Indianapolis Times, Volume 39, Number 40, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 June 1927 — Page 6

PAGE 6

Elizabeth Sanborn and Charles LaFollette Wed in Home Garden Service

[7=l HE garden at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Gerry M. San- | 1 j born, 4701 Michigan Kd., was the scene Saturday evening at 7 for the marriage of their daughter, Miss Elizabeth, and Charles DeVon LaFollette, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles C. LaFollette, of Thorntown. Dr. Mathew L. Haines, pastor of the first Presbyterian Church, officiated. Green vines with archways of pink rambler roses formed the pathway for the bridal party from the east entrance of the home through the garden to the altar at the edge of the flower beds. Tall baskets of pink flowers were used on the posts of

the terrace and at the edges of the driveway. Pascale Montani, harpist, played “Andante Constabile, ’ ’ by Tschakowsky, alluring the service, which was preceded by a program of bridal airs. Party Crosses Terrace The bridal party, led by Addison Miller, head usher, came from the Sanborn home across the terrace and into the garden. Mitchel P. Crist, Edward B. Raub Jr., John K. Ruckelshaus, William Kennedy and David Donham of Cambridge, Mass., Edwin Lindsey of Davenport, lowa, and Charles E. Piety, Terre Haute, were ushers. The bridesmaids were Mrs. Frederick Boone, Miss Edris Rice-Wray, Detroit, Mich., Miss Ruth RobHLi. Irvington-on-the-Hudson. Miss Hwellyn Hereth, Miss Genevieve Bterell, and Miss Eleanor Chase, ■ciinati. They wore gown Mniifned alike in shades of pink, Bigjtig from flesh pink worn by Boone, to a deep rose worn by Chase. They carried long shep■d's crooks with roses in shades of Hk fashioned to the handles. The wearing dresses in lighter Blades had deep roses and those Bfith darker shaded dresses had light ■oses.

I Miss Lucia Turner of Washington, ■D. C., as maid of honor, and Mrs. ■Mitchell P. Christ, sister of the T bride, is matron of honor, wore deep cherry gowns fashioned like the others aand carried delphinium and roses. The gowns were made with three tiers of plaiting in the skirts and with taffeta jackets cut very low in the back. The slippers of each attendant were the shade of her dress. The bride, who was given in marriage by her father, wore white satin embroidered in pearls with a train lof satin, beaded. The, gown was [long waisted with long sleeves and lv neckline. Her veil, also beaded, ■fes fashioned with a coronet of ■birls in front caught with orange Hssoms ta either side. She wore H gift of the bridegroom, a strand ■pear*. Her bouquet was orchids Wn d lilies of the valley, oln shrdlu omfwyp vbgkqj xzflfl eta Dancing After Reception A reception followed the ceremony, after which there was dancing on the pavilion in the garden. The home was decorated with roses and delphinium and the wedding cake was on a mound of smilax. Tal white tapers lighted the dining room. Mrs. Sanborn received in blue chiffon and lace, with slippers to match. She wore a shoulder bouquet of (Wchids. Mrs. LaFoLlette wore black chiffon over flesh color and wore orchids. Mrs. E. G. Stiles,, grandmother of the bride, wore gray chiffon with sweet peas and sweetheart roses. The couple has gone on a trip to Quebec and will beat horrfe at the Sanborn home until Jan. 1. Mr. and Mrs. Sanborn will leave Aug. 1 for a trip abroad. The bride traveled in an outfit of snakeskin. Her dress was snakeinn satin, her green coat trimmed with snakeskin and her accessaries m s mkeskin. Her corsage whs of orchids. Mrs. La Fclietfe is a graduate of Tudor Hall and Vassal’ College, and Mr. LaFollette is a graduate of Wabash College and Harvard University. I-Ie is a member 1 of Phi Delta Tlieta. A large number of friends and relatives from Thorntown were guests at the wedding, and among other out-of-town guests were: Mrs E. G. Stiles, Hartford, Cohn.; Mr. and Mrs. L. A. Kinsey, Chicago; Mrs. M. E. Hayes, Los Angeles; Mrs. Mary E. Newton and Mrs. A. R. Ticknor, Jacksonville, Fla.; Mrs. M. E. Applegate, Buffalo, IT. V.; Mrs. L. A. Robison, Irvington-on-Hudson, N. Y.; Miss Jane Schucraft and William Schucraft, Chicago; William S. Hailey and Kennedy Bailey, Cleveland, Ohio, and Mr. and Mrs. Edward Nrl Jr., New York City. Arabian Chapter Mrs. Clayton C. Harris will entertain the Arabian chapter of the International Study and Travel club Tuesday with a luncheon at her coufftry home. Summer garden flowers will be used for decorations. Mrs. S. R. Artman will be an honor guest and Mrs. Beulah Cox, accompanied by Mrs. Carl Strickland, will sing. Honor Bride-Elect Miss Cornelia Bates and Miss Janice Meredith entertained Saturday with a bridge party and shower at the Columbia Club in honor of Miss June Brayton whose marriage to Raymond Stewart will take place in July. Miss Bates will be Miss Brayton’s maid of honor. The bridal .colors of pink, orchid and green Ifcvere used in the decorations. Kitzmiller-Sibbit MB’/ Timm Br/rcinl ■ DELPHI, Ind., June 27.—The marI riagef is announced of Miss Jessie ■Kitzmiller, daughter of Mrs. Martha ■Kitjamiller of Delphia, and Elmer R. ■ Siijbit, son of Mr. and Mrs. William I SiPflt of Cutler. The ceremony was I performed by the Rev. J. T. Boyer, I pastor of the First Presbyterian ■/hurch at Flora. Public Health Luncheon Mrs. George A. Van Dyke, 535 N. Central Ct., will entertain at luncheon Tuesday the members of the Woman’s Department Club auxiliary to the Public Health Nursing Association.

Miss Halliday Is Married to Charles Obold The Meridian Street Methodist Ep ! scopal Church was the scene of the wedding Saturday evening of Miss Justine Halliday, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George L. Halliday, 2423 Park Ave., and Charles Taylor Obold, Detroit, Mich., son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. Obold, 2930 Broadway. Rev. Virgil E. Rhorer officiated. The altar was banked with palms, ferns and summer flowers and lighted with tall tapers. Mrs. Howard L. Clippinger .organist, played a program of bridal airs before the ceremony and “At Dawning” during the service. The bridesmaids, Mrs. Richard Harding Stout, Miss Dorothy Arndt, Miss Irma Ulrich and Mrs. Clarence T. Drayer jyere gowns alike of lace with three-tiered skirts and long blouses. They wore slippers to match on which were rhinestone buckles, the gifts of the bride, and carried butterfly roses. Mrs. Stout wore yellow, Miss Arndt, blue over pink, Miss Ulrich, peach, Mrs. Drayer, orchid, and Mrs. Frederick C. Albershart, matron of honor, wore green lace. The bride, entering with her father, wore white satin with lace with long blouse and V. Neckline both front and back. The sleev.s were long and tight and the skirt tight with circular folds of satin in front. Her tulle veil was edged with lace and caught with orange blossoms. Her bouquet was of orchids, valley lilies and Ophelia roses. A reception at the Propylaeum followed the ceremony. Mr. and Mrs. Obold left for an extended wedding trip and will be at home after Aug. 1 in Detroit. The bride’s traveling costume was an ensemble of navy blue silk coat and white georgette dress. She wore a navy blue hat and accessories to match.

Patterns PATTERN ORDER BLANK Pattern Department, Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Ind. Enclosed find 15 cents for which send Pat- racoon tern No. JO D O O U Size Name Street City

A SIMPLE DAYTIME DRESS 5830. Cotton foulard, pongee, linen or tub silk could be used for this model. The dress may be finished with short or long sleeves. This pattern is cut in 6 sizes: 34, 36, 38, 40, 42 and 44 inches bust measure. A 38-inch size will require 2ls yards of 40-inch material,

iy 5830 b* tj * \ \ 7? * 9 --<U\ -q* G t i : Sfi a ;fl : v - 0 ; r> i o - Fa

together with % yard of contrasting material, for facing on collar, cuffs, pockets and belt portions, if made with short sleeves. If made with long sleeves, and without contrasting material 3 3 i yards will be required. The width of the dress at the lower edge with plaits extended is 1% yard. Every day The Times prints on this page pictures of the latest fashions, a practical service for readers who wish to make their own clothes. Obtain this pattern by filling out the above coupon, inclosing 15 cents (coin preferred), and mailing it to the Pattern Department of The Times. Delivery is made in about a week,

TO BE MARRIED SATURDAY

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Miss Esther Kelly The marriage of Miss Esther Kelly, daughter of-Mrs. H. R. Kelly, 815 Spruce St., to Harry R. Reed will take place Saturday at the bride’s home.

GENTLEMANLY WOMEN Margot Asquith’s Assertion There Is No Such Thing Meets Denial in Indianapolis

BY ELDORA FIELD Are women ever gentlemen? It's just like Margot Asquith, wife of the former British prime minister, to put a question about her sex in some startling form. Margot, in her new book, “Lay Sermons,” recently published in London, but whose pungent statements therein have seeped across the water and disturbed some of our American club women, makes a straight - from-the-shoulder attack on women's ability to tell the truth. She doesn’t think they can. Is Margot catty? That's what Bhe says about other women. “Women are like cats,” she says. "They simply can’t be candid and truthful. Very few are gentlemen”—the last statement evidently registering Margot's belief that gentlemen tell the truth. Several Indianapolis women who saw and talked with Margot Asquith

when she lectured in this city two years ago don’t take her remarks as seriously as Chicago club women, for instance, who have been registering protests about them. “Mrs. Asquith simply glories in startling folks and impressing them with the conviction that her thought processes are different from any one’s else,” commented Mrs. A. S. Ayres, 4040 Guilford Ave., now serving her fourth year as second vice president of the Woman's Department Club. “I think Mrs. Asquith is stretching the truth a bit herself, enjoying the sensational tang of her own remarks. She certainly doesn’t believe men have a monopoly upon candor and truth. Women are quite as truthful as the opposite sex.” Mrs. Henry Jameson, 111, of 3055 Washington Blvd., was of a like opinion, but commented upon the fact that men and women have different methods of expressing candor. “Men arc more blunt. They are likely to make their statements in clear black and white fashion, while women, because of their stronger respect for the social amenities, are fikely to shade opinions into softer lines. This tendency, | which Mrs. Asquith probably comes largely into contact with in her social world, has probably given rise to* her remarks. Certainly she can not mean that women are incapable of truth and loyalty. That's too absurd to discuss.” Mrs. Allen T. Fleming, 1509 W. Twenty-Sixth St., president of the 38th Division Auxiliary, thinks the, wife of the former British prime minister probably meant what she said, but in the saying, Mrs. Asquith revealed the fact that she herself is inclined to be “catty” and not adverse to twisting the truth around to accommodate the spicy remarks for which she is noted. “The world is a mirror,” said Mrs. Fleming “Mrs. Asquith is simply standing before that mirror and showing up her own thought processes. She's amusing, though.” “I think the joke Is decidedly upon Mrs. Asquith when she declares against woman's candor," commented Mrs. Elizabeth W. Hughes, 2315 College Ave., former president of the Indiana Drama League. “For of all the persons you can think of—men or women—who can compare with Margot in the unafraid candor of her unusually original mind?” Announce Marriage The marriage of Miss Mildred McHaffey and Edwin Sinker took place Thursday at the home of the bride, 2360 Ashland Ave., with the Rev. Richardson ofilcating. Miss Helen Brunson and Ehrman Clarke were the only attendants. Clogged Drains A spoonsful of lye should be placed directly over the drain in the sink about once a week and then washed down by boiling water to prevent clogging. Paper Napkins Paper napkins save time and energy in summertime. Use them in the kitchen, too, to wipe greasy pans before washing, to clean drain board and to shine gas stove. Stuffed Cucumbers Cut small cucumbers lengthwise In half, hollow them out and fill with fresh vegetables covered with French dressing flavored with cheese. Escalloped Vegetables Left-over fresh vegetables make satisfying luncheon or supper dishes creamed with hard-boiled eggs and baked with top covering of cheese and cracker crumbs.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Life’s Niceties Hints on Etiquet

1. Who pays for bridesmaid’s gowns, the bride or the attendants? 2. Who pays for the bridesmaid's bouquets or baskets of flowers or whatever they carry? 3. Who decides what costumes the attendants at a wedding should wear? The Answers J. The bridesmaids themselves unless the bride is wealthy and wants some fancy frocks that could not be used again. 2. The bride. 3. The bride.

Postponing Happiness Will Bring Discontent BY MARTHA LEE “Don’t put off ’til tomorrow what you can do today” can be applied to happiness. Don’t wait until tomorrow’ or some time in the dim, far future to find something to be glad for and to enjoy. Whole dreams and big glowing visions are not materialized in the ordinary experience, but poor indeed would be the life where there are not at least shreds of rosy clouds floating around to be grasped and enjoyed. , After all .being happy is a sort of habit—or can become so, Being grateful for W’hat we have helps to brighten the moment at hand. Don't wait until you’ve attained some extraordinary height. You're only sure of the present. Be happy and you can be. right at this point.

She's Never Satisfied Dear Martha Lee’ Do you think it is wrong to be terribly ambitious? It Just seems as if I cannot be happy unless I think I am getting ahead toward something worth whUe. Vet I will say I never seem to get any place either. I have taken all kinds of lessons at least my father who pays the bills says so, but I never seem to be satisfied. Maybe I am a kind of discontented disposition, but I would like to be happy. Do you think I will ever be? LILLITH. That’s for you to decide, Lillith—whether you'll ever be happy or not. If you are constantly ungrateful and dissatisfied with what you have, you will cultivate such a hard crust on your appreciations that you’ll not hear the knocking of opportunity which makes for further happiness, if it does come along. Cultivate appreciating small things and being glad for them. She Distrusts Him Dear Martha Lee: I have been keeping steady company with a young man that I am just wild about ana he says that he loves me and has proposed. However, he goes some with other girls. I love him and don't want him to be with others and he doesn't want me to either. Now I am willing to give up • all other company for him. but am afraid he would deceive me and go out with others. How can I bring him back? BETTY. I don’t understand what you mean by “bringing him back” when you do not indicate that he and you have in any way broken your friendship. your distrust of the young man indicates that you have a mighty poor foundation for marriage. Unless you can have broader, more generous thought about him, don’t think of marrying, for you would make yourself miserable with suspicions. Fruit Stains To remove fruit stains from table linen, stretch the stained part over a bowl and pour boiling water through from a height of ten inches. Fried Mush Old-fashioned popular fried mush may be approximated by frying any cold sliced breakfast cereal and serving with Vermont maple syrup. Dry Cooking Fresh spinach should be thoroughly washed, put on dry and cooked ever aslow fire for a very few minutes to preserve color ai}d vitammes.

Prize Recipes by Readers

NOTE—The Times will Rive $1 for each recipe submitted hv a reader adjudged of sufficient merw 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. Write on one side of sheet only. Only one recipe each week will be accepted from one person. Banana Icing Mash one-half of ripe banana up with fork, add piece of soft butter and enough powdered sugar to make a stiff paste. Spread on cake. Mrs. Helta Hansing, 2157 Ringgold Ave., Indianapolis. Unburdened Life of Man Causes Envy BY MRS. WALTER FERGUSON Along about this time of the year I get a great hqnkerng to be a man. It seems to me that these males get a lot out of life that we miss. They refuse to be'burdened with'the cares of a financial or a domestic world. Housecleaning means nothing to them. They don't care whether they have anew suit or not. Only one great desire floods their souls. They want to go fishing. And fishing they go. Armed with hooks, fly rods, reels, lines, leaders, worms and artificial bait, they are taking to the woods in droves, happy as woodchucks, cheerful as cherubs, entirely unmindful of the troubles in China or Mexico or Nicaragua. Oh, yes, they know how to capture the elusive thing called happiness when the fishing days come. They are wise as Socrates when they let their worries slip and run back with hurrying feet into boyhood again. And do they go fishing to get fish? Goodness, no. The fellow who comes back with empty creel and stories of the large ones that got away is just as contented, just as glowing, as he who returns with trophies to exhibit. For it is not so much the fish they want as the freedom, and the dirt. And they are akin to the gods because they can go out under the open sky and loaf away the hours on some river bank. Dear, happy fishermen! How 'ike little boys they are. And well may we women envy them. For to us Is never vouchsafed that glorious return to childllood. no matter how long we may angle or how often we may scurry to the wudwood. Once we have become women we can never go back over that magic road that leads again tp youth. We are grown up. we are sophisticated, are old. The birds may sing to us but never with that lilting song that comes to the ears of men. The winds may blow to us over a hundred hills, but the message of the breeze does not penetrate our consciousness. For we, alas, are only women and shackled with a thousand primal cares from which we may never be free. So we can only look and envy—envy these fat, bald-headed men who by some magic talisman which they carry within themselves, can become for the space of one fishing day, carefree boys again.

Style Briefs BY HEDDA HOYT (I'nltfd Pi-mu Fashion Editor) Printed chiffon frocks, preferably with small geometrical or floral designs, will play an important part in the summer wardrobe. Colors most apparent this year are blues, golden browns and hennas, fuschias and Orchids. The printed chiffon frock is primarily an afternoon model, having long sleeves, and being simply made except for front skirt fullness or side drapery. For cloth frock nailheads are the very newest trimming, replacing in a way, beaded or silk embroidery. Some of the imported two-piece models have the entire bodice portions studded with either silver or gilt nailheads placed in floral or geometrical designs. Felt hats with brims outlined in nailheads or with crowns embellished with nailheads are to be shown later on. The large black hat of hair or straw may be trimmed so as to better harmonize with the various colors of one’s frocks by using several narrow ribbons of various colors shirred and joined together to form the crown band. One large black hair shape uses purple, rose, green and yellow ribbon of narrow width, joined together. This makes a band sufficiently wide, so that it may be used half on the crown and half on the brim. Printed bathing suits of cretonne or light challis are shown by the smartest Fifth avenue shops. They are made in dress fashion being belted at a low waistline. It is thought that most women wiU prefer these printed suits or plain taffetas above one-piece types. Waistlines are just a bit higher this year than they were last. A few of the Parisian designers are attempting to bring the posture of the waistline back to normal, but, with the exception of youthful period frocks, the low waist remains. Where it was placed low on the hips last season, the belt is now placed at the top of the hips.

Busy Child Assured of Happiness BY OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON Thou shalt keep your child occupied. The way to keep a child happy is to keep him busy. Fill his time completely and you may drop the word “don’t” from your vocabulary. Right here may be a good time to repeat a remark of Thomas Edison on the young people of today and the cause of their discontent and restlessness. 4 They have never been taught that the ideal life is work and play. They do not know the joy of working,” he says, “and they get tired of all play.” Asa child is never too young to learn other things, it is reasonable to suppose that he may also very early acquire the habit of work as well as the play habit. Liking for Work Children love to do things. Ask a very little girl to help you set the table, give her a little broom and ask her to sweep a room. Get a little boy to shovel a crooked path in the snow, or pick up papers in the yard, or put away his toys. There are all sorts of little jobs to do. You will soon have them thinking that work is fun. And follow It up with more work responsibility as they get older. Never shove a child out of the road and say you would rather do it yourself. There is play and then again there is play! Children tire of toys because half of them are meaningless. They do not occupy them. Unless a child develops a real attachment for a stuffed monkey or a horse on wheels or a Teddy-bear or a patent leather cat, they apt \to lose their attraction very" soon. Toys Not Solution Constantly buying new toys for children is a mistake many parents make. The thrill is fleeting. The real joy lies in the toy that gives the child a chance for not only acivity of hands and body, but activity of mind. Pictures to color call for selection; cut-outs teach manipulation and care; modeling clay, mechanical sets, building blocks, all develop initiative and purpose. A sand pile with its endless possibilities never tires him. Then there are dolls to dress and undress, doll clothes to make no matter how crudely, doll houses to furnish with awkward cardboard furniture. Simple games are fine. Games develop many things in a child's mind. Tastes in toys change as they grow older. Carpenter sets are invaluable, and turning lathes, and jig saws for boys. Bails, skates and rolling stock are wonderful outlets for bottled up activity. Safety valves, all of them. Bridge, Shower Miss Mildred Marie Milter, who will be married in July to Wallace R. Jone i of Chicago, was honor guest Saturday when Miss Catherine McCarthy, Miss Mary Welch, Miss Raffaela Montani and Miss Juanita Mann entertained with a bridge party and shower at the Marott Hotel. The flowers and appointments for the party were in pink, blue and orchid. The gifts were arranged on a small table decorated to represent the top of a mountain on which was a home with miniature bride and bridegroom. Euchre-Bunco The St. Bridget's Social Club will give a euchre and bunco party Wednesday afternoon and evening at the hall, Pratt and Fayette Sts. The hostesses will be Mesdames Peter Costello, John Mayo, Will Schifferdecker and Bruce Pickering. Wed at Mooresville Tt’> Timm Special MOORESVILLE, Ind . June 27. Miss Esther Frances White became the bride of Walter Smitherman 1 here Sunday. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. E. F. White. The groom is a son of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Smitherman of Haviland.

RECENT BRIDE

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Mrs. Frederick Cooney Before her marriage on June 19 Mrs. Frederick Cooney was Miss Stella Simcn. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Hugo Simon, 5044 Bay St.

Beulah M. Jones andH. V. Wilson Wed at Danville Miss Beulah Myrtle Jones, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. D. R. Jones, Danville, was married at 4 p. m. Sunday to H. Verle Wilson at the White Lick Church, Danville, by Rev. V. W. Blair, of Plainfield. The church was decorated with white roses and ferns and lighted with tall tapers. Before the ceremony Misses Chistine Lohrmann. violinist, Mary Lohrmann, cellist and Lena Lohrman, harpist, played and Miss Juanita Matlock, of New York City, san. Mrs. Sherman Scott, sister of the bride, as matron of honor, wore coral pink georgette and carried Premier roses and blue delphinium. Miss Juamta Thomas in orchid georgette, and Miss Ruth Knapp in pale green georgette were bridesmaids. Both carried bouquets of roses and delphinium. The bride, given in marriage by her father, wore white bridal satin with tight bodice and uneven hem line. Her veil was caught with a bandeau of seed yearls and orange blossoms. She carried a shower bouquet of bride roses and valley lilies. The ushers were Floyd Jones, Russell Molls and Oris Morrell. Earl Wilson, brother of the bridegroom, was best man. Mr. and Mrs. Wilson left immediately for a motor trip in the east and Canada, the bride traveling in a two-piece dress of beige crepe with green hat. fur scarf and accessories in green and beige. Mrs. Wilson is a graduate of Indiana University, where she was a memLcr of Kappa Delta sorority, and Mr. Wilson was an Acacia at the University of Illinois. Pledge Guest Dinner The Bide-A-Wee Club will entertain the new pledges and several guests with a dinner this evening at the homo of Miss Alary Dugan, 417 N. Gladstone Ave. A Fourth of July program will be presented after the dinner. Mrs. Earl Howard and Misr. Minnie Weisshaar will assist the ’■'Ostcss. Miss Gore Honored Miss Hope Bedford, Miss Vivian Ely and Mrs. Cecil Weathers were hostesses for a bridge party and shower Saturday afternoon at the home of Miss Ely, 928 W. Thirtieth St., in honor of Miss Edith Gore, who will bemarried July 2- to Dr. Edward D. Campbell. The appointments were in pink and blue, the bridal colors,and the gifts were presented in a pink and blue hat box by little Joan Henry, dressed as a bride,

Oak Grove Bu 11 er is available at Independent Groceries where good food is sold, including IRGA Independent Chain Stores, and Great Atlantic and Pacific Tea Company Stores in Indianapolis.

H LOSS E R j Butter,

FRESH CHURNED FROM FRESH CREAM

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Two Rabbis Read Service at Wedding The Beth El Temple was the scene of a wedding at 5 p. m. Sunday when Miss Henrietta Naperstick, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Nathan Naperstick, 827 S. Capitol Ave.. became the bride of Samuel A. Klein, son of Mr. and Mrs. Moses Klein. Rabbi A. Portnov and Rabbi S. A. Katz performed the ceremony before an altar of palms and ferns, lighted with cathedral tapers. Mrs. N. L. Ogden played Mendelssohn’s “Wedding March" for the processional and “To a Wild Rose” during the ceremony. Miss Iris Hopper sang “At Dawning" and "I Love You Truly.” Miss Frieda Naperstick, sister of the bride, as maid of honor, wore a gown of flesh georgette with tight bodice. The full skirt was of Chantilly lace trimmed with rosebuds and rhinestones. She carried butterfly roses. The bridesmaids w r ere Miss Frieda Selig, wearing yellow taffeta and carrying Madame Drew roses, and Miss Shirley Lcnowitz in orchid georgette with Columbia roses. Tha flower girls were Henrietta Schwartz, wearing green georgette, and Harriett Tawler, in flesh georgette. Frank Danzig in a black and white satin tuxedo, carried the ring in a lily. The bride, who entered with her father, wore white georgette, heavily beaded with pearls and crystal beads. It was fashioned on straight lines with panels. Her tulle veil w’as cap shape and was caught with orange blossoms. She carried a showier bouquet of bride’s roses and valley lilies. JacV Klein was his brother's best man. Supper for 200 was served after the ceremony and a reception followed. The couple left on a motor trip east to be gone two months. The bride traveled in a black and gray tweed suit with accessories in green. They will be at home in Indianapolis after Sept. 1. Mata Svendsen June Bride of A. J. Wittlin Miss Mata Svendsen, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William C. Svendsen. 49 E. Regent St., was married at 6:30 Saturday evening at the home of her parents, to Albert J. Wittlin with Rev. J. Ambrose Dunkel officiating. The ceremony was performed before the fireplace which was banked with palms, ferns, roses and daisies, carrying out a color scheme of pink and white. Preceding the ceremony Mrs. E. F. Haymaker sang “At Dawning” and “O Promise Me." Miss Emily Svendsen, the bride’s sister, was her only attendant and wore a dress of white and rose georgette. She carried Columbia roses. The bride wore white beaded georgette with a band of rhinestones in her hair. She carried Duller"/ roses. Jack Prade was best man. The service was followed by a reception. The w’edding cake was lighted with tall pink tapers and hr. rt roses and ferns for decoration. The couple left immediately afto? the ceremony for a motor trip to Michigan and will return to live Id Indianapolis. The bride traveled in a green inu tan flannel sport dress with hat and shoes to match. Country Club ance The Indianapolis Cc ntry Club will entertain with a dinner and dance Wednesday evening at the clubhouse for young people home from school.

HOME-MADE // CANDY' A'ways p^’d