Indianapolis Times, Volume 39, Number 208, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 January 1928 — Page 9
!lAN. 7, 1928.
Head Should Be Guide of Mother Love BY MARTHA LEE Mother love is one of the most admirable instincts we find in the human race. This instinct, however, can be detrimental to the very sons and daughters in whose protection it is arouied, if it is not tempered with good judgment and foresight. Every mother knows how hard it is to deny a loved child anything he wants, but the true mother will steal herself against her strongest instinct. She will consider first the welfare of her son or daughter and then make her decisions, using her mind rather than her heart as a guide. . , A mother should realize that although he has this deep instinct of mother love, a child does not have a corresponding instinct regarding his parents. The child will love and revere his parents, but he will not make the sacrifices for them that a mother would make for him. Do not let this instinct, mothers, ruin your life and perhaps your husband’s and other children's lives just because you can not be firm in the management of a selfish son or daughter. Dar Martha Lee: I am in trouble and I wonder if you could help me see whether I am in the rlirht or in the wrong. I have been married twice and have three children by my first husband, two boys and a R ‘mV second husband, whom I married six rears azo is a hard-workine man and at the time we were married was maklnß good money. My two sons did well for a while, but then they got so they did not work for three or four months at a time. Mv husband did not say much about their not working at first until he stopped making stood wages. We started to go in debt and h told the .boys, who are now J 5 and 2J. they would have to get iobs. I gave them money secretly, but my husband found it out and we started ° > Thls‘ i contlnued until it resulted in W husband's leaving us, although he said he had nothing against me or my daughter whom he had willingly sent to business college and from whom he would accept n< Mv''husband also said that he was. willing to take care of my daughter and me any time, but he would not support two men who were too lazy to work. Was I right in defending my sons. Miss Lee, or should I try to get my husband back and tell my two sons they must get Jobs? A WORRIED WIFE AND MOTHER. Dear Worried Wife and Mother: You have permitted yo4r love for your sons to ruin your domestic happiness. Os course, it is only natural for you to defend your sons from criticism especially from the criticism of a step-father. , m You have been very foolish because your own common sense ought to tell you that young men of 25 or 23 are far better off working than doing nothing at all. Your husband has acted reasonably throughout your married life. He has taken the responsibilities of being a real father *to your daughter. He knows, as every man knows, that two young men like your sons are nothing but worthless parasites to society. Do not rob your daughter and j'ourself of a good home and the influence of an admirable man like your husband. Go back to him and let your sons “shift” for themselves. It will be the best thing for them and both they and you will realize it later.
W. C. T. U. NOTES
University Heights Union will hold its next meeting Tuesday noon at the home of Mrs. B. F. McNeeley, 4159 Otterbein Ave. Dr. D. H. Gilliat of Indiana Central College will speak. The University Heights W. C. T. 0L quartet will sing a group of songs. Tm luncheon committee is composed of Mr*. Elizabeth Carter, Mrs. Frances Mann and Mrs. Charles Sims. Mrs. Robert McKay, president, will preside. u u Victory Union will hold a local directors meeting of the racial group at 222 Douglas St. Tuesday at 2 p. m. Miss Sonora B. Pruden, president, will preside. nun West Washington Union will hold its regular meeting Friday at 2 p. m., with Mrs. Minnie Benson, 230 N. Belle Vieu PI. Mrs. Carrie L. Rwails, president, will preside. # n n Zerelda Wallace Union will meet Tuesday at 10:30 a. m. for an allday meeting with Miss Anna Shepard, 1424 E. Washington St. Mrs. Carrie Hansing will preside. u m * Broad Ripple union will hold a family banquet for members of the union and their families Wednesday at 6 p. m. at Broad Ripple M. E. Church, Sixty-Second and Bellefontaine Sts. A program of music and readings has been planned by Mrs. H. E. Summers to follow the banquet. The committee in charge includes Mrs. Nellie Whitehead, Mrs. Minnie Abrams and Mrs. Minnie Klaffey. Mrs. Ella Montgomery, president, will preside. # n * Brightwood Union will meet Thursday at 2 p. m. at the Brightwood M. E. Church. Mrs. Victor Hargitt will lead devotions. Mrs. Emma Yeager, president, will preside. # M * Frances Willard Union will meet with Mrs. Asher W. Gray, 121 E. Thirty-Eighth St., Tuesday at 2 p. m. The twenty-ninth anniversary of the union will be observed with an appropriate program. Mrs. Nellie Pittman will have charge of devotions. The Frances Willard notebook will be read. Miss Dorothy Oberhiser will be the soloist. Miss Edith Turner will give a group of readings. Mrs. Pansy Bolin Allen will be accompanist. Mrs. E. A. Kemp will preside. It M M Nina Brighan Union will meet at 2 p. m. at the home of Miss Julia Smith, 1926 N. Alabama St. The Rev. George Arthur Frantz of the First Presbyterian Church will speak on “The Event of Prohibition.” A 6 o’clock dinner will be served. Mrs. Addie Lancaster will preside. a a a 'Palmer Union will meet with Mrs. W. TANARUS, Davis, 3360 Kenwood Ave. Friday for an all day meeting. Members are asked to bring covered dish and sandwiches. A special program has been planned. Mrs. Elizabeth Arbuckle, president, will pre-
BEAUTY HOW and WHY MUM KEEPING THE HANDS IMMACULATE
BY ANN ALYSIS 'No hand that is stained or grimy may make any pretension to beauty, no matter how well shaped it may be. But no matter how poorly shaped, if the hand is immaculately clean, the texture of the skin good, the nails well shaped and in good condition, it may be adjudged beautiful. % Use hot water, a toilet soap of good quality, and a good bristle brush as your first step toward this scrupulous cleansing. Do not economize on soap, for poor soap will intensify any skin trouble you may have or may start such trouble by roughening the skin and so preparing the way for unfriendly germs. If deep-seated grime remains, apply a cream with an oily base. That is, the solvent should be in the nature of a cold cream and not a vanishing one. For the purpose of cleansing the hands, it is not necessary to buy an expensive cream. Vaseline, or an oil such as liquid petrolatum, cotton seed, or olive, will serve the purpose just as well.
Two Entertain Bride-Elect in Saturday Rite Miss Kathleen Hottell and Miss Beatrice Batty entertained at Miss Hottell’s home, 25 W. Forty-Ninth St., Thursday evening in honor of Miss Margaret Graham, whose marriage to Robert M. Armer will take place Saturday. The hostesses were assisted by their mothers, Mrs. M. B. Hottell and Mrs. D. R. Batty. The bridal colors, pink and blue, were carried out in ices and appointments. The guests were: Mesdames K. T. Graham A. M. Armer Misses Wilma. Dunkle Dorotha Weaver Dorothy Carroll Harriett Schumacker Dorothy Pier Dorothy Bj>ooner Mary Frances Ogle Monzelle Skelton Mary Dyer Virginia Foxworthy Billie M. Krelder Marjorie McElroy Mary Eixler Dorothy Krelg Katherine Reagan
Prize Recipes by Readers
NOTE—The Time* wIU give fl let each recipe submitted by a reader adjudged of sufficient merit to be printed <n this column. One recipe Is printed dally, except Friday, when twenty are flven. Address Recipe Editor of The 'lines. Prises will he mailed to winners. Write on ons side of sheet only. Only one recipe each week wUI be accepted from one person Com Pie Two cups of com, cut from cob, stew with one-half cup milk and one-half cup water, also plenty of butter. When done add one cup of granted raw corn, but do not cook again. Line a deep pan with good pie crust, put com in and add top crust. Bake. This will make two moderate sized pies. This pie takes the place of meat. MRS. MARY FLEDDERJOHNE, 2755 Cornell, city. Card Party Officers of the Christian Mothers Society, Altar Society, St. Rita Society, Young Ladies Sociality, Social Club and various committees, will assist Mrs. R. A. McKinney, chairman, at a euchre, bunco, and lotto party, which will be given Sunday afternoon and evening. Euchre will be played in Sacred Heart Hall, 1517 S. Meridian St., bunko and lotto will be played in St. Cecelia club rooms, 1502 Union St. Games in the afternoon will begin at 1:30 and in the evening at 8:30. A chili supper will be served In Sacred Heart Hall from 5:30 to 7:30 for those who wish to remain for the evening games. Anniversary Banquet St. Paul’s Sick Benefit Society will celebrate its twenty-fifth anniversary this evening with a banquet at St. Paul’s Lutheran Hall, Weghorst and Wright Sts. This society was organized Jan. 6, 1903. Surviving charter members are: Charles Bohnstedt, Fred Heyden, Niels Nisson. K. C. F. Miller, Henry L. Rugenstein, H. C. Vehling and William F. Wiese. . This organization has a mem *•- ship of fifty. Present officers are: Fred W. Vehling, president; W. C. Reimer, vice-president; J. F. Mussmann, secretary and H. C. F. Miller, treasurer. Smooth Fudge For smooth, creamy fudge, pour the fudge Into an unbuttered platter the minute It Is done; let stand until absolutely cold, then stir with a knife.
THE CONNOISSEUR ... Mr. Van de View Is a Sorry Toastmaster
Mr. Van de View is noted for his clever repartee And his talent is rewarded as a talent ought to be— At a banquet which is given by the so- \ dally elect He is made the master toaster as a Vnark of high respect, \
GLIMPSES OF MILADY’S FASHIONABLE FOOT PRINTS IN EVENING
Evening summons shimmering, luxurious footgear; a fox-trimmed, orchid velvet, evening coat takes gold brocaded slippers with lavender lizard bandings and strap: (1) “Marchioness” in black patent leather with dotted green and gold trimmings and elaborate cut steel and bril-
BY JULIA BLANSHARD NEA Service Writer Evening slippers are the real barometers of fashion! Milady’s footprints on the ballroom floor sing a saga of this luxurious age in which we live. They really tell a tale of the nation's prosperity. For when tiir.ee are hard it is the custom, as every woman knows, to get along with one pair of black satins. Right now the tendency is to change one's evening slippers even more often than one’s evening dress. They have graduated into the accessory class, along with flo / ::v*and jewels, and are used to alter the appearance of a costume by adding a note of color or dash. Bewildering Result The result is bewildering. Alluring colors, intricate decorations, elaborate effects offer grace, daintiness and individuality to every woman’s feet. Satins are shown in all the luscious new shades such as fuchsia, vermillion, catawba, emerald. Gold and silver kid and brocades shimmer among glittering colored metal brocades. New leathers such as pearl lizard and checkered, glazed sharkskin, in soft, pastel coloring, vie with rich broche tissues in Persian and Indian patterns. Kid slippers in all the season's colors come intricately overlaid and trimmed with contrasting skin. Slender lines prevail. So do spike heels—very, very high ones. Strappings are the artistic achievement of this season's slippers. Innumerable, effective, intricate strappings weave narrow, decorative lines of grace across women's ankles Curved
FORMAL KERCHIEF COLLAR
NEW and arresting is the kerchief collar, which knots on the shoul- t der with one end falling ./ down the front and one n. the back. It emphasizes \ the # importance of ker- / w \ chiefs even on formal at- . / , \ tire. Supple silver bro- / ; 'r**\ \ cade fashions the bodice / V■' > > \ of this dinner / l*< \ gown, while transparent f / N if |p|C I velvet in anew rich blue I 4i • lEifex, I makes the gracefully full l llIk: . / skirt, with its swathed \ I /
NEW and arresting is the kerchief collar, which knots on the shoulder with one end falling down the front and one the back. It emphasizes the # importance of kerchiefs even on formal attire. Supple silver brocade fashions the bodice of this imported dinner gown, while transparent velvet in anew rich blue makes the gracefully full skirt, with its swathed hip line.
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But the moment that he rises with a toast upon his tongue, He begins to wish his reputation never had been sung, For his eye alights unluckily upon a shoulder pin And the speech that he prepared is fated , never to begin.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
edges, sandal cutouts, and inlays and overlays enrich slippers. Pumps take royal unique buckles of real jewels or dainty bowknots or other designs worked out on their vamps. The best slippers do net feature fancy heels any more, A pair of charteuse satin pumps is entirely checkered in tiny brilliants. Scrolls, geometric designs and even monograms are worked out on kid slippers by sharkskin, gold or silver leaf. A carmine red satin slipper has a tiny oak leaf pattern inlaid in gold on its shank. A soft green slipper twinkles with silver stars while others in gay colors take tiny gold polka dots and inlays of mother-of-pearl. The straps of slippers often enlarge upon the scroll design of the trimming, by themselves being scroll shaped. Single-strapped slippers are wont to take slender tongues reaching up to them for slenderizing effects. Buttons may be real gems, this lavish winter. A pair of flesh slippers, embroidered in a floral design in lavender, rose, blue, yellow and green, has real pearls for the one button strap, set in gold to match the trimmings. Black Important Black plays no mean part in the season’s fancy evening footgear. But, graciously relieved by trimmings, it takes its place as proper footwear for the very chic black evenings gowns of the mode. Today we show one such—a black patent leather “Marchioness” pump, with swerving trimmings of narrow bands of dotted gold and green kid set in with
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And endeavoring to concentrate, he looks the other way And discovers still another one to lead his mind astray, If his eyes do not deceive him, its the Parthenon he sees And he wonders at its novelty with quaking of the knees. (
Hants buckle; (2) pastel flowered brocaded pump with gold heel and filagree gold fan for buckle; (3) purple moire slipper, polka dotted trimmed and buckled with gold, and (4) T-strap French sandal, octagonal heeled, in scarlet glazed kid, with pearl sharkskin pipings and inserts that lend it rarely distinctive smartness.
fancy stitching, and huge, oval buckles of cut steel, set with brilliants in a floral design. Stunning is the purple moire one-strapped slipper shown today. It is richly dotted with gold and has gold kid curved and pointed edgings and single strap. Three tiny real gold buckles give a chic touch to the strap. The T-strap French sandal, complimentary as it is to a woman's foot, is shown in scarlet glazed kid, with pearl gray sharkskin pipings. For further individuality the heel is octagonal shaped, instead of merely rounded.
NEWS NOTES OF Y. W. C. A.
Announcements “The Monroe Doctrine and Its Significance Today” will be the theme of a talk and discussion led by Ray S. Trent, chairman of the Indiana Council on International Relations at the next Wednesday noon discussion hour. This group is not limited to business women, although the lunch hour, 12 to 1 o'clock is set for their convenience. Phone luncheon reservations to Miss Ruth S. Milligan, Main 2601 by Tuesday evening. The committee for International Friendship Week, Mrs. Charles A. Mueller, presiding, met Tuesday afternoon to further plans for the third observance of the week, Feb. 7 to 10. The House Committee will hold a supper meeting Monday evening at 6. A full attendance is desired. Health Education ' The Downey Avenue Christian Church will hold a skating party Monday evening at 8:15. A social dancing class will start a course of ten lessons Wednesday evening at 8:15. Miss Verna Nash will be instructor. The social recreation committee 'of the Health Department will meet Friday at 12:15 p. m. in the gym office. Industrial Department Members of the Student Industrial Group will have their meeting at Butler on Monday evening. The group will discuss the “Social Ideals of the Church.” The Industrial Council will have an important meeting on Thursday evening at 6:15. Every council member is urged to attend. The Industrial Committee meeting will meet Friday noon with Mrs. Howard Jensen. A report of the Industrial Secretaries’ Conference in Chicago this week will be given by Miss Toy. Young Business Women Business college girls will have their regular luncheon club meeting Thursday, as a New Year’s party . Central “Y” clubs will have their regular supper meetings Tuesday evening. The Y. B. W. Clubs will have their monthly business meeting. "clubs at the South Side Branch will meet for supper and a program, Wednesday evening.
Probably most satisfactory for wear with different tulle, chiffon and light colored velvet dresses is the gold brocaded slipper with bandings of lavender lizard slcin and a single strap of lizard fastened with an amethyst. Very new and beautiful is a pastel metal brocade pump which features many pastel shades In its indefinite floral pattern. It has the new, shorter vamp and still achieves the slenderizing lines so important. Its slender, tapering heel is of gold. A buckle, unique as it is “dlffeemt,” is a filagree gold fan that stands up from a banding of gold, fastened with a tiny gold button.
Girl Reserves Technical Girl Reserve Club held a supper meeting at the Y. W. C. A. Friday. The subject was “Exploring Foreign Lands.” Manual Girl Reserves will hold their regular meeting at the Y. W. C. A. Friday. Sports will be the main feature. Shortridge Girl Reserves held their first meeting of the new year at the Y. W. C. A. Wednesday. New Year resolutions were made for the club. The Cabinet of the Washington High Club met in Miss Myrtle Johnson's room after school for their regular monthly meeting. Plans were made for the coming year. The High School Advisers’ Group of which Mrs. B. 8. Goodwin is chairman, will hold its regular monthly meeting at the Y. W. C. A. on Monday at 6 p, m. The Grade School Advisers’ Group of which Mrs. Walter P. Morton is chairman, will hold its January meeting at the Y. W. C. A. Tuesday. Supper will be served at 6 p. m. All advisers are asked to phone reservations to the Girl Reserve office by Tuesday morning. ' The regular Saturday afternoon skating hour which was discontinued during the Christmas holidays was resumed again today, Jan .7, and will be held every Saturday from 1:45 to 3 p. m. Club 14, Maxine Martin, president, will meet at the school on Monday afternoon. Following the meeting the program committee will make plans for January and February. Club 31 met Tuesday afternoon. After the meeting games were directed by Miss Annie Moore Daughtry. The club will meet at the South Side Y. W. C. A. on Tuesday for a candy pull. Parts will be assigned for a play which will be presented at the annual meeting of mothers and fathers. Work will also be begun on school bags to be sent to the Mexican children. Club 20, Mrs. H. L. Purdy, adviser, and Irene Bentley, president, met Tuesday at the school. Plans were made for a supper which will be given on Jan. 17 for the mothers and fathers. At the regular meeting Tuesday place cards and favors will be made for this occasion.
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And a little brooch of brilliants, which is like a temple door, Takes him farther from the subject than he’s ever been before. So he merely says it’s very hard to think of something witty Whqp the ladies and their ornaments are all so very pretty. ....
Patterns PATTERN ORDER BLANK Pattern Department, Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Ind. Enclosed find 15 cents for ■which send Pat- 9 9 9 Q tern No. O A 4. O Size Name Street City
NEW FEMININE MODE An‘exquisite frock of sheer figured velvet, boasting the feminine mode, revealed in soft shirring at either side of skirt, and at either front shoulder, forming yoke, with an interesting standing collar in boat shape, terminating in a bow. Navy blue wool crepe, black crepe satin, seal brown flat silk crepe, black chiffon velvet, green novelty woolen, featherweight tweed ? beige and tan tones, and gorgette epe in new purple, are exceptionally lovely fabrics to choose for Design No. 3228. Pattern in sizes 16, 18 years; 36, 38, 40 and 42 inches bust. 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 tills pattern by filling out the above cupon, including 15 cents (coin preferred), and mailing it to the Pattern Department of The Times. Delivery is made in about a week
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Family Menus
BY SISTER MARY BREAKFAST—Grape fruit, cereal, cream, baked sausage, creamed potatoes, whole wheat muffins, milk, coffee. LUNCHEON—Creamed oysters on lasses cookies, milk, tea. DINNER—Roast shoulder of lamb, boiled potatoes in parsley, butter, mashed turnips, head lettuce with Russian dressing, peach fritters with peach syrup, milk, coffee. Nippy fall mornings sound the first call for sausage. How r ever, some persons find that they can’t take care of the hearty meal in the morning but do enjoy a dinner of sausage with mashed potatoes, apple sauce, cole slaw and perhaps buckwheat cakes and syrup. If this is the case substitute broiled lamb chops for breakfast and serve the sausage for dinner. Peach Fritters Three- fourths cup flour, 1 tablespoon sugar, Vs teaspoon salt, tfe cup water, 2 tablespoons melted butter, 1 egg white, 1 cup diced canned peaches. Mix and sift flour, sugar and salt. Add water, slowly stirring to keep a smooth batter. Beat in melted butter. Add peaches drained from their juice and fold in w'hites of eggs beaten until stiff and dry. Drop from tip of spoon into deep hot fat and cook five miutes. The fat should register about 370 degrees Fahrenheit or an inch cube of bread from the soft part of the loaf should brown in forty seconds. Drgn fritters on brown paper and roll in powdered sugar. Serve with the following sauce: Peach Sauce Three-fourths cup sugar, 1 tablespoon flour, 1 cup peach juice, 1 tablespoon orange juice, 1 teaspoon grated rind, 1 egg yolk few grains salt. Mix sugar and flour. Add peach Juice salt and grated rind and stir until smooth. Cook ten minutes, stirring constantly. Beat egg yolk slightly with orange juice and stir into sauce. Cook one minute and serve. W. C. T. U. Meeting The need of cooperation in modem churches was expressed by Dr. Ernest N. Evans, executive secretary of the Indianapolis Church Federation, when he spoke before the allday prayer service of the Marion County W. C. T. U. Thursday at the First Baptist Church. After the luncheon an afternoon program was * ivcn > ,*■■ ***-.•* • MwiiiOlVlMMil
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Entertains Members of Bridal Party Miss Mary Ann Miller, who is home from New York to visit her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Addison F. Miller, entertained Thursday evening with a dinner party at the Columbia Club in honor of the young women in the bridal party of the Misses Julia and Jessica Brown, whose weddings will take place Saturday night at the Downey Avenue Christian - church. Miss Miller is one of the attendants. The centerpiece of the table was a bowl of vari-colored flowers and at either end of the table were tall bouquets of flowers. Covers were laid for: Misses Julia Brown Jessica Brown Constance Forsyth Anne Moorhead Elizabeth Betcrmann
Medal Contest by Students Set for Monday Students of Class B of Mae Boy! Brown’s expression class will present a program at 8 p. m. Monday at th® West Indianapolis branch library. They will contest for the 1927 class medal, the winner of which will be chosen by the audience. The 1928 class medal will be awarded to tha best speaker to be chosen by five judges. Vocal numbers will be given by Thelma Long '>nd Leona Lauder. Maxine Lambei, up i! of Mrs. Ruth Kersting will g.v’e ;ht ‘ ball dance” in costume. Those having part in the program will be: Alice, Hope and Ramona Brown, E’fle Coomer. Mary Jane Dehoff, Ben, dine Fulk, Geraldine Jackman, Je..n Jordan, Margaret Kent, Virgini:*- McKay, Eunice Quackenbush, Bessie Short, Genevieve Sanders, Ruth Silvers, Virginia Tapp, Nellie Vinstein, Alma Elizabeth Edmonds and Geraldl’ie Kelly.
Woman’s Day
BY ALLENE SUMNER How amuing was the impassioned plea for “trial engagements” mad® by Dr. Benjamin R. Andrews of Columbia University speaking before the American Sociological Society! “It is during the crucial engagement period that the young couple should thrash out the financial scheme of the embryonic household,” said he, wisely adding, "it is on the shoals of money that most homes are wrecked, and this matter should by all means be settled before the ‘I do’s’ are said.” That last part is eminently sensible, of course, but it seems silly to believe that engagements are ever anything other than “trial” anyway, # n Ready-Mades Women buy ready-made dresses in order to save time rather than because they believe the readymades have more style, or because they especially care how they loo:;. This rather interesting fact has been discovered by the Federal Bureau of Home Economics. Seventy-two per cent of women who answered a questionnaire as to why they bought ready-made clothes said it was because “it saved time.” Just one more proof that modern woman is more interested in things other than her clothes; that clothes, in fact, are simply getting in tha class of one more nuisance of life. This viewpoint is a necessity in a day when thousands of women do their shopping on “lunch hours” just as men have done for years. Night Club Women Running night clubs, being hostess and “entertainers,” seems to b® the job choice these days of scores of women of the “upper crust” perhaps, who suddenly find it necessary to earn a living. Not long age it was Caruso's sistre-in-law, Mrs. Park Benjamin, and now it's Mrs. Oscar Hammerstein, widow of the famous opera house manager. It is human to sneer a bit at what one does not understand, and sines "night clubbing” is not within th® ken of most mortals we might be inclined to scoff at the idea of it really being work to run one, be a hostess and entertainer. It sounds a bit appalling to me. I think these night club women will earn their bread and meat as surely as any factory girl who counts nuts and bolts twelve hours a day. - u P A Princess Speaks Perhaps the loving loyalty of Princess Hermine, second wi.e of former Kaiser Wilhelm of Germany, is a bit staged for the eyes of a reading world. But I am gullible and read her recent interview regarding the kaiser with almost a tear. Her loyalty seemed to ring too true to be staged. She stressed the fact of their utter dependence one upon the other, living in isolation as they do. She wrote—“lntimacy of this type would reduce ’most any normal person to madness. It would breed constant irritations, but we have never exchanged a cross word.” scm ups sure Oj^nfiQVE O Yah Churned from afresh Oreem pianos' Saltan v iw OH THK CIRCLE tZOpCI | Records
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