Indianapolis Times, Volume 40, Number 61, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 August 1928 — Page 6
PAGE 6
Marie Louise Wagnon and George Hoster Will Wed at Church Tonight MISS MARIE LOUISE WAGNON, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur B. Wagnon, 321 E. Fifty-'Fifth St., will become the bride of George Mcßride Iloster, son of Mr. and Mrs. James Perry Hoster, 1434 Park Ave., at 8:30 o’clock this evening at the Broadway Methodist Episcopal Church. The ceremony will be performed by Dr. Orin W. Fifer, district superintendent of the Methodist church, assisted by Dr.
W. McFall, pastor of the Broadway church. The altar will be decorated with palms, ferns and baskets of cut flowers and lighted with, white cathedral candles in brass candelabra. Preceding the ceremony, Mrs. Mary Wilhite, organist, will play “Venetian Love Song,” “Evening Star,” “Swan Cong,” “My Heart at Thy Sweet Voice” and “Theta Prayer.” Mrs. Roy Kriepke, soprano, will sing "At Dawning” and “Ich Liebe Dich.” , Mrs. Wilhite will play “The Bridal Chorus” from Lohengrin for the entrance of the bridal party, which will be led by. Misses Alice Carter and Mary Lee OrlOff dressed in flesh chiffon robes de style with huge bows of satin shaded ribbon set on bustle style, with streamers to the bottom of the skirts. They will wear flesh satin slippers and carry shower bouquets of Columbia roses and delphimium. Misses Mildred Cooke apd Rebecca Jones will walk next, dressed in similar gowns of pink chiffon, with slippers to match. They will carry shower bouquets of Premier roses and delphinium. Sister Will Be Attendant Miss Alice Wagnon, sister of the bride, will be maid of honor. She will wear a gown, fashioned like those of the bridesmaids, of a deeper shade of pink chiffon. She will carry a shower bouquet of Matchless roses. Little Katherine Weaver will come next, dressed in flesh colored chiffon, made with a ruffled skirt. She I will carry a French basket of rose petals and flowers, tied with a huge pink satin bow. The bride, who will enter on the arm of her father, will wear a robe de style of bridal satin, with a Chantilly lace yoke, long tight lace sleeves .and a wide border of lace on the hem of the skirt. Her full length tulle veil will be fashioned cap shape, with a band of seed pearls and orange blossoms framing the face, and caught at each side with tiny clusters of orange blossoms. Her shower bouquet will be made up of bride’s roses, valley lilies and sweetheart roses. She will wear a pearl brooch that belonged to her maternal grandmother. Following the ceremony, a reception for the members of the bridal party and the immediate families will be held at the home of the bride’s parents. Mrs. Wagnon will receive in poudre blue lace over flesh, with a shoulder corsage of pink roses and Mrs. Hoster, mother of the bridegroom, will wear black beaded chiffon over flesh. The wedding collation will be served from a table centered with a mound of cut flowers in shades of pink. Couple to Travel on Lakes Following the reception, the young couple will leave immediately for a cruise on the Great Lakes and a motor trip through Canada. The bride will travel in a poudre blue ensemble of crepe Elizabeth with a close fitting blue felt hat to match, beige fox and a neck piece and accessories of beige. They will be at home after Sept. 1 at Chelsea Manor, Fifteenth St. and Central Ave. The bride attended Butler University and is a member of the Kappa Alpha Theta sorority. Mr. Hoster was graduated from Indiana University. He is a member of the Sigma Chi fraternity. Miss Broderick , Muncie to Be Bride Sept. 15 Mr. and Mrs. Michael H. Broderick, Muncie, announce the engagement of their daughter, Mary Elizabeth, and Bernard S. Berne t, Cleveland, Ohio, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Bernet, Cleveland. The announcement was made today at the home of Miss Broderick, Westwood, at a luncheon bridge. At the individual luncheon tables were old-fashioned nosegays tied with white satin ribbon extending to each guest’s place. These bouquets contained the announcement. The wedding will take place Saturday morning, Sept. 15, at the St. Lawrence Catholic Church. Miss Broderick' is a graduate of St. Mary-of-the-Wo6ds, Terre Haute, the New Rochelle School for Girls, New Rochelle, N. Y., and she attended Marcum School, Philadelphia, Pa. She also studied abroad. She is a member of the Delaware Country Club. Mr. Bernet is president of the Industrial Supply Company, Cleveland. He attended the University of Cleveland and Ohio State University at Columbus. To Hold Monthly Party The Altar society of St. Roch Church will hold a regular monthly card party at the hall, 3600 S. Meridian St., Sunday afternbon and evening. Mrs. Charles Murt is hostess and will be assisted by Mesdames Wilbur Wurtz, Pauline Clifford, Frank Price, Peter Murt, John Meihaus and Miss Minnie Murt. Luncheon will be served from 5 till 7 p. m. and transportation will be furnished from the S. Meridian St. car line. Ladies of H. A. A. to Meet The ladies bridge section of the Hoosier Athletic Club will give another luncheon at 1 o’clock Tuesday at the club home. Members wishing to attend will please call in reservations to Mrs. E. R. Daggett by noon Monday.
Fete Tonight in Honor of Bride-Elect Misses Jeanette Griffith, Olga Snyder and Jessica Peffley will be hostess this evening at the Lumley Tea room at a personal shower and bridge in honor of Miss Jane Catherine Hawekotte, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John L. Hawekotte, 812 E. Fortieth. St., whose marriage to Gareth Mitchell Hitchcock, sor. of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hitchcock, 41 N. Arlington Ave., will take place Sunday. The tables will be decorated with orchid and pink sweet peas and the gifts will be brought in in a wagon decorated with orchid and pink, drawn by little Marian Gay Kester. With Miss Hawekotte and the hostesses will be Misses Helen Stephenson, Marthalou Akers, Emma Lou Richter, Betty Barclay, Lucinda Smith, Dorothy Lambert, Julia Brettman, Margaret Shanklin, Irma Roller, Helen Haynes, Dorothy Pier, Ruby Davis, Betty Martindale, Elsie Gilkinson, Naomi Guild and Berniece Abbott. Miss Betty Barclay will be hostess at a linen shqwer in honor of Miss Hawekotte Thursday and Miss Helen Warmoth will entertain for her Friday. Shower Honors Miss Kuchler, Aug. 13 Bride Among showers given for Miss Eunice Marie Kuchler, whose marriage to Carl D. Moxley will take place Monday evening, Aug. 13, was a miscellaneous shower given by the sisters of the bride, Mrs. Ruth Byrket and Miss Naomi Kuchler, last evening. Guests included the Misses Irene Roehm, Matilda Gasper, Marie Gasper, Cecilia Rauser, Rose Yochem, Anna Riegal, Alberta Millikan, Esther Herman, Alveretta Stoddard, Gertrude Steimer, Rosemary Brennan, Ilene Brennan, Mary Murphy, Caroline Byrket, Anna Kiefer, Magdalen Kiefer, Agnes Kiefer, Dorothy Need, Mesdames Helen Lee, Margaret Rosenspien and Lena Junneman. The gifts were presented to the bride-elect by little Maxine Moxley, niece of the groom, from under an umbrella of the bridal colors, peach, orchid, pink and green. The hostesses were assisted by their mother, Mrs. Michael Kuchler, and Miss Josephine Moore. Music and games were the features of the evening.
YOUR CHILD Should Think for Itself
BY OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON The fallacy of acting on a principle that a baby should have his thinking and acting done for him is coming to an end. Those people trained by experience and observation in the intricacies of baby thought and baby behavior have learned that from his earliest months he is entitled to the respect and consideration of his elders. His mental processes, however diminutive, are positive and real. The bud is no less a flower because its leaves are not opened. Beneath the closed petals are the processes of a terrific growth, much more sensitive tto environment than the mature flower. Governed by Instinct A baby can and does absorb impressions through a curious and secret process of nature for which science has no name. He knows by instinct (call it that) if you are impatient or cross. In an incredibly short time he will base his estimate of himself upon your estimate of him. No one can analyze these processes; he himself is not conscious then, or even after, of these things. But later in life, if he is a victim of inferiority complex, a prey to unnamed fears, overly sensitive, morbid or a coward, perhaps dishonest, don’t look back to the time he was 6 years old and wonder what did it. Instead, look back to his first year of babyhood and the succeeding years, when as a child of preschool age he was treated as a creature without personality or thought. At 8 months he will hang his head and show embarrassment when his attempts to make sounds are imitated. He often refuses to continue. When Fear Begins As early as three or four months he often shows unmistakable signs of fear. At nine months he will cry heartt okenly when laughed at. Figure it out. Does it not look as though the seeds of trouble, the things we often spend years in trying to overcome in adolescence, had their beginning in thoughtless -or cruel acts on the part of his elders, in babyhood? For some as yet unexplained reason, the human being is full of fear—an unnamed fear of unnamed things, that had its beginning when man knew not the shelter nor safety of civilization. Self-preservation was the first law
PRIZE BEAUTY BRIDE OF TERRE HAUTE MAN Miss Lois Irene Wilcox, winner of a recent beauty contest at Indiana State, Terre Haute, and Floyd L. Fry, student at the school, were married this week. Both are residents of Terre Haute and have attended Indiana State two years. Mrs. Fry is an Alpha and Mr. Fry a pledge of the Forum. The couple will live with the parents of the bride, Mr. and Mrs. C. G. Wilcox.
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Miss Ada Ross Becomes Bride of Carl Witzke
Miss Ada Roberta Ross, daughter of Mrs. Lillian Ross, Marion, and Carl Witzke, Lafayette, were married Monday, at 4:30 p. m. at the home of Mrs. Dan Anderson. Summer flowers and ferns decorated the room where the service was read by the Rev. Thomas R. White, pastor of the Meridian Heights Presbyterian church. The bride wore a gown of ivory lace and carried a shower bouquet of bride roses and lilies of the valley. Following the candlelight ceremony, there was a reception. Out-of-town guests were Mrs. Ross Merchant, Detroit, Mich.; Mr. and Mrs. Dean Wilson and family, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Geisler and family, Charles McCabe of Lafayette; Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Hauck, Richmond; Mr. and Mrs. E. F. McCabe, Williamsport, and Mrs. Ida Coen, Oxford, Ohio. After their wedding trip, Mr. and Mrs. Witzke will be at home in West Lafayette, Sept. 1. of nature and fear was its watchword, just as taste keeps us instinctively free from poison. Inborn Timidity This is the subjective fear that puzzles psychologists so much and which has untold influence upon all human behavior v This must not 1' confused with the objective fear such as fear of a noise or a dog. T. is associated with the unknown. Little children are bom with it. It manifests itself in many ways; one of the commonest is fear of strangers. Don’t force a little frightened child to go to a stranger. The time time will come when you can diplomatically overcome his shrinking, but you never can do it by force or ridicule and you should not attempt it, no matter how young he is.
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Tudor Hall Graduate Is Winner
Miss Ruth Holaday, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. O. J. Holaday, 5347 College Ave., has just received a $350 tuition scholarship from Mt. Holyoke College, which she will enter this fall. There are six of the scholarships, five awarded to students in different sections of the country receiving the highest rating in college board examinations, and the sixth to the student receiving the highest award of all,, the one Miss Holaday received. Miss Holaday was graduated from Tudor Hall in June, where she was president of the junior class last year and editor-in-chief of the Tudor Hall Chronicle this year. At the Tudor Hall Alumnae breakfast following graduation Miss Holaday was presented with the SSOO Fredonia Allen memorial scholarship award. Graf-Goth Announcement is made of the marriage of Miss Genevieve Goth, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles A. Goth, 2055 Ruckle St., to Carl C. Graf.
BRIEFLY ABOUT PERSONS
Miss Amy Winslow, Miss Catherine Bailey, Miss Edna Johnson and Miss Wilma Reeve will leave Aug. 18 on a motor trip to Colorado, where they will visit Estes Park and Mesa Verde. Miss Winslow, after returning from her vacation, will go to the University of Chicago, where she won a fellowship, to continue her studies in sociology. Mr. and Mrs. Theron H. Carter, 3313 Ruckle St., and Mrs. Pearl Taylor, 18 E. St. Clair St., will go to Wawasee the last of the week for a ten-days’ vacation. Miss Katherine Kinder, financial secretary of the Y. W. C. A. left today for her home in Newport News, Va. She has resigned her position. Mrs. Laura D. Herrier, information secretary for the past year and Miss Frances E. Toy* secretary of the industrial department at the local Y. W. C. A. for the past four years, will leave Thursday on a moMiss Lindstrom f Bride-Elect , to Be Honor Guest Miss Edith Lindstrom, whose marriage to Leland Rinker will take place Saturday, will be the guest of honor this evening at a miscellaneous shower to be given by Miss Doris McKowan at her home, 104 N. Colorado St. Decorations throughout the house will be carried out in pale pink and blue, the bride’s colors. Besides the hostess and the guest of honor those present will be Mesdames C. H. Lindstrom, mother of the brideelect; Pxul Vogt, C. W. Vogt, Harry Trowbridge, Herbert Rennard, Virginia Cambridge and Lois Heyworth; Misses Ruth and Esther Owen, Mary Valodin, Marie Nielson, Helen Stockton, Helen Ernst, Louise Thompson and Anna Louise Cochrane. Miss Anna Louise Cochren entertained eighteen guests with a miscellaneous shower and bunco party at her home, 3021 Kenwood Ave., Monday evening in honor of Miss Lindstrom and Miss Mary Walodin, who will leave soon for Seattle, Wash.
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 daily, except Friday, when twenty are given. Address Recipe Editor of The Times. Prizes will be mailed to winners. Raspberry Marmalade Ten cups of sliced rhubarb, ten cups of sugar. Boil fifteen minutes, then add one quart of raspberries and boil twenty minutes. This makes about five pints of delicious spread. MRS. SAM BERG. R. R. 2, Arcadia, Ind. Benefit Card Party A card party for the benefit of St. Catherine Church will be given Thursday from 2:30 to 8:30 p. m. at St. Catherine’s hall, Tabor and Shelby Sts. Mrs. Julius Wendling will be hostess. Prizes will be awarded. Women of the Mooseheart Legion will entertain with a card party at the Moose temple, 135 N. Delaware St., at 2:30 Thursday afternoon. Mrs. John Nubar is chairman in charge of arrangements.
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Morning Wedding M Church
Before ah altar banked with ferns, palms and baskets of pink roses and gladioli and lighted with cathedral candles, Miss Sarah Elizabeth Schriber, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert G. Schrieber, 2946 Broadway, became the bride of Dr. Arthur G. Funkhouser, son of Mr. and Mrs. Hugh C. Funkhouser, at 10 o’clock this morning in the chapel of St. Paul’s Episcopal Church. The ceremony was performed by the Rev. Lewis Brown, pastor of St. Paul Church. A progr-m was given by Mrs. Ruth Renier Nessler, harpist. The bride, who was unattended, entered on the arm of her father. She wore an ensemble with a rose crepe romanine drrss and blue coat, heavily embrol' , ''“'''’ J n Creevel work, with navy kid shoes and a navy blue hat. She carried an arm bouquet of pink roses and delphinium. Following the ceremony, the young couple left immediately for a month's tour through the East. They will be at home after Sept. 1, at 2946 Broadway.
tor trip to Monrovia, Cal. They have both resigned their positions and will stay in California for an indefinite length of time. Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin D. HVtz and Mr. and Mrs. Joseph J. Daniels left Tuesday for a trip on Lake Superior. Mrs. Frank Hoke has as her guest Miss Mariom Stacey, Evansville. Miss Byrna Wllderson, Leetonia, Ohio, who was visiting Mrs. Hoke, has gone to Lake Louise. Miss Caroline Dunn, 915 N. Pennsylvania St., left for Connersville Tuesday. He will be librarian in the Connersville Library. Mrs. Perry Lesh and children, 4015 Guilford Ave., left Tuesday for North Scitufcte Beach, Mass., where they will join Mr. and Mrs. Fred Hoke. Mr. and Mrs. Alexander G. Cavins, 1232 N. Alabama St., have as their guests their daughter, Mrs. Russell I. Richardson and their granddaughter, Judith Anne, Detroit, Mich. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Fisher, 3615 Guilford Ave., have gone on a motor trip through th East. Mr. and Mrs. William H. Coburn, 522 Riverside Park Rd., have received word of the birth of a son to their daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Craig G. Forbes, in New York, July 27. Before her marriage Mrs. Forbes was Miss Anna Barbara Coburn. Dr. and Mrs. G. L. Glendenning, 3134 N. Delaware St., and Mrs. Glendenning’s father, Macy W. Malott, 4J58 Washington Blvd.. have been guests at Lake Wawasee Hotel and Country Club. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Scrogin and family, 5661 N. Pennsylvania St., have been spending a July vacation at the Wawasee Hotel and Country Club. Mr. lind Mrs. J. C. Consodine, 5560 Washington Blvd., spent several days at Lake Wawasee. Mr. and Mrs. E. H. Darrach, 1502 N. Meridian St., and Mr. and Mrs. S. C. Parry, 3010 N. Meridian St., were at Lake Wawasee for several days. Mr. and Mrs. C. D. O’Rourke, 336 Berkeley Rd., visited friends at Lake Wawasee Hotel and Country Club. Miss Norma Younghaus, 321 S. Hamilton Ave., has returned from Pittsburgh, Pa., where she has been visiting the past week. Harold Winckelbach, New York City, who has been visiting Dr. and Mrs. R. R. Coole, 1344 N. La Salle St., has returned to his home. Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Collins and family, 3909 N. Pennsylvania St.; Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Sutherlin and son, John Robert, 909 N. Pennsylvania St., and Mr. and Mrs. A. D. Hitz, 2112 Park Ave., have been spending an outing at Lake Wawasee. Mr. and Mrs. George T. O'Connor, who have been at Lake Wawasee, entertained a group of members and wives of the Highland Golf and Country Club, of which Mr. O’Connor is president, over the week-end. A week-end tournament for men and women was played on the Wawasee links. Mrs. Jesse J. Mossier, 129 Hampton Dr., has returned from a visit in Dayton, Ohio.
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ENTERTAIN AT BRIDGE TO HONOR HOUSE GUEST Honoring her house guest, Miss Louise Cashmire, Hollywood, Cal., Mrs. Mark Robbins Jr. entertained with two tables of bridge at her home, 923 Grant St., Tuesday evening. The tables were decorated with baskets of garden flowers in shades of white, orchid and gold. With the hostess and the guest of honor were Mesdames Norbert Fox, Irwin Shaw, Albert Hauck, Carl Stout, Fred Mullen, Frank Thompson, Joseph Volmer and Lee Cain.
GIRL, 17, WORKS AS PLUMBER
Evelyn Middleton
By SEA Service TULSA, Okla., Aug. I.—Feminism has chalked up another victory in Tulsa. A 17-year-old girl has invaded a 100 per cent masculine line of work. Evelyn Middleton has become a plumber—or “plumbess.” She has given scarcely a thought to the distinction which is hers by right of exclusiveness. For, according to all available records, she will be the only woman plumber in the United States. The Census Bureau lists women in the occupations of bricklayer, steeplejack, sailor, ironpuddler, farmer, stone mason and many another strenuous job. But not a single lady plumber is shown on its records. “There is nothing odd about my liking to fix a leaky water pipe or connect up gas stoves,” Evelyn says. “I played with pieces of pipe and joints instead of dolls when I was a kid. I may even have cut by teeth on a stillson wrench, for all I know, for my father has always been in the plumbing business.” GROUP TO BE GUESTS AT Y. W. C . A. CAMP Delta Phi Beta Sorority, the Fidelis - class of the Roberts Park M. E. Sundal school and a group from the Real Silk hosiery mills, will be guests at a welcome dinner to be given at the Y. W. C. A. camp on White River, to mark the opening of the camp to employed girls for August. Special music, stunts and surprise features are being planned for the occasion by Miss Eleanore G. Hoagland, to be associated with Miss Louise E. Noble in direction of camp life during the month. Sport possibilities include tennis, baseball, swimming, boating and archery, while ample opportunity will be afforded all desiring complete rest and relaxation, approximately sixty girls will attend this week-end.
The Perfect Shape /^SANDWICHES TWO SIZES Slice Loaf
Giving Second Chance to Philandering Husband Not Popular Idea With Wives BY MARTHA LEE POOR little Dolores, she with the trifling husband, has started quite a furore. There are those who think she has no selfrespect to stick around home after such a confession. There are those who say, that under no conditions would they give their husband a second chance if they discovered he was being unfaithful to them. And there’s the rub —if they discovered it. In other words,
Luncheon for Guests From East Honoring Mrs. W. R. Simpson, Rosell, N. J., who is the guest of her parents, Dr. and Mrs. David Kahn, 1839 N. Meridian St., and Mrs. A. Strauss, Newark, N. J., who is visiting Mrs. E. E. Rauh, Marott Hotel, Mrs. Harry Weill, 3656 N. Delaware St., was hostess at a 1 o’clock luncheon today at the Indianapolis Athletic Club. The guests were seated at a table centered with Dresden flowers. Mrs. Simpson and Mrs. Strauss will be guests of honor at a number of parties during their stay in Indianapolis. Shower Tendered Josephine Ryan , to Wed Aug. 16
Miss Josephine Ryan, whose marriage to Louis Dewald will take place Aug. 16, was the honor guest at a miscellaneous shower given by her sister, Mrs. Arthur Evers, 1437 N. Mount St., in her home, Tuesday evening. Appointments were carried out in the bridal colors, pink and blue. With Miss Ryan and the hostess were Mesdames Hugh Dugan, Frank Dewald, Norman Dunn, John Lawler, George Sheridan, John Schaeffer, Carl Eschenbach, Catherine Dudley, Gilbert Selmeyer, Carl McCormick, John Staub, James Noonan, William Esarey, Joseph Beckert, William Rankin, Henry Keller, John Wasson, Thomas Scanlon, Ralph Fiscus, Orville Vail, Herbert Bush, John Lamaureaux, Camille Lamareaux Jr., Thomas Craig, M. Crail, Denon Craig and Casper Wagoner. Misses Lucille Dichmann, Katherine Kelly, Marie Dewald, Katherine Ashe, Marie Gardiner, Frances Mary Boyd, Elizabeth Ryan, Eva Creager and Rachael McGoran. Miss Marie Gardiner, 3724 Salem St., will entertain in honor of Miss Hy; n this evening. Supper Honors Miss Horning to Be August Bride Miss Amelia Henderson, 23 Hampton Ct., gave a buffet supper Tuesday evening in honor of Miss Vera Horning whose marriage to Edward Whitney, Pittsburgh, Pa., will take place at her home in Castile, N. Y. t Aug. 18. The guests were Mrs. Frederick Boone, Misses Adele and Margaret Pantzer, Genevieve Pickrell and Mrs. Lawrens Henderson. After the ceremony the bridal couple will go on a motor trip to Bigwirt Inn, Muskoka Lakes, Ontario, for a few days, returning by way of Ottawa, Quebec, and Montreal to Pittsburgh, where they will make their home.
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as long as they know nothing definite, but only suspect, everything is fine. But the minute they get anything definite on him, their home, their happiness will go flying out the window. In the first plaae, just what does this “trifling” consist of? Man, being naturally a polygamous being, is apt, to be attracted to a pretty face, a shapely pair of ankles, the curve of a cheek and the tilt of a chin. These mental states of unfaithfulness are not, I contend, unnatural, nor dangerous. They are healthy and sane. And that’s the wife’s chance to get some good work in, if she is smart. Nothing helps things along quite as much 'as competition in any line of 'ports or business, and this marriage thing is a sporting business. It isn’t that I am contending that “trifling” is right. It isn’t. Maybe we are not talking about the same things, my advice-seekers and myself, when we talk about trifling. But I am convinced that most of the “trifling” that is written about consists of looking at other girls, appearing interested in women other than the one to whom the man is lawfully wedded. A wife can use this situation, any situation, in fact, to her own advantage, if she wishes. That is her chance to be more charming, more devoted, more loveable than ever before. It inspires her to that. Just like a sprinter, being gained upon by the runner-up, makes a final dash for the rope when he recognizes the situation. Here’s a woman who strenuously objects to Dolores’ very sensible viewpoint on the situation. Dnr Mcrthn Lee- After reading the letter from Dolores I am wondering how a woman could consider living with -a man aitpr nnriin" out ho was such a cad. After finding a husband untrue, I cannot see how anv self-resDectinjr woman could consider him fit to live with. Do vou think he would be 30 e?sv If you were the one who did wr .ir, Dolores?‘ Why don’t women have n little more rpunk? I have a good, kind husband: nave been married eighteen years and have seven children all unde- 17 years of age. hut my husband knows ouite well that any time he wants to go with anv one else he won’t find a thing holding him. Id pack his bag and see that he left at once or make him wish he had. No child Is better off with an immoral father or mother. And Dolores with only one child you could easily support her, but. of course, the law would make Mr. Dolores do that. Dolores spoke of pressing his suit. Ever try letting him press it himself? I do all the laundry work, cleaning, cooking and sewing for my family hut pressing suits for mv husband is not in mv line. I never started waiting on my husband when he is well. He never expects it and is good about helmng me and teaching •,lv> children to wait on me. While vou may think me a crank I want to tell you we are a perfectly happy family, but I insist upon the same fidelity from him that he expects from me. A HAPPY WIPE. Did this happy wife, with a husband who loves her, ever think what she would do should she discover her husband was trifling on her? Dolores loves her husband and wants, if it is at all possible, to stay with him. Sne is an entirely different type of woman. I still think she was right in reconsidering things from all angles before taking the fatal step. TT 7 ay mire Reunion Sunday Tpe eighth annual reunion of the Waymire family and friends will be held at Callaway Park, Elwood. Sunday. Charles Waymire, Elwood, is president; Oliver Waymire, Elwood, vice president, and Mrs. Spann Waymire, ’Pendleton, secre-’ tary-treasurer.
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