbles. Ices and confections were molded In ,form and color of red roses. Guests with Mrs. Smio(lenßkl were Mesdames H. D. Scott, Harry W. Scott, John Stuart, Charles F. Dawson, Robert Neff, O. R. Lieber, Charles D. Gaunt, O. B. Heppner, John Hintzie, Robert A. Du Boise, R. M. Cass, J. A. Stuart and the Mlsse Lula Brown, Gertrude Gutollus, Mabel Wheeler, Mildred Casey. The first of the after theater dancing parties for the winter seasen will be held at the Indianapolis Athletic Club tonight. The club orchestra, under the direction of George Irish, will pit y. During the winter these after-theater parties will be held Wednesday, Thursday, Friday and Saturday nights. One of the I most important events of the local fall season, the annual black and white Hallow’een ball, will be held at the club and Is being arranged for by President Matson. Many novel features are 'being arranged for the affair. * * • F. A. Doll, manager of the travel department of the Fletcher American Company, will leave for New York Saturday morning to attend a dinner to be given on the new French line cabin steamer, Rochambeau, on the evening of Sept. 18. Faculty of the Indiana University School of Medicine will give a gettogether party for new students, nurses and social service workers at the medical school building, 1040 W. Michigan St., tonight. Dancing and refreshments will be provided. * * * The Altar Society of St. Roch’s will entertain with cards on Sunday afternoon and evening, in the hall at 3600 S. Meridian St. The hostesses will be Mrs. Thomas Memmer, Mrs. Anna Rlsch, Mrs. Jos. Bergline, Mrs. H. Schmidt, Mrs. H. Hurley, Mrs. Ray Sauer. A luncheon will be served In the evening. Free transportation will be furnished to and from the S. Meridian car line. BELL CLUB TO MEET W. R. Hirst, president of the Bell Telephone Club, announces that the club will resume activities beginning next Monday. The club Is composed of local supervisors of the Indiana Bell Telephone Company, The Western Electric Company and the American Telephone and Telegraph Company. Meetings are held each Monday noon in the Splnk-Arms. W. E. Hansen is secretary.
Planning Season for Sorority
I;.. •? a! '♦!":' • wk H fill, \
Mrs. Jessamine Barclay Fitch
The Kappa chapter of Mu Phi Epsilon, national honorary musical sorority, has completed plans for its 1926-7 season. Five chapter program meetings will be held during the season. Mrs. Jessamine Barclay Fitch, 2317 N. Delaware St., Is a member of the program commute.
Sister Mary’s Kitchen
Breakfast—Orange Juice, cereal, top milk, broiled bacon, scrambled eggs, crisp whole wheat toast, milk, coffee. Luncheon—Macaroni loaf, celery and cheese sandwiches, grapes, white butter cake, mik, tea. Dinner —Roast shoulder of lamb, buttered rice, baked casrots, comJ blnation vegetable salad, peach Ba- | varinn cream cake, bran rolls, milk, ! coffee. White Butter Cake One-half cup butter, 1% cups sugar, 214 cups flour, 3 teaspoons baking powder, *i cup milk, 1 teaspoon vanilla, Is teaspoon salt, whites 4 eggs. Cream butter and gradually add sugar. Cream mixture thoroughly and add vanilla. Mix and sift flour, salt and baking powder and add alternately with milk to first mixture. Beat whites of eggs until stiff and dry and fold into batter. Turn Into an oiled and floured loaf cake pan and bake fifty minutes in a moderate oven. If you bake by temperature, 350 to 476 degrees Fahrenheit should be maintained. (Copyright, 1926, NEA Service, Inc.) By Sister Mary Breakfast Chilled melon, wheat cereal cooked with dates, thin cream, crisp rye toast, milk, coffee. Luncheon —Minced lamb on toast, carrot salad, whole wheat bread, California grapes, milk, coffee. Dinner —Cream of celery soup, pan-broiled pork chops, baked sweet potatoes, stuffed tomato salad, apple meringue pudding, bran bread, milk, coffee. Carrot Salad One cup grated carrot, % lemon, V 6 teaspoon salt, 1 teaspoon sugar, *4 cup whipping cream, paprika, lettuce. Grate rind from lemon and squeeze out Juice. Whip cream until solid and fold in lemon Juice, grated rind of lemon, grated carrot, salt and sugar. Drop from a spoon on to hearts of lettuce and sprinkle with paprika to serve. This Is an excellent salad for small children as it is, and if finely chopped nuts are added it will be found very satisfactory for older children and adults. (Copyright, 1926, NEA Service, Inc.)
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Times Pattern Service
PATTERN ORDER BLANK Pattern Department, Indianapolis Times. \ Indianapolis, ind- / • 2 8 2 8 Inclosed And 16 cent* from which send pattern No ** u ” Size .......... a ..*•i*• Name a* Address •*••••■• • City a- *4 • *444.* •** • *
SIMULATES THE TWO-PIECE MODE. No. 2828 v Sports dress with the new bloused effect, wide crushable girdle, and pressed plaits at either side of skirt that are stitched part way. Design No. 2828 boa-ts saddle shoulders and unusual turn-over collar. Pattern provides for short sleeve. Washable silk crepe, crepe satin. Chinese slllt damask, faille crepe, wood jersey and silk moire are appropriate. The pattern for this practical dress can be had In sizes 16, 18 years, 36, 38, 40, 42 and 44 Inches bust measure. The 36-inch size requires 3% yards of 40-inch material. 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 Time* will print on this page pictures showing the latest up to-date fashions. This is a practical service for read era 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 U to the pattern depart ment of The Times Dellvsry is made in about one week Be sure to write plainly and to include pattern number and size. WALTON LEAGUE DRIVE IN STATE Hoosierdom Should Lead. Says Bradford. Indiana State division of the Izaak Walton League of America is bending its efforts to mtfke the Hoosier State taake first ranking in Waltonism, acccording to State Senator L. and. Bradford of South Bend, and prominent sportsmen, president of the Indiana division of the league. "With thousands of members enrolled,” Senator Bradford said, “Indiana has advanced into the first ranks of Waltonism. Under plans of the present State administration we expect to go forward durtng the next year with as great speed as that which characterized the Izaak Walton League in Indiana during the past nine months. Chapters of the league have sprung up in nearly every town and village in the State. "Pollution, not only a nenace to fish and wild life Iq Indiana and the country at large, but a peril to the people, isr in many of the hundreds of fresh-water bodies of this State. This evil has come to such a state that the Izaak Walton League of America Is making a crushing, organized drive against It. In Indiana alone the yearly toll of natural and potential resources of the great outdoors Is appalling. But we are making a strong battle against the poisoning of the State's waters, and we won't relax our fight until pollution has been eradicated In Indiana.”
Luxury
Fall brings the luxurious mode of double pointed fox scarves with the early town frock. WALES SPEAKS YANKEE Prince’s Talk Has Occasional Touch of American. Bit United Press LONDON, Sept. 17.—That the Prince of Wales’ English has, occasionally, an American touch was the interesting observation made by hts audience at. Oxford —perhaps the most Critical and cultivated audience in Great Britain. For extjnple, the Prince chose the American pronunciation of "CAPltalist” instead of the prevailing English pronunciation of “caPlTalist." He wobbled a little on another word, first calling it, ala United States, “LABoratory” and then flopping over, later, to the English form of “laßOßatory." His Royal Highness likes the t In “often” and says "die-rectlon” and “acoostlcs”—purely the first syllable of TLLustrate” and “pursuit" but In most respects he adhered to the forms generalls favored by the bulk of his audience. .
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OBSOLETE “ut Prime Minister Appears Wearing Straw Hat. Bu United Prc*s LONDON, Sept. 17.—Straw hats are almost obsolete in England, but they have Just received a last-minute revival through the appearance on the streets of Prime Minister Baldwin topped with a "boater,” as the straws are called in England. The Premier's political audacity in sponsoring a form of headgear which has almost passed out of the book of styles has caused much comment. While straw hats are in disfavor, however, the “topper” is enjoying a boom. Not since the beginning of the war have so many shiny tall hats and collapsible opera-hats been seen In London. The manufacturers are busy, not only meeting the demand of the male dressers but also satisfying anew fashion in women’s millinery, which suggests that a crown of the same material of which “toppers” are made will supercede the interminable felt* this winter.
m Champion Flake Butters like all other products of vy Dp*] “Uneeda Bakers” are the result of the most modem and exact baking methods. / Q 0 When you open a package you get the oven aroma that rem i nc j s y OU of baking day at home. Champion (ffinsJn OCC Flake Butters are one of the favorite crackers to spread / IUJUWjvGoo with cheese or jelly. Sold in the big red package bear* ing the N. B. C. Uneeda Trade Mark or in bulk.
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A STORY OF A GIRL of TODAY JOHN’S TRIBUTE John Meredith sighed. I hadn’t answered him as he would have liked me to. “I expect you are right, Judy. You have shown fhr that if instead c*f being so cowardly and self-con-tained I had stayed in town at my mother's home and taken my medicine standing, it would have been much better for everyone concerned. "I certainly would have kept my sister from the great sorrow she is going through. But Judy, I have one excuse, I was very young, merely a child when I had to make my great decision, yet I am ashamed of all those years that I was skulking behind my crippled arm and leg, while I left Joan to the temptations of the world after our mother died. "If I had only someone like you then, to show me the right way, I would have seen what a weakling and coward I was. "Judy, dear Judy, you have taught me more of life in the comparatively few hours that I have known you than I have learned in all the years that have gone before. "Oh, I don't want to lose you now. Just when I have found you.” "Don't worry, John, you won't lose me." I knew I had to be flippant for if I was not, I should break down and sob. .-“When I was a very little girl, my mother told me that nothing would .go out of my life that something better would not come jnto it. That may be a sophistry or faLse philosophy but it has been a great comfort to me. "If I go out of your life, John, I am sure someone else will come into it who will make you happy." As I said this, my heart grew heavy, for I was beginnnig to feel that no one could come into my life who would make me happy. “However." I continued gravely, “you know, John dear, there are many other things that you must find and keep and the greatest of all these :s to find and keep yourself.” W la we had been talking, I had an uneasy feeling tliat Mr. Symington had been hovering about near and I was greatly relieved when I heard him walk across the drawing room and enter the hall where we were standing. I knew by his expression that he woo. consumed with curiosity as to Just what his friend and patron had been saying to me—just what we had been talking about. (Copyright, 1926, NEA Service, Inc.) Tomorrow: Judy Wonders. FIND TYPHOID MILK Preliminary investigation of a typhoid fever epidemic at Moores ville, Ind., by State Epidemologist Walter Lee has disclosed contamlna tion of milk supply from one source it was learned today. Milk samples have been tnken and all the employes of one dairy have been ex nmineJ. Twelve persons are affected with the fever.
The product* of “Uneeda Bakrr/* include a large variety of tweet bitcult, K Every pay day, the Indianapolis bakery the avorit es' crac^erfc i^mon * of National Biscuit Company release* thousands of dollars which will be spent £&££ (Awoned) in local stores to provide for the needs Loma Doone Shortbread of hundreds of families. The Display Rack fat jour grocer's A will make you acquainted with others w equally good. NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY “Uneeda Bakers" >
WHICH IS FICKLE SEX? # HE RAISES OLD QUERY
Loyalty is one of the finest traits in human nature. Whether it’s possessed in larger measure by men or by women, is an old and much disputed question.
Many women make the statement that “men are all alike” and that the average man will ‘‘kiss and ride away” with no further thought of the "girl he left behind him.” Men pessimists profess it’s the otWtir way 'round and that women can’t be trusted. No doubt the question, pro and con will be discussed indefinately. Can You Trust Women? Dear Martha Lee: Aa you are a woman. perhaps you will hesitate to five me a true answer, but really, dear lady, is there such a thing as a woman with a sense ol honor? I have never known one. It seems to me that they are all out lor what they can get. In business, you can t trust them. When they want o£f for a day, they find it easy to play sick. You can t depend upon them and in affairs of the heart—well I guess I had better not write too much, so I'll just go back to my first Question. Can women be trusted? WATCHFUL B. T. Yes, Watchful B. T. they can be trusted. Not all of them of course, just as all men can’t be trusted, but true hearts are not confined to either sex. I don’t know what experiences have made you pessimistic, but you’re not going to get the best out of life, unless you rid yourself of an unfair and totally mistaken conviction. Women, you say, can’t be trusted in business. Yet many an employer will tell you of the absolute faithfulhess of women employes, who for years have given the best that was in them to the firms for which they have worked. You'll have to admit that some of the reason for such ideas you voice, comes from the fact that men so often choose a girl for their office is pretty, regardless of her possible efficiercy. Happy, results can’t always follow. You think women are "gold diggers”? Again I say, some of ’em, yes, but truly, only a small minority, self-sacrifice is a strong element in the feminine nature. As for her disloyalty in love affairs—gracious, dear man, aren’t you joking? She can’t out-race her brother man in this regard. Perhaps, we can best settle the question by remembering that women are “just people,” and that men and women are not so very different in their thought processes, after all. 'Close Up'V\uto Riding Drar Martha Lee: I am asking you to publish your opinion of two couples riding in a coupe or roadster. Mother thinks it is terrible and says that a girl is not decent who sits on a boy's lap. Mother says I must quit going with my girl friend because she Bits on her boy friend s lap while riding. I would like to convince mother that it s not aa b.id a* she thinks. • JEAN MC You put me in a sad position, Jean, as I hate to condemn such a popular mode of transportation as “riding on a boy friend's lap” but I’ll have to say I think your mother Is considerably Justfled in not admiring the
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SEPT. 17, 1926
Martha Lee Says
practice. As long as human nature j is what it is, her dislike of this I "close up” riding is not without point, but I think she 1* too severe In her wholesale condemnation of a | girl as “Indecent" who rides in this manner. However, you know dear, that your mother has only your best interests at heart, and if this annoys j her, I would avoid riding In a car that didn’t offer enough seats for Its girl passengers.
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Silk Shop No. 27 the Circle Silks by the Yard
