Indianapolis Times, Volume 41, Number 162, Indianapolis, Marion County, 16 November 1929 — Page 9

Second Section

Nuptial Rites Are Held at City Church Miss Dorothy Frances Carroll, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas A Carroll, 2420 North Meridian street, became the bride of Frank Btroup Langsenkamp, son of . Mr. and Mrs. Frank Herbert Langsenkamp, at a lovely ceremony performed at 10:30 this morning by the Rt. Rev. Joseph Chartrand at SS. Peter aud Paul cathedral. The nuptial mass was celebrated by the Rev. Elmer Ritter, pastor, before the altar, whlcn was lighted with two five-branch candelabrae and decorated with white chrysanthemums. The sanctuary was decorated with palms and ferns. Thomas Poggiano. violinist, accompanied by Miss Helen Shepard, organist, presented a musical program, while the guests were being seated by the ushers, Russell Montgomery, Dayton, O.; William Ansted Jr., Connersville; Henry Marsh and Edward Dowd. Edward La (Shelle, baritone, sang the mass. Miss Kathleen Hottel, maid of honor, wore orchid satin made with a shirred bodice and long skirt with uneven hemline, edged with tulle. Bhe wore a transparent velvet Jacket of orchid, an orchid transparent velvet hat, with a wide brim, turned back off the face, and orchid crepe slippers. She carried a shower bouquet of pale pink roses. Mrs. Melvin Puett, Logansport, •nd Miss Mary Kinsley were bridesmaids. They wore satin gowns, made with fitted basque waists and full skirts, with three ruffles at the waist line forming a peplum. They wore transparent velvet jackets and hats and crepe slippers. Mrs. Puett's gown was yellow and Miss Kinsley, green. They carried shower bouquets of deep pink roses. Calvin Arter, Cleveland, was best man. The bride, given in marriage by her lather, wore a gown of ivory lace, made princess style, over an ivory taffeta slip. The fitted bodice had long tight sleeves. The long flared skirt had a train, set on at the waist line. She wore a tulle veil, made with a cap of Brussels lace, caught on either side and across the back with orange blossoms. She carried a bouquet of flesh colored roses, orchids and lilies of the valley. Following the ceremony, a wedding breakfast was given at the home of the bride’s parents. Mrs. Carroll received in gray chiffon with a gray transparent velvet Jacket, metal cloth turban, and a corsage of orchids and lilies of the valley. Mrs. Langsenkamp wore black panne velvet with black hat and slippers and a corsage of orchids. Leave on Trip The house was decorated with palms, ferns and white chrysanthemums. The bridal table was centered with a three-tiered wedding cake on a plateau of roses and chrysanthemums. The dining room was lighted with white tapers in silver holders, tied with white tulle. Assisting in the dining room were Miss Estelle Sadlier. Miss Marcelle Badlier, Miss Katherine Reagan, Miss Monzelle Skelton, Miss Beatrice Batty. Miss Margaret Thompson, Miss Mary Bingham, Miss Margaret Carroll and Miss Hilda Lou Carroll. Mr. and Mrs. Langsenkamp have gone on a trip, the bride traveling in a brown crepe ensemble with eggshell satin blouse, broadtail coat and brown accessories. They will be at home, after Dec. 1, at 6443 Park avenue. The bride attended Butler university. where she was a member of Pi Beta Phi sorority. Mr. Langsenkamp was graduated from Purdue university, and is a member of Bigma Phi Epsilon fraternity. He also was graduated from Babson Institute. Out-of-town guests at the wedding were Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Carroll. Pittsburgh; Albert Cole, New York; Richard Cronkhite, Howard Reigler, Chicago: Mr. and Mrs. Ray Ostell. Detroit; Mr. and Mrs. Howard Wedekemper, Louisville; Mr. and Mrs. Charles Stroup. Niagara Falls, N. Y. Artman Council to Meet Art man council of the International Study and Travel Club will meet at 6:45 Tuesday night for dinner in the North Methodist Episcopal church. Meridian and Thirtveighth streets. The Rev. J. B. Rosejnurgy will be the principal speaker. An invitation has been extended to •11 residents and secertaries of local chapters to attend.

Social Life Features Activity at French Lick Springs

Social life at French Lick Springs has been active during the last week, and, according to reservations, will be so next week, especially with the parties that will come from Bloomington, following the annual Purdue-Inriiana game. Mayor L. Ert Slack and Mrs. Slack were guests of Thomas D. Taggart over last week-end and. with Mr. and Mrs. Claude M. Worley were guests at several dinners •t the Golf and Country Club. In mid-week came Reginald H. Sullivan, mayor-elect, of Indianapolis. for a rest period, accompanied by W. W. Watson. William L. Toms, Howard C. Watson and Ben Stem of Indianapolis. The party were guests of Thomas D. Taggart at dinners Monday and Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. Frank G. Laird, Indianapolis, have been guests of French Lick Springs hotel. Mayor-elect Wood Posey, Terre Haute, has been at the Springs for a vacation. Richard Wemeke and Andrew Powers, Terre Haute, have been spending several days at the Springs hotel. Miss Emma May,

Kali leased Wire Service of the Cnlted I’resß Association

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Terre Haute, was a guest this week of the Springs hotel. Mr. and Mrs. St. Clair Perry, Indianapolis, were guests of the Springs but have returned home. Other Indianapolis persons who have been at the French Lick Springs hotel are Mr. and Mrs. Roy Shields, Mrs. M. P. King. Fred E. Barrett, Bruce McKain, F. E. McDaniels. F. H. Shelby, Gerald Mast and Robert B. Denham.

MRS. BROWN SPEAKER AT GUEST MEETING

Magazine Club will hold a guest meeting Saturday night at 8 at the D. A. R. "''apter house. Mrs. Demarchus Brown will speak on “Bangkok—Queen City of the Orient.” A musical program will be in charge of Mrs. Jane Johnson B- —oughs. Hostesses for the meeting will be Mrs. A. J. Clark, Mrs. H. J. Coerper, Mrs. C. D. Campbell, Miss Adelaide Corman and Miss Mary Brown. Each member may invite three guests.

The Indianapolis Times

Dinner Bridge Is Given for Bridal Couple Mr. and Mrs. George F. Lennox entertained with a buffet dinner and bridge party at their home, 2413 North Delaware street, Friday night in honor of Miss Eleanor King and their son, Richard C. Lennox, who will marry Thanksgiving day. Decorations and appointments were in white. The dining room was lighted with white tapers in crystal holders. The table was centered with an ice cream bridal cake. Guests, with Miss King and Mr. Lennox, were Dr. and Mrs. William F. King, parents of the bride-elect; Mr. and Mrs. Walter D. Grubb, Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Matthews, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph C. Matthews, Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Pedlow, Mr. and Mrs. Walter L. Dearing, Mr. and Mrs. R. B. Morrison, Miss Margaret Newton, Miss Jeanette Grubb and Frederick Ruskaup.

INDIANAPOLIS, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER, 16, 1929

Mrs. Edward Brigham Anderson, before her marriage Saturday, Nov. 9, was Miss Louise Alberta Goepper, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Goepper, 3055 North Meridian street. Her bridal party was composed of (left to right) Miss Elizabeth Anderson, Highland Park, HI., sister of the bridegroom, maid of honor; Miss Caroline Sweeney, Mrs. Addison Bliss Miller, Columbus, 0., and Mrs. Henry C. Atkins, matron of honor, cousin of the bride. Little Eleanor Dickson Frenzel, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Otto Frenzel, was flower girl and Charles E. Cox, nephew of the bride, was ringbearer. % The marriage of Miss Jeanette Epler, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. O. P. Epler, 133 North Drexel avenue, to John W. McPheeters also took place last Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. McPheeters will make their home in Philadelphia, Pa. Miss Madge Coons, state director of Pi Omlcron, national academic sorority, was elected president of Alpha chapter of Indianapolis at a meeting Wednesday night. Mrs. Pearl A. Cooke, chairman of the finance committee of the Indianapils Business and Professional Women's Club, is in charge of the bridge tournament being sponsored by the organization as a major project this year. Miss Margaret Kluger is general chairman in charge of the annual benefit card party given by the Indianapolis Alumnae of Zeta Tau Alpha sorority, to be held Thursday night at the Elks Club.

Give Christmas Sole Members of the Calender Society of the North Park Christian church, Twenty-ninth street and Kenwood avenue, are sponsoring a one-day Christmas sale, to be held from 8 a. m. to 9 p. m. Wednesday at the church. Food, mince meat, candy, aprons and a grab bag are features of the sale. Dinner will be served.

Gilt Frames This is the time of year to recondition your gilt framed mirror, picture frames or furniture. Get the pure banana oil and gold powder and mix it yourself if you want permanent results. If possible, gild your things either in front of an open window or even on the porch so the odor will not sicken jeta

Easterner to Make Talk at Luncheon Here Tucker P. Smith, executive secretary on the committee on militarism in education, New York City, will speak on “Breaking the War Habit,” at a luncheon being sponsored by the Indiana Council on International Relations, to be held Tuesday noon at the Hotel Lincoln. The talk will deal with the question from a psychological approach. Mrs. R. F. Davidson is chairman in charge of the affair, assisted by i/lrs. George M. Cornelius, Mrs. Lehman Dunning, Mrs. H. E. Barnard, Mrs. Ralph Carter, Mrs. George Cottman, Mrs. C. S. Dahman, Mrs. Frank Jones, Mrs. Samuel Kominers, Mrs. R. B. Long and Miss Evelyn Butler. Reservations may be made with any member of the committee or at the office of the Indiana Council on International Relations

Second Section

Entered as Second-Class Matter at ros-offlce. Indianapolis

Mu Phi Epsilon Alumnae Club to Give Benefit Card Party

A benefit card party and tea will be given Wednesday afternoon at 2 at the Odeon, Metropolitan unit of the Arthur Jordan Conservatory of Music, by the Indianapolis Alumnae Club of Mu Phi Epsilon, national honorary musical sorority. Miss Lulu Brown, chairman of

AVIATION PROGRAM IS ARRANGED BY CLUB

A program on aviation has been planned for the meeting of the community welfare department of the Woman’s Department Club to be held Wednesday at the clubhouse, 1702 North Meridian street. Luncheon will be served at 12:30. Paul H. Moore, superintendent of the Indianapolis Municipal airport, will talk on “Air-Minded Indianapolis.” Following the program at the clubhouse, a bus tour of the city’s airports will be conducted. Reservations should be made with Mrs. John Connor, Riley 1652, not later tiaaß lrmriii

Mrs. Wales to Sponsor Bridge Tea Mrs. Ernest De Wolfe Wales will sponsor a bridge tea to be given Thursday by Caroline Scott Harrison chapter, D. A. R., at the chapter house. Mrs. Wales, chairman of the finance committee, will be assisted by Mrs. Gavin L. Payne, first vicechairman; Mrs. Frank W. Lewis, second vice-chairman, and the members of the committee, Mrs. T. A. Wynne, Mrs. Myra J. B. Allison. Mrs. John L. Benedict, Mrs. Howard A. Benton, Mrs. William T. Brown, Mrs. Louis C. Cline. Mrs. Ernest David Cofield, Mrs. Clarence A. Cook, Mrs. O. B. Ent, Mrs. Edward Ferger, Mrs. Robert N. Fulton, Mrs. Albert Gall, Mrs. William J, Hogan, Mrs. John K. Jones. Mrs. William F. Kuhn, Mrs. George Phillip Meier, Mrs. John J. Madden, Mrs. J. Edward Morris, Mrs. Warren D. Oakes, Mrs. Edward D. Porter Sr., Mrs. Francis M. Reed, Mrs. William Sandeman, Mrs. Albert E. Sterne, Mrs. James Taylor, Mrs. Thomas Taggart, Mrs. William Ross Teel, Mrs. Harry Allen Van Osdol, Mrs. C. William Whaley, Mrs. Walter White and Miss Anna Wright. Mrs. Warren D. Oakes will be chairman of prizes, and Mrs William Whaley, Mrs. W. F. Sandeman and Mrs. J. Edward Morris will be in charge of tables. Reservations may be made with Miss Caroline Thompson at the chapter house not later than Wednesday noon.

Bridge Meet Is Scheduled by City Club Indianapolis Business and Professional Women's Club members are sponsoring a bridge tournament this year as a major project. Six-ty-four dub members are being responsible for two tables of bridge each. These groups will play four times each between now and Feb. 15. One winner from each table will play the elimination between Feb. 15 and March 13, when the four highest score players will compete for the grand prizes. Mrs. Pearl A. Cooke, chairman of the finance committee, and her aids have compiled a list of rules and the series and finals w r ill be governed by them. Mrs. Cooke’s committee is composed of Mrs. Florence H. Alley, Miss Gayle Baird, Miss Inez Holmes, Miss Jessie M. Pavey, Miss Hazel Street, Miss Mary Jane Sturgeon, Miss Harriet Bateman, and Miss Belle M. Cope. The proceeds of the tournament will be used by the organization to entertain the state convention of the Indiana Federation of Business and Professional Women’s Club, to be held here in May. The local club members will be hostesses. Convention headquarters will be the Claypool hotel.

Bride-to-Be Is Entertained at Bridge Party Mrs. Kurt Ehlert and Miss Dorothy Patterson entertained with a luncheon bridge party today at the Columbia Club in honor of Miss Virginia Curtis, whose marriage to Thomas Ford McNutt will take place Thanksgiving day. Covers at luncheon were laid at one long table, centered with a plateau of chrysanthemums in the rainbow shades and lighted with tapers in the same colors. Each place was marked with a wrist corsage of pompom chrysanthemums in the same shades, the bride's colors. Miss Curtis was presented with a table lamp. Guests with the bride-elect were Mrs. Joseph Buck, Mrs. Edward Davis, Mrs. Frank Ball Jr., Mrs. Harold Barclay, Mrs. Richard Corya, Mrs. Harold Victor, Miss Nell Lee Richardson, Miss Georgianna Rockwell, Mrs. Leila Belle Shipman, Miss Dorotha Berger, Miss Irma Ulrich, Miss Sara Frances Downs, Miss Marjorie Okes, Miss La Donna Lamb and Miss Alice Hollingsworth.

the finance committee, is general chairman, assisted by Mrs. Isabel Cannon Cartwright, Mrs. R. H. King of Danville, Mrs. Lutie O. Gruber, Mrs. Joseph Gregoire and Mrs. Asel Spellman Stitt. Mrs. Nell Kemper McMurtrey, president of the Alumnae Club; Miss Norma Mueller, national alumnae officer of the sorority, and Mrs. Gruber will preside at the tea table. Mrs. Pearl Munday Dedert and Mrs. Anna Rowlett are in charge of the candy sale. Purple and white, the sorority colors, will be used In decorations and appointments. The Indianapolis Alumnae Club has a room in the New York clubhouse of the sorority, to which additional fur-*-nishings are to be made from the proceeds of this party. Honor ihcent Bride Kappa Sigma Chi sorority entertained Friday night with a card party and miscellaneous shower at the home of Mrs. Walter Blasengym, Shelbyville road, in honor of Mrs. a B. Hanger, recent brid*