Indianapolis Times, Volume 37, Number 63, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 July 1925 — Page 3

JULY 25, 1925

SUMMER WEDDINGS HELD IN EVENING

Will Be at Homes of Bride-Elect —Both Will “ Reside in Other Cities. Two charming mid-summer weddiuga were planned for Saturday evening to take place at the homes of the brides-elect. Both brides will make their homes in other cities.

SHE home of Mr. and Mrs. R. W. Hostetler, 1420 Edwards St., was,arranged Saturday with" pink and blue garden flowers and greenery for the wedding Saturday eve'tting of their daughter, Wilma Lucile, and Harvey H. Bush of Jacksonville, Fla. The Rev H. A. Lucken was to perform the ceremony. Mrs. J. E. Dortch of Oak Park, 111., a sister of the bride, was to play a program of bridal airs before the ceremony. Mrs. S. W. Stecher and Mrs. Harry Stone were to sing. The bride, who was to be given in marriage by her father, was to wear a gown of white georgette over bridal satin, and a veil of tulle, arranged at the head with orange blossoms. The bride was to carry a shower bouquet of white roses and orange blossoms. Her only attendant was .to be her sister, Roberta, who was to wear a frock of pink georgette over satin, and to carry pink roses. The ceremony was to be followed by a reception for seventy-five. Following a wedding trip through the East. Mr. and Mrs. Bush will be at hf> m e after Aug. 15 at 3528 Walnut tit., Jacksonville, Fla. The bride will travel in a blue ensemble suit, with hat to match. Among out-of-town guests were Mr. and Mrs. B. F. Wiest, Mr. and Mis. O. G. Albert, of Cicero, Ind.. Mr. and Mrs. C.'E. Hostetler, of Chicago: Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hostetler, and Miss Katherine Ryan of Kokomo, Ind, * * • mHE marriage of Miss Blanche Helen Arnold, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Arnold, 548 Eastern Ave., to Wayne R. Arvine, was to take place Saturday evening at 8 at the home of the bride's parents. The Rev. C. F. HeiningeV. was to perform the ceremony before an altar arranged between two windows and banked with palms and ferns. Tall white candles were to light the altar. Miss Dora Rigdon, pianist, and Miss Claire Jackson, violinist, both of Morristown, Ind., were to play preceding the ceremony. Miss Irene Hetrick of Marion, Ind., was to sing “I Love You Truly.” The bridal party was to come down the stairs, led by little Carl Unger of Marristown, Ind., ring bearer, dressed in a white suit and carrying the ring in a lily. He was to be driven by blue tulle ribbons held by the little flower maids, Roberta Keaton of Morristown; Betty Jean Rawls of Lafayette, Ind., and the twins, Lora Martha and Laura Mae Handy. The little girls were to be dressed alike in frocks of blue georgette over silver cloth, trimmed with silver ribbon and blue rose buds. PThey were to carry silver baskets filled with rose petals which they were to strew in the path of the bride and her father. The bride was to be preceded by

Parties, Meetings and Social Activities

[— ~1 RS. GEORGE MOHLER, 725 lIVI I sosart Ave., entertained P"* I Saturday afternoon at the Polly Primm Tearoom with a lunchtop and shower for Miss Hazel Seely, whose marriage to Dr. Leonard Morgan will take place Aug. 1. Table appointments in the pink, blue and yellow shades were used. Garden flowers surrounded the centerpiece, which was a flower doll concealing the shower gifts. Tapers in the bridal shades lighted the table. Other guests were Misses Bertha Oinn, Hanna Mclntyre, Irma Lentz, Elizabeth Arthur, Ruth Palmer, Margaret Gibbs, Nellie Klphart, and Mesdames Mary Cooley, Lora White, Eldred Slaughter, and Ray Ellis. • * * Mrs. Robert H. Peterson, 5348 College Ave., Friday evening with a handkerchief shower and bridge party In honor of Miss Margaret Tyler, whose marriage to Nathan C. McCune will take place

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her sister. Miss Jessie May Arnold, as naid of honor. Miss Arnold was to wear a frock of blue georgette over silver cloth, and wreath of silver leaves in her hair. Her flowers were to be Columbia roses. The bride was to wear a gown of silver Spanish lace over cream satin and tulle veil arranged at the head in a cap with orange blossoms. She was to carry a shower bouquet of white’roses and valley lilies. The ceremony was to be followed by a reception for 150 guests. Assisting in receiving and serving were to be Misses Erma Belle Smith, Margaret Bittner, Volna Cregg, Stella Irvine, Mary Keaton, Gladys Jackson, Maxine Parrish, Frieda Cotton, Mary Talbert, Dorothy Arnett. After a short wedding trip Mr. and Mrs. Irvine will be at home in Morristown, Ind.

i no" TV.ir i f'r'J .'i .7 it.lMn irua WIT- At Ite W >A- ■■ ' : U : Jljjjp ■■ ■"■d.lily. j|ipß i Law, 4500 Broadway; Cameron Third S'., at thr cottage. Photo.- ' "FMk * *" " ' ,T? W Moag, 4453 Central Ave., and Miss by Photo Craft Studio, Inc., Mu |'.t Jljchl .V- y Jane Griffith, 3620 Fall Creek Blvd. ridian at Sixteenth Sts. Murderesses ‘High Hat * Those of Lesser Crimes fL. ImL. '.UPmBI ‘ \V 1 • - 1 : fr•< I Mason Hack, former Cna- Hived in Elizabri h cottage and and! ‘apli:JAg ’*Wi *45 dMlMtraaaßMKrvlras grr-swoman Olid the first woman to pre- I w* aide over the house of Representatives. not eat in the main had.

Aug. 1 at the home of the bride's parents. - Mrs. Peterson served by candlelight. The table was arranged with pink and white snapdragons. Guests included Mesdames Raymond Marsh, William Curthey, Hobart Litteral, Robert E. Kelly, Jess A. Roush, Howard Christena, Harold Stucky, T. M. Tyler, Misses Mildred Tyler, Frances Coyle, Elsie Milner, Hilda Milner, Marie Gardner, Betty Lindsey and Louise Weir. * * * Mr. and Mrs. George Barcus, 1132 N. Arsenal Ave., announce the engagement of their daughter, Betty, to Roy W r illiam Hert, son of Mr. and Mrs. W r illiam H, Hert. The wed ding will take place Aug. 17. * * * Mr. and Emory R. Baxter, 3301 Broadway, left Saturday morning on a three weeks’ motor rtlp to New York Boston, Mass., and other Eastern points- * * * Mis3 Emma Deal, 5210 Lowell Ave., is visiting Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Baxter at their cottage at Culver, Ind. * * * Riley Hospital Cheer Guild will meet at Garfield Park at 11 a. m. Tuesday. Each member will bring lunch. Following a short business session, games and entertainment will be held. Mrs. A. J. Porter, president, is in charge. ** * / Mr. and Mrs. Walter J. Murray, 4103 Arthington Blvd., announce the engagement of their daughter, Alice J., to Paul H. Allison, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Allison, 222 N. Tacoma St. The wedding will take place Aug. 8 at the home of the bride’s parents. -* * * Members of the Phi Sigma Delta Sorority planned to entertain Sunday afternoon with a tea at the home of Miss Dorothy Haworth, 4160 Park Ave. The hostess was to be assisted by Miss Dorothy Duesenberg and Miss Georgia Young. Special guests were to be Misses Shirley Baumb, Elizabeth Abbott. Helen

Local Families at Lake Wawasee

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Keaton, Frances McCready and Ruth Recobs. * * * • Dr. and Mrs. A. W. Gayer and daughter, Audrey, cf Rochester, N. H., are"motoring to Indianapolis to visit Dr. Gayer’s mother, Mrs. Mary A. Gayer. 2702 Boulevard PI. * * * Mr. and Mrs. Elmer G. Bornkamp have returned from their wedding trip and are at home at 1934 N. New* Jersey St. Mrs. Bornkamp was Miss Dorothy Fulkerson before her wedding, which took place at the Roberts Park M. E. Church. The bride is a member of the Sigma Alpha lota musical sorority. Members of the sorority provided music for the ceremony. Mrs. Glenn O. Friermood was soloist. Mrs. Harry Hiatt Kennedy, organist; Mrs. Christine Wagner Roush, violinist; Mrs. Bernice AVagner Gaines, cellist, and Mrs. Ada Strong, pianist. * * * Miss Marie Doyle and Miss Ethel Dees, 116 AV. Twenty-Seventh St., have gone to Milwaukee, Wls. '* • * Mrs. John E. Minor, 1831 N. Rural St., has issued Invitations for the marriage of her daughter, Elizabeth, to J. Austin Nutt, which will take place Aug. 1 at 8 p. m. at the home of the bride, with the Rev. Hotter Dale officiating. * * * Kenneth Shutts of Los Angeles, Cal., has been visiting his. aunt, Mrs. Edwin Quinn, 5143 Carrollton Ave., and ,T. M. Seaman, 4454 N. Delaware St. * • * Monday Euchre Club will entertain with cards Monday at 2:30 p. m. at Eagle hall, 43 AA r . A r ermont St. * • * Euchre bunko and lotto party wa to be given Sunday afternoon at tbj Mars Hill hall for the benefit of St. Anne’s Church. Members of the George H. Chapman W. R. C. No 10 will meet Tuesday at 2 p. m. at the G. A. R. headquarters, 512 N. Illinois St. • * * Ladies of Sr. Catherine's Parish were to entertain with cards Sunday evening In the hall, Shelby and Tabor Sts. *• • > Temple Review No. 15 W. B. A. will change the meeting day from Monday to Thursday.

WHEN ycu want to learn the true meaning of service, become a customer of this store. THE WHY STORE 29 E OHIO ST.

THE LYDIA YAPOLIS TIMES

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mx DI A X APOLIS families have made a great exodus from the hot and sultry city to the cooler regions of lake, sea and mountain. A number of families are spending the summer at Lake Wawasee, among them the group of young people above, who are (left to right) Carl Tuttle, 1815 N. Illinois St.; Miss Katherine Warrender and Marcus Warrender, 4554 Broadway; Miss Helen Law, 4560 Broadway; Cameron Moag, 4453 Central Ave., and Miss Jane Griffith, 3620 Fall Creek Blvd.

Murderesses ‘High Hat' Those of Lesser Crimes

AA’inaifrfd Mason Hunk, former Congresswoman and tho first woman to preside over the house of Representatives, got herself sentenced la prison. Guiltless of any crime, she sought answers to the question— Are our prisons humane? Can a girl, crushed by her fellow men, regain her place in society? This is the eleventh story, written for The Times. By Winnifred Mason Huck Former Representative of Congress From Illinois D“1 URING my stay at Marysville one sad occurrence showed me jiow real a sympathy even prisoners can show for a friend in trouble. The mother of Superintendent Mittendorf died. She was one of the best loved women in the town. The funeral was held In the prison chapel and all of us prisoners attended it. Never before at a funeral have I been so Impressed with the genuine grief of those present. There were 500 prisoners in the chapel. Most of them were weeping, not from hysteria, but from a real sense of loss. The others sat silent and somber. Mabel Champion, who has since escaped from prison, sat dry-eyed, staring out the window. I did not then know who she was, for she

LETTER FROM LESLIE PRESCOTT TO THE LITTLE MARQUISE!—CONTINUED. "And I found, Leslie,” continued Mr. Sartoris, “that I was quite as gullible as she seemed Innocent. Her very artlessness staved off any doubt that I would have had of a more obviously clever woman. "Presently she dried her tears, and mounting her horse rode away, after promising to meet me the next t'ay at the same place. "Determined to keep my identity secret* I went to my attorneys the next morning and asked them to arrange with some other attorneys for a client who must be nameless to hold in trust the sum of $25,000 for Miss Madelaine Menjies, to be paid to her In full or In such sums as she might desire. • “I have not time, Leslie, to go Into this in detial. Suffice It to say that before the book store was purchased and went through, I was head over heels in love with Madelaine, whom I fatuously believed did not have the slightest idea of whom the man was who was asking her to be his wife. "She sweetly agreed, after a little hesitation, to a hasty wedding, then I disclosed to her my real name. (I had been masquerading under the name of Robert Brown.) Two weeks from the time I met her in the woodland roadway, we were on our way to the Mediterranean in my yachet. "For a few weeks all went well, then In spite of anything I could do, Madelaine began to droop. She said she was getting tired of the sameness of the water. I hastily steamed into port at Marseilles, and the I morning after we disemba "krd I iwakened to find that rhe he 1 l- 't | me, leaving a note saying it was al! Ii plan to get enough money out of me to keep herself and her lover in comfort for their Uvea.

In the center group are the little Misses Betty Lou and Mary Alice Schneider,- daughters of Mr. and Mrs. Karl AV. Schneider of Elkhart, Ind. At the left is Miss Mary Jane Adams, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Roy Elder Adams, 8255 Washington Blvd. at the Adams summer home. At the right are .Toan, Todd and Mrs. I. C. De Haven. 48 W. ThirtyThird St., at the cottage. Photos by Photo-Craft Studio, Inc., Mo ridian at Sixteenth Sts.

lived in Elizabeth cottage and did not eat in the main hall. But her face fascinated me. Her whole mien was baffling. Dorothy, who sat beside me in the dining room, told me tvho she was. Dorothy had been Mabel’s roommate at the time when Mabel’s husband was hung In California. “I tell you, Elizabeth,” said Dorothy to me one day, "It was the most terrible situation you can imagine. For a week we waited day and night for a telegram saying the Governor would stay the sentence. "On the morning he was to be hung, Mabel sat in her room as in a trance, waiting for the wire. But we waited in vain. "At 10 o'clock I felt sure the sentence had been carried out, but Mabel would not give up hope until 4 o'clock in the afternoon, when word came that he was dead.” "I hope to God I never have to witness such agony again.” Dorothy herself was well educated. Immaculately clean, to all appearances, a lady by birth and breeding. Rumor had it that Dorothy was in Marysville because she had helped herseif prizes in a department store. This part of her story

" ’Don’t think toojiard of me, Mel,’ she wrote. ‘I love Don so much that I can not live without him. and I must have money to live with him, as he makes me very unhappy If I do not have enough to supply his luxurious tastes. “ 'That morning when you found me crying he had told me that I must In some way get enough money out of you to keep us in affluence. I knew all the time who you were. I have been a very wicked woman, Mel, but I hope I have not ruined your life.’ ” AA'asn’t that a terrible thing, little Marquise, for any wotnan to do? Do you blame him for never believing In one of us again? "Since that time, Leslie,” said Melville Sartoris, “I have never allowed a woman to come Into my life except as an amusement, for which I have always paid them. I have found that I could buy them, and having bought them, I have considered them mine to keep or throw away. "Leslie—my Lady of the Snows—almost you have persuaded me that there are good women in the world.” I rose at this and Involuntarily held out both my hands, saying: “The world is full of good women. Mr. Sartoris." The man clasped my hands warmly and drew me slightly toward him. • “I know at least there Is one good woman in the world, and my heart is full of the joy that I have had the privilege of knowing." “Leslie, do you not think It Is time we were going home?” I looked up to see Jack and Syd beside me. Copyright. 1925, XEA Service. Inc.) TOMORROW—Letter from Leslie Prescott to the Little Marquise.

CARD PIRTY TO BE GIVEN Reservations Made for Sorority Affair. $ Table reservations for the card party to be given Monday evening by the active chapter of Zeta Tau Alpha Sorority at Butler University at the home of Miss Barbara Fischer, 426 N. Arsenal Ave., have been made by Misses Helen Pritchard. Eleanor King. Edna Shulz, Dorothea Wolf. Jane Rnutzong. Grace Pritchard, Marie Tacoma, Edna Miller, Margaret Newton. Martha Armstrong, Susie Harmon, Pauline Ingalls, Betty Ann Miller, Naomi Adams, Dorothy Hill, Louise Duncan. Helen Leibking, Margaret Hohl. Bernice Billman, Helen Gorman, Jean Ntfnamaker, Louise Knarzer, Julia Griffln, Mrs. Ralph Duncan and Mrs. Leonard Swartz. Miss Fischer Is general chairman, assisted by Misses Newton and Routzong. LAWRENCE WILL SPEAK "The Making of a Newspaper.” will be the topic of Ben F. Lawrence, general manager of the Indianapolis Star, at Rotary Club luncheon Tuesday at the Claypool.

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had no interest for me. but seme of her ideas certainly did. "That woman," she stud to me one day, pointing to a ratty, mangy creature, "ugh! I cannot bear to be near her. r “I tell you, Elizabeth, these women who steal or murder in a moment of rage are miles above the filthy women who sell their bodies. “They pass on disease and sickness to the innocent. They wreck our homes, they maim and blind outbabies. “If I were an artist, I would paint the woman of the streets holding a red hot poker, in the act of searing out the eyes of little children. Shunned Woman “And,” turning to the woman she had pointed at, “I want that dirty woman to know that I do not want her near me—anywhere near me,” and she made an eloquent gesture of disgust. Dorothy turned to me. "Don't you feel that way about it?” she asked. "You have children, haven’t you?” “Yes,” I replied, "I have children,” and my thoughts dwelt upon the happy ilttle brood I had left In Chicago so many weeks before. I had never before realized how fortunate are the children who have another background than this of criminal parents, degradation, handicap. Store Day Monday afternoon was store day. At 4 o’clock we were allowed to go to Miss Green’s office, a room so small that we overflowed in a long line down the hall. Here we could buy crochet thread and needles, powder, soap and hair nets valued up to the amount of money we had brought Into prison or any gifts that had been sent us. This jail life was revealing some surprising things to me. I saw the murderess flaunt the size of her crime before her sisters who had oqly robbed a bank or held up a train. I saw long-term prisoners "high hat,"short term prisoners. Shame! I heard one girl say that her offense was so small she was going to be ashamed to meet the hbard. She seemed to feel that the fight she was having with her sister before the police so rudely interrupted, hardly warranted her accommodations at Marysville, though she confided to me that it was a great fight and that she would have killed her sister but for the police. But the general tendency among the women was to belittle or try to justify their misconduct. In almost evfry case I looked up after leaving prison, I found that the prisoner had told me only part of her wrongdoing ns though it were the whole, ahd had belittled that part considerably. A few actually told me that there was no reason at all for them to be in Jail. This seems to me a healthy sign, . that the prisoner is not proud of iVhat she has done. They wish to rn\° th-ir crime seem less, even in telling it to me. another prisoner. I (Copyright, 1925, NBA Service, Inc.) NEXT: Hazel Grabs ray scissor!.

jWTartha Lee’s Cos / u m n

Would Break Promise Dfiir Min* T*e: I am a Ctrl Ift, r* ar old I im tfnin> with n boy T hnve known four months I ltkft him h h Irjnpd. but nft bin 9 d'rprr feeling for mr. n* ••k** rut- to marry Titm I told hltu I would. MH unco I thought It over I we what a entry thing I did. I HUe him only • * friend I also am too .voting to even think of mar rlagt How <an I tweak my promise without hurling him? 1 don t think It would be rlk-tit for me to go on going with him giving him any hope* I could never learn to love him well enough to marry him. Well. Irene, I'm certainly glad you see the follshness of such a promise at your ugc. You both have lots of time for seriousness biter on. Gently persuade the young man to your own view of the iifTair. Tell him that you are both too young, and that Ideas do change radically.' that he might not care for you a few years from now, to break any mutual promises and wait until he Is out of college or in his twenties, then If he still feels the same he can propose again. Price of 'Chickie' Penr Mln Lee: What Is the prior of ■‘Chickie'' In bock formN I- th- ‘-emrl to • combined in "e r-m >vmu or do yeni have to buy^* The first book of Ch.cklc Is i-clng sold at bookstands at seventy-five cents. The sequel has not been published in book form.

!Up From The-Depths! The Church*s Challenge to the , Dominance of Commercialism

Broadway temple, 24 torie. in height* to be erected on the highest point in New York City, and to be surmounted by a thirty-four foot Cross visible night and day to no less than 8,000,000 people Is the challenge which Dr. Christian F. Relsner offers to the modern growth of commercialism which has submerged and hidden out of sight, the once-towering spirrs of the city’s churches. BROADWAY TEMPLE is "big business’* practically applied to religion. It will be self-supporting and money-making. It willcover26,ooofeet of foundation space on land already purchased. It will cost $4,000,000. But it will more than pay for itself. The religious aspect of the enterPrise will be cared for by Dr.C.hrlstiah . Reianer, and the Methodist Episcopal Church. The Temple auditorium will seat 2,200 people; it will have as fine an organ as there is in America and this will be supplemented at times by a great orchestra for special choral services. Always, sturdy, militant, forward-look-ing Cnristianity will be preached here, and under the care of the church there will be nurseries where tired working mothers may leave their children in safety; playgrounds, recreation rooms, lecture halls, a gymnasium, awimmlng pool and other devices designed to make BROADWAY TEMPLE in very truth a real Community Center. . The business aspect of this great pro-

ject will be in the hands of some of th<s most notable and trustworthy business men of America. Backing the building project and investing their money In it as a safe and conservative investment are such men as: #* Ellin L. PhlUlpa, Prender! Ctrl H. Fowler, VicePreildenc Samuel Meßoharta, Treoawrer Fra. Long hland Lighting Cos. Fowler 6f Holloway Chatham Phoanl* Natl. Bk. fPTrvat Cos. W. R. Comfort Arthur J. Baldwin, Vice Preiident Wataon S. Moor*. Vloa-Piwldenf Prei. Retd Ice Cream Cos. V.-P. KlcQrau/ Hill Pub. Cos. Form. V. P.—U. 3, QrabiCerp. Frederick Krtft, Secretary, Kraft Che, tt Cos. W. P. Tanner, ST. P. Tanner-Qrou Cos. Once More the'Cross Shall Shine on the Skyline of New York BROADWAY TEMPLE will cost $4,000,000. A great Insurance Company has loaned $2,000,000 of this amount. The site has already been acquired on Broadway, the block fronting between 173rd and 174th Streets. The center of a population of 400,000 people. People of many creeds and of no particular creea have already subscribed for $1,250,000, worth of the Second Mortgage Oold Bonds, bearing five per cent interest. The remaining $750,000 worth of Bonds is offered to the public. A Qood Investment for the Public Qood BUSINESS PROOF THAT THESE BONDS WILL PAT Considered merely as an investment—putting aside for a moment the weat religious inspiration and helpfulness of the BROADWAY TEMPLE— these Second Mortgage Oold Bonds are Inviting as a business proposition. Ewing, Bacon & Henry, real estate experts, in a letter to Donn Barber, the architect, show exactly where the income will be steady and sure: An Apartment Hotel In the Tower over the Church containing 644 room*, public office*. cafeteria, dining room and everything nereaaary for a fbatclaaa aparrmanl hotel, the whole overlooking both the Hudaon Rivet and Long (aland Sound, Incoma 14C2J00 Apartment* for Housekeeping In tlye two wine*, which will accommodate SCO pro* , pie right In a residence district whtre auch rooma are non deniable . , Income ' 164,290 Store* on the Broadway frontage will be very deilrable and therefore bring In a * •olid income ft.SCO Total annual Incoma , . * , , * ~• * TbiMo Total expenaea and Intereat and taxea .. . , , o o.m •a a #•!•• 470.5(\1 Leaving a net aurplua for the bond holder* of , ~,,,, •**•*'• TU5,59i) You should know the complete story of this {treat religious enterftrisc. It will he sent you iVithout obligation. CMP AND SEND THIS COUPON NOW _____ Gen. Samvei. MrßnsrsT*. Tuotutor, I Broadway Temple Building Corporation, 140 Broadway. New \ ork, 19# Ys | 1 hereby auhacribe ro $ in BROADWAY TEMPI F. SECOND MORT- ' | GAGE GOLD BONDS, IncAne hearing at the rate of i% per irat. 1 agree to make payment, •• follow,: 10% of total amount when my auhacrlptlon la accepted, and 10% every ai*y daya thereafter until paid In full, .- - r< ? YOU WANT DETAILS ONLY FILL OUT COUPON BELOW •• - J Before 1 aend In mv auhacrlptlon pleaae tend complete derails showing how I may malt* | thla Investment with safety of prlnclr*! and Intereat at 5%. j Addreaa „ _ *_ ’ Ii City State su7 A BON~D~ HELP - OOD FoMe”TO "BtOADWAY

MISS CARR AND ARTHUR J.MENG WED AT CHURCH Ceremony Followed by Reception—To Live in Florida. The marriage of Mlaa Kathryn Carr, daughter of Mr. and Mr*. H. F. Hydron. ,240 Hendricks PI., to Arthur John Meng. was solemnised Saturday afternoon at 8 In a lovely ceremony at the Westminster Pres byterlan Church. The Rev. H. T. Graham, read the service nefor* an altar of palms and ferns, lighted by cuthedrnl candles. Preceding thes-eremnny. Mrs. TTfl Ham Straw sang "Oh Promise Me.” and "I !/>vo You Truly,” aocompanted by Miss Ada Hit*, organist, who played the wedding march from "Iyohrngrin" for the entrance of the bridal party. (liven in Marriage The bride, who Was given In marriage by her father, was charming in a gown of white crepe trimmed with Venetian laoe and velvet. She wore a picture hat of white georgette and carried a shower bouquet of white roses and orchids. Oiio Attendant Her only attendant waa Miss Alyne Carr, her sister, who wore a frock of pole green chiffon, and carried an arm bouquet of Butterfly roses. A. S. Meng was best man. and ushers were Clayton and Harry Moody, of Danville, 111, The ceremony was followed by a reception In the church parlors for the families of the cmjpto and members of the hiddal party. Mr. and Mrs. Meng have gone on a short wedding trip and will be at home after Aug. 1 in Hollywood, Fla. Y. W. C. A. Notes There will be a farewell party for Mra. Hazel Margaret Toung and Mrs. Fred RoAfjcap, members of the Y. W, C. A. staff, at the home of Mrs. Fred Hoke. 3445 Washington Blvd., Wednesday evening. Mrs. Young Is going Into a different branch of association service work. Mrs. Rondrap and her husband are leaving for an European trip the first of August. Miss Verna Nash will return from her vacation in Decatur, 111., the first of next week. Miss Frances Toy and Miss Pram cea Hancock will return from*, their vacations by Aug, 1, Mrs. Lennle T. Ooeng, personal service secretary; Mrs. Ethel Shepherd. house secretary. Mrs. Esther Miara, cafeteria director: Mrs. Dora Maaten, director st the Blue Triangle residence, will take their vacations during August.

BROADWAY TFMPLI N A Tw4nU*th Cf rmmr Csthsdrtl, Oiasah. Hotel, Store*. A pertinent Hon**, Self-Suppottlni, Comm unity-Serving

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