Indianapolis Times, Volume 39, Number 44, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 July 1927 — Page 12
wrand-Graham -jsSmemony Performed i Tabernacle Church
Wbernacle Presbyterian Church was the scene of ■ding Thursday evening at 8:30, when Miss Mar■p Graham, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lyman Atwood Hterman Dr., was married to Harold Self Hildebrnd, Mand Mrs. Harold F. Hildebrand, 1824 N. Olabama St. Dunkel performed the ceremony before an altar Bnd fernery, lighted by cathedral candles. Five large pink and white roses were used at the chancel of the ■nd the pews were marked by white satin ribbons. ■ Walker, organist, of North M. E. Church, played
Wan Love Song,” “0 V Me'’ and “My Heart W Sweet Voice’’ before ■remony and for the proWa 1 the wedding march ■Lohengrin." He played “To ■ Rose" during the ceremony Mendelssohn's “Wedding for the recessional. I Helen Hildebrand, as maid B[or, wore a light blue organdie robe de style with blue to match. The dress had a Mhemline of blue taffeta and she a pink hairbraid hat. Her were pink roses. The bridesW s > Miss Dorothea Smith, wearHgreen, and Mrs. Wayne Geisel, Hung orchid, had gcwns sashHd kke those of Miss Hildebrand I wore shoes to match their Hses. Miss Suzanne Jane McNeil W Miss Martha Jane' Moore, Hrer girls, wore pink organdie and H r ied French baskets with rose tied with pink tulle. The atHdants all wore gifts of the bride, crystal and pearl necklaces. Woodsmall Jr. was best Kq and the ushers were Jack GodW~y and Robert Harold Bryson. Wrhe bride, who was given in marW,ge by her father, wore a gown of White embroidered silk lace with Wund neck and long tight, sleeves. Hiere was a band of lace at the botWm with another farther up on the Wirt forming two tiers, and at the was a white satin'girdle tying the left hip and hanging beW r the hem. Her veil was gathered j the back with orange blossoms ihich were also on the sides, and Fie carried a bouquet of bride’s pses and small daisies. After an informal reception at the lack of the church the couple left ,or a motor trip through the north nd will be at home after July 15 m their new home at Forty-second St. and N. Sherman Dr. The bride raveled in a suit of blue flat crepe ip ensemble, and had black accessories. Among the out-of-town guests were: Miss Helen Merrefleld. Terre Haute: Mrs. David Self, Washington, D. C.r' Mr. and Mrs. Charles Githcns, Shelbyville, Ind.; Mr. and Mrs. Mark Williams and Miss Adrianne Williams, Anderson, Ind.; Mr. and Mrs. A. V. Moore and Miss HJary Whitson, Kokomo.
Life’s Niceties Hints on Etiquet
j 1. If one motors often with neighbors, is it proper to offer to pay for Ihe gasoline? I 2. If. taking a long motor trip Ivith friends, how do you decide who Is to bear certain expenses? * 3. Is there any tactful way to ■suggest that a couple go with you to the beach for dinner and pay their own checks? The Answers 1. Certainly, unless they are wealthy. 2. Be frank before starting and apportion expenses. 3. Ask them if they would like to go “Dutch treat.”
Family Menus
BREAKFAST Blackberries, cereal, cream, eggs poached In milk on toast, crips toast, milk, coffee. LUNCHEON—CIear soup, toast sticks, spinach salad, rice custard pudding, milk, tea. DlNNEß—Spanish liver, baked new potatoes, string bean salad, rhubarb jelly with whipped cream, crisp cookies, milk, coffee. SPANISH LIVER One pound calves’ liver, 2 slices ■>acon cut !4 inch thick, 8 tiny silver skinned onions, 2 cups carrot balls, 3 u cup broken fresh mushrooms, 2 stablespoons minced parsley, 2 cups canned tomato pulp, 2 cups boiling water, 2 tablespoons flour. 1 j teastpoon salt, 1-3 teaspoon paprika. Cut liver in half-inch slices. Cut bacon in strips % inch wide. Lard iiver slices with bacon strips. Peel and parboil onions. Scrape carrots and cut into balls ifrith a French vegetable cutter. Dice can be made if vegetable cutter is not at hand. Clean and break mushrooms. Rub canned tomatoes through a strainer. Put liver, vegetables, mushrooms, tomato pulp and water into a casserole. Cover and cook in a moderate oven for two and one-half hours. Mix flour, salt and paprika. Slowly stir in enough cold water to snake a thin paste. Stir into the Lravy in casserole on top of the Itove. Bring to the boiling point, Itirring constantly. Return to the oven for fifteen minutes. Serve from casserole. Social Meeting Miss Olga Ruehl, 1830 Commerce i 'Vve., will be hostess for the social land spread meeting of the Tau ■Panama Kappa Sorority this eveS|ng at her home. Miss Marie Br■ar is chairman of the food commitWk. assisted by Mrs. Floyd A. Bftirch and Miss Anna Schuster.
Bk YOUR FACE working for or against !■ First impressions are stronptnneonsiiously form their and judge you by apCall or write for free “Face Value,” on Personal nee. iR. PER DUE and Feature Specialist H STATE LIFE BLDG
Patterns / PATTERN ORDER BLANK Pattern Department, Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Ind. Enclosed find 15 cents for which send Pat- On 7 C tern No. OVID Size Name Street City
JUST FROM PARIS The frock with the shirred waistline is becoming so popular in Paris, that you cannot afford to be without it. The deep open V-shaped neckline finished with applied bands and jabot, makes Design No. 3075 doubly smart. Even more surprising are the small illustrations, explaining the easy manner in which it can be made. Printed silk crepe, printed voile, silk pongee, georgette crepe and washable crepe de chine are effective fabrics for its development. Pattern in sizes 16, 18 years, 36, 38, 40 and 42 inches bust measure. The 36-inch size requires 3*4 yards of 40-inch material with % yard of 32-inch contrasting.
3075 \
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.
Given Away! This Lamp With Every New $lO Savings, Account
x Inland Dank 6-Trust Cos. Comer Market and Delaware Streets //j INDIANAPOLIS
BANKY-LaROCQUE WEDDING MOVIELAND EVEN'
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The wedding of Vilma Banky and Rod La Rocque at Beverly Hills, Cal., was movieland's biggest social event. The ceremony was held in the Church of the Good Shepherd, from which Rudolph Valentino was buried. The wedding party is shown above. In the picture (left to right) are Mrs. Harold Lloyd, Mrs. Sam Goldwyn, Diana Kane, Mrs. Abraham Lehe, Vilma Banky, Rod La Rocque, Bebe Daniels, Constance Talmadge and Monique La Rocque.
Cool Drinks
By SISTER MARY Whether it be on the porch, in the garden, at the bridge table or with a “dish of gossip’’ and an intimate friend, a cool drink served as if by magic is the aim of the summer hostess. When preparing drinks for expected guests the fruit juices and syrup can be mixed hours before needed and kept on ice. The tray and glasses and cookies or sandwiches can be arranged so that the last-minute effort creates little stir of preparation. But when the chance guest drops in and a quick and apparently effortless bit of refreshment is wanted the hostess, who is totally without preparation is “out of luck.” ✓ Refreshment Foresight To this end the foresighted housewife keeps a few simple expediences in her refrigerator. A jar of sugar syrup, a bottle of chocolate syrup and one or two varieties of fruit juices make is possible to concoct delicious beverages with regular soda-fountain speed. Another secret in making quick iced drinks is in using finely chipped ice. Less water is used when making the beverage, because the fine ice melts and dilutes the drink as it chills it. Sugar Syrup To make sugar syrup put 1 cup of sugar and % cup water into a Smooth sauce pan. Put over medium heat and bring to the boling point. Cover and let boil five minutes. One to 2 tablespoonfuls of this syrup to a glass will make the average drink sweet enough. Two tablespoons grated lemon rind can be cooked with the syrup. Strain syrup before bottling. This lemon syrup is particularly good with iced tea or a fruit lunch. A concentrated lemon syrup which can be diluted and used with iced tea for tea punch or charged water for lemon fizz is made as follows: Lemon Syrup Three cups sugar, 3 cups water, 3 cups lemon juice, grated rind. Combine sugar, water and grated rind of lemons. Bring to the boiling point. Cover and boil fifteen minutes. Add lemon juice, cover and bring to the boiling point. Simmer ten minutes. Strain into sterilized jars and seal. Any fruit juice can be used. The juice may be obtained by crushing fresh fruit and straining the juice through cheesecloth. Chocolate syrup can be added to milk to make a nourishing drink. The person who would diet to gain weight may prefer a milk drink to a fruit beverage. The fruit drink has a tonic effect and tends to whet a jaded appetite so the too-thin person may find the fruit drink a boon about half an hour before meal time. Chocolate Syrup Three squares bitter chocolate, 1 cup granulated sugar, % cup boiling water, 1 teaspoonful vanilla. Grate chocolate and mix thoroughly with sugar. Add boiling wa-
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Bridal Dinner for Miss Carr, Mr. Zimmerman Mr. and Mrs. Harry E. Hydron, 6103 Lowell Ave., will entertain this evening with a bridal dinner at their home for their daughter, Miss Alyne Virginia Carr, and Max Thomas Zimmerman, whose marriage will take place Saturday afternoon. The centerpiece "Os the table will be a bowl of pink and white flowers and the table will be lighted by orchid candles in crystal holders tied with bows of tulle in peach, green and orchid. Covers will be laid for Mr. and Mrs. Hydron, Miss Carr, Mr. Zimmerman and Messrs, and Mrsdames E. A. Roberts A. J. Mens Willtom McCulloush Mrs. Harry Moody, C. C. Lee Danville. 111. Arthur Francisco Misses Thelma Sawyer Elinore Moran Lrdell Beaumont. Margaret Moody. Chicago Danville. 111. Messrs. Cecil Long James Hatton “Moka” Hat A medium-sized hat with rolling brim, fashioned of thin straw in a dark brown shade called ‘“Moka,” makes a becoming substitute for the dead black hat. Eton Suit A smartly youthful summer suit is navy blue taffeta with a broken diamond design, fashioned with a circular skirt and Eton jacket over Mrs. Charlotte Beckley Lehman, 420 E. North St., will go to Anderson this evening to attend a piano recital of the pupils of Miss Crystal E. Ginn. Miss Ginn was a former pupil of Mrs. Lehman. "v Mr. and Mrs. William Hutchison, 3720 N. Pennsylvania St., will spend the week-end in Brazil. ter, stirring constantly. Cook five minutes, stirring to prevent burning. Cool and add vanilla. Pour into sterilized jar until wanted to use. Two tablespoons of syrup is added to lb cup of chilled milk for iced chocolate.
20-22 W. Wash. St.
Monstrous July Clearance 900 New Dresses —At a Price That Insures Instant Disposal
LOT NO. 1 Rayon and Jersey Dresses Were $5 to $7.95 SpJO
22 Rayon Dresses —34 Goth Skirts $1 .00 and Knickers, Gioice X ==:
SPRING COATS SQ.9O Sports and Dress Styles Were Up to $19.75 Each
elvet Sports Jackets, While They Last *4.90
Wigs Are New
BY HEDDA HOYT (United Frets Fashion Editor) If your lady fair is a blonde today, a brunette tomorrow and a redheaded vamp on Saturday night it's because she following fashion's latest dictate on hair styles. Wigs are about the newest things sponsored by the fashion world. One doesn't need to be baldheaded. badly bleached or dyed or ruined by permanent waves to rush to the wig counter. It's merely a question of wanting to change one’s color scheme, in most cases. Then too, it’s not a bad idea to give one’s own hair a rest from the curling prongs during the summer months and one can wear one's own hair straight around the home and don a wig of duplicate color for occasions which demand a more fetching head-dress. A great many smart women are wearing soft gray transformations at night time. - The brunette finds these extremely flattering if her face is youthful. And, the woman with sad looking half-grayed locks also peps up her appearance with a snowy white wig. They’re Bobbed Needless to say, the modern wig or transformation is bobbed. It is made of the softest of hair and the parting is so cleverly made that it can not be detected from one's real part. There's tiny wisp of a bang where the parting of the hair nears the forehead. It’s quite astonishing how very light in weight a modern wig is! One need not worry about its heating the head and causing the hair to fall out. Blonds, as a rule, prefer transformations of a golden reddish shade as they seem to bring out the personality of the more drab blonde type of woman. The brunette may wear her own shade of hair or gray to best advantage. Some women are startlingly lovely in wigs of gray and black hair evenly combined. Most women wear transformations only at evening time when the hair is of contrasting color than their own. If the transformation is of one’s ow ncolor, it may be worn at any time. Wigs can be purchased from $35 to SIOO, the average costing about SSO or S6O in department stores and wig shops.
Selig’s Subway L J EXTREME value for your money k / • __ id, • • ■ : : 7■ • ’“■ rt ’ -••■^
LOT NO. 2 Tub Silks, Prints Jerseys & Cloths Were Up to $11.95 si jo
Ebner-Frand Ceremony in Club Room The Harrison room of the Columbia Club was the scene of a wedding at 6:30 Thursday evening wnen Miss Bertha Frand, daughter of Edward Frand, 4150 Broadway, was married to Martin Ebner, Springfield, Ohio, ron of Nathan Ebner of Springfield. An aisleway for the bridal party was formed of ferns and tall standards of Columbia roses. Pasquale Montani, harpist, played before and during the ceremony. Mrs.. Nathan Frand, matron of honor, wore a gown of gold sequins and carried Ward roses. The bridesmaids, Miss Mildred Frand, Miss Naomi Ruth Ebner, Miss Celia Hirsh and Miss Henrietta Rothbard, wore taffeta and chiffon frocks in pastel colors and carried arm bouquets of roses. Joseph Ebner, Springfield, was best man and Audrey Office, Dayton, Ohio, was floiver girl. Edwin Stavitsky, Logansport, was ring bearer. The bride wore white crepe trimmed with crystal bead fringe and her cap shaped veil was trimmed with a wide band of rose point lace. She carried a shower bouquet of orchids and valley lilies. Following the ceremony a dinner was served to the two families and the couple left for a trip east, and will go to Quebec. TJiey will be at home after Aug. 1 in Springfield, Ohio. Mrs. Ebner’s traveling suit was a black jersey ensemble combined with printed silk.
MISS EVA LAIRD IS BRIDE OF LEON WILSON The marriage of Miss Eva Dorothy Laird, daughter of William A. Laird, 426 Hamilton Ave., and Leon Wilson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ed Nelson. 726 Highland Ave.. took place Thursday morning at 10 at the parish house of Holy Cross Church with the Rev. Father Sanderman reading the service. Mrs. Varle Lowe, the bride's only attendant, wore French blue with hat and shoes to match and carried pink rosebuds. The bride wore white crepe with hat and shoes to match and also carried pink rosebuds. A wedding breakfast was served at the home of the bride's sister, Mrs. Clifford Strong, 426 Hamilton Ave. The couple left for a trip to Donovan, 111., and will be at home after July 10 at 1723 N. Meridian St. Announce Marriage Mr. and Mrs. Martin O'Toole. 2148 N. New Jersey St., announce the marriage of their daughter, Margaret Florence, to Herbert Carl Von Fuerstenberg, which took place Thursday morning at SS. Peter and Paul Cathedral with the Rev. Joseph E. Sommes officiating. The attendants were Miss Tersa O'Toole and Francis H. O'Toole. After a short trip in the East the couple will live in Indianapolis. Business Meeting The business meeting of Alpha Beta Gamma. Alpha chapter, will be held this evening at the home of Miss Dollie Coleman. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Summers, 3603 Washington Blvd., will spend the week-end with relatives in Converse. Andrew Hepburn, 27 W. St. Joseph St., is spending the week-end in Culver.
HOME-MADE,/ CANDY Always (jQc plund
LOT NO. 3 Flat Crepes and Tub Silks Were Up to $16.75 s"jjo
N Just 25 Guaranteed Waterproof SO.OO RAINCOATS, While They Last
FINER COATS $ 1 /J. 90 Sports and Dress Styles I jiZZZII Were Up to $35.00 Each ■■ r
AUDACIOUS
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“Audacious,” indeed, is this printed gown combining the bustle of yester-year with the trousers of tomorrow. Colonial Chapter Members of the Colonial-Boston chapter of the International Study and Travel Club entertained Thursday at the home of Mrs. William J. Miller, 3159 Graceland Ave., in honor of Mrs. S. R. Artman. Miss Alice Emerson and Miss Thelma Sears gave piano numbers, and Miss Emerson also sang. Mrs. Artman read some original poems and Mrs. Audrey Manlove, chapter president, gave a reading. New members of the chapter are Mesdames C. W. Denison, John W. Seaman. Bertha Stairwaldt, Alan Ritchie and William Yeager. Navy Georgette Navy blue georgette is staging a come-back, having been crowded out by flowered chiffons. Smartly gowned women are sponsoring it with a touch of fresh organdy.
Ideal Leads the Town With These Magnificent Complete Three-Room
Directly Opposite New Indiana Theatre . iKDUXA’OUS, Ixft
LOT NO. 4 500 New Crepes, Georgettes, Washable Silks; Choice SQ.9O
JULY 1, 1527
Miss Russell Is Bride ofCecil Beck Miss Virginia Gertrude Russell, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William S. Russell, 602 Sanders St„ and Cecil L. Beck, son of Mrs. Maude Beck, were married at 8 p. m. Thursday at the Second Baptist church with Rev. P. H. Hughes reading the service before an altar of ferns and flowers. Dale W. Young, organist, played a bridal program before the ceremony. Mrs. George Hendricks, the bride’s attendant, wore peach georgetto trimmed with rhinestones and carried Columbia roses. Mr. Hendricks was best man and Albert Fox and George Hutton were ushers. Little Dorothy Slentz, flower girl, wore pale blue organdie. The bride's gown was of white georgette fashioned with bodice and trimmed in lace. Her veil was white tulle caught with orange blossoms and she carried a shower bouquet of bride’s roses and valley lilies. A reception was held at the home of the bride's parents. Mr. and Mrs. Beck left for a trip to Chicago and Milwaukee and 'iill return to Indianapolis after July 10. JONES-MILLER WEDDING THURSDAY AT CHURCH Miss Mildred Marie Miller, daughter of Mrs. Osa Miller, Martinsville, and Wallace R. Jones, Chicago, took place at 5:30 p. m. Thursday at the Second Presbyterian church with Rev. Jean S. Milner, officiating. Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Stedfelt were attendants, Mrs. Stedfelt wearing a yellow georgette gown with hat to match. She carried an arm bouquet of Pemet roses. The bride wore pale blue organdie with hat to match and carried butterfly roses and babybreath. Following the ceremony a supper for sixteen was served at the Spink-Arms. After a motor trip east the couple will be at home at the Spink-Arms. Division Party Division No. 10 L. A. A. O. H.. will give a card party at 8:30 this evening in St. Joseph’s hall. Those entertaining are Mesdames Margaret Cain. Katherine Scott, Anna Hanes and Elizabeth Dit'gler. Married Saturday Miss Margaret Delameter and Jack Stone were married Saturday morning at the home of Mrs. Cora B. Smith, 304 N. Denny St., by the Rev. George W. Allison. They will live in Louisville, Ky.
Outfits 1930 M i ti/ you need ■■for the Living Room, the Dining Room and the Bed Room ON EASIEST CREDIT TERMS!
Stairway Inside Doorway to Left
LOT NO. 5 100 New Dresses, All New Summer Models j 'ii-
