Indianapolis Times, Volume 39, Number 51, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 July 1927 — Page 8
PAGE 8
Afternoon of Bridge for Bride Miss June Brayton, whose marriage to Raymond H. Stewart of Owosso, Mich., will take place July 14, was honor guest this afternoon when Miss Dorothy, Miss Harriett and Miss Charlotte Thomas entertained with a bridge party at their home, 552 W. Dr., Woodruff Place, The decorations carried out Miss Brayton’s color scheme of pink and white and the tables held bowls of roses. The hostesses were assisted by their mother, Mrs. H. E. Thomas. The guests were: / Misses .Laura Pay Wood Florence Moore Janice Meredith Virginia Graham Lucille O'Conner Florence Allen Bernice Spade Pauline Acre Margaret Tinnier Katy Cryan Georgia Williams Georgiabelle Pleener Bernadine Holllngs- Nada Hollingsworth worth Dorothy Hlce Mrs. Wayne Gelsel
Warped By Heroine Worship
BY OLIVE, ROBERTS BARTON Hero worship and heroine worship Is all very fine, but let us be sure that the person who is the guiding star of our lives is a real hero or heroine, and not just someone it suits us to emulate. When I was a girl a school friend of mine visited the daughter of a| very rich family. When she came home she told the rest of us all about the butlers and coachmen, the art gallery and ballroom, and all the other things that spelled fairyland to us of the uninitiated. But none of us knew then the greatest and most lasting thing that had come out of that visit. The mother of the family was a “grand dame” whose word was law in her Heavenridge, Knapp Wedding Is Announced An announcement surprising to many friends of the couple, is that of the marriage of Miss Ruth Elizabeth Knapp, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John F. Knapp, 4300 Rockville Rd., and Glen G. Heavenridge of Washington, Ind., which took place at 4:30 p. m. Wednesday, June 29, at the Trinity Episcopal Church in Bloomington, with the Rev. Elliston Cole reading the service. Miss Juanita Matlock of New York and Raymond H. Knapp, brother of the bride, were the attendants. Only the immediate family was present at the ceremony. After a short wedding trip the couple will be at home temporarily with the bride’s parents. Mrs. Heavenridge is' a graduate of Indiana University, where she was a member of Kappa Delta sorority. Mr. Heavenridge attended I. U. and West Point Military Academy.
Family Menus
BY SISTER MARY BREAKFAST—Orange juice, cereal cooked with raisins, cream, crisp toast, soft cooked eggs, milk, coffee. ♦ LUNCHEON Jellied bouillon, crackers, radishes, asparagus mousse, brown bread, strawberry tapioca, milk, tea. DINNER—Baked ham, creamed new peas, potato salad, baked peach custard, health bread, milk, coffee. Continue to serve a nourishing breakfast during the warm months. A good breakfast lays a good foundation for the day, and if the sun grows hot and the appetite lags at noon time the child who has a “good breakfast” back of him will not suffer.Asparagus Mousse One bunch asparagus. 1 tablespoon butter, 1 tablespoon flour, % cup milk, s is teaspoon salt, teaspoon pepper, 1 cup whipping cream, 1 tablespoon granulated gelatine, 4 tablespoons cold water. Wash and scrape asparagus and cook uptil tender. Cut off heads and set aside. Force remaining asparagus through a sieve. Make a sauce of the butter, flour, milk and % cup of liquid in which asparagus was cooked. Add sifted asparagus and gelatine which has been softened in cold; water for five minutes. Stir until thoroughly blended. Season with salt and pepper. Let stand over cold water until beginning to thicken. Fold in cream beaten until firm. Pour into individual molds first dipped iff cold water. Chill on ice for several hours. Unmold and serve on lettuce. Garnish with heads of asparagus dipped in French dressing and mayonnaise made pink with pimento catsup. Coming Marriage The marriage of Miss Katherine Harvey, 1120 N. Pennsylvania St., to Bernard Keltner, Livingston Apt., will take place July 14 at the home of the bride’s parents in Hartford City. After a wedding trip the couple will return to Indianapolis for residence. Marry at Franklin Mrs. Laura F. Smith, daughter of Mrs. Barton Dunlay of Crowfordsville, HI., and Charles S. Fleetwood, son of Mrs. Lucy A. Fleetwdbd of this city were married at Franklin, Ind.. June 28 by Rev. Leroy Carter. "7 ~ ISCHLOSSER'S OmSrove BUTTER tjresh Churned from c fresh Cream.
Personals
Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Newman and daughter, Marcella, 947 Eastern Ave., have motored to Kankakee, HI., to spend the week-end with Mrs. Hampton Kerr. Mr. and Mrs. Edwin H. Forry, 2134 N. Alabama St., will sail Saturday for Europe. Mrs. Henry I. Raymond, Jr., 2869 N. Pennsylvania St., is entertaining her sister, Mrs. William A. Havemeyer, of Chicago. Mrs. Paul B. Gray, 4105 Graceland Ave., and Miss Kathryn and Elsie Rider, 2135 N. Meridian St., have returned from Florida. ) Miss Helen Louise Warmouth, 3140 Park Ave., has as her guest Miss Mary Caroline Bernard, Frankfort. Mrs. S. E. Perkins has returned to her home, 3253 N. Pennsylvania St., after spending a few days at her cottage at Lake Maxinkuckee.
Person Who Serves as Guiding Star Can Sometimes Be One That Another Merely Emulates.
social set. Her motto of living like Trafalgy’s in “Trelawney of the Wells,” was “It isn’t done.” Things were correct or incorrect not if they were right or wrong in themselves, but if they were properly done. It was anew world to a little school girl in her formative years, and the result was inevitable. What the grand lady said had more effect on her little visitor than the counsel of her own good mother. The visits were repeated, and in time we noticed a change. The first thing that brought us up suddenly to what had happened was that our friend announced to the crowd one day that she never intended having children. Mrs. So-and-So didn’t want her daughter to have any it seemed, because “it wasn’t necessary and only interfered with her social career.” She added on her own account that it was silly to have children, anyway. We followed her through part of her married life for some years, and lost sight of her eventually. But not before we had seen enough to know that the warped and false set of living standards she had adopted in her youth had stuck to her hard and fast. She was blissfully unconscious that they had bleached her life into nothingness. Convention we cannot discard. But what torture it would be to stop each time before we made a choice, to say to ourselves, “Would So-and-So do it? Is it the correct thing to do?” That is a false and silly standard to follow.
News Notes of Y. W.C.A.
Mrs. Minnie Lewis Crum, president of the Young Business Girls’ Club, announces a boat ride on the Sunbeam at Broad Ripple Park for Tuesday evening. This is open to all business girls; any girl desiring to go should call Mrs. Crum at Cherry 0609-J. The delegates chosen to attend the business girls’ conference July 15-25 at Saugatuck, Mich., are: Irma Kahn, Allegra Club; Misses Rosemary Morrissey, Jean Anderson and Vera Wenz, Alpha Omega, and Misses Jeannette Schaffer, Mary Cogger and Ruth Hook of the Y. B. W. C. Club, and Miss Hazel Morris, co-executive of the conference. They will leave Friday morning. Miss Frances Toy, industrial secretary, left Tuesday for-the industrial conference, where she will remain through the business girls’ conference which follows. Accompanying Miss Toy were Misses Opal Boston, president of the industrial department; Malvina Smith, Gladys Champlin, Katheryn Scott and Harriet Scott. Among the counselors for the first grade school camping period, July 7 to 18, at Camp Delight are Miss Christine Hinshaw of Miami University, supervisor of recreation, and Miss Lucille Cook, Girl Reserve secretary, Anderson, handchaft. Miss Annie Moore Dai)§herty is camp director. A lawn fete is to be held at the South Side Y. W. C. A., Thursday evening. The street in front of the building, is to be roped off and lighted. Troutman’s orchestra will furnish music. Proceeds will be used for an electric Y. W. C. A. sign for the grounds on the South Side building. Miss Louise E. Noble of the health education department reports a busy season for the pool. Many girls are seeking the pool, especially the juniors, girls sixteen and under. Junior swimming hours are from 3 to 4 every day but Saturday when juniors may swim from 10 a. m. to 3 p. m. Adults may also swim at these hours. One hundred and thirty-four private lessons were given last month in the small pool; private lessons may be had by appointment. “Qirls may enter swimming classes at any time,” says Miss Noble, “and they may sign up for five or ten class lessons.” The pool is closed on Sundays. For Bride-Elect Miss Georgiabelle Fleener entertained Thursday evening at the home of her sister. Mrs. A1 Henry Anderson, 3330 N. Meridian St., with a bridge party and kitchen shower in honor of Miss June Brayton, w’ho will be married July 14 to Raymond H. Stewart of Owosso, Mich. Miss Dorotha Thomas, who will be bridesmaid, will entertain with a bridge party Saturday afternoon for Miss Brayton. The guests at Miss Fleener’s party were: Misses Pauline Acre Margaret Tingler Lucille O’Conner Alma Lucas Dorothy Mae Cole Dorotha Thomas Janice Meredith
TWO SUMMER BRIDES AND NEW STATE AUXILIARY HEAD
K, $ V Wkk. MU' ••••'•* , .mjt . ■Kir Wm ii,Jlr '"fMi ,JL. T- 'Of a! ■pul J|lggN&fe| a m .. . 3 Four Children
Spectacular Bravery Not Only Sort
BY MARTHA LEE Heroes are not only found upon battlefields or doing spectacular deeds at which the world gasps. There are heroes within the four walls of a home whose deeds are brave enough to be worthy of any gold medal ever cast. The man whose letter follows, wrote lengthily and only part of the letter can be reproduced, but in his difficult walk of life, he has certainly shown courage.
His Wife Left Him Dear Martha Lee: I was married for some years when my wife concluded that she no lonaer. wanted to do housework or take care of the children. She had good clothes, but she wanted finer ones and although we had four sweet and good little children, she began running around with other men. I still have letters that some of them wrote her I was doing night work and it then became necessary to take care of the children during the dav and keep on with my Job at night. Mv oldest little girl did all she could to help and used to say. "Oaddv. you are a good daddy because you do not hit my mama when she swears at you.” I never mistreated her at any time. This kept up for a long time, but my health finally broke under the strain and I am now at the home of a relative, recuperating. Now my wife has had me served with divorce papers. It worries me horribly because I would lay down mv life for the children. As I have those letters from other men. do you think I can successfully fight separation from the children? S. C. N. You will not only have the letters, but your children’s testimony, so I think you will receive justice. It should not be difficult to prove that you worked faithfully until your health broke. A frank, full declaration* of circumstances will convince the judge, I am sure,, that you have done your best. Things undoubtedly look darker to you now in your condition of health, but I feel sure that things will come out right for you. Should’ She Leave Home? Dear Martha Lee: What do you think of a mother who hates her daughter and has really requested that the daughter leave home and has ofTered to give her the money to do so? My mother hates me. I was about to leave home when my uncle took part in the affair. I am only 16. in high school and feel that I should finish it. Would you advise me to leave home and make my own way or stay here in this torture? My mother does everything she can to go against my wishes. JUST PATSY My dear girl, ! cannot think you are right in your feeling about your mother. Surely no mother, unless she is ill and irresponsible, would want to send her daughter that she has nurtured and cared for clear to high school age, out
AMBASSADOR’S DAUGHTER WED
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A diplomatic romance culminated in London Thursday with the marriage of Miss Matilde Houghton, daughter of the American ambassador to England, Alanson B. Houghton, to Chandler P. Anderson Jr., New York banker. Anderson was confidential secretary to Ambassador ' - Houghton.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Man Struggling to Care for Four Children Deserted by Mother, Is Another Kind of Hero.
into the world alone. I’rfi inclined to think you are letting your imagination and extreme sensitiveness build a fanciful situation. If, however, you are sure that you are right, I would advise you even against much discomfort, to stay at home until you finish your education. You would meet harder situations out in the- world. “Lovey Mary” is greatly disturbed, because tne young man with whom she has been going and of whom she is very fond shows unmistakable signs of being deeply interested in her sister. The sister also likes him immensely and “I don’t think she should. It’s making us enemies,” says Maiy. If your sister and this youm, man feel this attraction, there is little you can do to stop it. As you and the young man are not engaged, he perhaps sees no reason why he should not change allegiance. Don’t judge your sister harshly. Love knows no rhyme of reason. “Ruby” has another year in hig> school. She has an opportunity to get a position that is desirable, but if she took it, it would mean that she will not return to school. She is 17. I should go back to school. Ruby. You are young to enter the business world. Anyway, you can go to work later, but you cannot always be a school girl. Better get more education. All-Day Meeting The Ladies’ Auxiliary of the National Federation of Post Office Clerks will meet Tuesday with Mrs. William O. Coleman, 4539 Winthrop Ave., for an all-day meeting. A covered dish luncheon will be served at noon.
Above, left to right, Mrs. Leßoy E. Otte (Platt Photo), Miss Blanche Jolly, Below: Mrs. Albert Greatbatch.
Before her marrirage June 29 at St. Marks Lutheran church, Mrs. Leßoy Otte was Miss Louise Neese. After a trip East Mr. and Mrs. Otte will be at home at Columbus, Ohio. Miss Blanche Jolly will be married at 8 this evening at the Irvington M. E. church to George Loy.
War and Human Nature
By ALANSON B. HOUGHTON V. S. Ambassador to Grrat Britain. In a Sprrrh to Harvard Alnmnl. War does not originate from time to time simply in a sudden uncontrollable impulse on the part of one of these great national masses tc go out and slaughter another. War is possible, no doubt, because these masses are willing, under conditions, to fight. But these conditions are themselves an integral part of the problem. And that issue, broadly
WED AT WINONA
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Mrs. Kenneth Clemens
The marriage of Miss Martha Borgstedt of this city to Kenneth Clemens of Gary, took place Sunday at Winona Lake, Ind. The couple will be at home at Gary after Sept. 1. W. C. T. U. PLANS ALL-DAY MEETING The Mary E. Balch Union will hold an all-day meeting Friday at the home of Una Franklin, Maywood. A cowered dish dinner will be served. The Zeralda Wallace Union will meet at the home of Mrs. W. D. Davidson for an all-day maai’ng. Tuesday. Summaries of the year's work will be presented by each director. Devotions will be led by Fannie Baliff. Dinner will be served in Spades Park. Wedding Today The marriage of Mrs. Mattie B. Seeds and Henry Benham will take place this afternoon at 4 at the Church of the Advent with Rev. Clarence Bispham officiating. Only the members of the immediate families will attend. The couple will be at home at 118 E. Forty-fourth St.
Next! Bu \EA Service DES MOINES. la., July B. Twenty-five years ago a man named Brown entered the barber shop of Philip Wenger, got a haircut, asked the barber for credit since it was his wedding day, and departed. The other day the same Brown, now superintendent of mails, got another haircut in Wenger’s barber shop and paid the bill. Brown has been visiting the same shop all these years, during which time the unpaid bill ha, s oeen a prize joke between th(: pair. Brown said he would pay on his silver wedding anniversary and he did.
At the State meeting of the In-, diana woman's auxiliary to the National Federation of Postofflce Clerks held in ft. Wayne recently, *Mrs. Albert Greatbatch, 1221 Winton Ave., Speedway City, was elected State president.
I speaking, is the outcome of a series J of maneuvers by which the masses 1 concerned are brought into positions j of opposition. | Obviously, this maneuvering is j not done by the masses themselves. Collectively and as individuals j they have little if anything to do | with the subtile and gradual shifting of international relationships. | Their interests arc directed to the more humble and prosaic task of earning a living. The maneuvering is done by little ( groups of men called governments. ' These little groups seek constantly and naturally to to gain supposed advantages of one sort and another for their own nationals. Out of their efforts to enlarge or to strengthen or to maintain the interests instrusted to their charge the masses they represent are gradually maneuvered into positions which, to say the least, cannot easily be surrendered. If the process continues, sooner or later a situation arises in which an agreement between these small groups becomes impossible. Then, on the ground that their lives and families and property are somehow involved and endangered, these great masses of men and women, roused by every power of organized appeal and propaganda, are ordered under arms, and war follows. The entire process Is in control of the smaller groups. They make the issue. They declare the war. The masses they control simply pbe.v. Having put this power or left this power in the hands of their governments. they find themselves at the critical moment’ substantially helpless. And so, as individuals, they merely accept the decision and go out to pay the bills of war with t their bodies, and perhaps with their souls, in the hope that if not they, then those who come after them may reap a benefit in some measure proportionate to its cost. And even the very men through whose instrumentality, consciously or unconsciously, this dreadful catastrope has been brought about explain it on the ground that, human nature being what it is, any other determination was impossible—and will be, either now or hereafter. Now, war may be in fact the inevitable result of a serious clash of national interests. It is possible that no method of reaching a peaceful settlement can be devised. But certainly we have no reason to base that assumed failure upon some inherent weakness of human nature. MATINEE PARTY FOR WIVES OF DRUGGISTS The Indianapolis chapter of the woman’s organization of the National Association of Retail Druggists will entertain with a matinee party Wednesday afternoon at Keith’s. Mrs. J. I. Geliy and Mrs. Fred Dunnington are hostesses. Altar Society Party Circle No. 6 of the Altar Society of St. Anthony’s will entertain with euchre and bunco Friday afternoon and evening at the hall. To Initiate Alpha Chapter of Alpha Beta Gamma will initiate pledges at the , home of Miss Lulu Hahn Friday j evening. W. R. C. Meeting George H. Chapman W. R. C. No. 1 10 WHI meet at 2 p. m. Tuesday at Ft. Friendly, 512 N.,Hllnois St.
Hero Medal for Woman Asked Bu United Preti CHICAGO, July 9.—Mrs. Henry Riggs Rathbone. head of the Illinois chapter of the American League of Penwomen and member of Chicago society, has been recommended for a Carnegie medal for saving the life of a 15-year-old boy. Although not an expert swimmer and handicapped by an injury to her arm, Mrs. Rathbone saved the boy from drowning in a Palm Beach swimming pool recently. Her husband is the Illinois Representative at large.
Surprise Shower The home of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Rolliaon, 1502 W. TwentyFifth St., was the scene of a surprise linen shower Wednesday evening when Miss Marlon Weimar and Miss Charlene Rolllnson of the Sahara Buds entertained members of the organization in honor of Mrs. Harry Schellert, Jr., who was before her recent marriage Miss Helen Rollinson. Sahara Bud colors of blue and gold were used in decorations. The guests were: Misses Alice Emminier Prnce Herrick Ruby Perkins Odens RolUfon Dorothy Emmlnfer Ida Keaton Isabell Really Emily Svendsen Mesdames Arthur Dobbins Herman Hendren William Powell John Katzenberger William Weimar Messrs. Arthur Dobbins Gilbert Hendren William Powell Harry Schellert. Jr. Henry Twente
Feminine Answer to Ervine
BY MRS. WALTER FERGUSON St. John Ervtne, distinguished English dramatic critic, has gone everybody one better. Without any apologies whatever, he announces that women are not fit to be companions to men. The world, since our enfranchisement, is a worrisome place for members of the superior sex. They get no enjoyment In a country where they have to meet women at
Patterns PATTERN ORDER BLANK Pattern Department, Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis. Ind. Enclosed find 15 cents (or which send Pat- o ft c r tern No. 0 u ° 0 Size Name Street ;•••• City
TRULY FEMININE Avery feminine type, chosen by well-dressed women for afternoon occasions, is a white chiffon printed in dashing dots of black, shown In Design No. 3065. The deep U-shaped opening in front is finished with a collar and vestee of white chiffon, which is also used for the flare-back cuffs. The shirred panel at front gives a fluttering appearance, when in motion. Printed voile, silk Imported pongee, printed georgette crepe, washable crepe de chine and flat silk crepe are unusually attractive for everyday occasions. Pattern comes in sizes 16. 18 years. 36. 38, 40 and 42 inches bust measure. The 36-inch size requires 3 1 - yards of 36-inch material with yard of 32-inch contrasting and 3 1 - yards of 2-inch ribbon.
Iw*#, f ( \ \ >V 0 • • 3065 I / &A k wf
Every day The Times prints on this page pictures of the latest fashions, a practical service for readers who wish to make their own clothes. Obtain this pattern by filling out the above coupon, Inclosing 15 cents (coin preferred), and mailing it to the Pattern Department of The Times. Delivery is made in about a week.
JULY 9. 1927
Announce Awards of Tri Kappa Eight girls, June graduates of Indiana high schools, have been selected to receive scholarships to attend college next year from the Tii Kappa sorority of Indiana, Mrs. Joseph W. Walker. Indianapolis, grand president, announced today. Announcement is also made of a gift of $5,000 by the sorority to the State sanitarium in Rockville, to be used in furnishing anew eight-room house and in erecting a $3,000 greenhouse there. The girls awarded scholarships are Euzetta Foster. Columbus: Thelma Overton. Kokomo; Jana Whelan, Bloomington and Sarah E. Rough, Jeffersonville, all to Indiana University: Lanore E. Woods, Union City and Naomi Feenh, Alexandria, Muncie Normal; Elizabeth Henderson. Sullivan, Franklin College, and Loretta Martin. Ladoga. Butler. Miss Henrietta Newton, Oary. is chairman of the State scholarship committee of the Tri Kappa, which made the awards. Other members are Mrs. H. A. Stipp, Paoli; Mrs. Hubert L. Homung, Brookvllle; Mrs. D. H. Brown, Sullivan: Miss Florence Reynard, Union City; Mrs. Moses Leopold, Rensselaer and Miss Frances Taylor, Huntington. In addition to the eight State scholarships girls, each of the eighty-eight chapters of the sorority in the State loans'money to one or more girls in colleges
English Dramatic Critic $ Bluntly Says Women Are Not Fit Com panion* for Men.
the pods and encounter them in droves upon the streets. In the theater Ervine finds us especially irritating, as he believes that tragedy has given place to light comedy because we women must have something to giggle over. Most of us over here had supposed that the musical comedy, so popular just now. is the direct result of a demand from the overworked business mn whose mental cares during the day are so heavy that he yearns for light entertainment in the evening. It seems w* have been in error. “ But we do wish Ervine could listen in while the average American wife is trying to , drag her husband to a Shakespearean production when the Oeroge White "Scandals” are in town. We have our place, surely, in the scheme of things, but that place is not upon the same high mental plane which the men occupy. Wo are all right as wives and cooks and I nurses. When we make ourselves useful in a domestic way, we can be tolerated, but as to being companions for the intellectual male—--1 what sacrilege. It must be terrible the way the men have to be bothered with us. V/c can see their point of v ew. Here, for ages, they have be*u • ceu- : pied with noble enterprises. * hey thought up the magnifleept Idea of the divine right of kings and j fought for generations to defen 1 it. , They are responsible for 4he slums in the cities, for the tenant Jarms in the country, for the factorles where , little children are worked, for th# ; stigma on illegitimate children, for j the Ku-Klux Klan. the double ctand- | ard of morals, and war. Having managed these and other great movements, we can readily see how humiliating it is for them i to be obliged to encounter evidences of our moronic minds wherever they Jo. But we Just don't know what to do ab-ut It. Peril*es Mr. Erv.na i might get him to a monastery.
DE /Mf/TU GRADUATES WED AT MONT ICE LLO Bn Time* Spec in l GREENCASTLE. Ind.. July 9. The marriage is announced of Miss Della Cochenour. daughter of Dr. and Mrs. J. Cochenour of Monticello, and Carroll E. Brown, son of Mr. and Mrs. Milton Brown of this city, which took place Tuesday at the home of the bride's parents. Mr. and Mrs. Brown both arc graduates of De Pauw with the class of 19C0. and :he Is a member of Alpha Gamma Delta sorority. Since receiving his master s degree at the University of Chicago. Mr. Brown has been instructor in the Harrison Technical high school in Chicago. Mrs. Brown has been work at the University of Chicago and assisting in the library. The coupl* will be at home after Aug. 1, in Chicago. Lodge Party The Ben-Hur Lodge will hold an open meeting Monday night when a two-act comedy will be presented by the dramatic club. The drill team of the lodge will perform.
.-Lit. . Burns Universal Sandal In Black, White Patent Leather w Gold or Stiver . • $ lO Send money order or a* •will thip them C- O. D. BURNS 525 South Broadway Los Anfslss. Csl. 2
