Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 110, Indianapolis, Marion County, 16 September 1933 Edition 02 — Page 5
SEPT. 16, 1933.
Fall Signal for Start of Season by Hunters in Traders Point Club Hounds, Horns Made Ready as Community Dinner Is Planned in Honor of Landowners Aiding* Sport. BY BEATRICE BI’RGAN Time* Woman's Pare Fditor INDIANAPOLIS huntsmen have been recognized. After two years of noviceship, the Traders Point Hunt Club has been taken intio* the fold of the Hunt Club of America, and will regulate its activities by the national group's rules. The arrival of fall weather is stirring up thoughts of drag hunts, blasts of the hunting horn, and the bays of hounds. Invitations for the first hunt in October are being prepared, and all the community of Traders Point is anticipating the community dinner for landowners
Oct. 6 at the Traders Point Ebenezer Christian church. The farmers and estate owners make the hunts possible, for they are assisting m opening up the country. In Virginia and Maryland, where there are many extensive estates the country is paneled, meaning the grounds are separated by posts and rails instead of with barbed wire fences, as in this territory. Farmers C'o-operate The land around Traders Point gradually is being paneled, for the landowneis have granted the club privileges in putting up pasts and rails. The community dinner is a gesture on the part of the club to show its appreciation for the co-operation of the farmers and estate owners in assisting the project of opening up the country. George M. Bailey again will be tl\e master of hounds. Since the club was started two years ago after interest was aroused by paper chases, he has led
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Miss Burgan
the club in its chases every Saturday afternoon during the season. Russell Fortune again will serve as honorary huntsman and Russell Fortune Sr and Ralph Lockwood as honorary whippersin, who wear the tra-
ditional velvet caps. Tire hunts begin around 2 in the afternoon, starting frcm various points and ending with tea at members’ homes near the hunting territory All the members of the club do not join in the hunts, but they support it and attend its parties, breakfasts and dinners. A ball is hinted for this season. Wear Special Garb There's a goal for riders reaching the end of the hunt. Their greatest satisfaction conies from being asked by the master of hounds to wear the special garb. Pink coats worn by men are a mark of their skill, and the brass buttoned, monogra mined blue vests are distinctive for women hunters. Wells Hampton and Nathan Davis are among the men with this special sartorial recognition. Mrs. J. J. Daniels, Mrs. Bailey, Miss Anne Ayres, Miss Hilda Hibben and Mrs. Cornelius Alig are wearers of the blue vest. A drag hunt might be called a slow steeplechase. The bait for the dogs is tied to a rope, held by a man who rides ahead of the hounds, dragging it with him. He rides a few jumps ahead of the hunt, but the field always remains far enough bark of the hounds not to interfere with their chase. The animals are sensitive and delicate and should never be overridden. Most of the members have jumping horses, some of them prize winners. Mr. and Mrs. Bailey have entered theirs in the Arlington Riding Club horse shows and have won trophies. Polo Playing Advantage Among other frequent riders are Mr. Alig. who is president; Mrs. Wells Hampton and her father, Charles Mayer; Miss Frances Holliday. Mrs. Nathan P. Graham, Kiefer Mayer. Mrs. Russell Fortune Sr.. Monte Williams and his sons, and Mrs. Herbert Pirnell, who’ll ride for her first season this year. Fearlessness acquired in playing polo is an advantage for Mr. and Mrs. Conrad Ruckelshaus, Thomas Ruckelshaus and Samuel Sutphin. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Shields of Foxclifle, near Martinsville, are members of the club, and Mrs. Shields probably will ride for the first time this year. Development of Traders Point as a favorite locale for country estates is an outgrowth of the attention drawn to it by the hunt club. Members glory in the wooded beauty of the land, and enjoy its seclusion.
Woman’s Department Club to Give Program for President
Mrs. R. O. McAlexander, president of the Woman's Department club, will be honored at the opening meeting Wednesday, Sept. 27, at the club. Mrs. Leo K. Fesler, charter and life member, is general chairman of the affair, which will include a reception, luncheon and musical program. Receiving at 12:30 with Mrs. McAlexander will be founders, past presidents, present officers and members of the board fit directors. Seated with the president at the luncheon will be Mesdames Felix T. MeWhirter. W. W. Thornton and Everett M. Schofield, past presidents. Mrs. Paul V. McNutt will be a special guest. Members of the board of directors will be hostesses at small tables. A color scheme of yellow, orange and green will be used in the decorations. A program. "The New Deal,” featuring the NRA slogan, "We Do Our Part." will be given during the luncheon hour. Mrs. Frederick G. Balz will extend greetings front the Indiana Federation of Women's Clubs, and Mrs. J. F. Edwards from the Seventh District federation. Other talks will be “A Tribute to Our Country,” by Mrs. Thornton; "A Tribute to Our State." by Mrs. Schofield; "A Trib-
ENGAGEMENT TO -BE ANNOUNCED TONIGHT
The engagement of Miss Wilma Leonard to Everett B. Smith of Chicago wiU be announced by her mother. Mrs. William Leonard. 4516 East Washington street, at a party tonight at her home. The wedding will take plsce Nov. 12. Guests will be Misses Eleanor Marshall. Clementine Casmire, Gwendolyn Coleman. Florise Scott. Frances Fulmer. Frances Leonard. Josephine Symms. Geneva Harrell. Virginia Page. Genevieve Rohm. Anna belle De Burger and Mesdames Seward Baker. J. Ray Martz and Harold Brady. Announce Engagement Mr. and Mrs. J E. Niedenthall. Bluff road, announce the engagement of their daughter, Miss Amelia Niedenthall, to Car! Bristow, son of Mrs. Lena Clarke, Beech Grove. The wedding will take place Bept. 23.
Music Sorority Alumnae Will Start Season A century of progress in music will be the theme of the opening program of the Indianapolis Alumnae club of Mu Phi Epsilon, national honorary musical sorority, at 6:30 Wednesday at the home of the president, Mrs. C. P. Cartwright, 5420 North New Jersey street. The hastess will be assisted at the dinner by Mrs. Asel Spellman Stitt and Misses Charlotte Liebor and Mary Moorman. Miss Lulu Brown, program chairman, has arranged the entertainment to include numbers from composers of the last century, and she will give a paper on these composers from Schumann through Mendelssohn. Voice—"Wldmung” Schumann Miss Charlotte Lieber. Piano—" Nocturne. Op. 48. No. I....Chopin Mrs. Ernestine Fleming. Voice—"O. For the Wings of a Oove” Mendelssohn Mrs. June Baker. Piano—" Nocturne. Op. 15. No. 2.... Chopin Mrs. Ernestine Fleming. Voice—"O. Mon Fils” (Le Prophetel... Meyerbeer Miss Mary Moorman. Miss Louise Swan will be the accompanist. MRS. ALBERT CHILL IS HONORED GUEST A surprise shower was given Mrs. Albert Leland Chill Jr., recent bride, Friday night at the home of Mrs. De Vota Tobey, 3815 North Capitol avenue. Blue tapers in crystal holders lighted the serving table and decorations were carried out in tearose and blue. Guests included Mrs. Chill, and her mother, Mrs. J. Hymer Williams, and Mesdames E. D. Cromley. A. L. Chill Sr.. Paul Boots, Tom Barnett, Harry Brown, Joseph Scott, Dan Wilson. Minnie Fry, Edward Woodward, Charles Farmer, Charles Bamford, Mack Ross, Wayne Williams and A. C. Rodgers. Misses Clemence Dow, Virginia Scott, Martha Bryan. Dorothy Kent, Dana Wililams and Martha Rodgers. Society Will Meet Girls Friendly Society of Christ church will meet at 5:30 Tuesday at the parish house. Dinner at 6 will be followed by a business meeting.
ute to Our Homes.” by Mrs. MeWhirter. and "A Tribute to Our Club.” by Mrs. McAlexander. Mrs. Fesler's assistants are Mesdames A. C. Barbour. W. P. Morton. James T. Hamill and John Downing Johnson. Mrs. H. O. Warren, reservations chairman, has announced reservations for the luncheon will be limited to 200. They will be received until Monday night. Sept. 25. Her committee is composed of Mesdames J. T. Hallett, O. P. McLeland and A. Edgar Shirley. The musicale in the auditorium will be given by Pauline Schellschmidt and ensemble.
BRIDE-ELECT
Miss Ruth Egan
Marriage of Miss Ruth Egan, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Egan of Ft. Wayne and formerly of Indianapolis, to Willard L. Cameron of Shelbyville. son of Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Cameron of Indanapolis, will take place next Saturday. lota Tau Entertains lota Tau Tau legal sorority entertained new women students of Benjamin Harrison law school at a bridge party Thursday night in the Columbia club. Miss Bonnie Miller .was chairman.
Their Activities Hold Society's Attention
Is * ' -aBB mm v * Mb. ’ .'. ... ...n, —Photo bv Df'xheimcr —Photo bv Brotzmh... ' 4 Miss Adelaide Gould Mrs. Trueman T. Renibuseh J vliss Williston Miss McCoy to Wed New York fc , j
Miss Williston Becomes Bride in Home Rites Miss Jane Williston, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Dudley M. Williston, became the bride of Edward Campbell at 10:45 this morning at the Williston home, Kessler boulevard and Forty-sixth street. The Rev. George Southworth read the service before the fireplace, which was banked with ferns and decorated with pink roses and delphinium. Miss Beth Ann Williston was her sister’s only attendant. She wore a blue satin gown with dark blue accessories. She carried an arm bouquet of pink roses and delphinium. The bride appeared in a white satin gown with sleeves puffed to the elbow and tight to the wrist. Her veil of Brussels lace was worn originally by her great-grand-mother. Her flowers were white roses and lilies-of-the-valley. Mrs. Williston wore a light blue chiffon gown with a corsage of tea roses. Dan Young was best man. A reception at the Williston home followed the service. The couple will be at home in Louisville after Sept. 23. The bride is a graduate of Butler university and member of Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority, and Mr. Campbell, also a Butler graduate, belongs to Delta Tau Delta fraternity.
In the Realm of Clubs
All /VIL v\ Hi, meet Clt • .TO Monday night at the Y. W. C. A. Mrs. George E. Klopp will be hostess Monday for the covered-dish luncheon meeting of the Te-Aro-Ah chapter of International Travel Study Club. Inc. Mrs. G. A. Fisher will read a paper. New members of the club are Mrs. Earl Smith, Mrs. Donald Klopp and Mrs. T. F. Druliner. Mrs. Emil H. Soufflot will be hostess at the president's day meeting Tuesday of the Mueteurn-in-Parvo Literary Club at the Marott. Mrs. Adolf Wagner and Mrs. W. David Morton will present "Queens of Long Ago.” Summer reminiscences will be the responses given to roll call Tuesday at the meeting of the Hoosier Tourist Club with Mrs. Roy H. Peterson and Mrs. T. B. Davis as hostesses. Mrs. C. E. Day will talk on "Travel Highlights.” Irvington Quest Club will observe President's day with a luncheon at 1 o'clock Tuesday at the home of Mrs. Clarence Kercheval. Mrs. Chic Jackson will be guest speaker and Mrs. S. G. Huntington will preside. Mrs. Dan Brown Jr., 21 West Forty-sixth street, will be hostess for the president’s day observance of Wy-Mo-Dau Literary Club at 12:30 Tuesday. Officers will be installed. Mrs. C. H. Heid will be hostess for the meeting of the Mothers Club of the Alliance of Alpha Delta Theta sorority at 2 Wednesday afternoon. Mrs. Heid, president, will be assisted by the following during the year: Mrs. F. B. Tomlinson, vice-presi-dent; Mrs. Carl Day, secretary’, and Mrs. A. J. Brossart. treasurer. Beta Delphian chapter will meet at 12:30 Thursday at Cifaldi's with Mrs. A. M. Alexander as incoming president, ——
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Miss McCoy to Wed New York Man at Meridian M. E. Church
The Rev. Abram S. Woodard, assisted by the Rev. Melvin V. Oggle of Crawfordsville, will read the marriage ceremony for Miss Edythe McCoy, daughter of Mrs. Henry J. McCoy, and Donald DuShane of New York, at 8:30 tonight at the Meridian Street M. E. church. Fourteen-w'ay candelabra will light the altar, which will be decorated with evergreens, ferns and palms. A reception at the Propylaeum Club will follow' the ceremony. Fall flowers and candles will be used throughout the receiving rooms. During the service Mrs. H. L. Clippin will play traditional airs, and Miss Helen Louise Titus will sing "Still as the Night,” "I Love Thee” and "Because.” The attendants will wear gowns in autumn shades of yellow, fashioned with high necklines, pleating over the shoulders and at the hemline. They will carry arm bouquets of dahlias, matching their gowns in color. Mrs. Frederick Atkinson ofEvansville will w f ear citrus; Miss Natalie Hopple of Englewood, N. J., palm lily; Miss Ruth Peterson, yellow” Miss Mary Martha Hockensmith, gold, and Miss Martha Banister, mandarin. Mrs. McCoy will wear a jacket dress of w’hite, imported lace with white fox trim, and Mrs. Donald DuShane, mother of the bride-groom-elect, will wear black satin. Both will have shoulder bouquets of gardenias. The bride has chosen a creme-
Ladies Federal Club will meet for a luncheon and business session Thursday with Mrs. G. P. Kibbee. Ten-minute reviews of recent fiction will be given at the officers’ luncheon Saturday of the Butler Alumnae Literary Club with Mrs. O. H. McCogin as hostess. presidents day will be observed by the Woman's Research Club Monday at the Propylaeum Club. Hostesses will be Mrs. J. M. Dungan, retiring president, and Mrs. Edmund D. Clark, new president, assisted by officers.
PI BETA PHI ‘BRIDAL’ RITE IS SCHEDULED
The traditional “marriage of Pi Beta Phi to Freshman Women” will be held tonight by the Indiana Gamma chapter in honor"of Butler university rushees. Mrs. Ray Briggs, 2823 Sutherland avenue, will be j hostess. Miss Janice Kellogg in white, : carrying white roses will represent the freshman woman, and her attendants will be Miss Ruby Hill, dressed in the sorority silver blue, and Misses Helen Carson and Pauline McCarty, in rose and blue, and will carry talisman roses. Miss Mabel Espey will be the bridegroom, and will kneel during the paraphrased ceremony with Miss Kellogg on a white satin cushion, before an altar of ferns and palms, lighted by seven-branched candelabra. Miss Mary Rose Lowry will sing | “Speed Thee My Arrow,” and other Pi Phi songs, accompanied by Miss Helen Root. Refreshments will include a wedding cake with the traditional favors, end appropriate decorations.
au-lait satin gown with coat train of satin and alercon lace. She will carry an arm bouquet of lilies with a shower of lilies-of-the-valley. After the reception, the couple will leave for their home in New York, the bride traveling in an eel grey tunic dress with matching accessories. The bride, a graduate of Tudor Hall and National Park Seminary in Washington, attended De Pauw and Butler universities. She is a member of Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority. Mr. DuShane was graduated from Wabash college, and attended Northwestern law school. Out-of-town guests attending will be Mr. and Mrs. W. O. McLelland, Detroit; Mrs. W. O. McLelland, Madison; Mrs. Carl W. Newton and daughter Jane, Evanston, 111.; Perry | TeWalt of Washington: Mr. and j Mrs. Hubert Havrick, New York; ! James Lowry Clifford, Evansville; Huldah Fritzberg, Marion; Dr. and Mrs. H. H. Thacker, Mr. and Mrs. Clem Zeller of Brazil, and Miss Mary Frances Johnson, Bedford. Guests from Columbus will include Messrs, and Mesdames Ray F. I Brown, Dan Frazee, George H. j Lucas, Frederick Sutter, Frank I Richman. John Marshall, Robert i Reeves, Ramsbn D. Perry and Barj ney Wernsing. Others were Dr. and ! Mrs. John Connelly, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Oakley, Dr. and Mrs. G. R. Ulmer, Mrs. Robert Henderson and Mr. and Mrs. Lee Roland Whitney of Terre Haute.
RUSH PARTY HEAD
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Miss Martha Shirk
Miss Martha Shirk is chairman of the second rush party of Pi Beta Phi sorority which will be in the form of “The Wedding of Pi Beta Phi to Freshmen Women,” tonight at the home of Mrs. Ray Briggs, 2823 Sutherland avenue. GUILD WILL MARK RILEY'S BIRTHDAY The birthday of James Whitcomb Riley will be celebrated Friday. Oct. 6, by the Riley Hospital Cheer Guild with a card party at Banner-White-hill auditorium. Committees for the annual project will be announced at a meeting to be held at 2 Tuesday, Sept. 26, in the American National bank parlors. Mrs. William H. Adams will be the speaker, and Mrs. Carl R. Semans, president, and Mrs. Ira Fisher, hostesses,
—Photo bv Photocraft. Mrs. Wesley Rayner Tinker MRS. WESLEY RAYNER TINKER w'as Miss Priscilla Miner, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Allison Miner, before her marriage Sept. 7. Miss Adelaide Gould with other alumnae members, will model gowns at the bridge party next Saturday in Ayres’ auditorium. The affair is under the auspices of the Indianapolis Alumnae Association of Kappa Gamma sorority. Another recent bride is Mrs. Trueman T. Rembusch, who was Miss Catherine Finneran, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. P. J. Finneran. The marriage of Miss Margaret Shanklin to Richard Beem, son of Mr. and Mrs. L. A. Beem, has been announced by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur T. Mayfield. The marriage of Mis Mary Jane Morris, daughter of Mrs. Ida B. Morris, and Albert Siegmund took place Tuesday at the Propylaeum.
Personals
Mrs. E. P. Endsiey, 441 North | Grant street, left Thursday lor New York, where she will visit Mr. and Mrs. A. D. Peters. She also will be a guest of Mrs. Agnes Deane and Mr. and Mrs. Will Deane of Hackensack, N. J. Mr. and Mrs. . M. Clodfelter and famly of Enid, Okla., have been guests of Dr. and Mrs. E. V. Alexander, 715 East Fifty-seventh street. Dr. and Mrs. Alexander and daughter Doris left Friday to spend the week-end in Chicago and Gary. Miss Estelle Rauh Burpee, 3025 North Meridian street, will visit in Greenwich, Conn., before returning to Sarah Lawrence college in Bronxville, N. Y. Mr. and Mrs. H. O. Garman, 2062 North Meridian street, will have as their guests Dr. Virgil E. Rorer and Miss Adele Rorer of Philadelphia. Mr. and Mrs. George Bates, 1212 South Richland street, and Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Smith, 732 North Denny street, have returned from Chicago, where they attended a Century of Progress exposition. Dr. and Mrs. Carl B. Sputh, 5735 Central avenue, have returned from Chicago, where Dr. South attended the national medical convention of the American Congress of Physical Therapy. Mrs. Albert J. Beveridge Jr. is visiting in New York. R. W. Beach and W. H. Arthur are stopping at the Roosevelt while in New York. TWO APPOINTED TO TUDOR HALL STAFF Miss Katrine Van Dyke Bucher will have charge of dramatics at Tudor hall this year, and Miss Anaronica Lamproplos, Latrobe, Pa., will assist Miss Lillian Reeves with class work in Greek literature and art. Miss Bucher, a graduate of the Emerson School of Oratory in Boston, has tabght dramatics in a New Haven preparatory school, was drama coach at Pine Knoll camp, Conway, N. H.; Moss lake camp, Eagle Bay, N. Y., and at Camp Wah-Na-Gi at Lake George, N. Y. Miss Lamproplos is a graduate of Radcliffe college and has spent two .years in Greece.
Increasing Interest in Aquariums Brings Out New Aids for Amateur Devices Insuring* Proper Treatment of Fish’ Available for Devotees in City; Beginner’s Group Shown. BY HELEN LINDSAY WITH the increase in interest in the hobby of raising tropical fish, an unusual number of new gadgets have been put upon the market. From these one learns much of the technique of maintaining a well-kept aquarium. At the Tropical Studio, on Maple Road, Is a varied display of these unique inventions. First of all, there are aquariums of different sizes. Then there is a health lamp, the same kind that brings healing rays to the human race. This is equipped with a brace which fastens to the side
of the aquarium by rubber suction cups, and allows the light to shine down directly over the surface of the water. It is to be used to advantage for a halfhour period, once or twice a week. While the use of these lamps also helps to heat the water, other devices are sold for this purpose. There is an aquarium heater, in which an ordinary light bulb is inserted, and which fastens to the side of the aquarium by suction cups. The water for most tropical fish should be kept at 70 degrees, and special thermometers are made to test the water. Tropical fish can not be kept in fresh water. Aquariums are filled with water, rocks, sand, and water plants for some time before the fish are put into them. Because fresh water is detrimental to the fish, cleaning methods have had to be developed which can be used without disturbing the fish. For this purpose there is an aquarium syphon, which is a long glass
tube, w T ith a suction bulb blown into it. With this, food particles and soil can be removed from the bottom of the aquarium without changing the water. a a tt tt tt tt Deposits Aids Fish Growth THE green, slimy deposit which forms along the side of the aquarium is not really dirt, but is a growing water plant, upon which the fish feed. The Tropical Studio shows a cleaner by which this deposit, known as algae, can be scraped from the sides of the glass walls. It is made so that old razor blades can be inserted into it, and used for the cleaning process. Algae is to fish what lettuce is to human beings. Not only do tropical fish need this lettuce substitute, but their health demands specially prepared foods, which are made from dried ground shrimp, clams, or oysters, mixed with oatmeal. This is sold in small containers. Glass feeding rings, which float on the top of the water, are displayed. The food is springled in the circle of the glass ring, and the fish learn to rise to this spot to be fed. While the angel fish like water with an acid content, most of the tropical fish do not grow well in it. For the elimination of an acid condition in the water, small “fish pills” are made. They are plaster of paris containers, which look much like half of a golf ball. The under side is treated chemically, and destroys acidity in water. tt tt tt tt tt tt ‘Tropicure ’ Is New Medicine TROPICAL fish need medicine, too. “Tropicure” is a liquid sold at the studio which is intended to prevent many of the fish diseases, among which are itch, fungus, shimmy, and dropsy. Nets are used for the removal of the larger fish from the aquarium. The baby fish are often so tiny that they would be injured if removed by a fish net. For this reason, a glass, cone-shaped spoon has been made, in which they are scooped out of the water. Snails and shrimps are put into the water, to be used as scavengers. Decorative stones, natural river gravel and red and sea sand are the materials used for decoration. A suggested “beginners’ group” for the person just starting an aquarium, has been submitted by the Tropical Studio. It includes a pair of Red Moons, for their bright color; a Black Molly, to set off the other bright colored fish; one Betta, for its unusual colorings, often ranging from the palest orchid to deep purple tints; one pair of Angels, because of their unusual graceful forms, and a pair of Zebras, for their liveliness.
Cornelia Dowling Is Married to G. S. Tatman at Church
One of the loveliest of fall marriage ceremonies was read today for Miss Cornelia Dowling and George Sinks Tatman. son of Mrs. E. W. Tatman of Connersville, at the First Presbyterian church. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Henry McCabe Dowling. White flowers and cathedral candles, banked with smilax. formed the setting for the service at which the Rev. George Arthur Frantz officiated. The bride entered with her father. Her gown of antique satin had bouffant sleeves, a square neck-line and was buttoned down the back with small satin buttons. The flared
Moore-White Rites Held in McKee Chapel A few friends and relatives witnessed the marriage of Miss Beatrice Moore and Kenneth R. White at 11:30 this morning in McKee I chapel of Tabernacle Presbyterian i church. Dr. J. Ambrose Dunkel j read the ceremony. The bride entered with her father, A. D. Moore, to the altar banked with palms with large urns of browrn shaded chrysanthemums on both sides. Ms. C. H. Eberhard, organist, played ‘‘Venetian Love Song,” “To a Wild Rose,” and “Sylvia.” The bride wore a sapphire blue velvet dress, cut on princess lines, and a jacket with shoulder bands of mink. She wore a matching cut velvet turban and carried a muff of Talisman rases. Harold White of Chicago, brother of the bridegroom, was best man, and Harrison Smitson of Tipton and Paul Brown of Chicago were ushers. Mrs. Moore wore a bogda wool dress trimmed in monkey fur and a corsage of Talisman roses, and Mrs. Clifford N. White, mother of the bridegroom, wore a black and white satin ensemble and gardenias. A wedding breakfast followed at the Propylaeum Club. Out-of-tow'n guests with Mr. and Mrs. White of Chicago, were: Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Mantz of Peoria, 111.; Mrs. John Stah, Mr. and Mrs. Royal Horn, all of Chicago, and Mrs. Sam Farrow of Greencastle. The couple left for a wedding trip, the bride traveling in an oxford gray wool suit, trimmed with Persian bandings. They will live at 1844 West One hundred fifth street, Beverley Hillls, Chicago. The bride is a graduate of Butler university and is a member of Kappa Alpha Theta. Miss Oakes Guest Miss Betty Wallerich and Miss Frances Lemaux will entertain tonight at the Indianapolis Country Club with a dinner honoring Miss Helen Oakes, bride-elect. The marriage of Miss Oakes to Dillon Huder will take place next Saturday at the home of her father, Warren D. Oakes, 3055 North Meridian street.
Complete ( 5-. j! Service BEAUTV ri. 802 Merchants
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Mrs. Lindsay
I skirt formed a sweeping train. Her antique satin veil fell from a pearl trimmed cap. Her flowers were white roses and gardenias. She was attended by Mrs. Paul B. Hoffman, matron of honor; Miss Josephine Tatman and Miss Elizabeth Tatman of Connersville, Mrs. Hollis Griffin of Chicago, and Miss Sally Reahard as bridesmaids. All wore gowns of period panel in blue crepe. The gowns, floor length, had shoulder epaulets of blue velvet and were worn with velvet hats and slippers. The attendants’ flowers were showers of coral roses and delphinium. Mrs. Dowling wore a pansy purple velvet gown with matching accessories and Mrs. Tatman appeared in. a pansy blue outfit. Mr. Tatman chose his brother, James Tatman of New York, as his best man, and Dr. Alexander Dowling of Cleveland, Arthur Neal of Connersville, Marcus Mason of Chicago and Addison Dowling as ushers. A profusion of flowers decorated the Dowling home for the reception following the service. The bride’s going-away outfit was a tan wool suit with brown accessories. Mr. and Mrs. Tatman’s at-home address is for 217 West Ninth street, Connersville. The bride was graduated from Tudor Hall and the Walnut Hill school in Massachusetts, and attended De Pauw university. Mr. Tatman is a graduate of Yale university. Miss Moore Entertains Miss Clara A. Moore entertained members of the Indianapolis Alumnae chapter of Phi Omega Pi at her home, 3150 W. Michigan street, this afternoon. Miss Moore and Mrs. Ermal Hedden, sorority delegates to the national convention at Lake Wawasee this summer, gave reports.
Room 601 Room 601 French Tonic Steam Permanent $ 4 Complete With Shampoo | and Push-l’p Our Stand- Tonic ar.ai lard Oil Oil Wave. ,ill 1 Ineludinr Including I .ini-t,- ■ Bed- sham poo Sh a mpoo nISUI , and Set— and Set—less to ACT NOW AND SAVE to Pay $2 $3 Pay More" %e r nd* BISS-* Less” 2 for *2.01 j 2 for $3.01 free: anniversary celebration Expensive— Beautiful Rifts with every Permanent, regardless of price. DO NOT FORGET prices are going Q p—>our Permanent may cost tob $j or more soon. Turn left in leaving elevator. - EVERY 'DAY BOOTH~B AKG AINS I Artistic Finger Wave 25c I BEAUTE-ARTES 601 Roosevelt Bldg. Illinois and Washington Sts. With or Without Appointment Li-0670. LI-0670
