Indianapolis Times, Volume 40, Number 64, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 August 1928 — Page 8
PAGE 8
Church to Be Setting of Wedding MISS JANE CATHERINE lIAWEKOTTE, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John L. Hawekotte, 812 E. Fortieth St., will become the bride of Gareth Mitchell Hitchcock, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Hitchcock, 41 N. Arlington Ave., at 9 o’clock Sunday morning at Christ Church, The Rev. Floyd Van Keuren, pastor, will officiate. The altar will be decorated with cut flowers, palms and ferns and lighted with cathedral candles. Miss Helen Stephenson, maid of honor, will wear orchid georgette with an orchid cape to match and an orchid horsehair picture hat. She will carry a shower bouquet of roses and forget-me-nots. The bride will wear a rose beige ensemble, with a crepe dress and lace coat and a rose picture hat trimmed with rose velvet ribbon. She will carry a shower bouquet of Butterfly roses and valley lilies. William Robinson will serve as best man, immediately following the ceremony, a bridal breakfast will be served in the Blue room of the Marott Hotel. The couple will leave immediately following for Chicago, where they will make their home. The bride will travel in a navy blue ensemble, with cloche shaped navy blue felt hat to match. Her accessories will be in navy blue. The bride, a Butler University Junior, is a member of Alpha Chi Omega sorority. Mr. Hitchcock is a graduate of Butler University and a member of Delta Tau Delta fraternity.
Bridge and Shower for Bride-Elect HONORING Miss Eleanor Bos Miller, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Oscar George Mueller, 3301 Park Ave., whose marriage to Frank Lindley Churchman, son of Frank S. Churchman, Beech Grove, will take place Thursday, Misses Dorothy and Jean Wilson, 528 DeQuincy St., entertained Friday evening in their home with a bridge and china shower. Decorations of Japanese lanterns, parasols and garden flowers were carried out throughout the home. The gifts were hidden under a huge wedding cake. With the hostesses and the guest of honor were Mrs. Oscar G. Mueller, mother of the bride-elect; Mesdames Robert Littell, Robert Avels, William A. O’Daniel, Beryl Kitch and J. C. Dehorety, Newcastle; Misses Katherine Gerlac'n, Lucy Ashjian. Armen Ashjian, Doris Haggard, Virginia Lucas, Lillian Peffley and Amy Beatty, Crawfordsville; Mary McMeans, Dorothy Dugdale, Catherine Gilbert, Thelma Thomas, Jean Mander, Helen Pascoe, Elizabeth Reed and Harriet Adams, Brooklyn; Louise Dauner, Wallace Montague, Acton, and Helen Dodds. The hostesses were assisted by their mother, Mrs. H. C. Wilson.
Committees of League Receive Program Guides Local chairmen of standing committees of the League of Women Voters have been provided with adequate instructions and literature on their subjects by the State league. Package libraries on each standing committee program have been prepared and mailed to all local chairman. These package libraries contain pamphlets published by the National League of Women Voters, articles published by other organizatons ■which are pertinent to the subject of each committee, lists of references, suggested programs for open meetings and lists of speakers. State chairmen of the standing Committees selected the material sent. They are: Mrs. H. R. Misener, Michigan City, chairman of the efficiency in government committee of the State league; Miss Mary Lane, Indianapolis, chairman of child welfare; Mrs. Frank Hatch Streightoff, Indianapolis, chairman of education; Mrs. Edna M. Christian, Indianapolis, chairman of women in industry; Mrs. Helen A. Guy, Remington, chairman of legal status of women; Mrs. William S. Ehrich, Evansville, chairman of international cooperation to prevent war, and Mrs. Charles N. Teetor, Hagerstown, chairman of living costs are the chairmen who have prepared the material. DEEMS-DA VIES WEDDING DAY SET FOR AUG. 18 Mrs. Mary Wesp Deems, 723 E. Eleventh St., announces the engagement of her daughter, Anna Catherine Deems, to Darrell B. Davies, son of Mrs. Charlotte Pennell, 1234 Broadway. The wedding will take place at 6:30 p. m., Saturday, Aug. 18, at the Memorial Presbyterian Church, Eleventh St. and Ashland Ave. Miss Deems has chosen her cousin Mrs. Ray Wyatt, as matron of honor, Edwin S. Woodward will be best man. Miss Deems was graduated from Arsenal Technical High school and Mr. Davies attended Purdue University and is a member of Delta Upsilon fraternity. Weds California Man Announcement is made of the marriage of Miss Leone Newman, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William C. Newman, 1155 S. State Ave., to William H. Sumner, Los Angeles. Cal. The wedding took place July 23. Mr. and Mrs. Sumner have left for Los Angeles, where t they will make their home.
\ N Meridian St . will leave Aug. IS; Meridian 6^'will leave Aug. 23 lor ibe the principal speakers at l vWV JlplkS** ' * PW //jyfiK ' rh JievoiJ* Mich summer homc | Chicago, where she will meet her son school of Democracy to be spe \%' 2 mSF / /// onarievoix, Mien. \ I Billy, returning from a boys’ camp at . . .. c-vp-ty, nutr V% 1 W ■ W C/)/)m J! Mr ' and Mrs ’ F ’ L Sullivan ’ 2066 t MiC R, V’ 1 Hotel' 1 b ° at Democratic Women's Club Wedn gtfT a* yl/IAfB -S/UAsC'ClrLs N Delaware St., are in Chicago the Edgewater Beach Hotel. day all day _ al Hollenbeck Hall W iLv * Mr. and Mrs7"Raymond Bliss and Mrs. Erwin C. Stout, 124 W. the Y. W. C A Oust /UAs d/EnV daughter, Margaret, arrived Friday Forty-First St., is at Roaring Brook. Sessions will start at 10 in t Cs rT ruuv to be the guests of Mrs. Henry R. Mich. mornmg with uncheon at noon a ILT BliSS ’ 2905 N - St - Mrs. Robert Wilson. 6013 Col- t —' * Miss Mary Fishback and her lege Ave., and her granddaughter, state Democratic committee, v ———. ■' ■ father, W. O. Fishback, Glen Mar- Jean, will leave Aug. 11 for a visu nlso address the members. A \ tin, left Friday for 'Cleveland, Ohio, in Pittsburgh, Pa. p or t 0 f the Democratic natioi */r,„ TCnuiPv 4SII Miss Marian~sracey, Evanston, convention will be given by M
Doris Howell and Dr. Dittbrenner to Wed Aug. 16 The engagement and approaching marriage of Miss Doris Howell, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Clarke W. Howell, 930 W. Thirtieth St. ,and Dr. H. H. Dittbrenner, Noblesville, son of Mr. and Mrs. E. S. Dittbrenner, Michigan City, was announced Friday night at a garden bridge given at her home by the bride-elect The wedding will take place Aug. 16. Japanese lanterns and garden flowers were used for decorations with a color motif of pink, blue, orchid and green predominating. At tea time, the tables w T ere centered with mounds of sweetheart roses, orchid sweetpeas, larkspur and maiden hair fern. Ribbons, from the centerpiece to the individual places, revealed tiny nosegays in which were hidden the announcement of the engagement and the date of the wedding, held in place by individual wedding bands. With the bride-elect were Mesdames Simeon Wampler, Gosport; Charles Harrison, Greenwood; Misses Alice Carter, Gladys Hollin, Isabelle Broom, Mildred Cooke, Alberta Claffey, Ermal Thorpe, Rebecca Jones, Lorene Rosebaum, Vivian Eby, Maxine Rosebaum, Harrictte Ely, Wanda Far son, Eleanor Iselin and Mildred McLaughlin, Clinton. Fur Sleeves A blonde satin coat for early autumn wear has mink sleeves of wide, flaring cuffs and a high, roll collar of mink.
FLIES OVER ANDERSON ON GOLDEN WEDDING Mr. and Mrs. William H. Fox, Anderson, will celebrate their golden wedding anniversary Sunday by flying over the city and surrounding country as the guests of the Orin Welch Aircraft Company. Mr. Fox is an ardent airman, but it will be Mrs. Fox's first trip. The couple was married fifty years ago in Ripley County, living there until 1894, when they moved to Anderson. Six of the twelve children they had are living. They are Wilson Fox, Mrs. Anna Cox, William Fox Jr. and Mrs. Elsie Stohler, all of Anderson, and Mrs .Mamie Coverdale, Jefferson County. HOWDY CLUB TO STAGE BIRTHDAY CELEBRATION The first anniversary of the Howdy Club will be celebrated Sunday with a guest picnic at Flat Rock cave. Charter members of the club will be honor guests. Miss Ruth Owen, assisted by Miss Gladys Pavey and Francis Fisher, is in charge of arrangements for the program. Members and guests will meet at the home of Miss Owen, 2159 E. Riverside Dr., at 8:30 Sunday morning. MRS. F. D. HATFIELD ENTERTAINS VISITORS Mrs. Frank D. Hatfield, 3858 N. New Jersey St., entertained in her home Thursday afternoon with a luncheon-bridge to honor Mrs. Edna Dorney, Washington, and Mrs. Austin Sheedy, Pennsylvania. With the hostess and the guests of honor were Mesdames Walter C. Zirpel, Carl J. Fletcher, Warren K. Mannon, Clifford Herod, Joseph Brink, Clifford Gay and Miss Ethel Curryer.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
D. of I. Picnic for Members and Friends in Week An old-fashioned picnic for the members of the Daughters of Isabella will be held Saturday afternoon, Aug. 11, at Northern Beach. Plans have been completed for a program of sports which will include tennis, horseshoe pitching, swimming, boating, fishing and cards. Special bus service from the bus terminal, 125 W. Market St., at 1:30 Saturday afternoon, has been arranged for. Reservations must be made with Miss Vanier, secretary, at Drexel 4918, not later than Thursday evening. Those who drive out will find paved roads all the way by going out Meridian St., to Canal St., around Broad Ripple and down Rd. 31 to Nora, then two miles to Frank’s barbecue stand and east to Northern Beach. By following Keystone Ave. directly out. Northern Beach can also be reached. Committees have also been selected and plans completed for a theater party to be given at Keith's, Monday evening, Aug. 20, for the benefit of St. Elizabeth's home. Arrangements for a trip to Madison are being made by Miss Edna Buennagel, chairman. A special meeting of the organization will be held at the Catholic Community center Tuesday. An early autumn frock of rich golden brown sheer woolen material has a removable little sleeveless Eton jacket banded with seal that makes the frock look like a suis for street wear.
NOTES OF SOCIETY FOLK
Mrs John C. Ruckelshaus, 2835 N. Meridian St., is in Wequetonsing, Mich. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Morse Jr., 1831 N Meridian St., will remain in Littleton, N H., for two more weeks. Mr. and Mrs Alex Metzger, 4280 N. Meridian St., will leave Aug. 15 for the Metzger summer home at Charlevoix, Mich. \ Mr. and Mrs. F. L. Sullivan, 2066 N. Delaware St., are in Chicago Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Bliss and daughter, Margaret, arrived Friday to be the guests of Mrs. Henry R. Bliss, 2905 N. Meridian St. Miss Mary Fishback and her father, W. O. Fishback, Glen Martin, left Friday for 'Cleveland, Ohio. Miss Sarah Frances Kackley 4511 Broadway will be the guest of Mrs. Noble Dean at her cottage, Harbor Springs, Mich., the coming week. Miss Kackley left Friday by motor. Mrs. Bert A. Boyd, 3115 N. Meridian St., will spend the week-end at Lake Wawasee. Mr. and Mrs. C. Severin Buschmann and family and Charles E. Buschmann, 5122 Washington Blvd., are motoring east to Montauk Point, L. I. They will return through the Adircndacks and White Mountains. Mrs. Ella Coates and son, Randolph La Salle Coates, 418 E. Nineteenth St., have returned from a motor trip through Kentucky. Dr. and Mrs. William E. Gabe and little daughrtes. Sue and Patricia, 3930 Guilford Ave., have returned from Michigan. Mrs. Carl E. McCaskey, 3551 Washington Blvd., left Friday for Bay View, Mich., where she will remain for the rest of the summer. Mesdames Robert A. Adams, Rose Rollings, Misses Ruth Miller and Mary Griffin are registered at the Roosevelt Hotel, New York. Mr. and Mrs. Homer G. Weigand, Kessler Blvd., are registered at the Kenilworth Inn, Asheville, N. C. Mrs. J. Levering Evans and son, Marsall, 221 E. Fifteenth St., have gone to Massachusetts to visit with Mrs. Evans' parents. Mr. and Mrs.. George F. Rooker, 1210 N. Drexel Ave., and Miss Alice Sullivan, 1635 Pleasant St., have left for a tour through the eastern States. Miss Marybelle Julian, 2353 Central Ave., has left for Washington and Arlington, Va., where she will spend the remainder of the summer.
Misses Delma and Esther Theobald, Milton, are the house guests of Mr. and Mrs. M. F. Ward, 768 Carlisle PL, for the week end. Mrs. Pearl Taylor, 17, Hampton Dr., left today to spend ten days at Lake Wawc-ee. Mrs. J. William Wright, 3231 N. Meridian St., will leave Aug. 23 for Chicago, where she will meet her son Billy, returning from a boys' camp at Burt Lake, Mich. They will be at the Edgewater Beach Hotel. Mrs. Erwin C. Stout, 124 W. Forty-First St., is at Roaring Brook, Mich. Mrs. Robert H. Wilson, 6013 College Ave., and her granddaughter. Jean, will leave Aug. 11 for a visit in Pittsburgh, Pa. Miss Marian Stacey, Evanston. 111., who has been the guest of Mrs. Frank Hoke, Brendonwood, will return home Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Smitha, 341 Berkeley Rd., will leave shortly on a motor trip to Colorado. Miss Gertrude Ryan, 3829 Graceland Ave., who recently returned from a vacation at Tippecanoe Lake, has as her guest Miss Zola Dunnington, South Bend. Miss Ruth Line, 401 Harvard PL, will leave shortly to spend a vacation at James Lake. Miss Ernestine Bradford has returned from Winnetka, 111., where she was the guest of Mrs. John S. Lomis. Mr. and Mrs. Horace Nordyke, 216 E. Thirty-Second St., will go on a motor trip east Monday for several weeks. Mrs. Nordyke will visit relatives in Danbury, Conn. Mrs. Charles Krauss, 733 N. Pennsylvania St„ returned today from a trip to Alaska. Society Picnic Aug. 15 The Staff Society of the Methodist hosiptal and members’’ families will be entertained at a picnic outing Wednesday afternoon and evening, Aug. 15, at Forest Park Inn, Noblesville. Dr. Marie B. Kust, secretary, is general chairman in charge of arrangements. Others in charge of committees are Drs. Lyman Pearson and Lilliam B. Mueller, golf, and Dr. and Mrs. William Gabe, general entertainment. New Bouffant A patterned moire in dull garnet has anew bouffant silhouette created by having the left side pouf at the lyaistline, with the right side flaring from knee length where a full flounce is attached.
Four Speakers Announced for Club’s School—Evans Woollen, Albert Stump, Frank Dailey and Boyd Gurley will be the principal speakers at the School of Democracy to be sponsored by the Seventh District Democratic Women’s Club Wednesday all day, at Hollenbeck Hall in the Y. W. C. A. Sessions will start at 10 in the morning, with luncheon at noon and talks in the afternoon. Mrs. A. P. Logansport, vice chairman of the State Democratic committee, will also address the members. A report of the Democratic national convention will be given by Miss Faye Terrell. Mrs. W. C. Smith, president of the club, will preside at business sessions. All Democratic women are invited to attend. Reservations may be made by calling Mrs. Carl Wood, Talbot 1899, or Mrs. Walter Lewis, Humboldt 3826.
NEWS OF INDIANA D. A. R.
A luncheon and business session was held by Caroline Scott Harrison chapter board of directors, Marion, presided over by Miss Alice Goldthwaite. Mrs. Elza Modlin, program committee chairman, submitted the program for the year. Board members attending were Miss Goldthwaite, Mrs. F. M. Bears, Miss Della Wall, Mrs. C. A. Priest, Mrs. Otho Campbell, Mrs. Virgil Knight and Mrs. John Kendall. A memorial meeting to be held at the Country Club in October is one of the leading events on the new program. Mrs. Lillian Ganlard, La Grange, a national committee member, will speak. Others to address the chapter during the year are Mrs. James B. Crankshaw, State regent; Mrs. Frank Gavin, Indianapolis, *vice president general; Mrs. Anne Studebaker Carlisle, South Bend, legislation committee, and Mrs. Harry Rigdon, Wabash, vice president of the national defense committee. New committee members are: Historical research, Miss Della Wall; historical markets, Mrs. Margaret Harreld, real daughter; Inez Dury, geneological records; correct use of flag, Mary Kendall; Children of the Revolution, Mrs. John Kendall, Mrs. Harry Erlewine, Mrs. Arthur Osborn; D. A. R. hosiptal, Winnie Butler, Mrs. Archie Price and Mrs. J. F. Charles; patriotic education, Mrs. Oscar Thompson, Mrs. B. C. Dale,
AUG. 4, 1928
Nuptials to A Be Tonight at Church TIIE Central Avenue Methodist Church will be the scene of the marriage of Miss Viola Pearl Austermiller. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Austermille, to Emmett W. Green, son of Harry Green, 4250 Central Ave., at 8;30 this evening. The church will be decorated with palms, ferns and cut flowers. During the ceremony, which will be performed by Dr. O. G. Fifer, pastor, Mrs. Marie Kean, soprano, will sing "At Dawning” and 'O Promise Me.” Miss Estelle Austermiller, cousin of the bride, will be maid of honor. She will wear a sleeveless pale yellow chiffon dress with a draped skirt and flowers from shoulder to waistline. The bridesmaid, Miss Bertha Green, cousin of the bridegroom, will wear orchid chiffon with a draped skirt and orchid satin slippers. Both of the attendants will carry shower bouquets of roses and valley lilies. The bride, who will enter on the arm of her father, will be dressed in a bridal satin robe de style, made with scalloped hemline and a lace panel, pearl embroidered, forming a yoke and going down the front of the dress to the hemline. Her full length tulle veil will be made with a lace headband caught on either side with clusters of orange blossoms. She will carry a shower bouquet of white roses and valley lilies. Little Mary Jane Singer will be the flower girl. She will wear flesh ruffled crepe and will carry a French basket filled with rose petals. Paul Kenneth Barger, dressed in a white Lord Fauntleroy suit, will carry the wedding ring in a lily. Immediately following the ceremony, a reception will be held in the church parlors. Mrs. Austermiller, mother of the bride, will wear yellow chiffon, with long sleeves and draped skirt. The couple will take a two weeks’ motor trip through the northern and eastern States, and will be at home after Aug. 20 at 3452 N. Illinois St.
Parties for Miss Cole to Wed Sept. 2
TN honor of Miss Dorothy Mae Cole, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Cole, 2258 N. New Jersey St., whose marriage to Frank Dilling Walker, son of William W. Walker, will take pace Sept. 2 at the Broadway Methodist Episcopal Church, Mrs. Charles Walker, Misses Dorothy Walker and Mary Hamlin entertained with a bridge and china shower this afternoon at the home of Mrs. Walker, 601 E. Fifty-Sixth St. Appointments were carried out in ashes of roses and Alice blue, with garden flowers in those shades used on the table at tea time. With the hostesses and the guest of honor were Mesdames A. W. Rohlwing, W. W. Scott, T. W. Vickery, Ray Stewart, A. H. Cole, Thomas Black, John Burnett, Arthur Leary, Paul Scharick, Douglas Cook, C. W. Cole, H. E. Lister. G. E. Vickery and Ruth Orr; Misses Mary Elizabeth Driccoll, Ruth Clark, Marjorie Goecheus, Frances Thorpe, Katherine Cryan, Martha Lou Kennedy, Dorothy Ragan, Berniece Finley, Kathryn Buxton and Georgiabelle Fleener. This is the first of a series of parties to be given for Miss Cole. Miss Frances Thorpe and Miss Katherine Cryan will entertain Wednesday night at their home, 1429 Fairfield Ave., with a hosiery shower and bridge. Next Saturday, Mrs. John Burnett and Miss Ruth Clark will be hostesses at a surprise shower. Mrs. Douglas Vickery Cole will entertain, but the date of the party has not been announced. A garden party and linen shower will be given for the bride-elect by Mesdames Raymond Stewart, A. A. Cole and Arthur Leary. Sunshine Club to Meet The Children’s Sunshine Club of Sunnyside will hold its regular monthly meeting at 2 Wednesday afternoon at the Fletcher American National Bank Bldg. Mrs. John Connor, president, will be in charge of the meeting.
Miss Emily Goldthwaite, Mrs. H. F. Anderson, Mrs. Ovid Miller, Mrs. Claude Black, Mrs. John P. Koeppen; flower fund, Mrs. O. M. Flinn, Mrs. John Ferree, Mrs. I. E. Renbarger; publicity, Mrs. Virgil Knight and Miss Della Wall. tt tt a Mrs. Millison Groub has been appointed organizing regent for anew Seymour chapter by Mrs. James Crankshaw, State regent. Mrs. Groub stated that she will organize a chapter if she finds at least twelve persons eligible. NORTH SIDE GARDEN CLUB HEARS ADDRESS Ivtisses Anna and Lou Hosea were hostesses Friday at a meeting of the North Side Garden Club at their home, “The Arbors,” 5855 Central Ave. Mrs. George J. Mess, who has just returned from a painting trip through the Eastern States, gave a talk on “Gardens in the Mountains.” She illustrated her talk with water color sketches she made during the trip. Peacock Train Anew little peacock train appears on a navy blue cire chiffon gown for evening. The back has flat draperies of rounded, slanting line, with the train coming from under, being the bottom section.
