Indianapolis Times, Volume 37, Number 109, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 September 1925 — Page 8
8
ISICKELS-MITCHELL WEDDING AT HOME I V ; House Decorated With Palms and Candles I —Reception Held After Ceremony—Couple Leaves on Trip. f The marriage of Miss Jane Winifred Sickels, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frederick S. SickeLs, 506 E. Walnut St., to Phlip jE. Mitchell of Mansfield, Ohio, took place at 3p. m. Sati; 'ay I at the home of the bride’s aunt, Miss Catherine Sickels. 1 N. Talbott St.
The Rev. F. W. Backemeyer performed the ceremony, the house being decorated with palms and cathedral candles. Miss' Alberta McCain Gaunt played harp selection before the ceremony. Mrs. R. S. Kinnard, soloist, sang “I Love The,” and “Mavis,” accompanied by Miss Ethel Mae Moore. The bride wore a gown of white chiffon beaded in rhinestones. She wore a tulle veil with ar cornet headband of lace. She carried a shower bouquet of white roses and lilies-of the-valley. Attendants were Mrs. Francis C. Smith and Mrs. Robert P. Lewis. Mrs. Smith wore a rose colored georgette gown with a circular skirt and carried a bouquet of. Columbia roses. Mrs. Lewis wore an orchid georgette gown and '•arried Aaron Ward roses. Don A. I leld was best man. Immediately after the ceremony a
SOCIAL ACTIVITIES
mHE marriage of Miss Lucy Evans, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William C. Evans, 4715 E. Michigan St., to OUn R. Hardy, son of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth E. Hardy, 2516 Brookside Ave., took place Saturday morning at 8:45 in a simple ceremony at the home of the officiating minister, the Rev. Paul Judson Morris, 102 N, DeQuincy St. Only the immediate families and friends were present. The bride wore a tan traveling frock and hat. Immediately following the ceremony Mr. and Mrs. Hardy left on a motor trip to Niagara Falls and New York. They will be at home after Sept. 15 at 4715 E. Michigan St. * * * Edwin H. Forry, 234 N. Alabama St., has arrrived In New York aboard the Homeric from a trip to Europe. • * # Miss Susan Gray Shedd, 3939 N. Delaware St., has returned from Camp Trail’s End, Lexington, Ky., where she spent the summer. * * * Miss Catherine Cavins, whose marriage to Russell I. Richardson of Detroit, Mich., will take place Sept. 16, was honor guest at a bridge and shower given bf Miss Catherine Lennox and Miss Gwendolyn Dorey on Friday evening at the home of Miss Lennox, 2413 N. Delaware St. The rooms were decorated in lavender. Guests included: Mesdames Winfield D. Crooker of Nashville, Tenn., and Alexander Cavins; Misses Katherine Underwood, Mildred Stilz. Dorothea Varntz, Lebanon; Mildred Stockdale, Gertrude Schmidt, Caroline Godley, Mary Black, Irma Ulrich, Justine Halliday, Pauline Ballweg, Dorothy Black, Mildred Johns, Ruth Clark, Charlotte Gilman, Emily Brossman, Dorothy Day, Louise Strickland, Bettty Mathews v Barbara Brown, Helen Payne. * * • Miss Grace Hutchings, IE 80 Broadway, will return Tuesday from Boulder, Colo., where she has been studying for six weeks in the class of E. Robert Schmitz, pianist oij Paris and New York. • • • Dr. and Mrs. John F. McCool, and nephew, Thomas J. Blackwell, Jr., 1410 E. Washingtm St., have returned from a cruise of the Great Lakes and a month’s sojourn on the Atlantic coast. • • • Mrs. James C. Jay of Portland, Ind., is spending the week with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Rockwood, 2339 Central Ave. She attended the weddirc- of Miss Mary Louise Gray, wnich took place Wednesday, and she was to attend tha wedding of Miss Etta Hopper, which was to take place Saturday evening. WEDDING DATE IS ANNOUNCED Miss Arlino Webster, <.augher of Mr. and Mrs. Dana Webster, 131 Bosart Ave., announced the date of her marriage to Stan! Green at a tea Saturday, afternoon. The wedding vill take place Oct. 17. The house was arranged with garden flowers, and In the dining room the table was decorated In Miss Webster’s bridal colors of pink and orchid. The favors were rosebuds. Attached to the p+emg were announcement cards which bore the date of the wedding. Assisting Miss Webster were her mother and Mrs. Thomas Shiner, Miss Alice Brady and Miss Lucy Ward. CITIZEN SCHOOL SCHEDULE GIVEN Preliminary schedule for citizenship schools to be conducted this fall throughout the State by the Indiana League of Women Voters, was announced Saturday from State headquarters at the by Miss Helen Rogers Hind, executive secretary. Dlkhart citizenship school will be held Oct. 6, with sessions through- , out the week. Classes are open to i the general public, men and worn- ; en. Mrs. L. S. Flckenscher, president of the South Bend, Ind., league : announces Nov. 18, as tentative date for the citizenship school. Lafayette, Ind., league, In cooperation with the Purdue University; ; faculty Is planning Its fourth annual citizenship school for the middle of November. No plans have /been announced tat the citizenship Wkhool of the Indianapolis ( League.
reception was held. Mrs Herbert Fieber and Mrs. Allan Hendricks assisted Miss Catherine Sickels and Mrs. Sickels. Mr. and Mrs. Mitchell left for a wedding trip and will bent home after Sept. 20, at 1142 N. Pennsylvania St. Mrs. Mitchell attended Indiana University where she was a member of Alpha Omicron Phi Sorority and Mr. Mitchell attended Purdue University where ho was a number of Phi Delta Theta fraternity. The out-of-tow r n guests included, Mr. and Mrs. Frank G. Mitchell. Mansfield, Ohio; Mrs. Frank McCoy, Lexington, Ohio; Mrs. H trold Garthemer, Ft. Wayne. Ind.: Mrs. James A. McCullough, Connersville, Ind.; Mr. and Mrs. Gunn llaydon, Rushvllle, Ind.; Mr. and Mrs. Carl Beher, Rushvllle Ind.
A wedding took place Friday evening at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Guy L. Sparks, 1731 N. Pennsyl vania St., when their daughter. Miss Clare, became the bride of Robert Carson Walker. Garden flowers in the shades of pink, blue and white w r ere used in the decoration throughout the house. The Rev. Elmer Ritter performed the ceremony. Before the service Mis Victoria Montani played a progra. of harp music. The bride wore a white gown of chiffon beaded in crystals and carried a shower bouquet of roses and lilies of the yallley. Miss Eileen O’Connor, bridesmaid, wore a gown of pink chiffon fashioned with a tight bodice and embroidered In rhinestones. The ribbon bearers were Miss Imogene Poston, Miss Mildred Saffle, Miss Dorothy Saffle and Miss Miriam Shanley. Robert I. Hall of Evansville was best man. Mr. and Mrs. Walker have gone on a wedding trip and will be at home after Oct. 1. * * • William A. Langdon, 2441 N. Meridian St. left Saturday for Winter Haven, Fla., where he will spend the winter. * • * Miss Mildred Stilz, 450 N. Audubon Rd., entertukned with a bridge and shower Saturday afternoon in honor of Miss Catherine Cavins, w'hose marriage to Russ"! I. Richardson of Detroit, Mich., will take place Sept. 16. \ • * * Miss Alice Zietlow and Fred Zietlow, 548 Eastern Ave., will leave next week for college, Miss Alice to enter St. Marys-of-the-Woods and Fred, Notre Dame University. • * • Phi Sigma Delta Sorority has returned from Lake Wawasee. They were entertained wuth a theater party at the English Opera House Saturday afternoon in honor of Miss Catherine Carr and Miffs Catherine Brandt, who will leave Friday for Indiana University, and Miss Catherine Caver, who is visiting from Chicago.
Times Pattern Service
/ Jf v\A I l V fn\ 2519 J
PATTERN ORDER BLANK PatterA Department, Indlanapoll3 Times, Indianapolis, Ind. Enclosed find 15 cents for which please send pattern No. 2519. Size —- Name Address
THREE BRIDES AND ATTENDANT IN FALL WEDDINGS
‘low, left to right: ? ranees Seery. and Mrs. Maurice F. McGratl\ . ' jsjjjlf tOne of the rninent wed- Maurice F. McGrath of Bedford, JB|gH * KbP ji* f Miss Georgia Kathryn Osborn, fast at the Indiaanpolls Athletic | >ok place at the h unc of the on\ wedding trip to New York l| J M ist Saturday afternoon. The 142S W Thirteenth ' St., Bedford. Jl wfjPp^||h# rldegroom's father, Thu Rev. J. Ind. Mrs. McGrath was attended wKffll mbrose DunUel, officiated. Mr. bv her sister. Mss Frances Seery. jl/Jfllli '' A' ' iaP fQ§^gPSH|| nd Mrs. Dunk'd have gone on a The marriage of Miss Hattie * SHs 9h|gHKhßX Mrs. Dunkel was graduated from event of last Saturday evening. % j ational Park Seminary, and Bur The ceremony took place at the r university. She U a member Tabernacle Presbyterian Church. a \ | •unkel was graduated from In- on a wedding trip and will be at .„• ~y >A “ffijlWllffflM iana University and took his home after Sept. 16, in Indiantasters degree at Harvard. He apolis. AB' Iso attended the University of—>ok place Wednesday morning at ie SS. Peter and Paul Cathedral OTT ~P A "\.T DTJT T T T * * 'hen Miss Kathryn Seery 2928 V>l Fl JLVIO 1 I I N V>ll U l ollege Ave., became the bride of I. ’ I iMii• ii*f 1 1w - li-i-.a .. : ;';va..w .. v .. A/iw
Above, left to right: Mrs. Wilbur Dwight Dunkel (Photo by Charles F. Bretzman), and Mrs. Gerald \V. Watson (Photo by A. J. Fritsch). Below, left to dglit: Miss Frances Seery, and Mrs. Maurice F. (Photos by Plioto-Craft Studio).
One of the weddings of the ea.iy fall was that of Miss Georgia Kathryn Osborn, and Wilbur Dwight Dunkel, which £ook place at the of the bride’s parents. Dr. and Mrs. W. M. Osborn, 4411 N. Meridian St., last Saturday afternoon. The bridegroom's father, the Rev. J. Ambrose Dunkel, officiated. Mr. and Mrs. Dunkel have gone on a motor trip. They will be at home after Sept. 15, at 86 Union St„ Rochester, N. Y. Mrs. Dunkel was graduated from National Park Seminary, and Butler university. She is a member of the PI Beta Phi Sorority. Mr. Dunkel was graduated from Indiana University and took his masters degree at Harvard. He also attended the University of Chicago, and is a member of the Beta Theta Pi fraternity. A lovely wedding of the week took place Wednesday morning at the SS. Peter and Paul Cathedral when Miss Kathryn Seery, 2928 College Ave., became the bride of
For sports wear, you will like this lltle frock made from pattern No. 2519, fashioned of Madonna blue flannel. It boasts the new back fulness in the lower part of the skirt. Note the 6mall sketches and how very easy It Is to make this style. For fall wear, navy blue twill would be stunning with satin crepe for afternoon parties. Cuts in sizes 16 years, 36 to 44 inches bust measure. The 36-inch size requires 3 yards of 36-inch material. Complete instructions with pattern. Our patterns are made by the leading Fashion Designers of # New York City, and are guaranteed to fit perfectly. Every day The Times will print on this page pictures showing the latest in up-to-the-minute fashions. This Is a practical service for readers who wish to make their own clothes. You may obtain this pattern by filling out the coupon below, enclosing 15 cents and mall It to the pattern department of The Times. Be sure to write plainly and to include pattern number end size.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
WEDDING TO BE AT CHRISTIAN CHURCH Miss Etta Hopper Will Become Bride of The Rev. Urban L. Ogden—Will Take Motor Trip East. The wedding of Miss Etta Hopper, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. M. J. Hopper, 1722 Ruckle St., to the Rev. Urban L. Ogden, was to take place at 8:30 p. m. Saturday, at the Third Christian Church. The Rev. R. D. Hopper, a brother of the bride, was to perform- the ceremony before an altar banked with palms and ferns.
The wedding was to be a double ring ceremony. Preceding the service, a program of bridal airs was to be given on the organ by Miss Grace Black, and Merritt Howard was to sing. The bride was to be given in marriage by her father. The bride was to wear a gown of white satin crepe, with a skirt of white crepe chiffon petals. The waist was to be embroidered in In pearls. Her veil was to be cap fashion with a lace frill at the front, edged with pearls, and caught with orange blossoms at the sidesShe was to carry a shower bouquet of bride's roses and lllies-of-the-val-ley. The bride was to be attended by Mrs. A. Franklin Fulton of Cincinnati, the matron of honor, and her sister, Miss Iris Hqpper, the maid of honor. Mrs. Fulton was to wear a coral charmeuse gown trimmed In georgette. She was to carry pale pink roses. Miss Hopper was to wear a blue charmeuse gown with a skirt of blue and coral petals. She was also to carry pale pink roses. The bridesmaids were to be Miss Marjorie Hoppefl, Bloomington, Ind-; Miss Luclle Jones, Nashville, Ind., and Miss Ruth McCalister, of Logansport, Ind. Miss Hopper was to wear a coral charmouse frock with coral petals, and Miss Jones and Miss McCallister were to wear blue charmeuse frocks wrlth blue petals. They were to carry pink roses. _ little Martha Jane Bond; niece of the bride, and Daniel Ogden, brother of the groom, were the rlngbearers. Frank Hopper, brother of the bride, was to be best man and the ushers were to be Glen Bond, Glen Seitz, Akron, Ohio, and Myron and Ira Hopper, brothers of the bride. Followed by Reception The ceremony was to be followed by a reception at the home of the bride’s parents. Mrs. Hopper was to be assisted by Mrs. Glen Bond and Mrs. Frank Newland. The Rev. and Mrs. Ogden were to leave on a motor trip east and will be at home after Sept. 14, at 21 8. Butler Ave. The Rev. Ogden is pastor oC the Fairfax Christian Church. He attended Butler University. The out-of-town guests Included,
Mrs. Will Marshall, Grenora, S. D.; Mr. and Mrs. A. O. Tsy?gart, Washington, Ind.,; Mrs. D. W. Harmon, Mr and Mrs. Fred Seward, and daughters, Doris and Janet, Asrs. Kate Morse. Mrs. Eva Hopper, Mrs. Forest Whaley, Miss Gladys Lucas, all of Bloomington, Jnd.; Miss Edna Thum, Crawfordsville, Ind.; Mrs. Cora Ogden and son Dan of Anderson; Mrs. Martha G. Merrill, Connersville, Ind.; Milton Ogden, Anderson, Ind.; Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Gordon, Anderson, Ind.; Mrs. Ella Ogden, Anderson, Ind.; Mr. and Mrs. Walter Kennezy, Martinsville, Ind.; Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Jones, and sons, James and William of Nashville, Ind., and Mr. and Mrs. John Bond, Nashville, Ind. CLUBS AND MEETINGS The 51st Regiment Indiana Volunteers will hold a reunion at 10 a. m- at the home of Mrs. James M. South, 328 Bright St. • • • The Monday Euchre Club will entertain In the P. H. C. hall, East and Michigan Sts., Monday afterneon. The meeting place has been changed from the Eagles hall. Charles C. Chapman of Acton, Ind., Is spending two weeks In Miami, Fla. • • • The board of directors of the SoFra Club, Inc., elected officers Friday evening at the home of Miss Mildred McGlinchey, 1643- Lexington Ave. They were Tray Gatti, president; Ralph Maddux, treasurer; Miss Mildred McGlinchey, secretary, and Miss A esn Betz, society editor. • * • Members of the George H. Chapman W. R. C. No. 10, will meet Tuesday at 2 p. m. at Ft. Friendly, G. A. R. headquarters, 612 N. Illinois St. • • • The Tuesday Afternoon Club will play cards Tuesday afternoon at 2:30 at the P. H. C. Hall, East and Michigan Sts. Miss Margaret Cunningham is in charge of the arrangements. • • • Swastika Club will meet Thursday evening with Mrt% Minnie Taylor, 8129 Moore Ave.
THE TANGLE
EDITORIAL IN THE PITTSPURGH SUN. The letter printed In the news columns of the Sun yesterday was a most illuminating sidelight on the solil of a woman. It also shows that the physical side of a human being is not to be ignored. Until the woman who calls herself Mabel suffers the pangs of hunger, she strides through life in her ruthless way. By her own confession she encouraged a man to make love to her hoping that in some way she could get rid of the husband she had found out to be a crook. She did manage to effectually get rid of this husband, for in a sudden fit of anger he shot and killed her lover and was sent to prison for li<e. In a part of the letter which was not published she tells how she inveigled another man—hardly more than a boy—to fall In love with her, and one of the reasons why she came back was to be revenged on the woman who foiled her. She wanted to make the whole world suffer for her own sins, and she succeeded in doing it for a long while, but at last fate overtook her. If her conscience did not cry out against her, her stomach did—Alone and Hungry—that is the head that might be written over most of those who prey upon society, -when they become old. The man or woman who seeks to wrest ■wealth from those who have honestly earned it will surely come to a time and place where the friends they have betrayed will have forsaken them, and they will stare the last, great adventure In the face with great fear and trembling. It Is a rather peculiar state of affairs that Mrs. John Alden Prescott's pearls are woven In with-this sordid tragedy. It makes one think that the old tradition of bad luck
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following In the wake of pearls Is a true one. The jewels have contacted with the highest and the lowest. They have caused the death of one young girl In the heyday of her beauty, and they have given a woman evidently old and submerged in sin a taste of what a lingering death of starvation may mean. About the jewels belonging to Mrs. Prescott there has hung romance, jealousy, unhappiness and sin. The string is supposed to be the most valuable in the United States, but Mrs. Prescott has been heard to say that she hopes she will never feel them on her neck again. One rather thinks that no woman would ever wear splendid jewels if she could know their histories. There is not a valuable string of pearls, not a great diamond or ruby or amerald In the United States today that has not had a history of bloodshed and tragedy. One awaits the conclusion of the story of the Prescott pearls In the future with Interest. (Copyright, 1925, NEj Service, Inc.) TOMORROW —Letter from James Condon to Sally Atherton. LIVED HERE FIFTY YEARS Mrs. Louise C. Schart, ,73, who died Friday at the home of her daughter Mrs. E. H. Borchers, 1325 Lawrence Ave., was a resident of Indianapolis for fifty years. Funeral services will be held at 2 p. m. Monday at the residence, with burial In Crown Hill.
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SATURDAY, SEPT. 5,'1925 3)'
BR4ASWAYM.E. CHURCHSCEAE CF CEREMONY Miss Miller Becomes Bride of Randall Porter. The Broadway M. E. Church was the scene of a early fall wedding Friday evening when Mias Helen Elizabeth Miller, daughter of Mr*. May Brooks Miller, 2355 College Ave., and Randall Robinson Porter were married by the Rev. J. W. Mc.Fall. Palms and ferns were used in decorating the church, and the altar was lighted by cathedral candles. A program of organ music was played pteceding the ceremony, and Mrs. Edward Madinger sang "Because," and ”Oii Promise Me.” The bride wore a gown of white georgette fashioned over satin, and beaded in silver and crystal beads, tier tulle veil was arranged with ,a cap of chantllly luqe and clusters of orange blossoms at the sides. She carried a shower bouquet of bride s roses. Miss Wiloubo Woodbridge as maid of honor wore a frock of orchid satin back crepe, fashioned with a tight basque and a full, straight skirt. She carried an arm bouquet of yellow roses and wore a bandeau of silver ribbon. The bridesmaids were Miss Mary Bayne, Miss Dorothy Swift and Mils Evelyn Mehrley. They were dressed alike in frocks of blue georgette, fashioned with tight waists and full circular skirts, trimmed in silver. They carried arpi bouquets of pink roses. The ring bearer was J. Brooks Buderus. The best man was Harold Barclay, and ushers were Paul McNorton, Gilbert Hawthorne and Donald Bell. Mr. and Mrs. Porter have gone East on a motor trip and will be at home after Oct. 1 with the bride's mother temporarily. Mrs. Porter traveled in a black satin ensemble suit and hat.
M artha Lee’s ' Column
Wanted: Nice Boys D#ar Miss Lee: We are two readers who want advice on how to meet the “rurht" kind ot fellows. .We hiive d;ite every nleht. but we aro (rettinir so ills(rusted with the types of fellows there are in our part of town. For lnstanee. "Tom" likes pet tin? parties, boose parties and all kinds of parlies: "Dick" lilies lonr auto rides with a (Treat deal of Diukiair: "Harry" likes a nice dark park, a nice dark show or a nice dark porch. Just so it’s dark. In other words, he is "not so ,ood in a crowd, hut who nvou erct him alone " These fellows are ones we have met st chureh! You say "(to to church” to jret acquainted with nice younc people. Tell us the church you mean and well an. We’re sick of it. On our word of honor, we’re nice, decent irirls. but somehow or other it has been told that we arc not ami believed! How can we chance “their" opinion and stop remarks Whrih are made) We "conduct ourselves'with dignity.” and it goes on just the same. JACK AND JEAN. Telling la a well-known habit among boys and girls who make a practice of kissing and petting. Be very sure you can’t trace the originators of your scandal back to yourselves before you start in. But start in I would, and demand a show down by the persons who are spreading falsehoods. Gossip is like a forest fire. It has either got to be allowed to burn itself out in time, or else desperate methods must be used to stop It. “Where did you hear that? Have you any proof of it? No. Then don’t spread it any further,” is cold water to most gossips. Remember this, girls, if you are intelligent at all, then you cannot be victims of circumstances like this. No boy, when it doesn’t cost him anything, is going to miss an opportunity to pet with a ■ girl who will let him. That it degrades him as well as her he doesn't stop to consider. It Isn’t a question of what’s sauce for the gander Is sauce for the goose, but a question of it being equally disgusting in either sex. So it is up to you, girls. If you are going to tolerate the Tom. Dick and Harry of your story, then you’ll have to tolerate the talk, and the boys who are not the “right" kind. I don’t know of any Bpeclal fishing place where you can find boys of the right kind, but I do know that they will stay away from you as long as the other kind of boys continues to monopolize your time.
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