Indianapolis Times, Volume 40, Number 67, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 August 1928 — Page 6

PAGE 6

Miss Abigail A. Bevan and Herman A. Zeyen Wed Today at Cathedral THE marriage of Miss Abigail Alice Bevan, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Bevan, 1843 N. Talbott St., and Herman A. Zeyen, son of Mrs. Rose Zeyen, Richmond, took place at 9 this morning at the SS. Peter and Paul Cathedral, the Rt. Rev. Joseph B. Chartrand and the Rev. Edgar O’Connor officiating. The altar was decorated with vases of pale pink and white

gladioli and ferns. A program of organ music was played by Miss Helen Sheppard and Harry Calland sang “x\.ve Maria,” “Mystery of Love” and “Benedictus.” Miss Ethel Bevan, sister of the bride, was the maid of honor; who wore orchid and silver changeable taffeta made with a bouffant skirt and basque waist; silver slippers, a picture hat or orchid horsehair braid and carried Premier roses and delphinium. Miss Lucille Gillespie, Logansport, maid of honor, was gowned in pale green georgette, made with a low waistline and rippled skirt, with a cape effect in the back. She wore silver slippers, a picture hat of horsehair braid to match her dress and carried butterfly roses. James Bowen served as best man and Edward Zeyen and Jack Bevan were ushers. Bride Wears Satin The bride wore white bridal satin, made robe de style with a scalloped hemline. A panel of lace embroidered in pearls down the front of the gown, widened at the throat to form a yoke in the back. Her full length veil was caught cap shape with a band of lace and clusters of orange blossoms at either side. Her bouquet was made up of bride’s roses and valley lilies. Following the ceremony a wedding breakfast was served at the Marott Hotel gold room. Covers were laid for twenty-five guests at a long table decorated with a mound of roses and gladioli and lighted by tall white tapers in cadelabra at either end of the table. Couple on Motor Trip Th£ bride and bridegroom left Immediately after the breakfast for a two weeks’ motor trip through the eastern States and Canada. They will be at home after Sept. 1 at 2020 N. Delaware St. Among out-of-town guests were Forrest O. Barnhardt, Mr. and Mrs. L. S. Owen and daughter, Louise, and Mrs. Rose Ryan, Logansport; Mrs. and Mrs. Harry Black, Dayton, Ohio; and Mr. and Mras. Richard Zehen, Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Zehen, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Peiffer, Mr. and Mrs. Norbert Anderson, and Miss Marie Folkner. Richmond. Shower Tonight for Miss Phillips to Wed Sunday In honor of Miss Kathryn Phillips, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John H. Phillips, 1045 King Ave., whose marriage to James Russell Stonehouse will take place Sunday, Miss Elsa Behrmann, 1019 Bradbury St., will entertain this evening with a linen shower. With Miss Behrmann, the hostesses will be Misses Frances Olfc’en and Margaret Holdman. Gifts to the bride will be attached to ribbon streamers, which wjll fall from 1 the spout of a sprinkling can. Roses, gladioli and delphinium will be used to decorate the home and on the table at serving time. Guests will be Mrs. John Phillips, mother of the bride: Misses Gertrude Weinbercht, EdnS McDaniels, Esther Hilgemeier, Alma Dammeyer, Dorothy Luplow, Evelyn Lentz, Louise Mayes. Irma Vollrath, Alma Burke, Hilda Krest, Lenore Mueller and Eleanor Hilgemeier.

Dorothy Luplow Will Be Bride of E. E. Dammeyer

The engagement of their daughter. Miss Dorothy Luplow, to Edward E. Dammeyer, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles G. Dammeyer, 4444 Central Ave.. was made Tuesday evening at a bridge party given by Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Luplow at thei rhome, 544 East Drive Woodruff Place. The wedding will take place Sept. 1. The announcement of the marriage date was concealed by miniature brides at each place. The table was decorated with sprays of flowers in shades of pink, orchid and green, the bridal colors. A bride and bridegroom on a platform of ferns marked the centerpiece. Guests with Miss Luplow were Misses Alma Dammeyer, Margaret Holtman. France', Olsen, Hilda Krest, Irma Vollrath, Irene Russell, Lenore Mueller. Elsa Behrmann, Xiouise Mayes, Esther Hilgemeier, Evelyn Lentz, Kathryn Phillips, Edna McDaniels, Alma Burke and Eleanor Hilgemeier.

Prize Recipes by Readers

NOTE —The Times will give $1 for each recipe submitted by a reader adjudged of sufficient merit 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 Meat Salad One and one-half pounds lean pork, two pounds veal. Boil tender, cool, dice fine and add two onions, one stalk celery, two mangoes, one bottle stuffed olives, six hard boiled eggs, one dozen sweet pickles which have been diced. Mix with a vinegar mayonnaise. MRS. F. W. EARHART 627 N. Dearborn St., Indianapolis. Entertain at Cards A euchre and card party will be held this Thursday and Friday afternoons at St. Catherine’s hall, Shelby and Tabor Sts., for the benefit of St. Catherine’s Church.

Home Scene for Evening Nuptial Rite The wedding ceremony of Miss Gertrude Thompson, daughter of E. S. Thompson, Springfield, and Vernon Newman, son of Mr. and Mrs. R. F. Newman. 1254 Belmont Ave., took place Tuesday evening at the home of the groom’s parents. The bridal party sto and beneath an arch at one end of the living room festooned with summer flowers and hung with bridal bells. Miss Gertrude Davies, Anderson, was maid or honor, and Roy Michaels best man. The bride was gowned in a white satin robe de style with panniers of silk lace. Her tulle veil was caught cap fashion with orange blossoms. She carried a shower bouquet of bride’s roses. Miss Davies wore a frock of peach georgette embroidered in lavender chenille, and a large picture hat Following the ceremony a reception took place on the lawn, where about 175 guests were entertained. Mr. and Mrs. Newman have gone on their wedding trip to St. Louis, Mo., and points in the South. Miss Thompson was graduated from the Anderson high school and Mr. Newman is a senior at Purdue University.

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own clothes. Obtain this pattern by filling out the abovee coupon, including 15 cents (coin preferred), and mailing it to the Pattern Department of The Times. Delivery is made in about a week. Reunion and Picnic Reunion and picnic of residents and former residents of Gosport will de neld Aug 12 at Garfield Park Dinner will be served at noon followed by a short program. E. A. McCarty is president and Mrs. John Brasier secretary. Annual Mary Reunion The fifteenth annual Mary reunion will be held at Broajd Ripple Park, Aug. 23. persons bearing I the given name of Mary are invited to attend. Mary Batty is president.

MATCHING SET

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BY OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON There is a type of child who prefers his own company to that of other children. It is often difficult to tell what motive may lie behind the habit, but various things may be accountable. Perhaps he has been an only child just long enough to be a bit spoiled. The arrival of another baby may cause a feeling of resentment, and he goes into a prolonged state of sulky pout that will keep him away from other children and other persons for a long period. This habit may grow. Another reason for a child preferring his own company is supersensitiveness. He shrinks from playing with other children to save himself from ridicule. Such children are constantly on the qui vive and their poor little minds imagine slights that are not intended. Ridicule means agony of mind for almost any child, and for a sensitive nervous child it becomes intolerable. Sometimes a solitary child may be merely tired for nervous. Perhaps it exhausts him to paly where other children are making a noise and romping and pushing and tearing things up. Solitude may be sought by a child of the highly imaginative type who makes little plays for himself out of his dream world. He can play by the hour with an imaginary playfellow, or dress up a toy with life and personality and making of it a pleasant companion. If I were the mother of a “solitary” child, I should try to discover which one of these possible causes was responsible for his avoidance of other children. If it is the suly solitude of a child whose place has been usurped by a baby, I should get him out of it by extreme kindness and tact. Show him no one can take his place. If he is sensitive and afraid of ridicule, I should get the co-op-eration of other children in trying to overcome it. Then I should have him spend a part of each day with them. He needs those other children. Explain to them that they must avoid noticing anything he does. He will work out of it in time. The tired, nervous child should not be tired or nervous. He should have all the sleep he can possibly get and his diet looked into. Give him milk and fruit and plenty of green vegetables. Get him outdoors all you can. He may, in time, become more sociable. The imaginative child should be dealt with carefully. Foster his little plays and the mind-child he has created. But also see that part of each day. at least, he has one or more normal healthy children to play with. He needs them to balance the real and the makebelieve in his mind. A little red blood if you please! Edna Gwynn and Reid Sharum in Wedding at Home Announcement is made of the marriage of Miss Edna Gwynn, j daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. E. j Gwynn, 5753 Bonna Ave., to Reid Sharum, 80 E. New York St., at the home of the bride's parents Monday evening. The ceremony was performed by the Rev. Albert J. Spaulding, pastor of the East Park Methodist Episcopal church. Miss Agnes Marley was the bride's only attendant and Charles Gwynn, brother of the bride, served as best man. Miss Marley wore pink crepe de chine beaded in crystal and carried a shower bouquet of pink roses. The bride was dressed in a simple white crepe bridal gown and wore a long tulle veil caught in cap shape, with Clusters of orange blossoms. She carried a shower bouquet of bride’s roses. After a short trip, the couple will be at home at 136 Good Ave.

Party Given for Duluth, Guests at Iverson Home Honoring Misses Carrie and Evelyn Rasmussen, Duluth, Minn., who are the house guests of Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Iverson, 1650 Barth Ave., Miss Helen Luedeman entertained Monday evening with a Japanese garden party at her home. The yard w r as lighted with Japanese lanterns. The evening was spent playing bunco. With the honor guests, were Mesdames J. C. Iverson, Edwin Luedeman, Will Iverson, Emil Iverson, Homer Carter and Alvin Iverson; Misses Dorothy Roehm, Margaret Layton, Martha Luedeman, Mary Easley and Gladys Emerick. The hostess was assisted by her mother, Mrs. Edward. Luedeman.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Formal Dinner Opens Series of Events for Miss Peters, Bride-Elect HONORING Miss Frances Irene Peters, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank M. Peters, 3327 Central Ave., whose marriage to Fred Arhbecker, son of Mr. and Mrs. E. H. Arhbecker, Oak Park, 111., will take place Aug. 29 at the Tabernacle Presbyterian Church, Miss Bertha Green entertained with a formal dinner at the Indianapolis Athletic Club Tuesday evening. Appointments were in rainbow shades and a plateau of

garden flowers formed the centerpiece for the table. Silver in the bride’s chosen patterns was presented to her. With the hostess and the guest of honor were Mrs. Frank Peters, mother of the bride: Misses Eugenia Harris. Jane Ogbome, Genevieve McNellis. Margaret Macy, Eldena Meier, Dorothy Avels, Helen DeGrief, Helen Wilson, Ona Boyd and Mary Lee Orloff. The hostess was assisted by her mother. Mrs. Thomas L. Green, 716 E. Thirty-second St. Other parties to be given for Miss Peters include one party Saturday afternoon, with Miss Margaret Macy as hostess, and a breakfast bridge Tuesday by Mrs. George Halberton. Misses Mary Lee Orloff and Helen De Grief will be hostesses Wednesday and next Thursday Misses Charlotte Reissner and Beatrice Moore will entertain. Misses Jane Ogbome and Genevieve McNellis will entertain together Aug. 20 with a bridge in honor of Miss Peters. Miss Beatrice Batty will give a bridge Aug. 21 and Miss Alma Lucas on Aug. 23. A dinner dance at the Columbia Club in honor of Miss Peters and Mr. Ahrbecker will be given by Miss Eugenia Harris and Miss Betty Hodges will give the last party, a luncheon, on Aug. 27. The bridal dinner will be given by Mr. and Mrs. Frank M. Peters in the Harrison room of the Columbia Club Aug. 28. Mrs. James Westerman and Miss Valencia Meng will entertain for Miss Peters, but the dates have not been cho§en. Miss Peters is a graduate of Butler University and a member of the Gamma chapter of Kappa Alpha Theta sorority. Mr. Ahrbecker attended the University of Wisconsin and is a member of Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity. Bride-Elect of August Honored at Bridge Fete, Miss Anna Burkert, 2942 Broadway, entertained with a luncheon bridge and apron shower Tuesday at her home, honoring Miss Mary Williams, Knightstown, whose marriage to Park A. Bryan, Akron, will take place Aug. 16. The table at luncheon, was centered with a low bowl of varicolored garden flowers and lighted by pink candles in pink crystal holders. Guests included Mesdames Edward Williams, Knightstown; Mark Hampton, Plainfield; Charles Walker, James Hartley, Lowell Russell Hess and LeGrand fcannon; Misses Dorothy Ragan, Knightstown; Mary Frances Headington, Marion: Josephine Duckwall, Noblcsville; Frances Smith, Frances Winters and Henrietta Jungclaus. The hostess was assisted by her mothter, Mrs. George C. Burkert. Family Menus B\ r SISTER MARY BREAKFAST—Orange Juice, cereal, cream, puffy omelet, blueberry muffins, milk, coffee. LUNCHEON—Toasted ham sandwich, shredded cabbage salad, jellied prunes, milk, tea. DlNNEß—Broiled halibut steaks with egg sauce, steamed potatoes in parsley butter, stewed okra, blackberry bread pudding, milk, coffee. Stewed Okra One quart okra, 2 cups diced celery, 1 green pepper, 1 teaspoon salt, 1 tablespoon minced onion, 4 tablespoons butter, 3 medium sized tomatoes. Wash okra well and cut off stems. Cut pods in slices, crosswise, about one-half inch thick. Remove seeds and pith from pepper and mince flesh. Melt butter in sauce pan, add okra, minced onion and pepper, and celery and simmer closely covered until vegetable begins to soften. Add peeled and chopped tomatoes and salt and cook slowly about one hour, until okra is tender. \ Turbaned Hips The swathed hipline gives way to the turbaned one. Burnt orange and soft brown blend to fashion the turbaned hipline of a brown satin, with front panels of both colors swinging free. SPORTSHOSE

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Miss Joseph Is Bnde in Simple Rite In a simple ceremony at the residence of her brother, Charles G. Joseph, 3336 Central Ave., Miss Rose H. Joseph became the bride of Harry F. Lessinger Tuesday afternoon. The ceremony was performed before the fireplace, which was banked with ferns, garden flowers and varicolored gladioli. Rabbi Lazar Solomon read the service. Miss Eleanor Shulman, the bride’s only attendant, wore pink and rose shaded organdie, made bouffant with a blue horsehair braid picture hat and carried a colonial bouquet of roses. Aaron Joseph, brother of the bride, served as best man. Bride Wears Blue Gown The bride was gowned in azure blue chiffon made with a lace berthat that widened in the back to form a cape. Both the bertha and the cape were embroidered in pearls and rhinestones. She wore a pink horsehair braid picture hat and pink satin slippers and carried an arm bouquet of Premier roses. Following the ceremony a dinner was served at the home, followed by a reception for the immediate families and a few friends. The table at dinner was centered with a mound of cut and garden flowers in variegated colors and lighted with tall white tapers in silver holders. Take Motor Trip The bride and bridegroom have gone on a motor trip through Canada and the eastern States and will take a cruise on the Great Lakes. The bride wore a royal blue ensemble, a red hat and red accessories as her going-a way outfit. She carried a traveling coat of tan tweed trimmed with blue fox. Mr. and Mrs. Lessinger will be at home after Aug. 22 at the Marott Hotel.

APPLIQUE GLOVE

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PERSONALS

Miss Jeanette Lleber, 1333 Central Ave., will leave soon for Lakeside, Mich., where she will be the guest of Mrs. Walther Lieber at her summer home. Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Kinnairdy3(4o E. Maple Rd., are at Mrs. Kinnalrd’s parents’ summer home at Charle-' voix, Mich., while Mr. and Mrs Charles Roemler are in Europe. Mr. and Mrs. Frank D. Hatfield and family. 3858 N. New Jersey St., are at Tippecanoe River for a vacation. Mrs. Thomas Mahaffey, 1512 N. Meridian St., is in Chicago. Mrs. Reilly C. Adams and daughters, Sara Tice and Martha, and son, Reilly Jr., 4340 Central Ave., have returned from Alaska. Mr. Robert Hall, 5351 Washington Blvd., are at home after a motor trip to the Dells and Lost Lake, Wis. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Shirley, 5632 Broadway,, have returned from a motor trip to northern Indiana and Chicago. Mr. and Mrs. L. R. Cartright and family, 5717 Central Ave., are on a motor trip in Michigan. Mrs. W. F. Hughes and daughter, Mary Esther, 4025 N. Meridian St., are at Tarry town-on-the-Hudson, N. Y. Mr. and Mrs. Earl D. Haley and daughter, Virginia, 3440 Winthrop Ave., have returned from a trip to the Dunes, Michigan City, Gary and Detroit. Luncheon Group Meets Mrs. Lennie T. Goens, personal service secretary of the Y. W. C. A., addressed members of the Wednesday business and professional womens luncheon group today. Mrs. Goens is a member of the case committee of the Family Welfare Society and of the social service committee of the Indianapolis Church Federation. Her subject was “Fitting Misfits Into Community Life.” A black tulle evening gown achieves its uneven, longer back, by having two wide tiers across the front of its skirt and three graduated tiers across the back, with each Jutting down right in the center.

CASED UMBRELLA

This very new and very smart umbrella fits snugly into dark brown leather case. The handle is of tan and the brown leather embellished with delicate gold pipings.

GIRL ABOUT TOWN BY MARILYN At one of the lasi parties given for Vera Horning before she left for her home in Castile, N. Y., to be married, there was a most alarming innovation. If this continues, ladies and gentlemen, I intend to resign from public life—the strain is far too great. It was a buffet dinner and we managed to get through dinner in a fairly ladylike fashion, and after that the party went all to pieces. By some strange chance the hostess put on the Victrola, Walter Camp’s reducing records, which was a great mistake You simply can’t hear those sharp brisk commands and the music in perfect rhythm without getting right down on the floor and taking them seriously then and there. It wasn’t long before the living room was filled with a peculiar mixture of elevated arms, legs, heads, bent torsos and flexed knees. Well, I leave the scene to your imagination, and I hope it’s vivid. The evening was a wowi The only drawback was later when * discovered all the living room blinds were up, exposing us to all the inquiring eyes of Hampton Court. If one must reduce, one should control one’s enthusiasm at least until the shades are drawn. m n tt Elisabeth Haerle writes from Dresden that she saw t some splendid things during the opera season there. She attended the premiere of Strauss’ latest opera, “The Egyptian Helen,” and the “Rosenkavaher.” She also saw Somerset Maughms ’play that Ethel Barrymore was in last summer on Broadway called “The Constant Wife.” The German rendition of the title is something weird to behold, “Do You Think That Virtue Is Its Own Reward?” Can you bear it? m m u The latest report from the pastern front is that Irving Fauvre and Byron Elliott blew in at Hyannisport, Cape Cod, to see Mary Louise Millikan at her summer home. What with the Allison suit being brought up In Judge Elliot’s court, he should be coming home to big things presently. Friends who have visited Mrs. Watler Goodail at her summer home at Lake Maxinkuckee say that she has remodeled it and changed it into one of the loveliest cottages on the lake. Mrs. Ralph Vonnegut and’ her small son are there now with Mrs. Goodail. A late fashion note from New York: It is considered extremely bad form to murder a woman there with your hat on. Sixty-First Wedding The sixty-first wedding anniversary of Mr. and Mrs. Frank M. Hay, pioneer residents of Indiana, will be celebrated tonight at their home, 545 Highland Dr. Mri Hay, a Civil War veteran, and Mri Hay have lived in Indianapolis fifty-four years. Mr. HHay, although he is nearinng 84 years of age, is a practicing attorney with offices at 605 Inland Bank Bldg. Mr. Hay was in thirty-three pitched battles during the Civil War and bars several wound scars.

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Wives, Here’s Chance to Express Viewpoint on Faithless Husbands BY MARTHA LEE SOME way or another 1 have started an argument. Or perhaps I haven’t exactly started it, but, merely heaped reasons for the continuance of one already started. / Opposing viewpoints are hard to get straightened out through letters. Because the points can not be taken up, at a time, aifd reasoned to the bitter end. The argument has been a difference of ideas about what to

do with an erring husband. And my share in the whole affair has been the raising of the question as to what constitutes an erring husband. “Dolores” wrote about a week ago asking what she should do about her husband, who had admitted unfaithfulness. She has a child and more important than even that, she still loves him dearly. And she wanted to know whether she should leave him. Because I am terribly opposed to breaking up a home where there are children to consider, I advised her to consider every angle of the affair before she made so drastic a move. In answer to the advice, "A Happy Wife” wrote her opinion as to what she would do under similar circumstances. She is, doubtless, a higher spirited woman than Dolores. She has what is commonly known as m&re “spunk” about things. But what is good for one person is not necessarily good for another. When I advised Dolores, I was taking into consideration the character she had revealed in her letter. I believed that she would be completely crushed over such a move, that she would be miserably unhappy. Even more unhappy than she would be staying with her husband knowing that he had been unfaithful. Consequently, in my response to “A Happy Wife” I maintained the position I had taken in the first place. I want my readers to write, commenting upon the letters they read and upon the advice I give, if they think it is wrong. I welcome those letters. And when I respond to them in the column, I do not mean to seem ungrateful for the interest they are taking in others’ problems. All of which leads to the fact that I have another letter from “A Happy Wife,” in which my attitude has seemingly been misconstrued. Dear Mies Lee—ln your answer to my letter about Dolores I suppose I should consider myself “bawled out.” I have thought seriously of what I would do If I found mv husband trifling. That would be the time for the competition you speak of, but when I find* him unfaithful I would do just what I told Dolores—leave him. You seem to think It funny that women think everything Is all right as long as they do not know their husbands are untrue, but when they find It out, make a fuss. Do you think we should howl before we know? I am opposed to divorce,.but I think unfaithfulness ,/fcs distinguished from trifling), Is one of the few causes that would Justify a husband and wife separating. For those who think differently, all right, that is their own affair. I was only giving my opinion. I had thought the leaders' opinions were welcomed in this column. Sorry,l was mistaken. A HAPPY WIFE. And I am sorry I gave you reason to think that readers’ opinions were not welcome. They are. When I answered your letter I was merely giving my opinion in return. I liked your letter and your attitude on things, but I still think what would be beneficial under similar circumstances for you, would not necessarily be beneficial to Dolores. MANY RESERVATIONS FOR LUNCHEON BRIDGE There are fifty-two reservations for the luncheon bridge party at the Highland Golf and Country Club today. Among those reserving tables are Mesdames R*y Reed, Harry Burke, Carl Habieh, A. Bossier. Ray Rodebaugh, W. Brayton, C. R. Schmidt, G. O. Marquette, F. M. Fauvre, M. Re:sner and Miss Katherine Voyles. Craig Family Reunion The Craig family reunion will be held at Riverside Park Aug. 12. An old-fashioned basket dinner will be served. E. A. Trittike is secretary.

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Morning Wedding at Church The marriage of Miss Leona Schnipel, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harry M. Schnippel, 1042 High St„ to Josph H. Bauer, son of Mr. and Mrs. George Bauer, 1127 Churchman Ave., took place at 9 this morning at the Sacred Heart Church, the Rec. Joseph T. Bauer officiating. The bride was attended by her sister, Miss Edna Schnippel, and Miss Frances Bauer, bridesmaids, and little Mary Bauer, train bearer; Edward A. Coomes was best man, and the ushers were Harry Shutt and Joseph Scherrer. The bride was gowned in white taffeta with a skirt of ruffled lace. Her veil in cap form was caught with orange blossoms. She carried a shower bouquet of white bride’s roses. Miss Schnippel wore a gown of orchid crepe, the oustanding feature of which was the piquoted scallops of the skirt. Miss Bauer wore a gown fashioned similarly of peach color. Following the ceremony, a wedding breakfast was served at the home of the bride. Mr. and Mrs. Bauer left immediately for a trip to the Great Lakes and Canada. They will be at home here after Sept. 1. New Resident Honored Guest at Bridge Fete Mrs. James L. Kalleen, 2444 Park Ave., entertained Tuesday afternoon in her home with a bridge party in honor of Mrs. P. A. Watson, Marott Hotel, who came to Indianapolis recently from Auburn. Brown-eyed Susans in amber crystal vases and orange tapers in amber crystal holders were used for decoration. Guests with the hostess and the guest of honor were Mesdames Walter Jarvis, James Carr, Daniel Creamer, C. T. Shadle, Walter Mayer, Albert Davis, J. F. Brubaker, Edward Rehm and Miss Caroline Thompson.

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