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The Los Angeles Times from Los Angeles, California • 25

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Los Angeles, California
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25
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A A A MORNING. Zos Angeles tr Times MAY 8, 7 Engagement Being Announced of Miss Ruth Foster Bradford and Ernest F. Smith WEDDING DATE LATE IN AUGUST Marlborough School Girl Studied in Italy Bride-elect Now Enrolled at Trojan School Fiance All-American Tackle on Football Team BY JUANA NEAL LEVY Announcement is being made by Mr. and Mrs. C.

Raymond Bradford of 2444 Inverness avenue of the engagement of their daughter, Miss Ruth Foster Bradford, to Ernest F. Smith, the wedding to take place the last of August. Miss Bradford was graduated from Marlborough School in 1930 and after a year at the Elizabeth Yoder School in Florence, Italy, matriculated at the University of Southern California, from where she will be graduated next month. She is active in affairs on the campus and is a member of Kappa Alpha Theta Sorority, Mr. Smith.

is the All-American tackle of the Trojan football team. He was graduated from Gardena High School and at Southern Callfornia, is a Fraternity, member of Sigma Phi Sigma honorary, and Alpha Eta Rho, honorary, aviation fraternity. Your Baby -AND MINE BY MYRTLE MEYER ELDRED The mother approaches the period wi.en her child will go to school with the feeling that she may then slough off any worries about his diet. That this is an erroneous idea should be apparent with a moment's consideration. Mrs.

A. L. has a 6-year-old weighing only 36 pounds. She writes: "He is particular about his food. At breakfast he eats a flaked cereal, with milk, nothing more; at poon one-half a baked potato, a fittle vegetable, glass of milk; at 3.

p.m. banana, glass of milk and cracker; dinner a small serving of lean meat, soup, one slice of bread. I give him milk with some flavoring before he goes to bed at night. He won't take cod-liver oll." The diet you outlined is too meager. The child needs home-cooked cereals (wheat, barley, rice, oats) or bananas in the 1 morning.

He may also have buttered toast and milk or a cup of weak cocoa made with milk. At noon he should have meat or a hearty dish of macaroni or rice or: spaghetti with tomatoes or cheese, several vegetables, and cooked dessert made with milk, such as custard, sago or cornstarch. His appetite for the night meal might be improved you gave only orange juice or some other fruit in the afternoon. Then at night offer cereal again, or baked potato with the meat. and vegetables, and a cooked fruit for dessert.

He needs codliver oil until June. Meanwhile have him examined by a doctor to rule out any physical handicaps. Bachelor of Arts A Serial by John Erskine INSTALLMENT 26 Wally got there on time. Tom minute late. Alec felt once more that Wally some day would be a great man -he had such A direct approach.

The way he shook hands with the girls, for instance. "Awfully glad to meet you! Which one has taken a fancy to me?" "If you 1 must know," said Beatrice, "it's me! I intended to be maidenly, but I see you wouldn't appreciate 1t." "Now we're talking!" Wally sat down carefully on a weak-backed chair next to her end of the sofa. There were no other so far 88 Alec could observe. And he had thought himself masterful, the night he met Mimi! Tom's entrance, Alec was glad to see, had a good deal of Binghamton decorum, a subdued reticence. The contrast to Wally's vigor was fortunate.

"Awfully glad to meet you both! Your brother and I are, pretty thick, and he talks of you A lot!" Good taste, Alec thought-just right. "Well, children, shall we eat?" Wally and Beatrice walked ahead, with Laura following between Tom and her brother--Tom trying to be sociable. "I suppose you've seen New York before?" "Well, Trenton isn't so far, you know!" That wasn't so good! Alec tried to recall what Tom's line of talk had been with the Whistles, before they got to the necking. At the Gold Rail he had reserved the table at the southeast end. Just after the cocktails had been brought Weinstein came through the door looking for them.

Alec stood up and waved. "Here you are -we kept a place! Swell you could My sister Beatrice -my other sister Laura -I mean, I ought to do it the other way! This is Mr. Edward Weinstein. Sit there, next to Laura." This was the first time Alec had seen the dark- haired classmate elsewhere than in the classroom, or the history seminar, or Barth's home, or beside Bertha's carriage. Now with these two girls the courtly manner turned to brilliant account.

Alec once more felt a little crude, and wished that he and Tom and Wally had cultivated more subtle line of talk, something natural without being monotonous. Laura liked Weinstein. Even Beatrice glanced away from her saxophone player now and then to hear what Eddie was saying, till Wally would demand her attention again, and get it. No catching him off guard! But Laura could answer Ed in his own style--they belonged together. Alec could see that Tom felt out of it -he felt a little SO himself.

Those two, both of them with that black hair! Her gray eyes, her whiteness- -and his olive skin! Gosh, they were a picture. Something had happened, Alec was sure, a stroke of fate, right there at the table, right in the crowded restaurant. Afterward they saw a picture. Alec was for the Nemo, but Weinstein asked the girls if they'd seen Radio City. Alec was annoyed not to have thought of it himself.

They TODAY'S CROSS-WORD PUZZLE 25 26 28 32 33 38 39 44 54 155 59 60 9-Ponders 10-Sea bird 12-Plural ending 14 -Pronoun 17-To peruse 20-Law 24-Electrical unit (pl.) 25-Grain spike 27-Seed covering 28-To become insipid 29-Kitchen vessels 30-Arrow poison 32-Pay 36-Pronoun 37-Maxim 42-Fiber joint 44-To join 46-To defeat 48-Commercial plant 49-Claw 51-Bristle 54-Wave-like molding 55-Teutonic Fate 57-German watering place 59-Type measure 62-Comparative ending 64-Denoting authorship Answer to Yesterday's Puzzle, No.2931 BUOYS SWABS PUPPET WELLED OF SLOPE LONA OFT PUREE EON LEES TOTAL RE STATE PESETAS SENT REAR CREATOR SPUNK HE METER SEEN EAR RATES RED EDIT LEGER DE REFILL A RELAY LINED 1934, The Bell Syndicate, Inc.) BETROTHAL TOLD AT LUNCHEON Announcement was made Saturday at a luncheon given by her aunt, Mrs. Lee Allen Phillips, of the engagement of Miss Amytis Richey, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Wylie Richey, to Vernon Barrett, son of Mr. and Mrs.

Walter Barrett of 4353 Victoria Park Drive. No date is announced for the wedding. had become popular since his youth, and Mrs. Weinstein remembering a motor trip to Cooperstown, which had been the occasion of a delightful luncheon at A Binghamton hotel. After the theater, when he was alone with his sisters again, back at the King's Crown, Alec saw that the Weinsteins were on their minds, too.

"I like the mother," said Laura. "You can see where Eddie gets his charm." "They're awfully sweet," agreed Beatrice, "but they don't seem American." Alec nodded. "That's because they have culture. Haven't you noticed? If you don't fall over your feet you're not American." "Wally doesn't fall over his feet!" "Well, he didn't get excited about those Rembrandts and Rubens, did he?" "They're not Rembrandts and Rubens!" "Well. whatever they are." Beatrice was doing the talking.

"If Mr. Weinstein made all that money himself-and 1 I don't believe he did, he seems too bashful-but if he did, where did he get time to collect pictures, and travel and learn languages, and that sort of thing? I couldn't make him out. He's more like a professor!" "He didn't make the money himself," Laura corrected. "They've had those pictures hundreds of years, when they were living in Spain." Beatrice looked skeptical. "How do you know?" "I asked Eddie." Beatrice fixed a thoughtful eye on her sister.

"You seem to like him." those servants, each more dignifled than the other, and those three courtly people. A few days later he got hold of Tom. "The girls are leaving tomorrow. Wally wants to throw die wants to give us another blowout, and since they're my sisters, I'd like to do the honors myself, so hold yourself ready while we fight it out! You're a guest, and later you'll know whose!" Tom took his arm as though to help him over a rough spot. "If you've any sense, you'll let me give a party for one, and that one will be you! Let duty call you away for this evening! Then Wally and Weinstein each can give separate parties.

They'd like to!" Alec woke up. "You think so?" "Try it and see!" He was startled to see how much they liked it! Weinstein took Laura to a concert. Wally carried Beatrice off to a dance. Tom and Alec studied the situation over beer at the Gold Rail. "I don't see why you're surprised," said Tom.

"They're swell girls and they're reaching the man-hungry age. I don't blame them; it's natural. Neither of those fellows is good enough for them, but you might as well begin saving up for the wedding presents!" "They've been here only five days!" protested Alec. "Man, you can get married in an afternoon!" (Continued Tomorrow.) (Copyright, 1934, by John Erskine) HINSEYS HONORED ON ANNIVERSARY "I do." "A lot?" Mr. and Mrs.

J. V. Hinsey of Pico "A lot." were honored at an informal dinner The sisters faced each other and Sunday at the home of Pearl MelAlec had the startled sense that back in Los Angeles, in celebration here was a challenge of some sort. "Eddie's a swell chap!" of their twenty-fifth wedding anniHe got up, yawned, and prepared versary. to go through the ceremony of kissing his sisters good night.

"If Laura likes him, good judgment, I say! You seem to be getting on pretty well yourself with Wally." More contented than he'd been in a long while, Alec sauntered back to his room in John Jay, thinking not of the show that Weinstein had taken them to, but of that house full of treasures, and all CHILD A GOTHAM WENT FORTH HOUSE 3.00 Brings New Beauty "to Spring Wardrobes! Use TINTEX for TILLIONS of women save Underthings Negligees M' money- REAL MONEY Dresses Stockings Slips. Sweaters Men's Shirts Scarfs Instead of dis- Blouses Children's Clothes -with Tintex. faded apparel, they Curtains Bed Luncheon Spreads Sets carding Drapes its original color or Doilies Slip Covers restore give it a different color with At notion all drug counters and 156 Tintex. It means beauty as well as economy--for everything you wear. And all of the Tintex 07 35 brilliant, fashionable Colors are so easy to use! TINTS AS YOU RINSE PARK TILFORD, Distributors SIZE World's Selling Largest Tints Dyes MARY HAYWARD HONORED Bride-elect Guest al Numerous Functions Before Wedding Set for Next Monday Miss Mary Frances Hayward, Sayer is to take place next Monday, courtesies.

Miss Hayward is the daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Ralph W. Hayward of 436 South Rexford Drive, Beverly Hills, and Mr. Sayer is the son of Mrs.

D. Dayton Sayer of South Cardiff avenue. Last Thursday Miss Hayward was guest of honor at a tea and stocking shower given by Miss Mary Sandberg and Mrs. H. Persons at the Sandberg home in North Laurel avenue, guests including Mmes.

R. W. Hayward, Thomas Griffin, William Horton, Ross Wood, Edwin Ware, Wallace Hickman, E. A. Ralston, Allen Simpson, Orville Mohler, Misses Barbara McCartney, Jane Wall, Nancy Jones, Catherine Evans, and Mary Ann Cotton.

Saturday Mr. and Mrs. William Horton and Mr. and Mrs. Ross Wood were hosts at a dinner party at the home of the former in Stone yon Road.

Bel-Air, when Mr. Sayer shared honors with his fiancee. Guests included Messrs and Mimes. Persons, Griffin, Gale Dr. and Mrs.

Markeley Cameron, Misses Sandberg, Wall and Cotton, and Messrs Norman McCloud, Constant Toohey, Todd Inch, Charles Lee and Jack Green. This afternoon there will be a tea and kitchen shower given by Mmes. Hickman and Griffin at the Grimn home, Lindenhurst avenue, to which Mmes. Wood, Horton, Cameron, Ware, Hayward, Willis J. Boyle, H.

C. Hickman, D. Dayton Sayer, Jack Nicholls, Allen Simpson, Good Taste Ny FRANCINE MARKEL: took a taxi to the Music Hall and marveled at the corridors, and at the ushers, and at the comfortable seats, and at the dancing girls, and the many-lighted ceiling, and the spectacle, and the organ playing. Alec, left to himself, would have shown them the good old Nemo! After the show Weinstein had them up on the roof to marvel at the city by night, and when they came down he dated them up for the next evening. dine at my house and go to a show." "There are a lot of us." said Alec.

"Are your parents out of town?" Weinstein laughed. "They're at home, but patient." "I'm not sure I can come," said Wally. "You must!" said Beatrice. "In that case-" said he. Alec remembered the Weinstein butler.

"It's a dinner coat, I "Any way you like." "But don't you dress?" "Well," said Eddie, "since we're going to show, I suppose it's a black tie." Weinstein never talked about himself, nor about his parents, but the travel years which he had enjoyed suggested wealth. Alec expected a comfortable house, like his father's in good times. He WAS astonished when they came to the formidable house just west of Lexington, and found themselves in 1 palace or a museum. He had the impression at once, before his coat was off and in the hands of the butler, that every stick of furniture, even the chairs, were from some points of view a work of art. The Weinsteins went in for paintings.

There were some modern things in the hall, but on the wide staircase, in the spacious living-room, the pictures had the tone of age. Mrs. 'Weinstein WAS tall, oliveskinned, like her son. Alec thought he had. seen her.

portrait somewhere, then remembered how pictures of the Madonna frequently wear that thoughtful, slightly sad, expression. Mr. Weinstein was shorter than his wife, and perhaps was conscious of the fact. When he greeted his son't guests, Alec thought him for a moment a little stiff, but before the dinner had progressed he knew the stiffness was an unusual sensitiveness. He might have known it from the man's lips, and from his eye, melancholy but alert.

"This is swell of you. Mrs. Weinstein, to take in the whole regiment at once!" confess to great curiosity! We wanted to see you all, but particuyou! I told Ed you must know more about babies than he does, or that poor Barth child wouldn't survive." "Why, Ed's fine with Bertha! As a matter of fact, we leave her strictly alone. If she didn't sleep all the time I don't know what we'd do." Mrs. Weinstein turned to the girls.

"Have you seen this nursing team at work?" "Not yet." Laura took the question to herself. "The boys promise an exhibition tomorrow--the wouldn't show today." "That was Barth," explained Dal. "He wheeled Bertha out himself because you girls were visiting Alec. Isn't that like him, father?" Mr. Weinstein smiled.

"Do you know him, sir?" "Quite well. But I wish we saw more of him. I can never express my gratitude for what he has meant to my son. What a noble life!" "Are you to be a teacher?" asked Mrs. Weinstein.

Alec was caught off his guard. "Me? Gracious, no!" His sisters laughed. "I'm no scholar," he hastened to explain. She seemed to be disappointed. "I should think you'd want to be!" "Well, Ed's going into diplomacy," he countered, in instinctive self-defense, "and I'll try for something practical, too." "I wish Ed would be a teacher!" "Maybe he will, mother," said her husband.

"Ed hasn't found himself yet." Those remarks on another occasion and at another table would have seemed to Alec mere domestic chatter, but now he caught meaning from them. These people, with their wealth and their culture, considered teaching important. The idea was new to him. own father and his father's friends, respected professors, but never heard them desire one in the family. In the presence of Barth, who had no money, this Weinstein family were humble.

Wally and Tom were rather out of this talk, but they established their own interests before long, Mr. Weinstein showing a keen desire to appreciate the saxophone, which Tintex- Tintex whose wedding with John Newton is being much feted with social Johnson, H. E. Franklin, Stockton, Misses Mary Wiegar, Sandberg. Elizabeth Crenshaw, Jones, Marion Marks, Mary Herbert, Wall, Stockton and Hayward have been bidden.

Thursday afternoon there will be bridge luncheon at the home of Mrs. Boyle, 511 Muirfield Road, at which Miss Hayward is to be guest of honor. Others included are Mmes. Willis J. Boyle, L.

M. Boyle, Harold Latimer, Charles Latimer, Lynn Fowler, Chester Bower, Frederick Treat, Guy M. Ruff, Ellen Isherwood, Joseph C. Savage, Ralph O. Proctor, Thomas W.

Proctor, Roy E. Thomas, ert M. Ketchum, D. Dayton Sayer, William Horton, John G. Blystone, John G.

Blystone, Earl Dietz, Helen Petzelt, Alice White, Lovell Ewisher, Kenneth Bissell, Robert McKee, Frank E. Sharp, Hugo C. Boorse, Benjamin Parsons, George Kothe, Richard Porter, Albert I. Peck, Charles H. Lee, Raymond L.

Follmer, Ralph W. Hayward, Miss Hayward, Mines, Ross William Horton, Thomas Griffin, Wallace Hickman, H. Persons, Miss Roberta, von KleinSmid and Miss Sandberg. The prenuptial will be climaxed by a dinner Del Mar affair, Club, Santa Monica, next Saturday evening following the church rehearsal. The ceremony is to take place in All Saints' Church, Beverly Hills.

Miss Hayward was graduated from the University of Southern nia, and is A member of PI Beta Phi Sorority. Her flance is a Kappa Sigma Fraternity man from the University of California at Los Angeles. While we should manifest much interest in our friends during conversation, we should retrain from excessive tion, particularly as to personal matters. Nothing shows greater lack of breeding than the practice of asking too many questions. Polite attention indicate more genuine interest than such inquisitiveness.

Tomorrow- Wearing Jewelry Copyright by Public Ledger DOYLES ENTERTAIN AT BRIDGE DINNER Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Doyle entertained Saturday evening with a bridge-dinner at their home in Montebello. Guests included 1 Messrs. and Mmes.

Kenneth Knowles and L. J. Fitzsimmons of Santa Monica, Chester Fitzsimmons of Venice, Robert Goodwin of Fullerton, C. B. Easton of Monrovia and James Doyle.

1111 BANG CLAnG CHANGE A Tickets Pacific Telephone Les and Electric Angeles MAdison Information Station 1151 COMPLETE FOR Relax and Play SANTA CATALINA ISLAND 20 24 35 36 37 50 51 52 HORIZONTAL 1-Moccasin 4 -Because 6 -Humiliation 11 To omit 13 Poverty 15-Spanish article 16-Steeple 18 Bondsman 19-Edible seed 21-Fish sauce 22-Pronoun 23-To compare critically 26-To weaken 29-Marrow 31-To pull 33-Sun god 34-Concerning 35-To clean 38-Age 39-International League (init.) 40-Note of scale 41-Breaking waves 45-Adage 47-Akin 50-Bone 52-Scene of wine miracle 53-To put on 56-French for father 58-To banish 60-Colloquial: success 61-Part of foot 63-Melancholy 65-To begin 66 -Type measure 67-Japanese coin VERTICAL 1-Sly look 2-Wheel spindle 3-200 4 -To terrify 5-To quiet 6-Apparition 7-Pronoun 8-Again 18 31 65 48 58 66 Marian Manners Conducts A Cooking Class Program Tomorrow 2 o'clock PRESENTING NEW CREATIONS OF Cold Eats for Hot Days These pesky weather men tell us that we are having the warmest spring in some twenty-five years. Now what about summer? "Torrid enough that cold things on the table and cool hours in the kitchen will be the order of the season." That's Miss Manners's prognostication and she is Johnny-on-thespot with a demonstration of cooling dishes which are effective antidotes for hot stove cooking and sweltering, listless appetites. Consider them: Grapefruit Salad Dessert--Jellied Tuna Salad Loaf Chocolate Refrigerator Cookies--Pineapple Mint Sundae--Frozen Fruit Salad--Jam Cream Tarts--Orange Ice. B-1-r-r! That's almost enough cold goodness to sprout icicles on the sun's red face itself, and to be sure that your freezing technique i is snuff, Miss Bess Meals of the George Belsey Co. will be on hand up to all questions pertaining to electrical refrigeration under the to answer General Electric Method.

Come, with your friends, and learn the secrets of Antarctic cookery. THE TIMES HOME SERVICE BUREAU BROADWAY SECOND FLOOR 130 SOUTH Maid.

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