Indianapolis Times, Volume 39, Number 52, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 July 1927 — Page 6

PAGE 6

George B. Loy and Blanche Jolley Wed At Irvington Church mHE Irvington Methodist Episcopal Church was the scene of the wedding Saturday evening at 8 of Miss. Blanche Jolley, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George Jolley, 5810 Dewey Ave., and George B. Loy, son of Mrs. Adelaide Peffley. Dr. W. B. Farmer performed the ceremony before an altar of ferns, palms and cathedral candles. Mrs, Charles Teeters, organist, played, and Mrs. Robert Drake sang “0 Promise Me” and “At Dawning.” Miss Jessie Peffley, sister of the bridegroom, as bridesmaid, wore orchid georgette in sleeveless style with circular skirt. Her hat was of

orchid hairbraid. Miss Georgia Jolley, niece of the bride, was also a bridesmaid and wore a sleeveless blue chiffon dress with circular girdle and ruffles, her hairbraid hat matched her dress. Both carried bouquets of Premier roses. Miss Naomi Jolley, sister of the bride, as maid of honor, wore pink georgette with circular pieces inset in the skirt and trimmed with pink lace. Her pink georgette hat was trimmed with a rhinestone buckle. Mrs. Lillian Hancock, matron of honor, also a sister of the bride* wore pink georgette fashioned with skirt of two tiers of plaited ruffles. Her hat was also of pink, and both carried Columbia roses. The attendants all wore pearl and crystal choker beads, the gifts of the bride. Little Ruth Esther Hancock, niece of the bride, wore a ruffled dress of pink crepe and carried rose petals in a basket. Richard Pressel, nephew of the bride, wore a white suit and carried the ring in a lily. The bride, who was given in marriage by her brother, John H. Toner, wore white satin in robe de Style, beaded in pearls. Her veil in coronet style was beaded in pearls and rhinestones and bound on the lower edge by a large circular piece of lace. Her bouquet was Ophelia roses and valley lilies and she wore the gift of the bridegroom, a necklace of crystals and pearls. Robert Fitzgerald was best man and the ushers were Scott Ham, Theodore Wilson and James Vincent Rawlings, Jr. A reception at the home of the bride’s parents followed the ceremony. The house was decorated with garden flowers and the table lighted with white tapers in crystal holders tied with white tulle. The wedding cake formed the centerpiece of the table. The couple left for a motor trip to Detroit and eastern points and will be at home after Aug. 1. at 603 N. Chester Ave. The bride traveled in a pink crepe dress with pink hat and accessories to match. Out-of-town guests were: Mr. and Mrs. John H. Toner and son, John, Jr., of Detroit, Mich.; Mr. and Mrs. Walter B. Goff, Earl Bell, Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Host and Mrs. Katherine Host, all of Jewett, 111., and Mr. and Mrs. Guard Myers of Kokomo. New Home for Masons BU j Vnitrii GREENSBURG, Ind., July 11.— Work of converting the old Methodist Church into a temple home for the Greensburg Masonic Lodge Started this week. Several months’ work will be required to change the building throughout, it is said.

You ’ll Be Surprised at Gratefid Cure’s Success BY MARTHA LEE Ever hear of the grateful cure? • It’s good for what ails you when the world looks all wrong. If you’re feeling that way, you’ll say of this, “I have nothing to be grateful for.” That, of course, is the first hallucination that this cure puts out of business. You begin the day, before a single troubled thought has had time to generate, by declaring that you’re mighty thankful for something —anything will do, from gratitude for your soft bed to the fact that

your corns haven’t been hurting. Any grateful thought—but, mind you, they must come regularly and quite often at first. It won’t take long to notice effects. The first will be that your mind, trained to find things to be grateful for, will unearth a surprising number. After while there will seem so many things that call forth more .or less pronounced waves of gratitude that your digestion will improve powerfully, your heart, having expanded to the comparatively new

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Week's Program in Child Health Opens at Winona Bn Uniled Press WINONA, Ind., July 11.—Child health week opened here today with a large attendance of children, parents and physicians. Dr. Ada E. Schweitzer, director of the child hygiene division of the State board of health, declared that every effort will be made to impress parents with the need for keeping their children healthy. For this purpose she has brought to Winona physicians and nurses to present the most recent advances in maternal and infant care. Examinations Arranged Apolina Wilson, M. D., and Fanny Thomas, R. N., will assist in the examination cf children and will give lectures and demonstrations. Miss Charlotte Davis and Everit Conder will help with exhibits and examination routine. Local dentists will provide demonstrators each day and local day committees will assist. -jf On Friday forenoon Dr. Schweitzer will hold a consultation on child management and habit training for any parents who may wish to discuss their problems. The program this week includes: Exhibitions of posters models and table displays to illustrate safety first methods for parents, mothers, the baby’s reception; the baby’s first year; the toddler and the pre-school child. Devices for avoiding physical, mental and moral injuries also will be shown, and many new books will be on exhibit. Lecture Topics Lectures will be given on accident prevention; babyhood, home and school accidents; accidental disease; danger curves from infancy to old age, and family harmony. A health examination of all children whose parents bring them to the meeting, will be held Wednesday and Thursday from 9 a. m. until noon at the Winona Presbyterian Church. Dr. Schweitzer urges all parents who can possibly attend the meetings to bring their children for examination, which will be very thorough and free of charge. Requests for examination of groups of pre-school children from surrounding territory should be sent in at once to Dr. Schweitzer, giving approximately the number of prospective first grade children so that additional hours may be arranged for this work if necessary.

emotion, will unaccountably begin to sing and—well, anyway, there’s quite a surprise waiting for you if you adopt the grateful cure. Life Is Uninteresting Dear Martha Lee: 1 wish you would give me some suggestions. X just don’t know what to do with myself. I am married, have a wonderful home and everything that heart could wish, but I am miserable. My husband is good to me and it worries him to death that he can’t make me happy. A dozen times a week, he'll say to me, “Is there anything I could get you—is there anything you want?” A lot of folks envy me, but they wouldn’t if they knew how uninteresting life looks. What’s the use of things anywav? MRS. J. M. C. Well, I should say you're simply suffering from acute ingratitude. You can make a complete cure on yourself by quitting the very evident bad habit of trying to make, yourself happy with no particular concern about any one else’s. Have Other Company? Dear Martha Lee: I am 17 years old and am going with a young man 21. I love him very much and he says he loves me. Occasionally he goes out with other girls, but keeps his regular engagements with me. i My aunt with whom I am staying does not approve of him because he does not give up all other girls for me. Do you think I should not allow him to se me on this account? MAE. As you are not engaged, I think it would be entirely unreasonable to require that he act as your aunt suggests. You also should feel free to have other company, under the present conditions.

Life’s Niceties Hints on Etiquet

1. If your hostess has arranged for entertainment for every single minute of your visit, is it proper to try to beg off just to rest? 2. When inviting guests is it customary to state the time of their departure as well as their arrival? 3. Should a prospective hostess tell her guests when inviting her what other guests are coming and outline the entertainment? The Answers 1. No. Rest when you get home. 2. Yes. 3. The considerate hostess will, it helps a’guest plan her wardrobe.

MARRIED

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—Photo by Holland Studio.

Mrs. Raymond L. Cork Mr. and Mrs. Obed Cork, 237 N. Pershing Ave., announce the marriage of their son, Raymond L. Cork, to Miss Leona Swango, 439 N. Gray St. The wedding took place at Englewood Christian Church parsonage on June 26. Mr. and Mrs. Cork are at home at 5932 Dewey Ave.

Patterns PATTERN ORDER BLANK Pattern Department, Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Ind. Enclosed find 15 cents for which send Pat- oA n o tern No. • *3 U/ £. Size Name Street City

EXCLUSIVE SPORTS STYLE The new sleeveless dress has been steadily gaining in popularity for town, country and seashore for smart daytime wear. It is in evidence everywhere the fashionables gather. Printed silk crepe, flat silk crepe, rayon crepe, shantung, georgette crepe striped washable radium and jersey are the popular fabrics chosen for Design No. 3072. Pattern can be had in sizes 16, 18 years, 36, 38, 40, 42 and 44 inches bust measure. The 30-inch size requires 2% yards of 40-inch material with % yard of 36-inch con' -sting.

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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 cants (coin preferred), and mailing it to the Pattern Department of The Times. Delivery is made in about a week. Birthday Luncheon Queen Esther Circle of the First Moravian Episcopal Church will give a birthday luncheon at the church Wednesday noon. Alpha Chi Sigma Miss Hannah Sullivan, 214 S. McKim Ave., will be hostess for the meeting of Alpha Chi Sigma sorority this evening. 1 Elect Delegates Election of delegates to the national war mothers convention in Milwaukee in September will be held at the meeting of the Marion county chapter at 2 p. m. Tuesday, in the Fletcher American Bank.

Artemus Luncheon Mrs. John E. Ambuhl will entertain the Artemus Club with a picnic luncheon Tuesday at her country home, Eightieth St. and Lincoln Blvd. A short business meeting will be held in the afternoon.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Prize Recipes by Readers

NOTE—The Times will give $1 for each recipe submitted by a reader adjudged of sufficient merit to be printed In this column. One recipe is printed dally, except Friday, when twenty are given. Address Recipe Editor of The Times. Prizes will be mailed to winners. Write on one side of sheet only. Only one recipe each week will be accepted irom one person. Southern Cornbread Two cups corn meal, two tablespoons cornstarch, one teaspoon salt, one teaspoon soda, one teaspoon corn syrup, one egg beaten, two cups buttermilk, two teaspoons shortening. Combine the ingredients in the order given. Beat well, pour into medium sized pan, well greased. Bake thirty minutes in a hot oven. Miss Kathlyn Creech, C. of D. Ooley, Romona, Ind.

Plan Events for Bride-to-Be in August Wedding The engagement of Miss Wilhelmina Schoenholtz, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Schoenholtz of Connersville, to Waldo J. Shierling of Saratoga, Ind., has been announced. The wedding will take place Aug. 4 at 3:30 p. mfl at the home of the bride-elect’s parents. Both are graduates of Purdue University, where Miss Schoenholtz was a member of Alpha Chi Omega. Among Indianapolis events planned for the bride-elect is a bridge party July 27 at the home of Mrs. Stanley Green, 5154 E. Michigan St., by Mrs. Green and her sister, Mrs. Thomas Shimer. Mrs. John P. Schoenholtz, 240 S. Emerson Ave., will entertain for her July. 30. SHELBYVILLE WOMAN IN AUXILIARY RACE Bn Times Special SHELBYVILLE, Ind., July 11.— Miss Mamie Jones, Shelbyville, has announced she is a candidate for State secretary of the Indiana department, American Legion Auxiliary. The election will be held at the State convention of the auxiliary in South Bend July 24 to 26. Mrs. Claire P. Thurston, Indianapolis, will seek re-election as State secretary in opposition to Miss Smith. GARDEN PARTY GIVEN AT BEACH FOR GUEST Miss Gladys Paschall, house guest of Miss Marguerite Watson at her home in Terrace Beach on White River, was honored with a garden party Saturday night given by Miss Watson at her home. Flowers and Japanese lanterns were used on the lawns, the boat landings and on the refreshment tables. The guests were: Misses Gladys Paschall Marie Kite Helen Whelan Esther Jackson Margaret Squab Julia Shurgert Ruth Reece Genleve Bey Frances Patterson Katherine Reece Mary Gillert Virginia Penny Myrtle Hacker Ruth Watson Messrs. Harry Jarvis Glenn Barr John Clearwater Paul Barr Hazel Mundon Drew Ross Leonard Jackson Allen Hlgabocxum Wendell Jones James t rthur Darwin Alshfleld Harold .’eters Irvin Scovell Hospital Report Bu Times Special BLOOMINGTON. Ind., July 11— The Riley Hospital Cheer Guild now has 317 members in Indiana. Mrs. Edna Hatfield Edmondson, of the I. U. extension division, and field worker for the hospital service commission, has announced in her report. The guild meets once a month at the Claypool except in July and August. Mrs. Edmondson in her report gives an account of the work done by the guild and of the gifts made to the hospital. • - Esther Lukens to Wed Mr. and Mrs. Alfred S. Lukens, 2802 E. Michigan St., announce the engagement of their daughter, Esther, to Leonard F. Pursell, son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Pursell. The wedding will take place Aug. 20 at the bride’s home. Miss Martha Lukens, who will sing at the wedding, will entertain Friday evening with a miscellenaeous shower in honor of her sister. Cervus Party \ Mrs. D. C. Crawley, Mrs. C. J, Austermiller and Mrs! Harry Sargent were hostesses at the regular card party of the Cervus Club this afternoon at the Elks Club. A luncheon for board members preceded the party. Seymour Club Mrs. Mayme Davis, 1038 N. Hamilton Ave., will be hostess for the Seymour Social Club, Thursday afternoon. Mrs. Anna Farrell will assist. Elect Officers Election of officers for the TriArt Club will be held at the meeting this evening with Miss Dorothy Ann Allen, 1522 N. Tuxedo St. Initiation Hostess Miss Rezina Bond, 3710 Central Ave., will be hostess for the initiation service of Psi lota Xi Sorority this evening. Honors Guest Mrs. Dayle C. Rowland, 3015 N. Meridian St., entertained Saturday with a bridge party for her guest, Mrs. James W. Pastorius of Miami Beach, Fla. Sorority Party Miss Juanita Shafer, 1718 College Ave., will entertain members of the Tau Gamma sorority with a social meeting this evening. She will be assisted by her mother, Mrs. Hayes R. Shafer.

SCHLOSSER'S Omßrove Butter O resh Churned from c itreshCre<m

SOCIETY WOMEN AT SOUTHAMPTON

On the sands before the new club lander and Mrs. Orson S. Munn. Tuckerman, Mrs. Philip Kip Rhinehouse at Southampton—Mrs. Roger

Family Menus

BY SISTER MARY BREAKFAST Chilled stewed prunes in orange juice, cereal, cream, omelet, toast, milk, coffee. LUNCHEON—Cream of spinach soup, croutons, baccon and lettuce sandwiches, Bohemian tarts, milk, Broiled sirloin steak new potatoes, French fried onions, bet greens, lemon cream pie, bran rolls, milk, coffee. Bohemian Tarts One yeast cake, one-half cup luke wamr milk, four tablespoons flour, one cup butter, two eggs, one-fourth teaspoon chinniman, one-half lemon, one-half teaspoon salt, two cups milk, about four cups flour. Scald milk and cool to lukewarm temperature. Add yeast cake and dissolve. Add flour and beat until smooth. Let rise half and hour in a warm place. Put butter into a mixing bowl and add yolks of eggs, grated rind of lemon, salt and cinnamon. Beat until mixture “horns.” Add yeast and additional milk which has been heated and cooled to lukewarm. Add flour and beat for fifteen minutes. Let rise until double in bulk. Roll lightly on a floured molding board into a sheet about three-fourths inch thick. Cut in four-inch squares and fill with the following filling: One tablespoon butter, two cups cottage cheese, yolke two eggs, six tablespoons sugar, one-half lemon (grated rind), one-fourth teaspoon salt, one-half cup sultana raisins. Beat yolks of eggs with sugar. Add remaining ingredients and beat well. Put a large spoonful In the center of each square of dough, pull corners together and brush over with the slightly beaton whites of the eggs. Sprinkle with shredded nuts and bake thirty minutes in a moderate oven. Sprinkle with powdered sugar when done. (Copyright, 1927, NEA Service, Inc.) Honor Bride-Elect The Nu Sigma Delta Sorority entertained Saturday afternoon with a luncheon-bridge and boudoir shower in the blue room of the Marott in honor of Miss Dorothea Baase, who will be married July 19 to James Burke. Pink roses and tapers formed the table decorations and other appointments were in pink and white, the bridal colors. Marry at Peru The marriage of Miss Opal Daniels, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Daniels of Peru, and Clifford K. Arnholt of Champaign, 111., which took place June 25 at the Mississinewa Country Club, has been announced. After a trip on the lakes the couple will be at home in Champaign, 111. At Convention Mrs. Richard Lieber, wife of the State Conservatory Department director, left Sunday for New York and will'go to Locarno, Switzerland to attend the international conference on education. She is a director of the Clarie Ann Shover nursery school, 3265 N. New Jersey St.

Life’s Most Thrilling Stories NO matter how many romantic tales of fiction we may read, we always find that the most thrilling, most heart-gripping, most convincing stories of all are those that are based on the experiences of real life. That is why True Story Magazine has the largest newsstand circulation in the world—because it reveals the comedy, the tragedy of life—not as the fiction maker paints it, but as it really is. If you like frankly written narratives of men and women who have learned the real meaning of love and marriage, of struggle and sacrifice, of defeat and triumph in the swift-moving drama of life get the August issue of True Story. It contains seventeen powerful, soul-searchirgfcztures. Your newsdealer has it. Ask for yof r copy today. True Story Out Today 25f J

Women’s Party Sends 18 Envoys to See Coolidge COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo., July 11.—Bearing instructions to ask the President to lend his support to the speedy passage of the equal rights amendment, eighteen envoys of the National Women’s party today were en route to Rapid City, S. D., to visit President Coolidge. Gail Laughlin, Republican member of the Maine Legislature, and Mrs. Anna Laskey, Democratic member of the Oklahoma Legislature, were spekers. The party's convention, which has been in session here all week, ended Sunday with an impressive outdoor equal rights demonstration. The resolution to be presented to the President asks that he add his support to the amendment to the Constitution, which provides that “men and women shall have equal rights throughout the United States and every place subject to its jurisdiction.” MISS M. E. THOMPSON WEDS H. LYNN RAPP The marriage of Miss Mary Elizabeth Thompson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. David L. Thompson, 1249 Ringgold Ave., and H. Lynn Rapp, son of Mr. and Mrs. T. C. Rapp of Los Angeles, Cal., formerly of Kokomo, took place at 2 p. m. Saturday at the Immanuel Reformed Church with Rev. H. L. V. Shinn officiating. The bride wa sattended by her sister, Miss Nelle Thompson, and the best man was her brother, William R. Thompson. The ceremony was followed by a dinner at the bride’s parent’s home. Mr. and Mrs. Rapp have gone on a wedding trip and will return here Aug. 1. Business Meeting Zeta Theta Psi sorority will hold a business meeting this evening at the horn of Miss Loranie Jones, 515 N. Tacoma Ave. On Trip Mrs. M. Sylvester and daughter, Dorothy, 149 N. Highland Ave., have gone on an extended western trip to Colorado Springs, Denver, Yellowstone and Los Angeles.

300 Pairs of White FABRIC SHOES

Straps, Pumps, medium and high heels at a price that sets them apart as the most sensational values our shoe department has ever been able to offer. Eveiy pair easily worth two to three times the money. Your choice, Tuesday only, a pair. Come Early!

CHURCH SOCIETY TO HONOR MISSIONARY The Woman’s Foreign Missionary auxiliary of the Merritt PL M. E. Church, assisted by officers of the Indianapolis district, will give a reception Friday evening at the Merritt Pi. church in honor of Dr. Rebecca Parish, a member of the church, who is on furlough after serving five years in the Mary Johnson Hospital in Manila, P. I. Newcastle Hostess Miss Ruth Nicholson, Newcastle, entertained Saturday afternoon with a luncheon bridge of ten tables at the Marott. A color scheme of orchid and yellow was carried out. She was assisted by her mothers, Mrs. L. T. Nicholson, and Mrs. James Keeling of Newcastle. There were guests from Newcastle, Indianapolis, Plainfield, Bloomfield and Anderson. Coming Marriage Mr. and Mrs. Joseph C. Seyfried, 1011 E. Tabor St., entertained Saturday with a bridge and supper party to announce the engagement of their daughter. Marguerite, to Leslie O. Clevenger. The wedding wi'l take place Sept. 7 at St. Catherine’s Church. Marry in Cincinnati 1 The marriage of Norbert A. Weber, son of Mr. and Mrs. John Weber, 326 N. Oakland Ave., and Misi-. Irene Lois Mills of Cincinnati, Ohio, will take place at 8 a. m., July 20, at the Church of the Resurrection, Price Hill, Cincinnati. The couple will be at home after Aug. 15 at 644 Eastern Ave., Indianapolis. Marriage Announced The marriage of Miss Louise Reeves of Peru and Fred James Koster, son of Mr. and Mrs. Carl C. Koster, 3251 N. Illinois St., is announced. The couple Is at home with his parents. Silver Anniversary Mr. and Mrs. Harry Raitano, New Augusta, celebrated their twentyfifth anniversary with a party at their home Saturday night. Mr. Raitano is a local attorney, at one time city prosecutor.

lour Choice Tuesday Only 98 1 A PAIR!

JULY 11, 1927 A

Men Seem to Prefer . Tiny Girls By MRS. WALTER FERGUSON “She is a large, domineering sort of woman.” This sentence was used to describe a wife whose husband was divorcing her. Within it lies tragedy. Why do we always associate dominance with large women? Some of them are as meek as house cats, and yet they are forever doomed to be regarded as rampant and ruthless individuals who trample upon everything that gets in their way. The large woman is a victim of fate. She always yearns to be small and hungers for the protection of stalwart men which she so soldom gets. * For men prefer the tiny, cuddling kind. They want somebody to shelter, somebody who must look up to them, somebody to play the dinging vine to their role of sturdy oak. Get Away With It It does not matter that often these small dames have natures as hard as adamant, that they are as determined as the tides, as hard to move from their way as the Rock of Gibraltar, or that they rule their men with a rod of iron. They are little and they can get by with murder. Large women are often lazy, and whatever you may say about them, lazy women are nearly always easier to live with than the energetic type. And it takes the little woman to be forever sweeping and cleaning, running through the house like a gale and prodding folks to her way of doing. Far more husbands are run by small than by large wives. They, of course, probably do not realize this. So long as the woman has to crane her neck to kiss them, things are all right. Everything Is Cute Anything a little woman does is cute, anything a large one does is domineering. Thus life to the oversized woman is always more or less hard. She gets little sympathy and .little petting, and petting is certainly the thing she wants most in the world. Large women, If you know them, instead of being yelling suffragists and iron-handed Carrie Nations, are usually as mild as milk. Their souls lie trembling in perpetual subjugation to their menfolks. They wouldn’t hurt, a fly. They are kindly, tractable and harmless. But people will make them miserable by insisting that they of e out to get their own way or die trying. The intrepid soul within a small body Is an Inspiring sight, but a meek, dependent, feminine soul housed in a big frame, is a spectacle tragic enough to move heaven to pity. TRIBUTE TO MOTHER OF ABRAHAM LINCOLN Bn Time Special BOONVILLE, Ind.. July 11.—Tribute to the mother of Abraham Lincoln was paid at Nancy Hanks park at Lincoln Sunday at the fourth annual outing of the Boonville Press Club. A program was given at the grave of Nancy Hanks. The audience comprised large delegations from the Fint, Second and Third congressional districts of Indiana and from northern Kentucky. To Live Here Mrs.M. E. Dunbar, 3411 Broadway, announces the marriage of her daughter, Emily, to Bernard Elfrink Slenker, son of Mr. and Mrs. B. F. Slenker of Monticelllo, which took place June 25, with the Rev. G. M. Smith officiating. The couple will live In Indianapolis. The bride is a member of the Purdue chapter of Kappa Alpha Theta. Sorority Supper A box super will follow the regular meeting of the Rho Sigma sorority Tuesday evening with Miss Eloise Greenwalt, 2219 Parker Ave.