Indianapolis Times, Volume 43, Number 296, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 April 1932 — Page 6
PAGE 6
Miss Hunter to Be Bride of D.R. Mote Miss Flora Hunter, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. F. Ellis Hunter, will be married at 4 this afternoon to DonRid R. Mote. Indianapolis, son of Mrs. Oliver P. Mote of Winchester, Rt the home of the bride’s parents. 3921 North Delaware street. The ceremony is to be read by the Rev. George S. Southworth, pastor of the Church of the Advent, before an improvised altar, with palms and Easter lilies forming the background. Cathedral candles will be placed on each side of the altar before the fireplace. The bride will wear a blue wool suit with beige fox collar with accessories of dark blue. A corsage of gardenias will be worn at the hipline. Martha Mote Attendant Her only attendant, Martha Jean Mote, daughter of Carl H. Mote, as flower girl, will wear a poudre blue crepe dress with pink and white accessories. She will carry an arm bouquet of pink rases and blue delphinium. Charles M. Johnston of Chicago will be best man. Mrs. Hunter, the bride's mother, will wear a gown of light blue chiffon trimmed in lace. Her corsage will be of pink roses. Only members of the immediate family and a few intimate friend - , will be guests. At the reception following the ceremony Mrs. Ralph Davis and Mrs. Floyd White will pour. The table will be decorated with smilax, lighted tapers and pink and white flowers with the wedding cake arranged on it. Fraternity Songs to Be Played Mrs. Stewart Greene, pianist, and Mrs. Alma Miller Lentz, violinist, will play a group of fraternity and bridal songs preceding the ceremony and during the reception. The couple will leave immediately for a short wedding trip. Out-of-town guests will Include: Mrs. Mote, the bridegroom's mother; Messrs, and Mesdamps Will Mote and Will Grimes, Union City; Will W. Moore. Lynn; Walter Neible, Edinburg; Colonel and Mrs. Arnold Strode Jackson, Louisville, Ky.; Hon. and Mrs. Noel C. Neal. Nobles- i vllle; Mrs. Helen Baker, Bloomington; j Miss Kathryn Lewis. Vincennes, and | Messrs. Nelson Hunter, Flint, Mich; Rufus i Mote, Dayton, O.; Ray Dean Mote, Winchester; John F. Murphy, Crawforrisville; Donald Stahr. Bloomington, and Frederick Buggle, Toledo. O. Miss Hunter attended Indiana university, where she was a member of Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority. Mr. Mote, a graduate of Wabash college and the law school of George Washington university, is a. member of Delta Tau Delta. G.O.P. Women to Be Guests
of State Head Members of the staff of assistants to Mrs. J. P. Holland, Republican state vice-chairman and the Republican state committee will be guests Saturday of Ivan C. Morgan, state Republican chairman, at the Ninth district rally in Bedford. These assistants who will take part in the work of Republican women in the summer and fall campaign in the state arc Mrs. Prank D. Hatfield, speakers bureau and publicity; Mrs. Frank Donner, Grecncastle, director of women’s Republican clubs; Mrs. Reynolds, Cambridge City, assistant for state field work, and Miss Elizabeth Gause, secretary to the vice-chair-man. Offices will be opened in the city within four weeks, according to announcement of Mrs. Holland. A two-day meeting will be held by Mrs. Holland at headquarters. Weekly meetings are scheduled at headquarters on Tuesdays and Fridays. Mrs. Donner will co-operate with various clubs whose interest it is to promote Republicanism. Miss Vollmer, Bride-Elect, Is Shower Guest Attendants for Miss Elizabeth Vollmer, whose marriage to John R. O’Harrow will take place May 3, entertained for her Tuesday night with a bridge party and miscellaneous shower at the home of Mrs. Randall White. 1126 North Jefferson avenue. Other hostesses were Mrs. James E. Durham and Miss Ruth Killie. Bridal colors of pink and blue were used in the decorations of the house and at serving time. Tin bridge tables were laid with blue covers and pink glassware. The tables were lighted with pink tapers tied with blue tulle. Guests were: Mesdames Harry J. Vollmer, Vincent T. Killie. Fulton J. Smith, Robert F. Vollmer Raioh Landis. Robert Hummel. Ray O. Herbtg. Kenneth Hittle, T. Krcigh Miles. Walter Stewart. Robert Sheets, Richard Kreclo and Chase O'Harrow and the Misses Kathryn Mullen. Pauline Ballinger. Ruth Mather, Elizabeth Uebe'.e, Pauline Eckert. Dorothy Smith. Lelic Petrie. Dorothy Rainwater and Olive Montell. MRS. GAB BERT IS HONORED AT TEA Farewell bridge-tea for Mrs. Charles Gabbert, Spink-Arms, who will leave next week to live at St. Louis, Mo., was given Tuesday by Mrs. Paul Weir at her home. 6414 East St. Clair street. Mrs. Weir was assisted by her mother, Mrs. Herman C. Davis. Spring flowers were used as decorations. A farewell gift was presented to Mrs. Gabbert. Guests included : Mesdamrs Daniel Young. Nvilliam R Tindall. Harold Sweenev. Edward Bardweli Clifford Crowell. Virgil Lemmon. Hour Timmona and Miss Wanda Behvmer of S. Louis. Mo., sister of Mrs. Gabbert. JANET HOLLIDAY IS COLLEGE EDITOR Miss Janet Holliday, daughter of Mrs. Alexander R. Holliday, 1235 North New Jersey street, recently was elected editor of the Campus, weekly newspaper of Sarah Lawranee college at Bronxville, N. Y. This is one of the two highest journalistic honors for students at the school. Miss Holliday is a graduate of Tudor Hall.
Patriots of 1776 Are Honored
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Members of the ladies’ auxiliary of the Lavelle Gosse 1 post. No. 908, V. F. W., in the Patriots’ day parade.
T TISTORIC episodes of the -*■ *■ Revolutionary war were reenacted Tuesday as Indianapolis observed Patriots' day with a military parade. In addition to observing the bicentennial anniversary of George Washington’s birth, the parade celebrated the battles of Concord and Lexington and Paul Revere’s ride. A squadron of army planes from Ft. Benjamin Harrison flew overhead as fife and drum players
'MAN NtRWMORALSI Jordan /Pi
WRITE to Jane Jordan for new light on your problems! Her interest in you does not end with the first letter. It is well to write again and tell how her plan for you worked. 'Note: This Is the second letter from Puazled Girl. In the first, one she described her unhappiness at the collapse of a romantic love affair. Jane Jordan and other readers advised her to find some one else. She iollowed the advice and here Is her new experience.! Dear Jane Jordan—Romantic love Is wonderful while it lasts, but after the romance wears off there is nothing left but ashes. Now. as you said I would. I have met a man older than I, who really has been wonderful to me, and who is sincere in his declarations. I don't love him. but I admire him greatly, and trust him, which amounts to a great deal. I wonder if it would be enough to build married happiness on? It seems too good a chance to miss, but I hesitate to take a jump that I fear. However, I know that he could make tne happy and possiblly love would come later. Do you think that is possible? In a way, I still love the other fellow, but I never could go back to him, because there is no respect, no trust, no admiration there. PUZZLED GIRL. Dear Puzzled Girl—l am glad you have learned to hesitate and I hope you will hesitate a while longer. It takes some time to know another human being well enough to determine whether he is the one with whom you can form a partnership
involving your entire life. You have a much better chance to see him clearly in your present state of mind than you would have if your vision was obscured by blind infatuation. You are free in the beginning from many of the illusions which are bound to be lost in the difficulties of living together. You do not expect the impossible and you pause before the realization that two human beings cannot share the same life without inflicting a certain amount of suffering upon each other. I do not believe that you still are in love with the other man. It is only that your imagination is loathe to let go of that part of the experience which was pleasing. The fact that the thrills which you found worthless do not rise with the same ease toward a worthier man should not make you doubt that you are capable of a real and lasting devotion to that man. The heart that is wounded does not readily commit itself again before security is reasonably certain. If, after you have known this man long enough, you find a deepening sense of satisfaction in his companionship, and a steady growth of your present admiration and trust. I should say that this feeling is a far safer basis for marriage than all the heart throbs that shook your inexperience. a a a Dear Jane Jordan—l am a girl of 15 rears, going stendv with a fellow 18 years old. Do you think he is 100 old for me? Is a airl oi 15 too voung to have dates? Should I sneak out and have dates or wait.? If a fellow reallv cares for a girl, would he nart with her if he caught her in a little white lie? Do vou think it is wrong to sooon in the theater? Will smoking, drinking, end being too free with love ruin a girls renutation? Does a fellow reallv and trulv love a Ctrl if he would wait for a vear for her when he could be having other dates? Does a fellow like tor a girl to babv him anti does he ever get tired of love? BABF Dear Babe—A boy of 18 is not too
f ■$ mail
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i and a color bearer marched in the parade, representing the spirit of ’76. Music was provided by several bands, including the Eleventh infantry band, Washington; Tech and Crispus Attucks high school bands, and the legion drum corps. Representatives of various patriotic and veterans' organizations marched. Heading the first division were Governor Harry G. Leslie, Mayor Reginald H. Sullivan and bicenI tennial commission officials.
i old to be friendly with a girl of .15, but the girl of 15 has no business j getting serious about his attentions. She is, indeed, too young to be monkeying with mature emotions and should not sneak out on her parents. 1 would not stress the fact that you are crazy about the boy to your parents, because it makes you feel so silly when you get over it. Nevertheless, you should not deceive them with secret meetings. Men usually forgive women for little white lies, because they long since have given up expecting them to tell the truth. It, is wretched i taste to spoon in the theater and I marks you as a person of no breeding. Smoking, drinking and, laxity in love ruin a girl’s reputation quicker I than anything else. A year is too | short a test of a young boy's love. Men like to be babied when they are | in the mood, and they tire of love quicker than anything else if they | are fed an overdose by an unwise maiden.
Federation of Clubs Meets at Greenwood Fourth district convention of the j Indiana Federation of Clubs was scheduled today in Greenwood with , the Fifth district meeting in Greencastle Thursday. Twenty-fifth annual convention 1 of the Sixth district was held Tuesday at Rushville with Mrs. Fred; Bell of Rushville, president, in charge. More than three hundred clubwomen from eight counties and 105 clubs attended. Annual reports of district officers and department chairmen were heard. Mrs. Edwin N. Canine, Terre Haute, president of the state federation, discussed “Obtaining Our Objectives,” and Mrs. Robert A. Hicks, Cambridge City, first vicepresident, spoke. Other state officers were among the special guests and speakers. COUPLE HONORED ON ANNIVERSARY Mr. and Mrs. Cyril L. Hurst, Beech Grove, entertained Monday night with a party in honor of Mr. and Mrs. H. L. Hurst, who celebrated their wedding anniversary. Appointments were in lavender and white. Guests were: The Rev. Owen Knox and Mrs. Knox. Dr. and Mrs. R. A. Butler, Mr. and Mrs. Wilfred- Hurst. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Jen- j kinson: Mrs. F. J. Brandon and Clayton i Robertson. Nurses Give Skate Nurses of St. Vincent's hospital will give a skating party tonight at the Riverside rink for the benefit of the school fund. Miss Mildred Walker is chairman.
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Have You Been Here? Have You Attended the Most Sensational Furniture Bargain Event Ever Accorded the Buying Public of This City? To Miss This Great Event Would Not Be Fair to Your Pocketbook. WILL SOON BE HISTORY ' ffl |p| ONLY Everything Must Go MR Sander & Recker AWM *)n VflVpf Inspires Hand- •> Quality Furniture * "*I\<"l• Clapping— I 9B GOING! 7:30 to To p iyi I Only s 3is mm lipi Made Daily at / 17 Custom Built Living Room Suites / JJ9S 00 Sld f 111 Miss This Auction at Your Risk l PIJ p p A Useful Gift Absolutely Free to Every Lady in the PH T T SrUCC Store After Doors Open Each Afternoon at IP. M. | If 11 EL SANDER & RECKER jO 42 S. Meridian St. FURNITURE CO. Indianapolis, Ind.
Mrs. Atkins New Junior League Head Mrs. Elias C. Atkins was chosen president of the Indianapolis Junior League Tuesday at the annual election at the Propylaeum. Mrs. Atkins succeeds Mrs. Robert A. Adams, who was chosen as delegate td the convention of the Association of Junior League of America, to be held at Los Angeles, Cal., early in May. Mrs. Atkins also will attend this conference. Other officers named were Mrs. Dudley A. Pfaff, vice-president; j Mrs. Paul Fisher, recording secretary; Miss Katharine Brown, corresponding secretary; Mrs. Lewis M. Huesmann, treasurer, and Mrs. George Denny, city editor. Reports of standing committees were given by chairmen following the election of officers. They in- ! eluded reports of the hospital com- ] mittee by Mrs. Edwin M. McNally; i provisional members, Mrs. Theodore B. Griffith; arts and interest, Mrs. Louis H. Haerle; trust fund, Mrs. Sylvester Johnson; braille, Miss Ruth Sheerin; Junior League shop. \ Mrs. Adams; trading post, Mrs. Thomas Hendricks; publicity, Miss Rosamond Van Camp, and recording and corresponding secretary', Mrs. Addison J. Parry.
Club Women Well Impressed With Reformatory’s Condition
BY FLORENCE DEERE Favorable impressions of the Indiana State Reformatory at Pendleton were gained Tuesday by members of the municipal affairs committee from the community welfare department of the Women's Department Club. The trip was made as one in a series the committee is making to study modern institutions. Many of the women never before had visited such an institution, and the conditions of extreme cleanliness seemed to impress them most. Things were not only clean, but were bright, light and airy. There was no dingy dr forlorn spots. The cleanliness, however, was overshadowed somewhat by the ex- ! tremely crowded state. The bunks, for such are the cells called, originally were built to care for one man. At the present time two are compelled to share them. This condition will be alleviated somewhat by the erection of anew dor- ! mitory, now in progress. Boys ‘‘in” for their first term are kept from the others as much as possible. The reformatory chaplain led the ! women into the chapel, a beautiful building both inside and out. The women were interested particularly in the large paintings of biblical scenes which had been created by one of the boys in the school. They showed marked talent, though the guide said the boy had had no training.
This institution is in contrast! with the Indiana Women’s Prison, which has been declared unsafe, j and a fire hazard. The Pendleton institution is new and bright, with ! fresh air to spare, while the other is old, run down, and in a section of the city where smoke and grime is abundant. The guide told interesting customs of the institution, one being the unwritten law by which every inmate and every employe of the reformatory removes his hat when passing under the flag which flies just in front of the dining hall. The guide said that in his many years there he never had seen a single man fail to follow this custom. In answer to questions asked by the women in the party, the guide said that since the depression the number of boys assigned there has doubled. He laid their misdemeanors to poverty, broken homes and ignorance. He told of his work as chaplain, and said that including his work as a minister before coming to the institution, he never had faced a more appreciative audience than he has at Pendleton. Women making the trip Tuesday were Mrs. C. A. James, chairman of the committee; Mesdames C. H. I Augstein, John Engelke, A. C. Rasmussen. I. E. Rush, Charles Smith. Misses Ethel Curryer and R. Katha- ; l ine Beeson.
APRIL 20, 1932
G. O. P. Women Plan Party to Build Reserve Mrs. L. P. Highly and Mrs. H. B. Pike were appointed chairmen of the card party to be given by the Twelfth District Board of the Indiana Council of Republican Women at a meeting Tuesday at the Severin of the ways and means and the state convention general arrangements committees. Date for the party has not been set. Proceeds of the party will be used to form a state reserve fund. Other members of the committee are Mesdames Fred B. Robinson. W. W. Atkinson, Bert Fuller. Dan Brown and Thomas Whalen. Guests of the board were Mrs. Beryl Holland of Bloomington and Mrs. Frank Donner of Newcastle. Other members of the board attending the meeting were Mesdames Frank D. Hatfield, chairman; Mae Marcum Jacobs, first vice-chairman; John F. Engelke, second vice-chair-man; John McCardle, treasurer; George F. Ong. organization chairman. and W. W. Atkinson, advisory chairman. State convention of the council will be held June 10 in Indianapolis. Kappa Alphas to Meet Kappa Gamma Alpha sorority will sponsor a card party and style show Thursday night at Seligs. Miss Helen Mary McLeod is in charge.
