Indianapolis Times, Volume 38, Number 149, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 September 1926 — Page 6

PAGE 6

PRESIDENT'S DAY IS OBSERVED BY AMITICIA CLUB Luncheon Held at Claypool —Musical Program Presented. The Amiticia Club observed president’s day with a luncheon at the Claypool today. Mrs. Arthur T. Harms, luncheon committee chairman , was assisted by Mesdames Rufus O’Harrow, George Green, Milton Wareing and Frederick Bretthauer. The table was decorated with a centerpiece of liowers in pastel shades. A musical, program, arranged by Mrs. John Larison, was given. Mrs. O. M. Richardson sang “In the Beautiful Garden of Prayer,” accompanied by Mrs. Walker Baylor. A violin and piano solo was given by Miss Mary Mahon, violinist, accompanied on the piano by Mrs. James Carr. Mrs. Walker Baylor and Mrs. O. M. Richardson sang duets. The Rev. George Henninger, pastor of the E. Tenth Street M. E. Church, who Recently returned from an extended trip abroad, told of conditions in a talk on “The Holy Land.” Covers were laid for Mesdames David Ross, J. Lawrence Wells. William C. Buser, John L. Duvall, Alfred Washburn, Ibbie Shaw Terrell, A. L. Reeves. Harry Bolin, William H. Blodgett, Arthur Carr, Galen Doyal, O. C. Lukenbil!, George Green, Samuel Grimes, Walker C. Baylor, Rufus Harrow, C. H. Hamilton, John Reinlien, Carl Day, Harry Allen, Paul Robinson, Frank Castor, Arch Hobbs, Frank Rummell, Albert Bretthauer, Melville Hawkins, Carl Jones. Edward Schauor, Frederick Bret thauer, Jennie Evans Brown, Carl R. Day, Alex Goodwin, H. S. Stone, Arthur T. Harms, Samuel Baringer, John Lardson, May Smith, Lillian Ryan, H. R. Van Doren, Walter Geisel and Elizabeth Smith. SLAY AMBASSADOR ARRIVES Bv United Per** NEW YORK, Sept. 28.—Alejandro Padillo, newly appointed ambassador from Spain, arrived today on the Manuel Armus with his wife and daughter.

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SOCIAL . ' ivities SMTEli.ei N M E N 1' a WEDDINGS BETROTHALS

The season’s first meeting of the Indianapolis alliance of Delta Delta Delta Sorority will be held at the home of the new president, Mrs. Eugene R. Ong, 5327 N. New Jersey St., Wednesday. Bridge is scheduled for 3 p. m., with a dinner at 6. Further plans will be formulated for the benefit bridge party to be given at the D. A. R. chapter house Oct. 23 to raise money for the new Delta Delta Delta Butler University chapter house at Fairview. Mrs. Gordon F. Briggs, chairman of this committee, is assisted by Mrs. Mabel Stuart, Mrs. Wallace ‘Wadsworth, Mrs. John Helney and Miss Margaret Haldy. Mrs. Ong will be assisted at the meeting by Mrs. M. L. Thompson, Mrs. John Heiney and the Misses l Helen Tichenof, Frances Longshore 1 and Helen Barry. Reservations for l the chapter bridge party should be made through Mrs. William H. Book. • • • Prenuptial Parties Planned A number of prenuptial parties are planned for Miss Dorothy Wordsworth Watkins, whose marriage to Frederick Conrad Albershardt will take place Oct. 20. Wednesday evening Miss Emily Brossman will entertain at a bridge and miscellaneous shower for the bride-elect. Invitations have been I issued for a bridge and personal shower to be given Oct. 9 by Miss Eugenia Coval at the Columbia Club. Mrs. William G. Albershardt and Miss Anna Mae Albershardt will entertain for Miss Watkins, and Miss Sara Rodecker will give a party in her honor at a later date. Mr. and Mrs. O. L. Watkins, parents of the bride-elect, will entertain with a bridal dinner at the Columbia Club the evening preceding the wedding. Miss Watkins’ sister, Mrs. Goodwin S. Elkin, and two children, Dorothy and Goodwin, Memphis, Tenn., wilKlarrive Monday to stay untl) after the wedding. Mrs. Richard Harding Stout has been chosen as matron of honor and Miss Justine lialliday as maid of honor. • • • Parly for Visitors Mrs. D. D. Taber, New York, who will be here this week to do field work for the Episcopal churches, and Mrs. E. G. Peck of Los Angeles, formerly of this city and ex-president of the Episcopal Auxiliary of which Mrs. S. E. Perkins now is president, will be guests of honor at a tea to be given Friday afternoon at the home of Mrs. C. Willis Adaips, 1452 N. Alabama St. Mrs. Peck is visiting her daughter, Mrs. Thomas F. Hudgins, here. • • * Luncheon for Miss Hodges Miss Lucele Hodges whose mar riage to S. B. VanArsdale will take place Oct. 6, was guest of honor at a luncheon Monday at the Columbia Club given by Miss Sara Frances Downes and Miss Avonelle Thorpe. The guests included members of the briday party and the long table at which they were seated was ar ranged with a centerpiece of'dahlias and roses and streamers of pastel colored ribbons led from the centerpiece to the places, marked with small perfume bottles as favors. Guests besides Miss Hodges were the Misses Elizabeth Hodges, Ruth McKenzie, Mary Ann Miller, Helen Stevens, Helen Meyers and Glen Scwenk. The hostesses presented Miss Hodges with a small oriental rug. • • • Marriage Announced Word has been received of the marriage of Miss Ruth Frisinger, daughter of Mrs. Jaes Frisinger of Decatur, to George Sprague Meyers of Jersey City, N. J., which was solemnized Saturday at the home of the bride’s mother. Mr . and Mrs. Meyers left immediately after the ceremony for California, where Mr. Meyers will continue his research work In the zoology department of Leland Stanford University. Mrs. Meyers is a graduate of Indiana University and a member of the Delta Gamma and Tri Kappa sororities. She is a sister of Mrs. J. Dwight Peterson, 4014 N. New Jersey St. * * * Writers’ Club to Open Season The .Writers Club will hold the first meeting of the season at the Chamber of Commerce, Wednesday evening at 6:30. Mrs. Carl Leiber is in charge of the musical feature and the heads of the committees will give reports. The officers of the club this year are Mrs. Blanche G. Williams, president: Paul Morgan, first vice president; Mrs. Minnie Olcutt Williams, second vice president; Mrs. John Dyer, third vice president: Miss Tillie Mayme, recording secretary; Miss Pearl McCarty, corresponding secretary, and William Chitwood, treasurer, 9 • * * Irvington Clubs to ( Meet The Irvington Union of Clubs has called a meeting for all Irvington women Wednesday at 3 in the parlors of the Downey Ave. Christian Church. There will be discussion of community matters and it is desired that every woman feel free to present problems which she feels will deal

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Woman Speaker for D, A . R. Luncheon

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Mrs. Blanche E. Chenoweth.

Luncheon for the Caroline Scott Harrison chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution will be given at the chapter house, 824 N. Pennsylvania St., Wednesday. Following luncheon, Mrs. Blanche E. Chenoweth will address the chapter, her subject being, “What a Line Will Do.” with better cooperation of Irvington. There will be a social hour as usual. • • • Et Cetera Club Meets Covers for twelve were laid at the Indianapolis Athletic Club Monday in observance of President’s Day of the Et Cetera Club. Mrs. O. C. Lukenbill is president and Mrs. R. E. Kennlngton vice president. The club pledged this year to keep one near East Orphan, one child in the fresh air school and to provide one college scholarship, as well as continue general charity work. • • • OTHER SOCIAL NOTES Miss Norma Mueller, 1305 Central Ave., is at French Lick, Ind., this week assisting in the hostess’ committee of the National Wholesale Druggists’ convention. Sept. 26 to Oct. 1. \ • • • The Ladies* .Society of tly Locomotive Enginemen and Firemen will give a card party Wednesday afternoon at the hall, corner of English and Shelby Sts. • • • The A. O. O. Sheperds will enter- ! tain Wednesday evening with a grand ball In the P. H. C. Hall, East and Michigan Sts. • • * The lecture course at Jasper College. Jasper, Ind., this year, will be conducted by the R* dpath Lyceum, and Arthur J. Beriault of the Beriault School of Expression, Indianapolis. On Thursday. Beriault will open the course with his famous | impersonation of Washington Irv-1 ing's “Rip Van Winkle.” • • • The George H. Chapman W. R. C., • No. 10, will hold a public euchre and card party Wednesday afternoon 1 at 2 at Fort Friendly. G. A. H. head , quarters, 512 N. Illinois St., for the benefit of the relief fund. * * * Winena Social Club will entertain ■ with a card party and luncheon Tuesday evening at the Red Men’s Hall, Roosevelt and Seventeenth Sts. • • • La Valle Gossette Post. Veterans of Foreign Wars, will give a card party this evening at the hall, W. Tenth St. and King 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 is printed daily, except Friday, when twenty are given. Address Recipe Editor of The Times. Cabinet* will be mailed to winners. Write only one recipe, name, ad dress and date on each sheet. CREAMED BEANS One pint cooked Navy beans, one pint canned tomatoes, one cup sweet corn, one tablespoon sugar, two chopped onions, salt and pepper to taste. Mix well, and bake one-half hour. Mrs. Oscar B. Campbell, R. R. No. 1, Monrovia, Ind.

jyTartha Lee’s Col umn

Dear Miss Lee: Will you please tell me what is best to serve on a hay ride'r Is it proper for the boys to pay for the use of the truck? We are going to have a party (lasting about an hour), before we go on the hay ride. Is it necessary to serve anything at the party (we are of course going to have refreshments at the place where we go on our hay ride. Thank you very much for the information. E. F. In answer to your questions in order, I would say: 1. Your hay ride probably will be given soon, and it is around Halloween time, so why not Halloween food? Cider and doughnuts make a most satisfactory menu with pumpkin pie. If you are going to build a fire and want to go to more trouble, you could have chicken or ham sandwiches, a mixed salad of some kind, hot coffee and fruit for dessert, or you might take ground meat along and make fried hambilrg or weiners in buns with baked beans, coffee and toasted marshmallows. Almost any combination proves satisactory when outdoors and the crowd is merry. 2. If the boys are helping to plan the party with you, then they should pay for the truck, but If you are asking them as your guests, they should not. * 3. }t is not necessary to have any refreshments before the hay ride. You will marvel at the array of deliciously prepared foods at White Cafeteria “On the Circle.” As always—odd penny prices.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Times Pattern Service PATTERN .AUER ULANb Pattern Department, Indianapolis Times. Indianapolis, ln<L 2 8 S 6 Inclosed find 15 cents from which send pattern No ** u u v Size ..••a,* N>.ue •• Address ~,., City . *ua* *•* * *

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97S> . WOMAN'S S DAY £ llene JSitmne f* Today's riddle! When is a royal suite not a royal suite? The answer seems to be, “when royalty wants It, and rich but not regal bloated plutocrats are sleeping on the silken sheets.” Beautiful Queen Marie of Roumania wants to sail to America, but the queen's emissaries learn that all the royal suites of all the royal steamship companies are booked for many a moon by rich Americans who have thd requisite $5,000, if not the blood rovpl tn their veins. Steamship companies have done their best. Have tried to recall some of the royal suites, ’tls said. But nothing doing. "Them ns {as, keeps.” and ‘them as hain’t, goes without,” be they ever so much a queen! This royal attack on democracy In its own inir seems brave Indeed to me. Evidently Queen Marie does not step into overalls and put up hay as a democratic gesture! • • Helen Wills (remember her?) smiles happily over her student's art work in a California university, albeit she Is sans appendix and championship. Young Helen proves again the folly of the nlr proverb, "too many irons In the fire.” Helen, "the all-around girl," is as happy with her art as with her racquet, and vice versa. And If even a champ can “chuck” the weapon with which she champs, how much easier should .it be for human mortals to "put an I other iron in the fire,” future insurance as it were, against the day when one vocation loses its charm. • • * The lady who takes the President his pay check each month tells this one. Her mune is Miss Kate A. Shea, employe of United States Treasury Department, who has paid so many presidents that she has lost count. The first time she paid silent Cal, say-- she, he said never a word ’till she reached the door, then murmured “please come again.” Well he might, thinks Mary Smith who opens “his” pay envelope of $27.50 on Saturday night. For Silent Cal’s monthly check is 6,250, hut by the time he’s paid for this and paid for that, he probably has little more left .for a real “bat” than has John Smith after paying his grocer and butcher, smiling over an extra half-dollar for a movie for the "missus” and self. • * * There are 50.000 women bootleggers in this land of the free, we are told. Investigators say that worn ! an's innate love of luxury which | cannot he satisfied on the average ! income forces her into this job. 1 Which reminds me of a famuos I woman detective who tells me that iin 25 years she has never found | a woman who stole from necessity, always the bit of lace, the string

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H or ! ! M 2&5b IT of pearls, or the vanity case, found when they are caught. ' Speaking of the ladles who bootleg, we are told of a famous pair called "Emperor” Pic and Florence Lassandra. They were caught and arrested. The man declared that he alone was guilty. The woman declared the same. To make sure, the law hung them both. Just a chance to remark, “honor among thieve*,’’ and “In the mud and scum o' things, there’s always something there that sings.” • • • Poor, abused woman, indeed! Somebody called Ernest Vierbrotter, who swam the English channel a few days after Trudy Kderle brought j glory to her sex and America. He bettered Trudy’s time by more than two hours. A few days later an- 1 other woman, Mrs. Clemlngton Cor- j son. shook the water of France from her tootsies on the English side Her time was not nearly that of the man’s. But every one Is talking about Trudy and Mrs. C., and hardly any one remembers poor Ernest’s name. It takes a woman to throw the proper romantic glamor over any feat! • • • Can you satisfactorily ablute your faire phiz without a wash cloth? Neither can I. Everjj time I stay at a hotel I mean to complain to the management by putting a note In one of these little boxes labeled “suggestions for bettering our service.” Any hotel which would be as generous with some nice, woolly wash cloths as with ita towels would get all my valuable patronage, I promise. • • • Speaking of the channel swimmers, Trudy is probably an awfully nice girl. But somehow I fell more for "the first words” of her first run-ner-up. Mrs. CJorson, than for Trudy's. Trudy 1 said, you remember. “I'm happy for America. I did it all for her.” Mrs. C. said. "I had to have some money for the kiddies.” Maybe when Trudy has some kiddies she’ll have some cause to be equally unaffected and stagey. GARLAND FORTUNE GONE Bi l United Preen NEW YORK, Sept. 28. The fortune which Charles Garland, eccentric farmer, refused four years ago and Instead devoted to the aid of idealists, has been entirely consumed. The $1,674,000, has gone for the aid of workers, schools, labor publication, farms and labor colleges. Athletes Praise It

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JUDY’S DILEMMA “Judy, do you know you have completed my cure?” said John Meredith. “Never again can I call myself cursed by life; never again can I say that I am not as other men are, for I find that I can be moved by pure emotion —thank God fo#that! And you do love me, Judy, do you not?” The question brought v me back with a thud. I stood up and shook my soft feather trimmed evening wrap into place. “You do love me,” he whispered again. “I don’t know,” I told him honestly. “But your soft lips did answer my kisses, your yielding form did not stiffen in my arms; you acted as though you loved my caresses, and surely no woman does that unless she loves the man who gives them.” “My dear John,” I 6aid, "that is an exploded notion. Our mothers were taught that no girl could love caresses for their own sake, as men do; but suddenly we have found out that we are human: there is something very sweet in your kisses. John.” Again he pulled me toward him. 'Judy, you do not deny your emotions, you do love me. you must love me. Darling, take pity on me. I have missed so much. I have never had any joy or real happiness before in all my life.” * "Judy,” called Joan, "are you ready?” “Yes, dear, I was just coming.” "Well, then. I’ll send for John,” she said as she came through the drawing room door out Into the hall. John also stepped forward. "I am here with Judy, Sts,” he said. In spite of all his efforts to keep emotion out of his voice it slightly trembled. Joan looked at me rather curiously, but only remarked; “I never saw you looking so lovely, Judy; I don't think I ever saw you in white

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before. If any one had asked me, I do not think that I would have said that pure white, withoutt vestige of color to relieve it, would be the most becoming to you.” “I would have said so,” broke In John impulsively.) “From the moment my eyes rented on her yesterday I knew that only the absence of all color that we always associate with anglelic purity would bring out her radiant beauty.” “Jack, any one would know you had always lived with books,” exclaimed Joan. ‘Of course that poetical language sounds perfectly natural to you, but probably any other of Judy's young men would have said, ‘Gad, Judy, you are certainly some chicken, decked out in ostrich feathers.’ " “Don’t be silly, Joan,” I said, for John’s face showed his acute mortification. NEXT: John's Night. Copyright, 1926, NEA Service, Inc.) SCHEDULE TO START Classes Will be Given at Y. W. C. A. This Fall. The fall schedule of the health education department of the Y. W. C. A. will open the week of Oct. 4, Gymnasium and clogging classes will be taught by Miss Louise Noble; aesthetic and social dancing classes by Miss Verna Nash and basketball

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