Indianapolis Times, Volume 40, Number 94, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 September 1928 — Page 8
PAGE 8
Michigan City Man Weds Miss Dorothy Moore in Lawn Rite at River View r K N unusual early fall wedding was solemnized at 4 o’clock jlx this afternoon at River View, the summer home of Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Moore, 3111 Broadway, when their daughter, Miss Dorothy became the bride of Gerald Raymond Redding, son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Redding, Michigan City. The service, which was read by the Rev. John W. McFall, was performed before an improvised altar banked with palms
and ferns, interspersed with garden flowers, on the lawn. Miss Lois Redding, sister of the bridegroom was bridesmaid. She wore a gown of pale yellow taffeta made with a basque waist and long full skirt and a pale yellow horsehair braid picture hat trimmed with maline. Her airm bouquet was composed of early fall flowers in the shades of yellow. Given by Father Mis; ; i Florence Moore, sister of the bride, maid of honor, wore pink taffeta, made with a tight fitted waist and a huge blue bow, arranged bus-tle-effect. Her hat was pink horsehair braid and her flowers were in shades of rose and pink with delphinium. The bride, who was given in marriage by her father, was dressed in a gown of white taffeta, made with a basque waist and long full skirt, square scalloped at the bottom and edged with maline. Her white horsehair braid hat was trimmed with maline. Her shower bouquet was made up of Bride’s roses and valley lilies. Sherwood Blue, Indianapolis, was best man. A reception was held at the house following the wedding, the table being centered with a tiered wedding cake on a mound of roses, orchids and delphinium and lighted with white tapers. Bridal Dinner at Marott The bridal dinner was served at the Marott. Mr. and Mrs. Redding left for Chicago, the bride traveling in a blue satin dress, with shoes, hat, traveling coat and accessories to match. They will go from Chicago to Grand Fork, N. D„ where they will make their home. Out-of-town guests included Mr. and Mrs. Frank Redding and Lois and John Redding, Mr. and Mrs. Milo Redding, all of Michigan City; Misses Leah Peters and Margaret Rose, Ft. Wayne Mr. and Mrs. Dallas Crooke and Mr. and Mrs. Walter Crooke, Leesburg; Mrs. R. B. Moore, grandmother of the bride, and Miss Lena Moore, Dayton, Ky., Mr. and Mrs. O. F. Moore and son, Donald; Mr. and Mrs. R. S. Bennett and son, Stanley, Ft. Thomas, Ky. Mrs. Redding attended Indiana University where she was a member of Delta Gamma Sorority. Redding was graduated from Indiana University and was a member of Theta Pi Fraternity.
Phi Gamma Banquet Set for Tonight THE annual banquet of Phi Gamma Tau Sorority will be held at the Indianapolis Athlete Club tonight, at which time the following officers will be installed for the ensuing year: President, Mrs. H. N. Jones; vice president, Mrs. Orval Barnett; recording secretary, Miss Edna Bleakney; corresponding secretary, Miss Catherine Comer; treasurer, Mrs. Bush Williams; historian, Mrs. Leonard Lennington; sergeant-at-arms, Mrs. William Pierce, and chaplain, Miss Grayce Ferguson. The table will be centered with a vase of Mrs. Aaron Ward roses, the sorority flower, and lighted tapers tied with orchid tulle will be used. Favors will be white gold bracelets (decorated with the sorority crest. A bridge party will follow the banquet. Arrangements are in charge of Mrs. Orval Barnett, assisted by Mesdames H. N. Jones, William Haine, Edna Bleakney and Dorothy Volkert. Covers will be laid for the officers and Mesdames Ben L. White, Maurice Healey, Major Dickson, Joseph Yakey, Orville Bass, V. C. Smith, Norman Keller, Misses Wilminia Dobbins, Lillian Lefforge, Marguerite Geizendanner, Charlotte Kendrick, Doris Prater, Dorothy Prater, Betty Hills, Dorothy Weir and Dorothy Volkert. CABARET DINNER-so BE GIVEN WEDNESDAY A cabaret dinner, the second rush party to be given by the Alpha Nu chapter, Delta Zeta Sorority, will be held at the Women’s department club at 6:30 Wednesday evening. The tables will be decorated with pink and green candles and vases of roses, carrying out the sorority colors, rose and Nile green. Dancers, blues singers and players will furnish the entertainment during the dinner and a candle service will be held at the conclusion of the dinner. Miss Pearl Bartley is in charge of arrangements, with Misses Gertrude Hock and Ruth Triller as her assistants. About sixty guests will be present. INDIANA GIRL TO WED CATALINA SWIMMER Anouncement is made of the engagement of Miss Jewel Cheatwood, Terre Haute, noted swimmer, who participated in the marathon at Toronto both last year and this year, to George Young, winner of the Catalina channel swim held last year. Miss Cheatwood, with her sister, Miss Billie Cheatwood, have been in Toronto for the past few weeks. Sunshine Club Meeting The business meeting of the Children’s Sunshine Club of Sunnyside will be held at 2 Wednesday afternoon at the Fletcher American Bank building.
Miss Conrad to Marry in Rite Tonight BEFORE an altar banked with palms and ferns, interspersed with baskets of flowers and lighted with cathedral candles, Miss Ermel Catherine Conrad, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Victor Conrad, will become the bride of William Koch Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. William Koch, 4055 College Ave., at 6:45 this evening at the Zion Evangelical Church. The service will be read by the Rev. Fredrick Daries, pastor. Before the ceremony, Professor Rudolf Heyne, organist, will play a group of bridal airs and Miss Charlotte Passwater will sing “I Love You Truly,” “At Dawning” and “Because.” Mrs. Otto Klingstein Jr., matron of honor, will wear a lake blue georgette gown, made with a fitted bodice and long full skirt, with flounces of silver lace. Her slippers will be silver and she will carry an arm bouquet of Ophelia roses. Bridal Satin Gown Miss Armilda Jane Cox, bridesmaid, will be dressed in pale yellow chiffon velvet, made with a basque waist and long, full skirt, with a panel of lace and embroidered with gold beads into the design of flower baskets. She will carry Ophelia roses. Both the matron of honor and the bridesmaid will wear rhinestone and crystal pendants, the gift of the bride. Otto Klingstein Jr. and Clarence Wilson will be groomsmen and Hugo Klingstein and Earl Martling will be ushers. The bridegroom presented his attendants with white gold initialed belt buckles. The bride will wear a gown of bridal satin made with a fitted bodice and full skirt, longer in back than in front, with a panel of lace in the front. Her full-length veil will be caught cap shape with clusters of orange blossoms on either side. Her shower bouquet will be bride’s roses and valley lilies. * Reception at Elk’s Temple . A reception and dinner at the Elk’s temple will follow the ceremony, covers to be laid for members of the bridal party and immediate families and Mr. and Mrs. Otto Klingstein Sr., Hugo Klingstein, Mrs. Edwin Welsh and sons, Hugo and Elmer and daughter Lillian; Misses Arline Neese, Frances Brinkman, Mr. and Mrs. L. C. Brandt, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Brinkman. Out-of-town guests included Mesdames John Jacobs, Minnie Smith, Walter Smith and Alfred Smith, all of Chicago, and Miss Mildred Conrad, Zionsville. Mr. and Mrs. Koch will go to Chicago on their wedding trip, the bride traveling in a midnight blue crepe dress and broadcloth coat to match with tan accessories. They will be at home after Oct. 1 at 4055 College Ave.
PERSONALS
Miss Maryella Julian, 2353 Central Ave., will return today from an extended visit in the east. Dr. Clark W. Day, 29 W. FortySecond St., has returned from an extended vacation in New England Mrs. Day and Mrs. Richard Harding Stout, will stay in Philadelphia for the next two weeks. Mrs. C. J. Buchanan, Marott Hotel, has returned from her summer home at Lake Tippecanoe. She will take charge of her Sunday School class at the First Congregational Church Sunday. GIVES BRIDGE PARTY IN HONOR BRIDE Mrs. William Hopkins, who before her marriage Saturday was Miss Wilhelmina Kedrich, was honored at a bridge party and miscellaneous shower given Friday afternoon at her home, 2951 Broadway. A color scheme of pink and green was carried out in the decorations and the guests with Mrs. Hopkins included Misses Elizabeth Kohler, Josephine King, Berta Claire Hedrich, Gladys Hooker, Virginia Sibel, Frances Parker, Dorothy Miller and Josephine Fitch. The hostess was assisted by her mother, Mrs. E. H. Emrick. Eggert-HoUingsworth Announcement is made of the marriage of Miss Bernadine Hollingsworth, daughter of Mrs. Minnie Hollingsworth, 3360 Guilford Ave., and Russell Eggert, son of Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Eggert, 605 Parkway Ave., which took place Saturday. Card Party Saturday The Pythian Sisters of Irvington Temple No. 411 will give a card party at 8:30 Saturday evening at the K. of P. Hall, 132 Vi S. Audubon Rd. Estella Thayer is chairmen in charge of arrangements. Laundry Savings If you hang all your clothes of a kind together, when laundering, and sprinkle and iron in the same order, you will find much time saved in extra handling required in sorting afterwards. Sorority Meeting Miss Marie Spitznagel, 2550 S. Pennsylvania St., will be host cs for the regular meeting of the A.pha Tau Zeta Sorority at her home Monday evening.
’***; soon, were special guests. ft ' ( 1 ' Delegates to the national conven /* — \ f 7/9/7 / , / / W/9 / JO // • tlon held at Mackinac Island ii t ) ~lnmm,| liilili* l,ll< UUJAA, IJefoCMb UXCUfTyiOVICU l/\ejClciori(2r> June, Mrs. Robert A. Wolfe anc /ftp. /J I— , V / / Miss Helen Murray, gave reports UI)UIA, {Jn/lJu (JJo/bOa eHororPAPr supplemented by talks by other v u wujy kjujlaj o&ciAl* l&rCkr photo ‘ w ho had also attended the conven
Sorority Rush Party Held by Alpha Thetas The first rush party of the Kappa Alpha Theta Sorority was given Friday afternoon at the home of Miss Valencia Veng, 4458 College Ave. It was known as a “pansy garden” party, the pansy being the flower of the sorority; The house was decorated with fall flowers. The sorority colors, black and gold, were carried out in the appointments, the ice cream being molded pansies in black and gold. The guests received bouttonierres of pansies and black taffeta pillows, with K. A. T. in gold letters. More than 100 guests were present. A Palm Beach frolic was one of the stunts provided for entertainment of the guests. Arrangements were in charge of Misses Jane Willis, Lenore Brandt, Gertrude Delbrook, Betty Hodges, Betty Preston and Virginia Rhodes. MAKEBETA CHAPTER PLANS AT BLOOMINGTON Several members of the lota Kappa Sorority motored to Bloomington today, where final plans for the installation of the Beta chapter will be made. A dinner and slumber party will be given in their honor and they will return to Indianapolis Sunday. Those attending are Mesdames Van Dorn Adams, Randle Willis, Misses Genevieve Smith, Roberta Cameron, Mary Lou Metsker, Bobbie Merrifleld, Winona Merrifield, Josephine West, Thelma Bird and Grace Templeton. Initial Meeting The first meeting of the Ladies Society of the Maenneochor will be held at 2 Friday afternoon. Hostesses will be Misses Mary Eymann and Lena Schramm. Mrs. Isaac Bom, president, will be In charge of the meeting.
THE IHDIAHAPOIIS TIMES
MISS DOROTHY MOORE, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Moore, 3111 Broadway, became the bride of Gerald Raymond Reeding, Michigan City, at a pretty late summer wedding held in the garden of the Moore home, River Heights, this afternoon. One of the prettiest of the late summer weddings was that of Miss Francis Irene Peters, who married Frederick W. Ahrbecker, Wednesday, Aug. 29. Miss Helen Claire Payne, daughter of Mrs. Wallace Payne, wore her mother’s wedding dress unaltered when she became the bride of Carl Gustav Seashore Saturday, Sept. 1. Her wedding was beautiful and unusual. The Ahrbecker-Peters bridal party, left to right: Misses Margaret Macy, Bertha Green, Genevieve McNellis, maid of honor; Helen DeGrief and Eugenia Harris.
MERIDIAN HILLS POOL TO BE OPENED TODAY The formal opening of the new swimming pool at the Meridian Hills Country Club will take place this afternoon and evening. An exhibition of swimming and diving from 5 to 6 p. m. has been arranged by Charles H. Hagedon, chairman ir. charge of arrangements. The exhibition will be presented by Dick Papenguth, swimming coach at the Indianapolis Athletic Club Supper will be served from 6:30 to 7:30 followed by motion pictures and dancing. The regular monthly luncheon bridge will be held Tuesday. Mesdames Fred W. Case and Raymond Gould are in charge. Bunco and Lotto Ladies of the Assumption Parish will entertain at 2:30 Wednesday afternoon with a bunco and lotto party in the hall, 1105 Blaine Ave., West Indianapolis. Those in charge of arrangements are Mesdames Edward Connell, Annie Ryan, Harvey Reed, John Kursh, Albert Kunze, Lettie Lafave, T. C. Fox and Sally Smith.
Trousseau Tea Given at Home of Bride-Elect Miss Dorothy Moore, whose marriage to Gerald Raymond Redding will take place at 4 Saturday afternoon, entertained Thursday afternoon with trousseau tea at her country home, River View. Baskets of gladioli and late summer flowers were used in the home and on the porch. The tea table, at which Miss Florence Moore presided, was arranged with a bowl of white asters and pink roses and was lighted with pink tapers. Out-of-town guests at the tea were Mesdames Donald Webster and Sylvia Stoney. Detroit; Misses Leah Peters and Margaret Rose. Ft. Wayne, and Mesdames Walter Crooke and Dallas Crooke, Leesburg. Election Planned Election of officers for the women of Avalon Country Club will be held at a luncheon to be given at the Indianapolis Athletic Club Thursday.
Honor Local Girl to Marry lowan Sept. 12 Miss Esther Chambers, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Chambers, 407 E. Thirty-Seventh St., whose marriage to A. B. Baxter Cook, Cedar Rapids, lowa, will take place Wednesday was the guest of honor at a bridge tea and kitchen shower given by Mrs. Walter Bodle, 3720 N. Pennsylvania St., at her home this afternoon. Appointments and decorations were in the pastel rainbow shades, and the house was decorated with fall flowers in those colors. Guests with Miss Chambers and her mother were Mesdames H. C. Baumgartner, Stanley Whitworth and John Floyd, all of South Bend; Caroline Bowman, E. N. Schumacher; Misses Mary Bruns, Wilma Cochrane, H. C. Pennicke, Dilouise Woodbridge, and Betty Shaw. Service Star Legion Hamilton-Berry Chapter, Service Star legion, will meet at 12:30 Tuesday at the Sarah T. Bolton home in Beech Grove, with Mrs. Adah Mann as hostess. A picnic luncheon w’ill be followed by a musical program. Informal talks will be given by Mesdames Bruce Maxwell, Linton Cox and Adah Mann and reports of committees will be given by the chairman. Juniors will attend and members may bring guests. Mrs. Cora Young Wiles, president, will be in charge of the meeting. President’s Day President’s day will be observed by the Oct-Dahl Club with a luncheon to be given at the home of Mrs. A. J. Huber, 2408 N. New Jersey St., Tuesday. Mrs. Huber, who is president of the organization, will be assisted by Mrs. Perry Vickers, retiring president.
Chi Omegas Hold Years .First Event Members of the Alpha Chi Omega Alumnae Club held their first luncheon meeting of the season today at the home of Mrs. Geoige S. Wilson, 40 E. North St. Covers were laid for sixty guests at small tables. Fall flowers were used for decoration. Twelve new members were present and several members of the four active chapters in the State, returning to college soon, were special guests. Delegates to the national convention held at Mackinac Island in June, Mrs. Robert A. Wolfe and Miss Helen Murray, gave reports, supplemented by talks by others who had also attended the convention.
New songs featured at the convention were introduced by Miss Dorothy Ann Rybolt, daughter of Mrs. T. M. Rybolt. She sang “The Song of the Lyre Bird,” written by Mrs. Ralph B. Clark, one of the founders of the sorority. Mrs. Wilson was assisted by Mesdames J. O. Tobin, chairman; C. E. Cottingham, Clarence Weaver, Harvey Barrett, Misses Daisey Wedding, Florence Guild, Nelda Weathers and Maryellen Clark. MAROTT TRIO PROGRAM FOR SUNDAY CONCERT The Sunday afternoon program to be presented by the Marott trio from 2:30 till 3:30 will be as follows. The trio will have as the assisting guest artist Miss Ruth Ranler Nessler, harpist. ■•Andante” Haydn ■•Finale” Mozart Trio ■■Romance” Haly “Legend" Zabel Miss Nessler •Cantilena” Goltermann ‘Danse Rustlaue” Bquire Consuelo Councilman Rcttig •'Valse Caprice” Verdalle "Music Box" Pocmtz Miss Nessler ‘‘Volga Boatman" Cady "Serenade Espagnole” Bizet Trio "Memories of Stephen Foster" ....Nessler Miss Nessler "Desert Song” Romberg Trio IRVINGTON SCHOOL OF MUSIC OPENS SEPT. 10 Monday, Sept. 10 will mark the opening of the tenth season of the Irvington School of Music. Among the additional features this year will be the opening of a library and reading room for students. Books will be obtainable on history, biog-. raphy, operatic and oratorio scores and classics. Classes in piano instruction for children will include general rudiments of music, technique and rhythm orchestra. The study of plays, drama, stage acting and pantomime wil be taught in the play acting shop. Three clubs, the A. S. F., Bel Canto and Theater Organ are organized to promote interest and appreciation lor better music.
SEPT. 8, 1928
Bride-Elect Honored by Bridge Fete MRS. RAYMOND H. MAGUIRE, 533 E. ThirtySecond St., entertained with a lunchem bridge and silver shower today at the Columbia Club in honor of Miss Caroline Conaut Maguire, daughter of Mr, and Mrs. Albert M. Maguire, 529 E. ThirtySecond St., whose marriage to Ralph Herbert Ransburg will take place Oct. 10. The bridal colors, yellow shading to burnt orange, were carried out in the flowers and appointments. The luncheon table was centered with flowers in these shades and lighted with orange and yellow tapers in crystal holders. Guests with Miss Maguire and her mother were Mesdames Herman G. Gaines, Nordea u Heaps, Harry E. Holt, Clifford E. Myers, Myron McKee, George Peavey, Kurt Ehlert, Curt Kischland, G. Jerome Murphy, Frank Innis, Ramon Browder, Manning Norland, Harry E. McCarty, Jesse Roush, Ernest L. Dinwiddie, Herbert Lorezen, Fred I. Jones, Frederick C. Alvershardt, Ralph Peckham, James Woods, Emmet L. Ireland, Katherine Clements, Misses Helen Smith, Dorothy White. Ruth Barnhill, Frances Aufderheide, Claudia Weyant, Caroline Thompson and Helen Von Grimmenstein. The hostess was assisted by her mother, Mrs. E. L. Ireland. The wedding of Miss Maguire and Ransburg, who is the son of Mr. and Mrs. E. W. Ransburg, 5137 Broadway, will take place at the St. Paul’s Episcopal Church. Mrs. Raymond Maguire will be maid of honor, with Mrs. Herman G. Gaines, Misses Dorothy White, Helen Stratton, St. Louis, and Leona White, Memphis, as bridesmaids. Miss Caroline Louise Jones will be flower girl. § Harper J. Ransburg will be best ; man and the ushers will be Herman ! G. Gaines, Raymond H. Maguire, Eric M. Arndt, Chicago, and Emory Sharpe. | Among the parties to be given in | honor of Miss Maguire are a shower j by Mrs. Herman G. Gaines, Sept. ! 15; Mrs. Harry Bolt, Sept. 19, and Miss Helen Von Grimmensyeln, Sept. 29. Miss Frances Aufderheide ] and Mrs. Fred Jones will entertain ■ in honor of Miss Maguire, the dates of the parties to be set later. Benefit Card Party St. Catherine’s Young Ladies Sodality will entertain with a card and bunco party Sunday afternoon ! and evening for the benefit of St. Catherine’s Church. Bridge, euchre and bunco will be played. Arrangements are in charge of Miss Maebelle Gordon, chairman, assisted by Misses Alice Shaw, Eleanor Higgons, Mildred Hohman, Sarah O’Brien, Charlotte Van Deman, Helen Brooks, Rosella Decker, Ella Gates, Joanna Lamping, Marie Noone, Margaret Sullivan, Florence Wilhelm and Estelle Williamson. Mothers’ Club Meeting The Mothers’ Club of the Cathedral High School will hold its first monthly meeting for the year in the school auditorium at 2:30 Tuesday afternoon. All mothers having children in the high school now or in the past are invited to attend the meeting. Mrs. Timothy P. Sexton, president, will be in charge of the meeting. Social Club Meeting Mrs. C. W. Abraham, 1121 Central Ave., will entertain members of the Independent Social Club at her home Tuesday afternoon.
Chicken Beats Nickel Stogie in These Days BY MRS. WALTER FERGUSON The country does not need a good 5 cent cigar half so much as it needs some good fried chicken. It was no real surprise to read that in New York City alone, the health commissioner who had examined poultry between April 1 and 21 reported that 42 per cent was diseased or partly decompose®. Chickens that leave the egg Jn the far West and are slaughtered for market along about the middle of February and that later grace the tables of eastern opulence around the first of June, are bound to have lost much of their fine flavor. Most of the birds we get nowadays taste a good deal like b. oiled chips. If there is not the strong savor of old age and decay, then one detects only the sauce with which the bird has been disguised and which sometimes may deceive an inexperienced palate. There is none of that succulent, rich and exquisite flavor that can be found nowhere save in a platter of real fried chicken. When you happen to be overcome with sympathy for the downtrodden farmer, take a sober second thought. For the farmer alone in these degenerate days savors gustatory delights. He alone knows the piquant juicy crackle of young radishes fresh from the soil, the rich taste of new potatoes from the odorous earth, the succulence of tender bean* newly gathered. He. that fortunate of mortals, is still acquainted with the delicacy of young fryers who proudly walked at dawn and the same evening lie sizzling in the frying pan. bathed in such a gravy as the gods might have mistaken for nectar on Olympus. Yes, the price we pay for modern civilization sometimes seems dear. The city dweller will never again know the heavenly taste of fresh fried chicken. Though we decorate our ancient specimens with parsley and dress them up in paper pants, to one who has been privileged to know the real thing no camouflage will ever make them appear other than they are, a poor masquerading Imitation of a by tone delicacy.
