Indianapolis Times, Volume 39, Number 89, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 August 1927 — Page 6

PAGE 6

Local Girl a Bride in Home Rite r Tha home of Mr. and Mrs. Frank li. Moore, 1063 Pleasant St., was the scene of the marriage of their daughter, Helen, frt 4:30 p. m., Sundry, when she became the bride of Paul A. Gochenour, of Columbia City. Decorations in the home were in summer flowers and tapers carrying out the bridal color scheme of blue and pink. The ceremony was read by Dr. George M. Smith before a bank of palms and ferns. Mrs. Floyd A. Chuvch played a program of bridal airs before the ceremony, including “O, Promise Me” and “Indian Love Call.” For the entrance of the bridal party she played “The Bridal Chorus” from “Lohengrin” and To a Wild Rose" during the ceremony. The bridesmaid, Miss Marie Erber, wore French blue georgette and carried pink roses and the bride wore shell pink georgette trimmed in rhinestone and carried pink and white roses. ,Dr. W. W. Gochenour, of Delphi, was his brother’s best man. After a small reception the couple left immediately for Columbia City, where they will be at home at 70 N. Line St. The bride traveled in a dark blue georgette dress trimmed in tan with tan hat and accessories to match. Among out-of-town guests were: Messrs, and Mesdames W. W Oochenour, Delphi; Ray (Jochenour, Delphi; Ray Shlgley, Princeton; Oall Moulten, Rubana, 111.; E. V. Arnett, Chicago, and Robert Barnard, Chicago. Business Clubs Complete Plans for Conferences The Indiana Federation of Business and Professional Women at the annual picnic Sunday at Broad Ripple completed plans for holding fifty district conferences during the year. Miss Marian Ingham, Ft. Wayne, State president, presided at the business meeting at which talks wef-e made by Miss Glenn Anderson, president of the Indianapolis branch; Miss Lucy Osborn and Mfs. Gertrude Long, both of Indianapolis; Mrs. Jennie Rae Herscfi, Portland, and Mrs. Sue Gimminger, Ft. Wayne, national convention delegate. Members representing twenty-six cities attended. FRANCIS FATOUT TO WED SEPT. 17 Sept. IT has been set as the date for the marriage of Miss i’rancis Elizabeth Fatout, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ensel Fatout, 3216 Ruckle St., and Frank Hugh son of Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Alexander. The ceremony will take place at 8:30 p, m. at the Tabernacle Presbyterian church. Miss Fatout’s attendants will be Miss Mary Anne Adams, maid of honor; Miss Virginia Sue Campbell, Bowling Green, Mo.; Miss Harriet Lucille Little, Des Moines, la.; Miss Alleen Noblitt and Miss Margaret Macy, bridesmaids, and Miss Dorothy Jean Alexander, ribbon bearer. The assistants at the reception following the ceremony will lie Misses Evelyn Barnes, Eleanor Raub, Helen Law, Carline Richardson, Dorothy Nelson and Mrs. E. G. White, Dayton, Ohio. Kitchen Shower Mrs. Karl try-First St., entertained Saturday afternoon with a bridge party and kitchen shower in honor of her house guest, Miss Daisy Fairfield of Chicago whose marriage to E. Nor- > man Kershaw, Fall River, Mass., will take place Thanksgiving Day. Miss Fairfield is a graduate of the University of Illinois and a member of Kappa Kappa Gamma. The guests Saturday were Mrs. Goodwin Elkin, Lexington, Ky., who is visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. O. L. Watkins and . _ Mesdames Richmond Bastian vfSS? Gl A,bcr3 - Earl Robinson nardt Ernest R. steel! Clarence T. Drayer Rov Dupree K L. wlllts Btifibee, Jr. ~ . . Misses Margaret James Jane Pritchard Fall Wedding Prof, and Mrs. Claude R. Palmer of Muncie announce the coming marriage of his sister, Miss Laura Irene Palmer to Qregory Ross, Kokomo, the weddihg to take ptace early in the fall. Seventh District Club The Seventh district Democratic Woman’s Club will meet at 7:30 p. m. Tuesday at the Indiana Democratic Club, 518 N. Pennsylvania St.

Prize Recipes by Readers

NOTE—The Times will give $1 for each recipe submitted by a reader adjudged of sufficient merit to be printed 'n this column. One recipe Is printed dally, 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 trom one person. Pecan Pie Two eggs, three-fourths cup sugar, one half cup com syrup. Beat egg, add sugar and syrup, pour in crust, place pecan halves over top and bake In slow oven. Serve with whipped cream. ' Mrs. L. Young, 417 Exeter Ave., City.

Apple Recipes?' What is your favorite way of using apples—in sauces, cakes, preserves, salads or any other delicious dish? Next Friday is the day for ways of using apples in The Times recipe department. Your recipes must be in The Times office by Wednesday noon to oompete for one of the dollar checks which is sent to each reader whose recipe is printed.

• ONE OF THESE MAY BE NEXT “FIRST LADY”

etue

v Mrs Charles* G. Daves 5

B WASHINGTON, Aug. 22.—Who is going to be our next First Lady? i The Colonel’s Lady and Judy O’Grady may be sisters under the skin, but when one or the other is to be First Lady, the surface skin stuff begins to look rather important. There are six ladies who, because of a recent famous sentence containing the verb “choose” are billed for stellar roles in that great quadrennial comedy entitled “Our First Lady.” Famous Quotations We might introduce the sextet with some of their famous lines. Alice Roosevelt Longworth—“lt will take more than official political life to keep me from being myself.” Mrs. Longworth, it may be recalled, has been herself since the days she smoked the first cigaret smoked by any woman in the country, rode a sacred elephant of Siam, and stood on her head at State receptions. Here comes Mrs. Herbert Hoover “I’m just a background for Bertie.” But she’s been a rather energetic, vital “background," translating books with him, Inventing war recipes, feeding starving refugee children, and being director in her. own name of such huge organizations as Girl Scouts of America. Here’s Mrs. Charles Dawes—- “ Charlie’s bark is so much worse than his bite.” And Mrs. Frank O. Lowden—“l am just a wife and mother. I have taught all my daughters to be good cooks and housewives.” And Mrs. William E. Borah—“I can’t keep up with the swim. We must live within our income. Besides, so much of this formal social stuff is so futile.” And Mrs. Hiram Johnson—“My house is my universe.”

Have Much in Common These six women whose husbands are all considered possible choices for 1928 Republican nomination for the office of president of the United States, are as unlike as the colonel’s lady and the classic Judy, and yet, in one respect, at least, have much in common. > Their commop bond is a shunning of the limelight of publicity and a belief that their husbands’ jobs do not make them, the wives, public characters. Mrs. Nicholas Longworth and Mrs. Hirman Johnson have given no interviews for twenty years. Mrs. Dawes has graciously refused any publicity since she became Second Lady of the Land. Mrs. Hoover will talk on only her pet child, the Girl Scouts. Mrs. Lowden will discuss home, motherhood and the job of being wife to a public official, and delightful little Mrs. Borah, who can refuse few people anything, will “help the newspaper girls out because she always wanted to be one herself.” She’d Give “Kick” Mrs. Nicholas Longworth as First. Lady would give romantic and thrill-loving America the “kick” of its life. Here would be the return to the White House as First Lady of the Princess Alice of T. R.’s legime—the adored, daring, fun-loving girl whose wedding day stopped the very wheels of State and whose wedding gifts from all the rulers of the earth represented such wealth that her father, Theodore poosevelfc, would not make the list public. With Alice Roosevelt Longworth as First of the Land the White House would become a saloon of wit, intelligent conversation, political planning, with she softpedal on inane social functions that mean nothing'.

Either Mrs. Frank O. Lowden or Mrs. Hiram Johnson as First Lady would mean a quiet, unpretentious, homelike White "House with the respective First Ladies evading as much public life as possible. Mrs. Johnson has hardly accepted one social invitation in the years her husband has been in the Senate. She is not well and admits that she is interested in little outside her home. The home, an old Colonial estate outside of Washington, has been refurnished and decorated by Mrs. Johnson to recapture the charm of olden days. Mrs. Frank O. Lowden, wife I the former Governor o ffllinols, as the former Florence Pullman and half heiress to the $30,000,000 Pullestate, i$ not at all unaccustomed to society. She was a beautiful girl wooed

MB?Vi]lfamE.BDFah. .

by foreign princes, and shocked everyone by her marriage to just an aspiring young attorney. She is characterized as “a man’s woman,” the sort of woman with whom men delight to talk. Efficient, a good business woman, she has managed her own money, her home, her children, and says her life is full enough without assumirg further responsibilities.

She’s a “Home Body”

Mrs. Dawes is another “homo body,” and one of these wifely powers behind the throne who makes her energetic husband take time off to relax with the music which he loves. Homes for homeless children take much of Mrs. Dawes’ time and interest, just as “the boys” at St. Elizabeth’s are the interests of little Mrs. Borah rather than the social fetes to which she and the Senator are constantly bidden. Decorating is a hobby of Mrs. Borah’s, too. Her apartment is furnished Chinese style and is gay with singing birds which fly uncaged about the rooms.

Freedom Exercised Too Far Kills Sacred Things BT MARTHA LEE Freedom upon many lines is the order of the day. Freedom of the press, free speech, loose free lines of clothing, freedom of thought and action—every one is demanding it. This is as it should be, highly desirable, the divine freedom of all people, but the tendency toward free loving, the promiscuous petting that so many folks seem to think their right, is surely taking "freedom” beyond safe lines. If a kiss stands for anything, it stands for some degree of love. It may sound old-fashioned to this modem generation to mention It, but love is surely something of a sacred thing; at any rate, sacred between two people.

We usually guard precious things with greatest care, jewels in their caskets, orchids in hot houses. Why then should caresses, a rightful expression of love, be dragged about for every one to gaze upon, to laugh about on the highway, to treat as a joke? Doesn’t it somehow seem uncommonly common, pitifully cheap, vulgar? Kiss Them Freely? Dear Martha Lea: Sometime* I Juat don't know what to do or how to act. My mother is dead and I .have lived with my auntie for seven years, r She lets me (to out with boys some since I am 18 years old but she has always been telling me to not let the boys make over me. Now you won't think I am bragging when I tell you that I am considered a very pretty girl. I have naturally curly hair and a complexion that people are always ravlpg about. I can get lots of beaus, but Miss Lee the thing that puzzles me Is that I don’t seem to make a hit with these boys if I act as my aunt has told me to. The other girls just kiss any boy they are with and my best girl friend (we counted this up one day), kissed as many as eight boys In one week. Now I don’t mean just one little goodby kiss either. She says though she doesn’t care anything about them, either the boys or the kisses, and she says a kiss Isn't anything, anywav. Who Is right, my aunt or my girl friend? MARGUERITE. Both are right, dear little girl, from their own point of view. To your girl friend who has taken all sentiment, all real feeling, everything worth while from her caresses, a kiss is a dead thing, worthless. That’s the price she’s already paying for making them common. She’s thrown away something precious that she’ll never get back. Your aunt is right. She knows, although she perhaps has never triqd to express It to you that to keep your expressions of love for the one thV; sometime will mean everything to you, is to be treasuring what poets write about. It will keep you from ever feeling that this old world holds only apples of ashes in the treasure house of human emotions. Shall He Forgive? Dear Martha Lee: I am hoping you can straighten me out. I was married for fifteen years to my wife and finally she got tired of housework. We have a nice ome. but she wanted to get awav from it. Well, ebe finally went to the bad. running around with other men. This was some years ago. Now I have received a letter from her from Oklahoma. She is in very bad condition. Savs she has no health and almost no money. Asks me to take her back and save she had never been happy since we parted. We are not divorced and I have never paid attention to any other woman. Folks here say I would be the biggest kind of fool to pay attention to her letter. What do you say? ROSCOE L. M. Only you know whether she has ■suffidtent place In your heart to make you overlook and forgive her wretched treatment of you. If you can forgive and help her, you will be doing an act of rare nobility. Even if you do not take her back as your wife, perhaps you can help her in her misery. NO doubt your friends are right in that she deserves nothing from your hands. However, our whole Christian faith Is based upon the idea that the grievous sinner should re-

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Hoover

The Longworths would be the only chief executive family to bring a small child to the White House.

®aby Paulina will be four at the time of the 1929 inauguration. No Other Youngsters

The Dawes have two adopted children, David 15, and Virginia, 13. The Lowden children are young men and women of 30, 29, 26 and 23; the Hoover boys are married: the Borahs have no children, and the two Johnson are grown and away from home. These six possible First Ladies might be classified thus—

Alice Roosevelt Longworth, the youngest, the prettiest, the most politically minded. Mrs. Lowden, the most cosmopolitan. Mrs. Johnson, the most modest and retiring. Mrs. D&wes, the sweetest. Mrs. Hoover, the most intelligent, the leader type. Mrs. Borah, the best company, the wittiest and the best friend of the newspaper girls.

ceive our pity and our help. Don’t let your friends decide this for yob. Make your own decision. “Broken Hearted,” who Is 22 years old, has been going with a young man for four years and has for two. Recently he told her to not expect him to marry for a long time. The girl’s older sister advises her to quit him and says as he has a good income, his reluctance to marry must come from the fact that he does not deeply love his fiaivee. * I think I agree with your sister, little girl. A young man who makes such an announcement after taking up this much of a girl’s time indicates he is a very doubtful matrimonial proposition. It will be hard if you love him, but if I were you, I would frankly offer to release him if he so wishes. This will either shake him into an understanding of your position or bring to a head what will eventually come about, anyway.

Family Menus

BY SISTER MARY BREAKFAST—Fresh plums, cereal Rooked with raisins, cream, oven toast, milk, coffee. LUNCHEON—Lettuce and peas au gratin, rye bread and cheese sandwiches, compote of fresh fruit, chocolate wafers, milk, tea. DINNER—VeaI balls with macaroni en casserole, celery and apple salad, steamed blackberry pudding, milk, coffee. Always be sure that a fruit compote Is thoroughly chilled. A spoonful of whipped cream can be dropped on top c f each serving and a cube of bright jelly used for garnishing if the dessert must be “dressed up,” but a cold, not too sweet mixture of three or more fruits is delightful and needs no apologies. Lettuce and Peas au Gratin Two cups shelled green peas, 2 heads lettuce, 1 tablespoon onion juice, % cup fresh mint leaves, % cup veal stock or water,* 2 tablespoons butter, 2 tablespoons flour, 1 cup top milk, Vt teaspoon salt, % teaspoon pepper, buttered crumbs. Chop mint leaves. Cut lettuce in slices. Put lettuce, peas, mint, onion juice and stock in a sauce pan, cover and cook twenty minutes over a low fire. Shake the pan frequently to prevent burning. Remove from fire and stir in butter and flour rubbed to a perfectly smooth paste. Add salt, pepper and top milk and stir until smooth. Turn into a well buttered baking d!*h, cover with buttered laid bake twenty minutes in a hot oven.

Nuptial Rite Held Sunday in Church Miss Genevieve Lahmann. daughter of Mrs. Amelia K. Lahmann, 2711 N. Illinois St., was married to Robert L. Hill, son of Mrs. Effie Hill, at 4 p. m. Sunday at the Zion Evangelical Church with the Rev. J. C. Peters, who officiated at the marriage of the bride’s parents, performing the ceremony. ’ Carl Ziegler played a program of organ music before the ceremony and Herbert McLeod, violinist, played “Love’s Greeting,” Melvin L. Kettlehut sang “At Dawning” and Mrs. E. Hopkins sang “O Promise Me.”

Miss Myrtle Lahmann. sister of the bride, was maid of honor and wore a gown of yellow georgette trimmed in taffeta and carried a bouquet of yellow roses. Miss Lillian Finke of Columbus, Ind., and Miss Ruth Sudbrock were bridesmaids. Miss Finke wore orchid georgette trimmed in silver lace and carried Ophelia roses and Miss Eudbrook wore apple green georgette with lace and carried pink roses. All wore black velvet hats with flowers to match their dresses. Little Betty Whttesell, as flower girl, wore white trimmed in peach and carried a basket of rose petals. The bride wore white satin with full side panels of lace caught at the left side with a rosette of seed pearls. Her veil was trimmed with a headdress of orange blossoms and she carried an arm bouquet of bridal roses.

Thomas Dillon was best man and the ushers were Herbert Hill, Dewitt Mier, Jack Leach and Edward Sudbrook. A reception at the home of the bride’s mother followed the ceremony and the couple left on a motor trip East. They will be at home at Bridgeport. Ind., after Sept. 10. The bride traveled in a suit of black and white satin with hat to ipatch, and fox fur. Wed Saturday The marriage of Miss Mary Fugate, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Willis T. Fugate, of Carmel, to Guy M. Hardin of Rochester took place Saturday morning at the Third Christian church with Rev. Charles M. Fillmore officiating. After the ceremony the couple left on a motor trip and will be at home after Sept. 1 inf Rochester. The bride was graduated from Butler and is a member of Delta Delta Delta. Bridge Series Miss Jane Foltz will be hostess this evening for the last of a series of bridge parties which the alumnae association of Phi Delta Psi sorority has given during the summer. Mrs. John Grumme and Mrs. O. K. Gaskins will assist.

Announce Engagement Mr. and Mrs. George M. Cornelius, 47 Layman Ave., announce the engagement of their daughter, Melissa Jane to Ralph Polk Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph B. Polk of Greenwood. The wedding will take place at 8 p. m. Sept. 10 at the Irvington M. E. Church. Wed Sept. 24. Mr. and Mrs. Harry L, Hicks, 3441 Guihord Ave., announce the engagement of their daughter, Irene, to Robert W. Stockwell, son of Mrs. Palmer R. Stockwell, the wedding to take place Sept. 24. Coming Marriage The marriage of Miss Thelma Kathryn Armstrong, daughter of Mrs. Emma Armstrong, of Edgewood, to George R. Vawter of Glenn’s Valley will take place Aug. 31 at the M. E. church in Glenn’s Valley. Anderson Couple to Wed The marriage of Miss Velma Crawford, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. U. W. C awford of Markleville, formerly of Anderson, and Carroll Cowgill, son of Mr. and Mrs. Bf*M. Cowgtll of Anderson, will take place Sept. 18. New Fi{r Zorino is the new nappy, soft fur, looking a bit like beaver, that forms the smart beige and brown cape jollar on a brown cloth coat. Sports Influence A Paris frock with a black velvet circular skirt borrows a sports idea and has its bodice fashioned from striped chiffon in ivory, flesh and yellow shades. 1 Soapy Water If you will shave a few slices of white soap into water before putting flowers in it, it will keep them fres i longer. Blue Popularity The outstanding color which smart Parisians are wearing is blue. Blues with a purple tinge are the most popular.

Dogs Become' Vanity Cases Bv WEA. Service LONDON, Aug. 22 —Lapdogdom is alarmed today as a result of anew fad that' is sweeping over London. Not that Pekinese and Sealyhams the Pomeranians are n6 longer in milady's favor; the trouble is that these, and all others of the toy variety are being skinned and their interiors fitted with vanity cases. . * In hotels and cases where dogs are forbidden, the managers hesitate long before, they tell a woman to leave her pet outside. If they do approach a woman with a dog in her arms, x the chances are that she will press a button and the dog / will fly open, revealing powder, mirror, rouge, handkerchief and other accessories. It is, indeed, a dog’s life.

PARIS OFFERS SQUARE PARASOL

*

Fickle Paris, tiring of regulation shapes in parasols, is reveling in new designs nd sizes for late summer parasols and early fall umbrellas. Most intriguing is the new square - shaped parasol, especially when it is gold-yellow silk mesh with gay colored flowers embroidered on it. The handle is carved ebony, fashioned so Milady can conveniently hold onto it.

' Patterns PATTERN ORDER BLANK Pattern Department, Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Ind. Enclosed find 15 cents for which send Pat- OQ O Q tern No. “ ** “ Size Name * Street City

DRESS OF PLAID WOOLEN Serviceable and comfortable dress of soft plaid woolen fabrics —the newest idea for the school girl’s wardrobe. Design No. 2929 in straight line styling boasts a boyish collar, bosom front and flared cuffs of plain harmonizing shade of woolen. A fetching suede belt matches the piping on dress. Four seams to sew! This cunning style closes at right of front insert. Pattern in sizes 6, 8,10, 12 or 14 years, and-only requires 114 yards of 40-inch material with % yard of 27-inch contrasting for the 8-year-old child. Wool jersey, striped flannel, challis and English prints arj all smart fabrics to choose. \

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 abbve coupon, including 15 cents (coin preferred), and mailing it to the Pattern Department of The Times. Delivery is made in about a week.

MISS BOOTH GIVEN SEND-OFF AT STATION Violet McAllister Booth, captain in the Salvation Army, who will attend the American Legion Convention in Paris in September, was given a “send-off party” at the union station at 1:45 p. m. today, by members of the Indiana unit of the Women’s Overseas Service League of which she is a member. Miss Booth will carry on canteen work during the Legion convention in almost the same location as was the canteen where she served during the World War. She will sail Thursday from New York. Members of the service league presented’ her with a sea log, candy, flowers, books and other remembrances.

Shepard-H aerie Mr. and Mrs. Frank R. Shepard, 2819 N. Pennsylvania St., announce the engagement of their daughter, Elizabeth Compton Shepard to Rudolf Karrman Haer’.e, son of Mr. and Mrs. George C. Haerle, 1449 N. Pennsylvania St., the wedding to take pmee the latter part of September. . •’ >

Finest and Largest Stock of Poeketknives in the State. Also a complete stock of other fine cutlery. VONNEGUT’S* U££?„.

Let Children Do Choosing of Vocation BY OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON After all the talking there has been about educations and vocations it seems to me that quite as many parents are on the wrong track about their children’s future as ever. That children are to go to college they seem to agree is a desirable thing. But that children are to go to college because beyond college are definite things they wish to do is quite another matter. They cannot seem to mix the two ideas. “John wants to be a farmer,” says John Smith, Sr. “I had to put my foot down on that 'good and hard. What does ing for all these years? John’s going to have a college education and have a chance I never had!” Doesn’t young John’s father know that his son’s idea of farming is the very reason he should go to college? Not because he has a vague idea that young John is to have one of those hazy things known as a chance? What chance? He doesn’t know himself. He is sending away to different colleges and universities for catalogs, and is asking around among his friends which college they think is ‘best.” Why not send John to a university that has a good course in agriculture and educate John’s desire to do a certain thing? Too mans parents think that boys and girls don’t know their own minds when they say they would like to do this thing or that. I knew a boy who wanted to be a musician. He talked constantly of being an orchestra leader. The father, hardheaded and practical, put him into a university for a course in business training. Later he went into arbank. He thought the boy’s talk mere prattle. That boy is saving every penny he can and studying music at night. Some day he may be a great musician. In this case the boy’s determination rose above the father’s mistake and the wasted years.

Personals

Miss Katherine Louise and Miss Lucinda Smith, 1026 S. Randolph St., who have been spending the summer at Ridley Park, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, Atlantic City and other Eastern points, returned home Sunday. Mrs. A1 Beckman of Coldwater, Ohio, and Ralph Althoff of Newcastle, Ind., have returned to their homes after spending two weeks with Mr. and Mrs. Harold Prather, 911 N. Bradley St. Mrs. Prather and her two children, Dorothy Marie an Eileen, returned home with Mrs. Beckman for a two-week visit. Mrs. George O. Rockwood and Miss Diana Rockwood, 1606 N. Delaware St., are spending some time in New York City at the Roosevelt Hotel. •Publish Book Psi lota Xi sorority of Decatur, Ind., has published a cook book, “Kitchen Kapers,” containing favoritee recipes of Decatur housewives. Tuesday Club Party The Tuesday Club will give a card party Tuesday at 2 p. m. at 3514 E. Washington St. Mrs. Elizabeth Austin is chairman.

Wet Wash—Dry Wash Rough Dry—New Way De Luxe—List Work —n j Choose the Sterling service which fits your Un6XCI needs .... know that your laundry will be handled carefully, Individually .... that Ivory soap and rain-soft water will 6300 gently wash all soil away, paying dividends in longer wear for your most delicate fabrics. V STERLING c lhe Ivory Soap LAUNDRY Every kind of cleaning service 1 v \ ...•? ?V. Yv.,,' y ; /

AUG, 22, 1927

Miss Lukens Is Bride of 1 L.F. Russell An archway of summer flowers, ferns and smilax in the living room of the home of Mr. and Mrs. A. S. Lukens, 2802 ts. Michigan St., formed the setting for the marriage at 8 p. m. Saturday of their daughter, Miss Esther, to Leonard F. Pursell, son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Pursell. Rev. G. L. Farrow performed the ceremony. Preceding the ceremony, Dudley Campbell, violinist, played a program of bridal airs, accompanied by Miss Majory Nelson at the piano. Miss Martha Lukens, sister of the bride, sang “O, Promise Me” and “I Love You Truly,” before the ceremony' and during the service sang “Smilin’ Through,” accompanied by Mr. Campbell and Miss Nelson. Attended by Sister Miss Mamie Pursell, sister of the bridegroom, was maid of honor and wore, a sleeveless dress of orchid and silver changeable taffeta fashioned with tig.it waist. A bow of orchid velvet hung from the shoulder to the hem in the back. She wore silver slippers and hose and a rhinestone headband and carried Ophelia roses tied with orchid tulle. Miss Mary Alice Underwood, bridesmaid, wore a gown fashioned the same as Miss Pursell’s, of greenj and gold changeable taffeta. HerJ bouquet, which was the same, was tied with pale green tulle. Miss Mary LaVerne Pursell, niece of the bridegroom, as flower girl, wore pink satin and carried a basket of rose petals tied with a pink tulle bow. Richard Stevens, as ring bearer, wore white satin and carried the ring ou a satin pillow. Theodore Brennan was best man.

Bride’s Gown The bride, given in marriage by her father, wore a gown of white bridal satin with full skirt and basque waist. It had a semi-overskirt of Spanish hwe set on in points and the long tight sleeves had cuffs of the lace. The V neck was ornamented with a flower of the material and at the waist was a crushed girdle. The veil had a double row of orange blossoms and was caught at the back with white satin ribbon. Her bouquet was of bride’s roses with an orchid in the center and was tied with orchid tulle and white satin ribbons. Reception at House A reception followed the ceremony. The rooms were decorated with standards of summer flowers and ferns and in the dining room were gladioli and delphinium. A three-tier wedding cake formed the centerpiecs for the dining table. Mrs. Lukens, mother of the bride, received in an alice blue georgette dress over printed crepe slip and wore a shoulder corsage of pink roses. Mrs. Pursell wore lavender crepe'trimmed in lace and she also had a shoulder corsage. J The couple left on a wedding trip" and will be at home after Aug. 27 at 5345 E. Washington St. The bride traveled in a suit of georgette and satin in two shades of ’brown with hat and accessories to match. Miss Blizzard Is Bride in Church Service The marriage of Miss Eleanor Pearl Blizzard, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles T. Blizzard, 6335 Michigan Rd., and Thomas E. Black, son of Mr. and Mrs. George Black of Rochester, took place at 11:30 a. m. Saturday at the Tabernacle Presbyteriaan Church with Dr. J. Ambrose Dunkel officiating, in the presence of only the immediate families. Miss Katherine Mueller, the bride’s only attendant, wore wine colored georgette combined with transparent velvet with hat to match. The bride wore tan georgette trimmed in velvet of a deeper shade and wore a tan velvet hat. Thomas Hoover of Rochester was best man. Follownig the ceremony there was a breakfast at the Elks Club and the couple left on a motor trip East. They will be at home after Sept. 1 with the bride’s parents. | Wed at Yorktown Miss Mary Margare Pittenger, daughter of E. E. pittenger of Yorktown and Alfred L. Ellison, son of Mrs. A. G. Ellison of Muncie, were married Sunday at the home of the bride. The bride attended Indiana University and was a Delta Zeta and Mr. Ellison graduated from Purdue, where he was a Delta Tau Delta.

SCHLOSSER'S OfflffitOVE Butter Cjresh Churned from'freshCreard