Indianapolis Times, Volume 39, Number 96, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 August 1927 — Page 6
PAGE 6
State Club Convention Preparations Being Made by Executive Committee • ppn HE executive committee of the Indiana Federation of I l [ Clubs, meeting at the Claypool Monday night and today, is completing plans for the state federation meeting in Terre Haute, Oct. 18, 19 and 20. According to reports from the committee there is a dearth of candidates for the state offices to be filled at the fall meeting, none having been anpounced for second vice president and corresponding secretary.
Mrs. Hamet D. Hinkle, Vincennes, is a candidate for president; Mrs. George Phillips, South Bend, for re-elec-tion as trustee, and Mrs. Frank J. Sheehan, who will retire as president, for director for Indiana in the General Federation. Members of the committee discussed the possibility of the formation of an honor society to be known as Epsilon Sigma Omricon in the federation, through which the members may continue their education and receive credit. It would establish reading courses in the State federation with credit from the United States Department of the Interior, American Library Association and home study course of Indiana University. One of the important decisions to be made at the Terre Haute convention is disposition of the old Fauntleroy home in New Harmony. It was purchased by the Indiana club-women some years ago, who believed it to be the place where the Minerva Club, the first Roman's club in the United States was formed. Since then it has been found that the Minerva Club was not the first club. Quite a sum of money has been raised by the Indiana Federation for maintenance of the home. On Wednesday night of the convention there will be a junior banquet in charge of Mrs. Sara Messing Stem, State junior membership chairman. The annual banquet on „ Thursday night will be in honor of ' Mrs. Edward Franklin White, candidate for president of the General Federation. Time will also be given on the convention program to the George Rogers Clark Memorial and the Hoosier Salon. Mrs. Sheehan is presiding at the sessions of the executive committee. Sorority Founders' Day The Sigma Phi Gamma sorority celebrated founders’ day Sunday I with a picnic at Broad Ripple Park. The table was decorated with the sorority colors of blue and gold. Miss Marguerite Johnson acted as toastmistress and short speeches were given by Miss Laura Hender- . son, president; Miss Myla Smith, vice president; Miss June Nikirk, rush captain; Miss Mary Schenck and Miss Frances Brockway, pledges. Members present were: Misses June Nikirk Myla Smiito Nellie Morgan Burnetta Miller Laura Henderson Clertrude Connell Zelma Cummins Alice Hoover Marguerite Johnson Elizabeth Connell Doris West Leota Kelsey Katherine Elzea Pledges present were: Misses Elizabeth Poe Pauline Poe Frances Brockwav Pauline Wheatcrait Mary Schenck Hazel Ahl Catherine Orider Sebekah Hlsslop The regular business meeting of the sorority will be held Friday evening at the Columbia Club. Officers for the coming year will be elected. Fraternity Farewell The Indianapolis Alumni Association of the Phi Epsilon Kappa fraternity gave a farewell party for Mr. and Mrs. George Auitman Monday at the home of Dr. and Mrs. Carl B. Sp'.lth, 5735 Central Ave. The picnic luncheon was served in the garden, after which the guests were entertained with games. Mr. Auitman for the past few years has been head of the department of physical education in the Emmerich Manual Training High School, and is leaving Indianapolis to take a position as head of the physical education department at the Kent Btate Normal School, Ohio. Benefit Party, Meeting Camp 3, P. O. of A. will give a benefit card party at 8 p. m. Wednesday, at the home of Mrs. Ruth Pfeifer, 536 N. Illinois St. The regular meeting of the order will be held Thursday at 8 p. m. Parish Club Party St. Anthony’s Parish Club will entertain Thursday afternoon and evening, 379 N. Warman Ave., with a card party. The hostesses will be Mesdames John Dillon, Mariah Dugan and Frank Duffecy.
ALL THAT THE
Extreme Standards of cleanliness mark every process in the preparation ’ and marketing of Capitol Milk Telephones: Cherry 5018, 6843
Party , Dance to Be Church Homecoming The card party and dance to be given at the Knights of Columbus auditorium Thursday evening will be in the nature of a homecoming and get-together for members and former members of St. Patrick’s Church. A large number of reservations have been made for the affair, which is being given for the benefit of St. Patrick’s Church, which was destroyed by fire. There will be bridge, euchre and bunco. Miss Josephine Riley is chairman of the committee, assisted by Mrs. M. H. Walpole, Miss Elinor McGrath, Miss Catherine M. Fletcher, Mrs. B. F. Deery, Mrs. Charles Griffin, Mrs. James Conerty and Misses May and Alice Poirer. Joy, Sorrow Balanced in Life’s Books BY OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON We hear over and over again that life keeps books. In the end the columns of debits and credits will balance, so they say. x It is probably true that our joys go just as high as our sorrows go low, a sort of temperamental syphon so to speak. In other words we have a capacity for enjoyment which balances perfectly our susceptibility for suffering; and our appreciation goes only as far above zero as our want goes below. Luxury Means Nothing I know a woman without a care or responsibility, with the rest cf her life on her hands, who steps into a brocaded limousine with no more thrill i han I walk upstairs. She may go where she pleases, when she pleases for as long as she pleases. It means nothing to her at all. In contrast is the cleaning wonfan who is driven to work each morning on her husband’s ice wagon. It never loses its thrill because for years on end she walked daily three miles to “her ladies.” The woman who has dressed well all her life knows nothing of the joys of dressing. To her, having the correct gown at the right time is the essential. To the woman who has looked longingly in shop windows for years, comes the real joy of owning a dress she may be proud of. Missing Pin Money It seems impossible to believe that the poor may be as happy as*the rich. I should, of course, never make a flat statement to that effect. That would, be foolish. Money as a means of exchange can make life very easy. But 'it produces misery as well as pleasure and there is no doubt that it cloys. The woman who has had her house carpeted with rag rugs is as happy when she can buy Wiltons as the richer woman, who, having Turkish rugs, finds herself the possessor of silk Persians. Even the possessor of silk Persians may be outclassed by the woman of still greater wealth who has collected art treasures of a dozen countries. Os all these, the first woman is probably the happiest, for she has known bareness and want. It takes the sick to appreciate health, the old to appreciate youth, the toilers to appreciate leisure, the plain to appreciate beauty. Does it not seem indeed that life does keep books? Evansville Wedding Miss Velma Memmer of Ft. Branch and Rollie Hamilton of Haubstadt will be married Thursday and make their home in Evansville. Fall Wedding The marriage of Miss Geneve Daugherty to Clarence E. Mennen, both of Frankfort, will take place Sept. 21.
NAME IMPLIES
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Mrs. James Null Among committee members who are arranging for the national convention of the Women s Auxiliary to the National Federation of Post Office Clerks to be held at the Claypool, Sept. 5 to 9, are Mrs. Karl Stimpson. chairman, program committee; Mrs. James * Nutt, chairman, badges, and Mrs. Harry Kuhlman, chairman, station committee.
Life’s Niceties Hints on Etiquet
1. How soon after dining in a woman’s home should you make your call? 2. Is is proper to invite her to lunch or dinner, instead of calling? 3. What are the hours for afternoon calling? The Answers 1. Within a fortnight. 2. If you are a business woman or if you live in a metropolitan place, yes. In suburban places or small towns, no. j 3. From 4 to 6. XWO LNCHEONS FOR FORMER CINEMA STAR Mrs. L. C. Robinson of Dayton. Ohio, entertained with a luncheon today at the Columbia Club in honor of Mrs. Yvette McClintock of Hollywood, Cal., who is visiting here. Mrs. McClintock, a former motion picture star, is accompanying her husband, who is a member of Waring’s Pennsylvanians, on the Circle program. Mrs. R. H. McClellan will entertain with a luncheon bridge party Wednesday at the Marott Hotel for Mrs. McClintock.
IF WIVES ONLY KNEW IT, THEY HOLD STRONG ADVANTAGE OVER “THE WOMAN DOWNTOWN”
BY MARTHA LEE “The woman downtown.” That phrase formed the theme for a preachment from a nationally known adviser the other day. According to this writer, not only is the woman downtown waiting with speckless attire and soft words for the arrival of the business man, but she keeps her attractive appearance all through the long, hot day and she never, oh, never, runs out of tact, encouragement, or an understanding attitude. “She holds her place by being agreeable,” this writer says. Well, well, well! While it may indeed be true, that many wives, having safely turned into the matrimonial harbor the man of their choice, take little further pains to be charming or tactful, every argument and tradition weighs on the side of the wife. In the heat and dust of an office; in the hard, white light of long, hurrying business hours, plainly dressed for business, “the woman downtown” is thrown with her employer under conditions illy calculated to build toward romance. From her he goes, In the luxury of evening and rest, to the woman who has had many hours of the day to plan the homecoming; she has had time to dress and nap and make herself fresh and pretty. If there are children, anecdotes and mutual interest In them, strengthen the tie between this man and woman. His place in society is merged with hers. How he treats her, what his attitude toward her and home are, largefy determines men’s opinions of him, even in the hard old business world. He is linked by the conscious and unconscious weigh' of a( state ceremony that has been said over them. Altogether, “the woman downtown” has so few and so weak weapons compared with the average wife that only a very imaginative and 111-advised one need be afraid of her. Jealous of Employe Dear Martha Lee: I wish you would tell me If you think I have reason to apply for a divorce. My husband has a stenographer that I simply despise. I know very well that she is not competent, but he simply refuses to discharge her. He says she docs her work splendidly, but I don't believe It. She is much younger than I and I cannot help but feel there Is something between them. He says he will not be bossed about how he should run bis business, but I think he should get someone else In the office if I feel that way. don't you? MRS. MIRIAM. “I’m afraid I don’t agree with you, Mrs. Miriam. How would you like for him to Insist that you discharge a dressmaker, lor instance, whom
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Credit to Pope If Rome Takes Dress Scepter Bn Vnited Pres* ROME, Aug. 30.—1f Rome succeeds in dethroning Paris as the arbiter and dictator of Italian feminine fashions, the pope will be mainly responsible for such a change, leaders of the movement assert. “Beauty without exaggeration” is the motto of the Rome committee of dressmakers and dealers in women’s apparel, who form the practical part of the movement for creating a national Italian mode in women’s dress. The movement is growing and gaining in strength. The remarks of the Popemn prevailing feminine fashions, will abbreviated skirts, short sleeves and low cut blouses was the direct cause of the Movement for Moralizing Women’s Dress which originated in Verona. From Verona, the idea has spread to Turin, Milan and Rome, but in the big cities it has lost something of its original character, inasmuch as the principal modistes and women’s tailors of Italy have interested themselves in the project from the commercial point of view.* Asa development of the Verona campaign for moralizing feminine dress, the Committee of the “Alta Moda” or aristocratic fashions was formed in Milan, while in Rome, an important group comprising practically all the big dressmakers and department stores selling women’s wear has been formed under the presidency of the prefect’s wife. Signora D’Ancora, to fight French fashions. Invitations Out Mr. and Mrs. How ard Schurmann have issued invitations for the marriage of their daughter, Louise Ruth, to Clifford Arrick, which will take place at 2:30 p. m., Sept. 17, at Tabernacle Presbyterian Church. The at-home announcement is for 3419 N. Pennsylvania St., after Oct. 15. Married Saturday Mrs. Anna Klein, 96 N. Dearborn St., announces the marriage of her daughter Mary to William Ferguson, which took place at 9 a. m. Saturday at St. Philip Neri Church, the Rev. Fenton Walker officiating. They will live in Chicago.
you had found very competent? You’d feel that he was unreasonable, don’t you think? It’s probably a matter of principle —a feeling that he will not be henpecked and bulldozed in his own office management that makes him refuse to discharge this girl, rather than any personal feeling. In fact, If it were the latter, he’d probably not risk turning the spotlight of your disapproving attention upon her by keeping her. Try and have more definite grounds for your opinions, before you do something you’ll be ashamed of.
Personals
Dr. Clark Day, 29 W. Forty-Sec-ond St., has returned from an eastern trip. Miss Hel<en Louise Warmoth, 3140 Park Ave., has returned from spending the week-end in Frankfort. • ' Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Cooper, 2907 N. Talbott St., and Mr. and Mrs. James J. Wood of Bridgeport have returned from French Lick. Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Wilds, 1119 W. Thirty-Sixth St., have returned from a three-week’s visit at Bay View, Mich., with Mr. and Mrs. F. W. Buck of Detroit, formerly of Indianapolis. Mr. and Mrs. Elbert C. Scoggins and daughter Nancy of Muncie have left for New York to sail for a year’s sojourn in Spain. Celebrate Anniversary Mr. and Mrs. William Ogden, 46 8. LaSalle St., celebrated their silver wedding anniversary Sunday at their home with a family reunion. A basket dinner was served at noon. Forty-seven members of the family, including the two children and three grandchildren were present. Among the out-of-town guests were J. E. Kennedy, Hope, Mrs. Ogden's father, Mr. and Mrs. Rome Barker and Miss Anna Barker, Anderson; Mr. an dMrs. J. Ogden, Ogden, Ind., Mr. and Mrs. Roy Scanlon and sons, Roy and Lawrence, Connersville; Mr. and Mrs. O. E. Ogden and children, Brightwood; Mrs. Scott Campbell and children, Milford; Miss Edna Elkins, Shelbyville; Mr. and Mrs. John Rutherford, Flat Rock; Mr. and Mrs. Robert Kennedy, Anderson.
Patterns PATTERN ORDEft BLANK Pattern Department, Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis. Ind. Enclosed find 15 cents for which send Pat- *ll/4 7 tern No. O l Hi Size Name Street City
Irresistibly lovely. Its double tiered skirt, one-sided cascading drape and soft shirring at each shoulder in front, emphasizes the new note of femininity that has caught the mode. Design No. 3147, made of black satin crepe, navy blue flat silk crepe or printed silk crepe is serviceable and smart for everyday occasions. For formal wear, select chiffon, georgette crepe or crepe Roma. Pattern comes in sizes 16. 18 years, 36, 38, 40 and 42 inches bust measure. Price 15 cents in stamps or,coin (cciin preferred). 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 thii pattern by filling out the above coupon, including 15 cents (coin preferred), and mailing it to the Pattern Department pf The Times. Delivery is made in about a week.
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Does He Care? Dear Martha Lee: A fellow that I have been Koina with thinks I am too younK. yet there is but a little difference In our age. He has never told me this personally. but he has told my girl friends this. I really care for him and as he Is leaving town In a few days. I would like to know whether or not he cares for me. How can I And out? LONESOME. There is no way, unless you choose to ask him and you can’t very well do that. As he has not made you his confidant in the one opinion he has expressed of you, the chances are that he does not seriously oare. As you are young, don’t worry.. You’ve plenty of time to find a desirable young man if he proves a disappointment.
Family Menus
BY SISTER MARY BREAKFAST—SIiced peaches, cereal, cream, corned beef hash, crisp toast, milk, coffee. LUNCHEON—Potato and parsley soup, graham bread and butter sandwiches, frozen cheese salad, cocoanut wafers, lemonade. DlNfJEß—Breaded veal cutlets, tomato sauce, scalloped potatoes and onions, beet and lettuce salad, honey-dew melon with lemon ice, mijk, coffee. If the lemon ice is not convenient to provide, serve sections of lemon with the melon. Be sure the fruit is very cold before serving. Frozen Cheese Salad One and one-half cups cottage cheese, 1 cup whipping cream, % cup bar le due currants, % teaspoon salt, chilled lettuce, French dressing. Add jam and salt to cheese. Fold in cream whipped until stiff. Turn into a mold and pack in ice and salt. Let stand four hours. Turn out of mold, cut in slices and arrange on a bed of lettuce. Pour over French dressing made a little sweet and serve at once. The dressing should not be really sweet, but the sharpness of the lemon should be tempered. Council Party Center Council, S. B. A., will give a euchre and bunco party this evening at 116% E. Maryland St., second floor. Church Party The Ladies of Holy Angel’s Church will give a euchre party at 2:30 p. m. Wednesday at their school hall, Twenty-Eighth St. and Northwestern Ava.
State Fair Girls School Opens Here One hundred and one girls from seventy-eight counties of Indiana registered in the annual Indiana State Fair school of home economics which opened Monday at the fairgrounds, for two weeks. The girls are receiving instruction in in planning and serving of meals, sewing, home nursing, physical education and color and costume designing. In addition to the school work, the girls will have time for recreation. Friday evening the State Board of Agriculture will be dinner guests of the girls and during the State fair next week members of the Legislature and other State officials will be guests at luncheon. Mrs. L. G. Vannice, Amo, is director of the school again this year, assisted by a number of instructors from over the State.
Only Goat Farm in Hoosierdom Run by Woman Bn Time* Special BOONVILLE. Ind.. Aug. 30.—Miss Katherine L. rtoctzel is Indiana's only Angora goat farmer. She raises the long-haired animals on a farm near here. The product of the farm is bought for odd reasons. Recently the owner of an estate at Indianapolis bought two goats from Miss Roetzel to help the decorative scheme of the grounds at his home. A baseball team obtained one as a mascot. Farmers buy the goats on the theory that they are immune from many diseases which afflict other farm stock.
Woman s Day
BY ALLENE SUMNER Gervane, the madcap beautiful daughter of Jonifer, the robber chief, is festooned with golden girdles and pearls like pigeon eggs, bracelets of sapphire and emerald, and fire-spitting diamonds, poured over her by the faithful minions of her father’s band who would kill any man who “harmed a hair of the princess’ lovely head.” All this in George Barr McCutchoon’s new novel, “The Inn of the Hawk and Raven.” Glass Diamonds If all the feminists in the world should read thio book, femininism would wither and blow up even as mushrooms ’neath a summer sun, for the substitutes of feminism for a day when woman was enshrined and reverenced and adored and surfeited with treasures of both jewels and servile devotion, would appear as vinegar competing with wine, or glass with diamonds. Male Jokers A certain lad attached an electric wire to the dinner bucket of his best friend, waiting to give him the haha when he jumped. The current being stronger than he.knew, the friend died. Men are often called “boys who never grow up” by women. Their delight in practical jokes might prove this. Then again, it might prove their asininity. Poor Bachelors / Bachelors have organized into an anti-ms trimony club in Stanley, Wis. Any member found guilty of weakening and casting the amatory eye will be expelled from the club. The president maintains that single men who wish to’ stay that way need protection today. Not So Torugh At first thought one is inclined to believe that in this day of economic hard-sledding, with many more eligible women than eligible men making a husband much more of a “catch” than a wife, bachelors may need support in being firm. Upon second thought, however, one telieves that the average girl’s compvrison of marriage with life wiihcit marriage makes so many hesitations about choosing the former that bachelors are as safe as they ever were when there were more men than women, if not a whole lot safer! Why! Speaking of marriage, the wedding of the famed violinist Ysaye, 70, with his 25-year-old music pupil is making many people wonder “why.” The only “why” is why more girls don’t marry old men than do, especially when said old men are artists of accomplishment. It is natural for women to worship achievement in men, just as it is natural for men to worship beauty and charm in women. Benefit Party Magnolia Circle No. 4 will entertain with a benefit card party Thursday at 2 p. m. at Red Men’s Hall, Morris and Lee Sts. Euchre Party Marion Council, No. 738, S. B. A., will give a euchre and bunco party Wednesday evening at the hall, 116 E. Maryland St., fourth floor. Pythian Party The Pythian Sisters will give a card party at 8:30 tonight at 130 Vi S. Audubon Rd. Picnic at Garfield P. O. of A. Camp 4 will have a covered dish Friday picnic at Garfield Park. Members will meet at the shelter house at 11 a. m. Dance Wednesday A. O. O. Shepherds will give a dance Wednesday evening at the P. H. C. hall.
BRIDE OF WEEK
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Before her marriage last Wednesday Mrs. Arthur Wayne Eubank was Miss Hilda Marie Brown, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. G.„ Charles Brown, 1321 Spruce St. Mr. and Mrs. Eubank will be at home after Sept. 15 at 1338 Ashland Ave.
Tiers Remain
BY HEDDA HOYT United Press Fashion Editor At the present writing there are no signs of our shedding tiers! Tiers will be just as popular during the fall and winter months As they have been during the summer season. Not only frocks, but wraps are being stressed with front tier arrangements. Even fur coats in some cases have tiers carried out in contrasting furs. A gray caracul coat, for instance, has a deep tier of gray-dyed ermine. Another coat of black seal has two diagonal tiers of gray squirrel. Sleeves of this model are made entirely of squirrel. Many of the latest evening gowns of pastel velvet have no trimming except diagonal tiers at the front of the skirt. One new frock has the tiered efftc without resorting to seton tiers. In this case the straightlined gown is made of three materials In three graduating colors, giving a tiered effect. The upper part of the bodice is made of pale flesh georgette. Joining this, just abo*'e the normal waist-line is a layer of pink satin which extends below the hem. This gown blouses slightly at a low hipline, being held by a narrow belt of brilliants. Triple tier skirts are frequently seen among new fall models. The three tiers may overlap one another or may be spaced to show the foun-. dation between tiers. A bit newer,, however, are the diagonal skirt tiers which are usually posed at the front of the skirt only. Diagonal lines of all sorts are well-liked at present and are preferred to horizontal trimming details. The combination of georgette and velvet is found in many tiered models of fall inspiration. The body portion of the dress is usually of georgette with the flounce portion carried out in transparent velvet of matching hue. We have seen these models in shades of green, brown, tan, navy and black. Among the most interesting of the new evening gowns of tiered type is a georgette model of flesh color which is completely covered from neckline to hemline with layers of fringe. GERALDINE KELLY WINS W. C. T. U. CONTEST Miss Geraldine Kelly won the diamond medal and Miss Catherine Beasley the gold medal in the contests Monday night at the Church of God, under W. C. T. U. auspices. Miss Kelly won with her oration, “Judge Cede Makes a New Year’s Resolutionf’ and Miss Beasley won the piano contest over Miss Margaret Hiday and Miss Thorda Arthur. Other contestants against Miss Kelly were Misses Elsie Coomer, Josephine Schaeffer, Mary Smallwood, La Vaughn Sanders and Miss Virginia Tapp.
Gives Shower
Merrill Tent, Daughters of Veterans, entertained Monday night with a shower in honor of Mrs. Henry Urlewicz, past treasurer, who announced her marriage, which occurred in June, last week. Mr. and Mrs. Urlewicz will be at home after Sept. 10 at Ravenswood.
3 Room Outfit i|ID Rrioiidilioncd Furniture 'll T LEWIS FURNirtJRECO lIJ United TiU.de In Store TERMS South Ntriclidn St
1 PIANOS Minin ON THE CIRCLE tTOpCS i Records
SMART APPAREL On Easy Terms PURITAN CLOTHING STORES 131 W. Washington St.
We Sell the “United States” Perfection Fs Abdominal v Supports V Exclusively in This Town * % m They are fashioned to every line of the body -m----m for ease and comfort, and at prices lower M H m than other*. For men and women. Come U m m .in and look them over as you do when bnying V H clothing or other apparel. . m W FOR SALE BY ALL HAAG’S Cat Price Drnf Stores <
AUtf. 30, 1027
Woman and Man’s Money* Issue Raised BY MRS. WALTER FERGUSON “Why can married women not be satisfied with tire money their husbands can afford to give them and be willing to give up their outside jobs?” You might know that this query . had been put by a man. A woman would already have the answer. This question of whether or not women should work to earn their own money is one subject on which men should never be allowed to venture an opinion. In the first place, they know nothing whatever about the feeling of being dependent on another's generosity. They know nothing whatever about the ignominious sensation of having to ask for every penny to spend. They know nothing whatever about the depressing feeling of having nothing that you can actually call your own. A Man's Money From the time they reach their majority, men start standing upon their own financial feet. They earn what they can, and spend what they will. They never have to give an account of their petty extravagances. If they want to throw their money 'away, it is theirs to waste at pleasure. On the contrary, in this rich nation, there are today .hundreds c | thousands of women who have no l , a dollar that they can call their very own. They can’t buy an ice cream soda without giving an account of the expenditure. They have to ask somebody else for every nickel they get. In Beggar's Role And no matter how kind and generous that somebody may be, every woman knows that it is no delightful sensation, that of having to run to some man and being put In the attitude of beggary. This is perhaps the chief reason why so many women perisst in holding down jobs after they marry. Once acquire the feeling of independence, of earning your own money to spend as you please, and it is difficult indeed to relinquish. Once have an earning capacity and you can never again be happy beneficiary of another's bounty. Husbands find this attitude of wives hard to comprehend. They would. Having never endured economic slavery, they are not actually capable of arguing the question at all. This is one subject on which they are totally ignorant.
Prize Recipes by Readers
NOTE—The Times will give $1 for each recipe submitted by a reader adjudged of sufficient merit to he printed 'n this column. One recipe 13 primed daily, except Friday, when twenty are given. Address Recipe Editor of The rizes 11 be . nl £lied to winner Write on one side of sheet only. Omv one recipe each week will be accented irom one person. Concord Grape Dumplings One quart of blue grapes, stewed and sweetened to taste, remove seeds, but use skins with pulp. Drop teaspoonfulful at a time of the following mixture into the boiling fruit and boil te:a minutes tightly covered: One cup flour, one egg, onehalf cup milk, one teaspoon baking powder, one-fourth teaspoon salt. Serve in deep individual bowls with cream or milk. Mrs. S. Peterson, 2154 Wheeler St City. Appointed Regent Mrs Lillian M. O’Day. of Greensburg, has been appointed state regent of the Daughters of Isabella tt> succeed Mrs. Marie Klotz of Ft Wayne. Mrs. Mary E. Booth, national regent, made the appointment. Marry Thursday Announcement has been' made of the marriage to take place Thursday in Auburn of Miss Opal Gordon of that city to Harold Harvev of Kendallville. Wed at Evansville The marriage of Miss Mildred Kearney and Edward D. Humphrey of Evansville will take place In September.
SCHLOSSERS QmSrove Butter Afresh Churned from Dtesh Qwm
mart New BATH MATS Junior League Shop 158 East 14th St
