Indianapolis News, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 October 1920 — Page 7
THE INDIANAPOLIS NEWS, TUESDAY, OCTOBEB 5, 1920.
Z
PERSONAL AND SOCIAL
of Hamilton.
■ -^r-'
haa cone east to at' kins Unisarsity In
* Mary Louise
and Mias
5L c ji:
wn, of of Mr.
Brown and
Miss Mary Wal-
are visiting tbeir aldenmaier, ani fit in-
to Cuba soon. _j Mr. wbo r
a summer's stay In are Friday for Boston to spend tbs winter.
Mrs. Milton F. Levey and
of Union Hill. N. J ,
vs come to Indianapolis to ... are the *ue*ts of Mrs. Leo E.
rey.
Tbs literature department of the Safi'S Department Club will give s luncheon at the club Wednesday at o'clock Instead of Thursday, as
announced.
Mrs. A. W. HtniUne, of » the guests of Dr. sod B. Wynn. Dr. Suntans the Indianapolis Med-
evsnlng.
entertained sixthis afternoon arraon, a bridea miscellaneous rotm. Mrs. John for her Thurs-
Club will at 1 o'clock
Warm,
street. All mem* ilty are Invited to
meeting and those who sre requested to notify I C. Curtis. . The club is elfot to obtain the names
■fraternity for
was entwined with southern smilax and asparagus ferns with flower boxes for the low newel post and the broad windows on the landing. In the dining room, the high Windows were filled In with boxes of ferns, chrysanthemums, roses and cosmos. The bridal table which was covered with a filet lace cloth bore the wedding eake set on a mound of flowers and a silver candelabra lighted with
white tapers. trio including
dressed the Woman s Rotary Club at the Clay pool hotel Monday on the possibilities of Indianapolis as an - Industrial center. He was Introduced by Mrs. Kate Milner Rabb. Mrs. May belle Pettigrew Mayer presided in the absence of Dr. Amelia R. KelKT' President- Miss Ann Raymond, of Chicago, and Mrs. Wilson Jones Harrington, of Indianapolis, were
guest#'erf Mrs. I ~S| ■
ter. Mrs. C. C. Dubois: her mother. Mrs. Maria Caldwell, of Ligoneer. and two sisters. 0LW1M SPEAKS TO LEAGUE,
W. H. Kirschner.
Mrs. W. W. Reed Dead. i to tm Unianapous
WARSAW. IikL October 5 —M
Wjllhlte WeWr, harpist, played the
the
music, using
'Bridal
. ^ trto Including Miss Ruth Eliza- , LJ beth Murphy, violinist; Miss Yuba, w - w - Reed ’ *« e Sfty-nine, is dead at Wllfhlte, cellist, and Mrs. Franc her home here after an illness Of a
year. She formerly served as second vice-president of the Indiana Federation of Clubs, and was chairman o? the federation in the Thirteenth district. Mr*. Reed was the first and only woman to serve on the Warsaw school board, and was a member of the local library board. Surviving are a daugb-
wedding
Chorus^ from ‘'Lohengrin' 1 ' for the processional and Grieg's "Melody of
Love," during the ceremony. The only attendants were Miss Eliz-
abeth Nicholson and Frederick 8- , Ford, of Detroit, brother of the bridegroom. Miss Nicholson wore jad* Areen chiffon over cloth of silver with silver trimmings and carried sunburst roses. The bridal costume
* Ifown of softly draped bridal
satin with trimmings of Belgian cobweb lace for the bodice. A long train
Tells
North
Men of Advertising Methods. G. F. Olwiu, manager of the Better Business Bureau, was the speaker at a meeting of the North Indianapolis Better Business League Monday night. Mr. Olwln explained the functioning of merchants’ associations and laid stress on the proper form of merchandising and advertising methods. Howard Griffith, advertising manager of the Udell works, also spoke. Officers of the North Indianapolis League are: Owen Shepard, president; Joseph liouge. ▼Ice-president, and Dr. Austin H. Todd, secretary.
MINE CONVENTION PUNNED IUl* Oja Frtlnr OaaiMt* *• Oil Keystone Werkesn. CANTON, O^ October 5.—The policy committee of the anthracite mine workers has been asked to call a tri-district convention of the Pennsylvania hard coal workers to consider the authorisation of a general strike in protest against alleged discrimination by mine operators against monthly workers in the Shamokm mining fields. This announcement was made here todav by Christ J. Golden, president of District No. 7. United Mine Workers. which includes the Shamokin fields, who is here attending the conference of the policy committee with Secretary of Labor Wilson. The committee. Mr. Golden said, will issue the call for a tri-district convention in the next few days. It prob-ii ably will be held at Pottsviile. Pa.. October 2*.
Used Piano Sale BIG BARGAIN THE STARR PIANO CO. 138-I40 N. Penn. St
Safety Razor Blades Gillette r:«; A»t» Strop («)Ate Durham Duplex Gem (?) tie (5) Ate JL«m Kutter Ruder* <51 CSr ; »«> -SSe Krer-Kmdy <S)J!Se i Sexte Wade (3) 2!« Vonnegut Hardware Co.
of the satin cut V-sbaped in the back fell from the shoulders where it was ] caught with pearls, a graceful spray f
of satin roses forming the only trt*nm^on the train. *fte wedding veil
making an effot to obi of all members of the
ths club register.
The Fortnightly Li Urary Club observed President's day with a lunch-
r asr
tables decorated with garden Dowers. Following the luncheon, t*** P r ®: gram committee conducted a takeoff on "investigation" committee*, the retiring president. Mrs, John Wheeler, and the incoming president, Mrs. Louis Henry Wolff, being the subjects
of Investigation.
The Oliver Perry Morton Chapter of the Laughters of the Ualon observed Regent's day with Mrs, OK, Kregelo Monday afternoon. Miss Charity Dye talked on "The Feeling of
the North and the Booth"; Mrs. Laura i.‘ttlndar** rhatii a. paper On IR*
Mara Lauter
Fletcher Hodges read a dianapolts, and Miss
rung a group of songs, Mrs. William Carlin also gavs a resume of the work done by the chapter during the c», A. It. encampment, which iaeluded the decoration of the nurse*’ headquarters at the Clay pool hotel, the
directing of the presentation of flowers to the soldiers by school children, and the placing of a wreath on the statue of Governor Morton, for whom the chapter was najned. Unocial guests at the meeting wers Mrs. George Head, Miss Margaret Read and Mis* McAfee. Mrs, Charles Bridges end Mis* Myrtle Naquin, of Ft Benjamin Harrison, and Mrs. Timothy Dwight Htigden, of Los Angeles, with lira
A. ft, Parker.
The Indianapolis section of the t’ouncll of Jewish Women observed President's day today with a luncheon and program at the Indianapolis < iub, which marked the opening of the sixteenth year of the council's activities. Mr*. M. L Purvis, president of th* Chicago council, was a guest
end spoke In the afternoon on 'The
Jewish Mother and Child,"
>ke
„ thsr a
noon program also Included
The after*
I a talk
the Kfr
new council president, Mre. Meyer oymson, remarks by Rabbi Morris Hi, Feuerllcht. musical monologue* by Mr*. Harry Israel, including "The Naughty Little Clock" and "Make Be*
lleve," and piano number* by Mrs. Isaac Marks. Including Moskowski’s “Caprice Eitpngnole" and Mendelssohn's "fieherio." Tbs luncheon was served to 110 guests at a "u" shaped table ndornecT with old-fashioned bouquets tied with vari-colored tulle end lighted with rose taper* set In silver candelabra. It opened with the singing of the council hymn. Immediately after the luncheon and preceding the program, there was a reception In th* palmroom, Mrs. Efmymaon and Mrs. Purvis, assisted by the hospitality commlttse, receiv-
ing the guests.
Ford-Tanser, Th* home of Mrs. George Gordon Tanner. North Delaware street, wa* the soene of a beautiful chrysanthemum wedding Monday evening when her daughter Katherine became the bride of John Battice Ford, Jr., t# Detroit. The sorvioe was read by the Rev. Lewis Brown before an altar of palm* and fern* flanked by cathedral tapers and tall floor baskets of chrysanthemums arranged in the bay window of the drawing room. The fireplace was banked with greenery and delicate asparagus ferns veiled the lights. Floor baskets of white chrysanthemums formed an aisle from the altar to the stairway which
on the
was arranged
with a wreath of oran was embroidered with
and pearls. Tbs bridal bouquet a shower of white heather, orchids and lilies of the valley. The bride j also wore the bridegroom's gift, a bar pin of sapphires and diamonds. Mrs. Tanner, mother of the bride, whose wedding anniversary was also! marked by ths day, wore a gown of gray charmeuse trimmed with old • MMbe and a corsage of orchids. Mrs.} J. B. Ford, mother of the bridegroom, j was gowned in white Haiome velvet with white bead embroideries and a I corsage of orchids. Mrs. Gordon B. j Tanner wore orchid and silver bro- ! cade. A buffet supper and dancing I followed the ceremony. Assisting in the hospitalities were Mr. and Mrs. L K. UUy. Mr. and Mrs. Meredith Nicholson, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Lane Wilson, Mr. and Mrs, W, H. Coleman, Mr, and Mr* Harry Murphy, Mr*. Charles F, Hay!**. Mra Charles Voor bees, Mr. and Mr*. William Ptrtle iUro4 and Mrs. Gordon Tanner. The out-of-town guest* included Mr. and Mrs. John B. Ford, of Detroit, parent* of the bridegroom; his grandmother. Mrs. Edward Ford, of Toledo; Mr. and
fc** Jerome Remfek,
John V. Dwyer and Miss Esther Caulklns, of Detroit; Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Knight, of Toledo; Mr. and Mrs. El11* Jackson.^ of Philadelphia: Mr. and
Mra K A. Kellogg,
bail Haullsbgl
Phla;
of Buffalo: Kim-
J? a £ ,M £ bary ' Fart*r Hopkins. v* -L r " A a H. Burton, of
New Tork. and Mr. and Mra L A Wheeler, of Troy. N. T. Mr. and Mrs. ford have gone on a motor trip east.
traveling In a suit of dark duvet delaine with hat to
match trimmed with ooque feathers and a sable collar. They will be at home in Detroit after th* middle of
November. ,
Thom peon-Teems a. [Special to The IndlanspoUa New*} TERRE HAUTE, Ind, October 6 — Miss Elvada Tessmand, daughter of Mr. and Mra C. H. Tessraan. and Colonel H. Thompson, of Colorado Spring*. Colo., were married today at th# Tetsman home by tbs Rev. Orlando South, of th* Fourth Avsnuc Methodist Episcopal church. Miss Lusyl Penns, daughter of Mr. and Mra Phil Penna. was maid of honor, and Gordon Van Nsss, of Baltimore, was best man. A wedding breakfast followed tbs ceremony, after which th* young couple left on a wedding trip, before going to Colorado to llva The bride is a graduate of Indiana State Normal, Cincinnati Musical College, and attended th# University of Mexico for a time. Mr. Thompson is an electrical engineer.
Smlth-M attic*. [Special to Th* Iwfisnspoiis N>w«J BRAZIL lnd„ October S.—Charles II. Smith, son of Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Smith, of Brasil, and Miss Marion Mattice, of Hpringfleld, Mass., were married Haturday at New York city by tho Rev, John O. Benson, formerly of Brasil. Mr. Smith, who was a lieutenant in the army during the world war, met his bride while she wa* in the east dolflg government clerical work. She Is a graduate of The Kims and Vasear College. Mr. gmlth attended Purdue University and is now a student In the Wharton School of Commerce of the University of Pennsylvania. ’ r ————— Mslott-Boyd. [ftpecis) to The Indianapolis News! COLUMBIA CITY, Ind., October 5.— Burton J. Maiott. a teacher at Indianapolis, and Miss Ruth Boyd, daughter of Mr. and Mr*. George E. Boyd, of this city, were married here Sunday by the Rev. Mr. Bair. They will live in Indianapolis.
JOIN OUR “OHIO” ClUB “OHIO*’ Electric Cleaners are always in great demand at Christmas time—the genuine merit of the “Ohio” and the wonderful amount of time it saves the housewife in keeping her home cleaty are the primary reasons for its popularity as a Christmas Gift The Purpose of This Club Is to Enable You to* Buy Your Christmas “Ohio” Now on Payments-at the Cash Price You Pay $5 Down and Receive Credit for $10
The balance may be paid in monthly payments. You save $5.00, cash or terms. If you want to pay cash on delivery you simply place your order now with the $5.00 deposit and^the balance will be payable on delivery—all deliveries will be made December 24th, or at any specified time.
A Good Photograph— speaks a language all Its own. Its charm is everlasting and its possession becomes priceless in
years to come.
Make the appointment with—
Hmts: P-12 s. ■»- 1-5 P- m. Thu Net Open Sundays. Sitting* by Appointment Only, ftp Floor Fletcher Tract Itldf.
=1]
J
Join NowOffer Expires November 1st
EARLE J. MARSH VILETTA T. DOSS Announce New Classes DANCING BEGINNING EACH WEEK. COMPLETE STEP TAUGHT EACH EVENING
Schedule nf CLASSES. Monday. Beginners’ OneStep. The La Veeda Fox-Trot. Thursday. Beginners' FoxTrot. Saturday. Th# Marsh Walts
LEARN— "The La Veeda.”
■That Cat Step.* The Fadeaway." • "The Chines* Trot.” •The Brush Step." The New York Promenade.”
The Marsh Walts."
Dancing Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday, 9 to 12
Du Valle’s Syncopated Jaxx Orchestra
Special 1 Learn the "One Step,” “Fox Trot” and
Course
‘Marsh Walts’ class lessons.
in three private and six-
MARSH DANSE STUDIOS Recognized Authorities on Modem Ballroom Dancing ILLINOIS AND NORTH STREETS Main 5306 or Main 5305 Auto. 221-21
TRY A WAMT A0 IN THE NEWS
HOTEL PURITAN
the comforts of home. Absolutely fireproof.
Rooms $1.00 to $2.50 CetMr Market and New Itntj SU. W«kl, R«U» on Applicntlra.
B*.«*»*M
ree Demonstration
WE HAVE RESERVED 100 “OHIOS” FOR THIS CLUB. GET YOUR NAME IN TO US AT ONCE-TIME LIMITED
Main
■Wire SAVING STATIOHT
3012 3645
Auto. 28-908
JE,UPE,KA
145
North Delaware Street
55-=
=5!!55’-i-'»L=!
Addressee Woman’s Rotary Club. Myron R. Green, chalrmaa of the bureau of industry of tbs Indianapolis Chamber of Commerce, ad-
WINTER TOURS Egypt—The Holy Land Greece and Europe
Mata 1ST*.
DAYS—SAILING—JANUARY 9S mNBKARY ON RBROTBST FORKTGH DKFARTMKNT.
Ant*. M-SSO.
UNION TRUST COMPANY
120 East Market Street
ipecial Values For Wednesday and Thursday $5 Sandwich Tray
effield silver
•.••••••••••a
$6 Rogers Bros.
6 Knives and 6 forks, fitted in box
$4 Casserole
Large size, heavy plated frame
$V.95
£0
43-45 N. Illinois
. ^Wm
One Dollar
Pstirl WskrlnAcrlskv mT cLICI W 6006 SO cly Sends This Grafonola to Your Home
“Hard-to-CJet*’ Records
at
WIdeaer’s.
Tone quality, beautiful cabinet work and the exclusive improvements are the reasons why those who know select this instrument as the best value that can be bought Our easy terms make it possible for you to have this instrument at once—and it will be paid for before you realize it
•-
Sends it home with the records yon select and buy. Pay the balance in small, convenient payments.
Place Your Order Early Wednesday.
EXCEEDINGLY DISTINGUISHED ABE THE
new fall suits
W
FASHIONED OF RICH CLOTHS, OFTEN ENRICHED BY FURS. INTERESTING SELECTIONS AT
X
cot.
Elegant wool fabrics combined with the art of the designer and the skill of the expert tailor. Their superiori* ty is evident in every detail—style, fabric and workmanship. Priced at $45 to $85. 0 OTHER SUITS OF DISTINCTIVE SMARTNESS FOR WOMEN AND MISSES WHICH INTERPRET BOUYANT YOUTH. CLEVER, EXCLUSIVE STYLES, IN NEWEST MATERIALS, WITH RICHEST FUR TRIMMINGS AND NOVEL GARNITURE. PRICED AT $95 UP TO $395
n—■
Gratinda Shops 44 N. PENN. ST. Indian* poiis Headquarters for Colombia Grafonola and-Records.
CUT OUT THIS COUPON AND MAIL TONIGHT Widener’s Grafonola Shops Kam%
Street .............
:
City ...«»««......a* State
SPECIAL FOR WEDNESDAY, A SALE OF
fine
coats
44 .V. Pnmsylvama St. Telephone Main IZSTT.
Without any obligation on my part, send me photographs and particulars of your special
Grafonola offer.
(CAPES AND STOLES) at reductions averaging
33Vz%
KOLINSKY WRAP, copy of imported mod el, $600 value, $385. EASTERN MINK COAT, large collar and cuffs, $1,800 value, $1,385. SIBERIAN SQUIRREL WRAP, $1400 value, sale price, $850. FRENCH NEAR SEAL COAT, large skunk collar, $1,100 value, $850. HUDSON SEAL COAT, skunk collar, cuffs and border, $1400 value, $850. HUDSON SEAL COAT, mink collar and cuffs, $1,250 value, $1,000. SCOTCH MOLE DOLMAN, large fox collar, $1400 value, $850. HUDSON SEAL DOLMAN, gold embroidery lining, $1,350 value, $985. SCOTCH MOLE AND SQUIRREL WRAP, $650 value, sale price, $458J0. — SELIG’S
.4
