Indianapolis Times, Volume 39, Number 131, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 October 1927 — Page 7

OCT. 10, 1927

Home Scene of Autumn Nuptial Rite I ' The home of Dr. and Mrs. John McLean Lechhead, 1202 N. Pennsylvania St., was the scene of the Xvedding at 8:30 p. m. Saturday of their daughter, Miss Lida Milne, and Neil Craine Estabrook, son of Mrs. Fannie Taylor Bryson. The Rev. Jean S. Milner officiated, assisted by pr. Frederick Taylor. The ceremony was performed in front of the mantel, which was arranged with ferns and lighted with candles. The house was decorated with fall flowers. The Misses Harrison played violin and' harp numbers *>efore end during I— 3 ceremoney and for the reception. Attended by jSister Mm, I. B. Williams of St. Louis, Mo., sister of the bride, was matron of honor and wore a gown in shades taf lavender chiffon with tiered skirt and shoulder drapes. She "carried yellow roses and purple delphinium. The bridesmaids, Mrs. John Q. Holmes, Anderson, sister of the bride; Miss Margaret Moore and Miss Elizabeth Wales, wore gowns fashioned alike'and similar to Mrs. William’s in shades of pink. They wore slippers to match their dresses and carried bouquets of pink Columbia roses and blue delphinium. Robert T. Ramsey Jr. was best man. The bride wore white bridal satin with plaited panels of tulle held in •place with pearl ornaments. The neckline was finished with a deep ' bertha collar of duchess lace and the hem of the skirt was also finished in the lace which had belonged to the bride’s. great-grand-fnother. Her grandmother’s wedding veil former the train on the bride’s gown, and over that a tulle veil with cap of lace caught with orange blossoms. She carried a handkerchief which had been carried by the bridegroom’s mother at her wedding. The bridal bouquet was of sweetheart roses and lilies of the Valley. Reception Held The ceremony was followed by a reception. In the receiving line with the bridal couple and their parents was Mrs. George Gibbs, aunt of the bride. Mrs. Lochheld received in a gown of poudre blue chiffon and Mrs. Bryson wore imported black lace with rhinestone ornaments. The couple left on a wedding trip and will be at home in Indianapolis. The bride traveled in a beige dress of wool georgette with beige coat with beaver collar and cuffs and hat and shoes to match. Among the out-of-town guests were: Mrs. George Gibbs, Denver, Colo.; Mr. and Mrs. Joseph V. Banks, Chicago; Mr. and Mrs. Bryson Horton, Detroit, Mich.; Mrs. William Friend, San Francisco, Calif.; Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Jaques, Mr. and Mrs. D. E. Jaques, Miss Jeannette Jaques, Miss Bess Gaskill and Mr. and Mrs. E. Ward Moore, Thorntown and Miss Mabel Sering. Anderson.

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STILL THEY FALL FOR FINERY

Mrs. Minnie Barton, “Mother” to All Women, Helps Them to Get Up.

Bn NEA Service LO SANGELES, Cal, Oct. 10.— A beauty compact and silk underwear can invariably be found in the possessions of girls and women on whom jail close these days. Love of finery and personal adornment are undoubtedly still the main cause of a majority of feminine missteps. So says Minnie Barton, founder of the unique open-door “prison” here, in which she is demonstrating a new way to “serve a sentence” for wrong-doing. She calls this haven of any and all upon whom fortune has frowned, “the woman’s traiing home.” But her work does not end with offenders. She finds room, even if it is only a place on the hall floor, for any needy woman, any time. The home was established with a very small beginning, to work out her life dream—the dream of salvaging feminine wayfarers. The inmates are women prisoners, for the most part, released by the court to “Mother” Barton merely on her word to return them at any specified time on their simple promise of good behavior. She assumes the responsibility of “mothering” them. Another Cause “Along side of love and finery,” says “Mother” Barton, “I’d place lack of training in the ways to earn an honest living as a chief cause for many' many women deviating from ‘the straight and narrow.’ "If ever there were a time when parents should look to their laurels in training their progeny—girls as well as boys—to be self-supporting and Independent of the favor or frown of others, it is now. '

“A girl, who has learned from childhood what It means to assume her share of life’s responsibilities and to know that humanity pays for each and everything it gets, is far less likely to fall by the wayside than the feminine drone, who believes the world * owes her a livelihood. “That’s why the home is a-buzz all day with workers. Our chief concern is to inculcate in the inmates a spirit of industry. “A girl comes into the building—a perfect know-nothing. We intend she shall go out of it equipped to hold up her h6ad, ask favors of no one and be able to earn her own way honorably.” Probation Effective Minnie Barton’s home is Just a big, old-fashioned house, set in a green garden in one of the less pretentious residence districts of Los Angeles. There are no bars on the doors. The windows are_open. Life within is peaceful and active. And the encouraging part of it is that Minnie Barton’s probation project works! The explanation, old as the hills, is faith. Attempts at escape among these women are scarce. Records show more than two-thirds of them get anew start. Many of them marry. Some of them become competent business successes. They come from almost everywhere in the country, at one time or another. There are dope users on the mend. There are shoplifters, learning the folly of trying to get something for nothing. There are needy women, who come because

there is no spot in the world they can call theirs—even for a night’s rest. There are women whose hurt hearts ache far more sorely than their hurt feet. Constructive good immeasurable has been achieved in this one building. Its friendly beacon shines afar and Minnie Barton goes on proving there is another way beside jail by which to convert feminine drones and unfortunates into self-respect-ing, capable citizens. HOSTESSES NAMED FOR A.A.U.W • SUPPER MEET Members of. the Indianapolis branch of the American Association of University Women, who are graduates of State universities other than Indiana University, will be hostess at the supper meeting of the branch at the Hoosier Athletic Club Tuesday at 6 p. m. President Dearing of Oakland City College will speak. The committee of hostesses will be: Mesdames Wilbur Appel, Lester A. Smith chairman E. W. McCullough Frank Greenwald P. H. Skinner Victor R. Jose W. A. Warrick A. Klein Mary A. Loomis Fred Terry a. H. Hinkle C. B. Durham w. J. Hasselman John C. Mellett Misses Amy Keene Minnie Catherine Effte Abraham Dodson Gladys A. Seider Marie Meid Nannie B. Rives Winifred Terry Kate Huber Clara N. Ryan y Strap Holders Evening and afternoon gowns should have tiny loops on their shoulders that hook around under garment straps and snap shut.

®>YAL S. COPELAND, M. D. /. S. Senator from New York and formerly ieallh Commissioner of theCityofNew York Copeland says: “Mineral waters of right sort are preferable to many of cathartic compounds on the market, sir power to overcome the immediate cts of constipation is unquestioned. :y are soothing and healing to the ues. Sugar coated pills are pleasant to : which may add to their danger/ That he reason they are coated with sugar. ;y are no less drastic And habit-form-because they appeal to the taste, teral waters pass through the system, ng nothing else but to flush and inse the intestinal tract.” , mom Miami, Fla., July 16, 1927 ' jPgi I used to think of Pluto Water only as a m *1 laxative to be used in times of emer- ~ * gency. Following the advice of my doc- B tor, however, I commenced some time m ago to take a small quantity each morn* ing in a glass of hot water. Previously Ik. , I had tried different so-called prevents- j-rSb—£=3=l tives of constipation, but none cf them f fPLUTOI gave the continued good results that f Pluto Water has given. I cannot rec- t- J> ~ : :• 1 ommend it too highly.

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Constipation is one of the easiest ailments to get—often one of the hardest to get rid of. It causes headaches, dizziness, foul breath, indigestion, lethargy and a train of other ills. Its victims often seek relief through drastic, habitforming drugs. This artificial elimination of poisonous waste gradually weakens the normal functions, inducing drug-slavery. Sugar-coated pills may be pleasant to take, but—remember—therein lies their lure and danger. Water — Nature’s Cleansing Agent Water is nature’s great cleansing agent. Ift the elimination of waste, water with

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Working Class ■ Mothers Held Hardest Toilers liu United Press BUFFALO, N. Y., Oct. 10.—“ The most overworked and exploited members of our society are the working class mothers of two or more children,” declared Prof. Paul H. Douglas of the University-of Chicago here this morning at the conference on Family Life in America Today, attended by executives of family welfare organizations from all sections of the country. “We have been concerned during the last two decades with the protection of women who work in stores and factories,” Prof. Douglas said, “but because of their isolation we have tended to forget the lot of mothers in the home and to ignore the fact that XVtchen stoves and washtubs are worse tyrants than the spindles and punch-presses of industry. Working class mothers of two or more children, in general, cut their consumption of food and clothing far below that of their husbands and their employed children and have few of the diversions which they enjoy. The protection of these almost forgotten women is one of the most pressing problems of social reform.” Increases Divorce Speaking on “The Changing Basis of Family Support and Expenditures,” Prof. Douglas said: “Industrialism has increased the age of marriage; it has also increased divorce. The range of employments open to women makes it possible for wives to leave their husbands and to dissolve relationships which have become irksome. It is primarily for this reason that there is so much more divorce in the cities than in

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the rural districts. The increasing ability of women to stand economically upon their own feet has in turn made men more 'willing to break off marriage ties.” “Some of the effects which the entrance of women in industry on approximately the same terms as men may have on marriage are strikingly evidenced by the developments in Russia from which I have just returned. Divorce there is possible virtually at the will of either party, subject only to the provision th&t if either later becomes economically dependent, then the other is liable Jor support up to one-third of his or her income. A man, therefore, cannot, safely be divorced more than twice.” Family,.Will Stay “While the future may bring in America great changes in family relationships, it is idle to believe that the family will disappear or that its importance will be greatly lessened. The gloomy prophets of the dissolution vOf marriage err most in forgetting the powerful forces which operate toward the permanency of relations between men and women. They generally forget the simple fact that even in an age of birth control children are the normal consequence of marriage, and that the care of children—with all its difficulties—most parents will not willingly confide to any institution.” The overworking and exploitation of motherk, Prof. Douglas attributed not alone to existing wage scales, but to the failure of husbands and employed children to pool their wages for the support of the family.

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Voters’ league picks CHICAGO FOR MEETING > By United Press WASHINGTON. Oct. 10. The 1928 convention of the National League of Women Voters will be held April 23 to 28 in Chicago, it is announced at league headquarters here. In selecting Chicago for its eighth national convention •the league returns to the scene of its first convention. It was in February, 1920, in Chicago, that the league* had its first national congress in connection with the fifty-first and final convention of the National American Woman Suffrage Association. As first formed in 1919, the league was an auxiliary to the association. With politics, issues and candi- { dates, and the part women will play in the campaign, holding first place in the interests of women voters next spring, the 1928 convention promises to attract the largest representation in league history. The Illinois League of Women Voters, of which Mnr. James W. Morrison is president, will be the hostess league.

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