Indianapolis Times, Volume 38, Number 168, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 October 1926 — Page 4
PAGE 4
SOCIAL ACTIVITIES
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Edwin Holt entertained at a bridal dinner at 8 o’clock Tuesday night at their home, 6234 E. North St., in honor of their daughter. Miss Vorle-Marle Holt, ■whose marriage to Richard Preston Overaayer, son of Judge and Mrs. Arthur Warren Overmyer of Fremont, Ohio, will take place at 8:30 o’clock tonight at the home. The bridal colors of lavender, yellow and green were carried out In the table decorations. Miss Holt presented dainty violet bracelets to the five girls who will be her attendants. They are Miss Elizabeth Stepleton, Lima, Ohio, who will be maid of honor, and the Misses Thelma Hull, Martha Cretors, Margaret Newton and Lois Wilcox, sorority sisters of the bride-elect, all of Ada, Ohio. Mr. Overmyer presented a handsome leather belt and silver Initialed belt buckle to Orville A. Reed of Indianapolis, who will be best man. The guests were Judge and Mrs. Overmyer, Misses Stepleton, Hull, Cretors, Newton and Wilcox; Mr. Overmyer, Mr. Reed and Miss Holt. • • • Daughters of 1812 Society Members of national board of Society of Daughters of 1812, of which Mrs. S. K. Pei ins is local president, Who were prw.ant at the opening session of a two day board meeting this morning at the Woodstock Club, were Mrs. Samuel Z. Shope, Philadelphia, Pa.; Mrs, Clarence Chandler, Grosse Point, Mich.; Mrs. Frederick W. Mllspaugh, Nashville, Tenn.; Mrs, Martin L. Sigmon, Montioello, Ark.; Mrs. Robert J. Johnston, Humbolt, Iowa; Mrs. J. A. Ostrom, Chicago; Mrs. Walter Cole Hudson, Pine Bluff, Ark., and Miss Edith Edwards, Woonsocket, R. I. Tuesday Mrs. Clarence O. Robinson, 4509 Central Ave., entertained With a tea in honor of Mrs. Samuel Preston Davis, the national presl-
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dent. Receiving with Mrs. Robinson and Mrs. Davis, were Mrs. Walter Cole Hudson, Mrs. James E. Watson, Mrs. O. 8. Shattuck and Mrs. Perkins. Assisting in the hospitalities were Mesdames Theodore Cravens, Donald Test, George a. Olive, Alton Reeves and Guernsey Van Riper. Miss Jean Richardson Entertains Miss Jean Richardson, 6920 College Ave., entertained Tuesday evening in honor of William Allen McKenzie, with throe tables of bridge. Marigold flowers decorated the room and the appointments were carried out in Halloween colors. Guests were the Misses Maude Ann Searcy, Alice Kepner, Dorothy Avels, Frances Woolery, Bertha Green and Dorothy Stephenson and the Messrs. Irwin Eagen, Don Higgins, John Christie, John L, Niblack, Marvin Lugar and Eugene Taylor. • • v Mrs, Harry Foreman Hostess Mrs. Harry Foreman was hostess Tuesday artefnoon for the Expression Club. Fall flowers decorated the home and baskets of green and white flowers adorned the tables. Assisting Mrs. Foreman was Mrs. Ned Clay. Presiding at the tea table were Mrs. Frank Feay and Mrs. Walker Baylor. Mrs. Arthur Randal] gave a talk on the Community Fund. Mrs. Vincent B. Binager gave a report of the State conference of federation yof clubs. . Characters in a one-act play, entitled "Blood Will Tell.’* were Mrs. Walter E, Jenney, Mrs. Roy H. Graves, Mrs. Arthur Randall and Mrs. Wayne Reddick. Mrs. D, E. Gruber gave the life and history of Bra hm. Mrs. Lela Peck Zimmer gave a cornet solo, “Sonato 120, No. 1.” Mrs. Charles Carter of Arcadia accompanied Mrs. Gruber, who sang "Ah, Sweet, My Love’* and "The Cradle Song.’' by Brahm. Mrs. Zimmer and Mrs. Carter played "The Sixth Hungarian Dance.’* Evans-ltennard Nuptials Rainbow shades were tne predominating colors in the wedding of Mis 9 Dorothy Evans, daughter of Mr. and Mrs, W, L. Evans, 365 W. Thirtieth St„ and Herbert E, Hennard, which took place Tuesday evening at the Capitol Avenue M. E, Church, -with the Rev, J, G, Moore officiating. Before the ceremony Mrs. H. W. Paulson, sister of the bride and organist, played bridal selections, and Mrs. Jesse Ruth, Pittsburgh, Pa,, another sister, sang. Mr* H, \V. Jones, sister of the bride, Was matron of honor; Miss Mary Mendenhall of Tipton was maid of honor and Miss Wilda Woodruff and Mrs, Roy Sabens of Girard. Pa., were bridesmaids, AH the attendants wore gowns of georgette in the rainbow shades. Little Wanda and Bvelyu Woodruff were flower girls and little Billie Pattlson was ring bearer. The bride who was given in marriage hy her father was lovely in white georgette gown beaded with rhinestones. Her veil was arranged fan shaped at the head and she carried a shower arm bouquet of butterfly roses, Harold Rennard, brother of the groom, was best man and the ushers were A. If, Cole, Earl Hoover and Kennard Perkins. After the reception held at the Evan* home, Mr. and Mrs. Rennard left on a wedding trip through the East, The out-of-town guests were the Messrs and Mesdames E. E. Mendenhall, I. H. Woodruff, Ray Woodruff and p, E, Beckett family of Tipton; J. K, Ruth, Pittsburgh; rfoy Babe ns, fiirard. Pa.; Albert Woodruff. Arcadia; Charles Evans, Dublin,
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and the Mesdames D. M. Rennard of Terre Haute and H. H. Bunch of Tipton. • * • Mrs. George Hunter Entertains Mrs. George Hunter, 2330 Park Ave., was hostess today for the card party given by the Ladies auxiliary of the United Commercial Travelers. Yellow dahlias decorated the home and black and yellow candles symbolic of Hallowe’en lighted the rooms. Mrs. Hunter was assisted by her daughter, Mrs. Howard Kimball, Mrs. Harvey Dodge, president of the auxiliary, and Mrs. Verne Sholby, chairman of entertainment. * The Wednesday night meetnig of the ladies’ auxiliary to the Sahara Grotto for October has been postponed. The meeting place for the next month will be announced later. The Aftermath Club will be entertained Thursday afternoon by Mrs. W. P. Hall, at the home of her daughter, Mrs Henry M. Cochrane, 4241 Broadway Ave.
Recipes By Readers
NOTE —The Times will give a recipe filling 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 bo mailed to winners. Write only one recipe, name, address and date on each sheet. CHOI-FED LIVER RELISH One-fourth pound tender liver talked fifteen minutes. Add two hardboiled eggs, one large onion minced very fine, pepper and salt to flavor. Chop altogether and keep hot. Just before serving add hot fat in which the liver was baked. Minnie Smith 834 Union St., Indianapolis,
Times Pattern Service PATTERN ORDER BLANK Pattern Department. Indianapolis Timer Indianapolis, lad. 2 6 7 3 iThi-Ttl find 1* oeata from which send pattern No u * 81*e Name . ... •■••••••• Address . CIU . ... ... ... -si- -a- •* *•* ‘
SPORTS FROCK Anew sports idea that has won instant response. Its perfectly straight lines with deep French Vfront, make it especially suitable for stout figures. It features full sleeves gathered into wristbands, and finished with a flare cuff. The flare in skirt is achieved through inverted side plaits. See! They are part of front and back section. Just side and shoulder seams to sew! The dress Js slashed from neck at centerfront, which forms the rever. The collar is simply stitched at perforations and shield inserted. Complete instructions with pattern. Design No. 2673 cuts in sizes 36, 38, 40, 42, 44 and 46 inches bust. The 36-inch size takes 3% yards of 40-lnch material. Select flat crepe, broche crepe kasha or lightweight tweed for its development. Embroidery Design No. 718 (blue or yellow) is 15 cents extra. Our patterns are made by the leading Fashion Designers of New York City, and are guaranteed to fit perfectly.
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Saint and Sinner By ANNE AUSTIN '
On Thursday noon Cherry made a flying trip home, arriving in a taxi piled high with- bundles. With an imperious wave of her hand, as if taxis were the most ordinary convenience in a pampered life, she bade the driver wait after die had lugged parcels into the liVing'room. "Yoohoo, Faith! S’prise!” she called out gaily, as serene as if she had not narrowly sidestepped disgrace the night before. “Hello, Mliggy, darling! Feeling better? 1 brought you a bag of the most marvelous black figs! Just look Faith —” she began to tug at the cords of the bundles. "Cretonne! Yards and yards of it! The furniture and the curtains look so absolutely hopeless against this gorgeous new wallpaper, that I simply couldn’t stand it. Like it?’’ she caught up a fold of the cretonne and displayed it like an expert salesman. Against an ivory white background Jungle foliage, brilliant plumaged parrots and exotic flowers rioted in a blaze of color. "Won’t slip covers for the davenport made out of this gorgeous stuff simply. transform it?” she went on breathlessly, as if she did not see the cloud that had settled on Faith's tired face. “And we can cover the cushion of the old wicker chair with it and make new curtains —” “You don’t mean we,” Faith interrupted with quiet bitterness. “You mean I can. You must think I’m made of iron and steel, with ten pairs of hands. Cherry.” “Get Aunt Hattie to help you,” Cherry- suggested airily, "Just four pairs of curtains for living room and dining room—and the slip covers and cushions. You can just run them right up on the machine. And oh, look, I bought some cans of
Evrey day The Times will print on this page pictures showing the latest up to date fashions. This is u practical service for readers who wish to make their own clothes. V iu may obtain this pattern by Ailing out the accompanying coupon, enclosing 16 cents, coin preferred, and mailing It to the pattern department of The Times Delivery 1* made In about one week. Be sure to write plainly and to include pattern number and size.
ft 2673 \TT "l! 8 Vi 41 Irv \
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paint and lacquer. That old wicker chair is too horrible for words. Dad or Junior can a coat of this black lacquer paint and trim it with red. Won’t that be stunning? And here's an unfinished side table with a book trough that you can paint with the black and red lacquer. We can put my Tennyson and your two volume Shakespeare—l think leatherbound book look swell in a living room, don’t you?—and that set of Michael Arlen Abat Bill Warren gave me for Christmas. Books make a room look so—#o high-brow, don’t you think?" She cocked a bright, untroubled topaz eye at Faith’s frowning face as she shuckled the brown paper wrapping from the cheap piece of white pine furniture. “Junior or Dad can paint this, if you haven’t time, ’farling. Ido want everything to look spiffy for tomorrow night. Please be a good sport and help me. Faith.” “What’s all this about Friday night?” Mrs. Lane demanded, test-’ ing the quality of the cretonne between wetted forefinger and thumb“S’prise!” Cherry patted her mother’s hand. “And Faith, if you have time, darling, you might wash and iron the collars and culls on Muggy's blue foulard. to be all dressed up for Cherry’s surparty! Gotta go now, darlings* Please be nice. Faith!” she flung her arms about her sister's stiff, unyielding form and planted a swift butterfly kiss dh her stern-set mouth. When she had gone, Faith threw herself upon the shabby old davenport, with its worn red \plvet cushions, and began to weep stormiljc. "Now, what in the world's the matter with you?” her mother demanded, edming to bend over her. “You use the parlor as much as Cherry—or nearly as much, if you’ve got to jerk mo up on everything I say—and I should think you'd be glad she spends her hard-earned money to fix it up. Not a word of thanks out of you—just stood there, lookin’ like you could bite nails In two, and if looks could kill —well, the poor little thing, tryin’ so hard to make a good showin’ with her friends, would be lavin’ stark and cold at your feet right now.” "But, Mother,” Faith sat up suddenly and dabbed angrily at her eyes. “She brings in enough work ‘to keep me busy for a week, with all the housework and everything to do, and expects me to have it all done by tomorrow night! And me right in the middle of a week's ironing! And I’d promised Joy I’d go to the mothers' meeting at her school tomorrow-. Miss Spencer sent me u special invitation—” “Well, it ain’t'goin’ to mend matters any for you to whine around about it,” her mother told her sternly. “Go right now and phone your Aunt Hattie to come over and help you. If I could peddle a machine I wouldn’t let you touch them drupes and slip covers—” . “I know you can’t run the machine, Mother." Faith rose, tried to smile. “I’ll do the best I can. It’s just that—l’ve worked so hard lately, there’s been so terribly much
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happening—l’m sorry, Mother, I was cross.” Mrs. Lape's stern face softened, like dark ice breaking in a spring thaw. “You’re a good girl, Faith. Me—sick and, all —you got a right to complain-*-’’ “No, Mother, no!” Faith, touched to the heart by this rare burst of affection and appreciation from her mother, flung her arms about the massive body, laid her head against the vast breast. “Don’t carry on, now,” her mother told her gruffly, to hide her unwonted emotion. “You get the slip covers cut and I’ll stitch them up by hand. Hattie can hem the drapes and valances on the machine. 'Twon’t be such a job, if we all pitch in, and Cherry’ll be real pleased—’’ Because her heart had been made incredibly light by her mother’s shy, awkward kiss on her cheek. Faith’s body seemed electrified with energy. Aunt Hattie arrived, scolding but actually pleased at being needed, and “pitched in” with a will, gossiping and snipping and basting and' treadling w-ith indefatigable vigor at the old “drop head" sewing machine. Mrs. Lane took great pride in the smallness and evenness of the stitches she put into the slip covers for the dusty old davenport, and personally with much groaning, super-, vised their installation. That night, while Cherry danced somewhere, as usual, “Long” Lane, with many flourishes, and an endless monologue on Just how expert interior decorating should be done, painted the old wicker chair until it gleamed a lustrous black, trimming it artistically with the vermilion red lacquer; treated the unpainted pine “side table” with its book trough, in the same fashion, and, because his fingers loved the feci of the brush, .sandpapered and retinished with mahogany varnish the scarred, waterstained piano bench. "This old Axminster rug looks like kingdom come,” he held his head to one side and surveyed the threadbare, ugly floor covering with disapproving eyes. “Say, Sis, I got a few bucks saved up to pay you back—you know that fifty? How about me putting five of it down on a rug? Something with parrots, maybe. I can still give you ten on your fifty I owe you.” “That’s sweet of you, Long," Faith smiled at him through misty eyes. "Good old boy! And —and you can bring Fay ( Allen over sometimes—” "Gee, Sis, could I? She’d be —why, she'd be tickled silly. Honest, Sis, she's a good kid. Say, it’s gonna be n swell room, ain't it?” (Copyright. 1926,* NEA Service, Inc.) (To Be Continued) Tomorrow: Cherry breaks the news of her engagement to Mr. Chilly to her mother and aged suitor arrives to ask for her hand.
PERSONAL ITEMS
The second social event of the fall season for Shriners and members of their families will be held at Murat Temple, Friday nighty it is announced, including cards and other amusements in the social rooms and a full program of dancing in the Egyptian room for which a good orchestra will be provided. The potentate announces that there is no charge for admission, but adds that t!ie party is for Shriners and their families qnly Und the current Shrine membership card mupt be shown at the door. g
This great Indlanapotb bakery of National BUcuit Company to a good customer aa well as a good provider for the dry. Thousands of dollars are spent in this market for the purchase of raw materials and other items.
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Martha Lee Says WHEN FALSE LOVE MASKS LIKE A BANDIT
Worse than the .bandit’s mask, is false love which many a scoundrel uses to further his wicked plans. What a pity 1 that there is no law to deal out justice to the man or woman who uses the semblance of love to further his or her selfish plans I
Such a one, when hi* own need has passed, is ready to discard the one who has helped him, as- readily as he would discard a sheet of paper upon which hq has written—usually without even slight consideration for the other’s feelings. Truly, the victim of a deceitful lover is to be pitied. Dear Martha Lee: I have been married since June. I married my husband' because he wn in trouble and bettered me to marry him to help him out. I did not love him then, but since then I have grown to love him. but he save frankly that, he does not care for me and gays that he wants to leave me. I don’t think I could do without him any more. Do you think he cares for me, or only wanted me to help him out of his trouble? P. E. B. Basing an opinion only upon what you have told me, I should say he married you for only selfish reasons and does not love you. It is useless to try to hold him if he is not interested. Surely you would not want him to stay against his will. The sooner you get away from him the sooner you will forget him. Dear Martha Lee: Every time roy hnsband and I get with a bunch of single folks, he humiliates me by staying with the girls and trying to kiss them. He pays no attention to me at all. No young man wanta to pay attention to a married girl, so what shall I do? MRS. M. M. Your husband is very indiscreet in his behavior. It may be he is trying to excite jealousy in you, and if you act as if you don’t care perhaps he will give it up as energy wasted. Try having as good a time as he does. I can’t see why a single girl would want to kiss a married man any more than a single boy would want to kiss a married woman. Both are forbidden fruit. I really think It would be much more pleasant for both of you to associate with a young married crowd. Dear Miss Lee: Is It correct for a young lady to hold a mans hat in church or the theater? After twenty-two years of married life is it correct? It is correct for the man to take care of his own hat and also any burdensome belonging of his woman friend or wife in church, or the theater, or on any social call. Can Love and Abuse Mingle? Dear Miss Lee: You have told others what they wish to know, and I hope you can helo me. \ Can a husband really love his wife and babies if he beats bis wife and berates her in front of the babies? If a woman is divorced from her husband and he comes into her home and -hits her and carries untrue tales about her character to have her babies taken awav from her. can that be love? A WONDERIN'# MOTHER I gather from your letter that th% man who is divorced from you declares he still loves you even though hq takes the liberty to come into
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OCT* 20, 1026
your home and abuse you. Surely no decent man would intentionally hurt a woman he loves. A man with the mean disposition you describe should not be given any consideration if he professes to love you.
Painty Underwear for 15 cts! Those delicate, true tint* the fabric hud when new! Yon can do such tinting if you use real dye. Soft, but per feet shades for all your underthingh. stockings, etc. And don't stop wfth tinting? Yon can Diamond dye dresses, even your old suit. The true tones In Diamond dye* make home dyeing Just as perfect as* any .professional conld do. Any mn \ terifl. any color—right over the old. Diamond dye your drapes and rartains, too. So easy. It's fun—and how ,economical! FREE—Yonr druggist win >gtve yon the Diamond Dye Cyclopedia; valuable suggestions and easy direction*, with piece-goods samples of color. Or, big illustrated book Color Craft postpaid—. write DIAMOND DYES, Dept S-L Burlington, Vermont Make it NEW for IS cts!
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Buy YOUR Wearing Apparel on the AMERICAN BUDGET TWENTY PAYMENT PLAN Ho rtr* h~. for this tsarrnitnea HR, €r*ry Mrtkit* SL2S (■irtitnil Id si** - - s^*o9mtishMon m * 75.00 $3.75 Islo6.#|ss^o ™WHEN‘™ 82 N. Pennsylvania St .
Some of the most popular sweet biscuit baked by “Uneeda axe Moonbeams (Assorted) Marshmallow Pecans Coffee Cake (Lettered) Other tempting suggestions will be found In the Display Rack at grocery stores.
