Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 83, Indianapolis, Marion County, 16 August 1934 — Page 5
AUG. 16, 1934
City Pastor’s Daughter to Wed Tonight The Rev. W. C. Meinzen to Have Dual Role in Ceremony. The Rev W. C. Meinzen, pastor of the Emm aus Evangelical Lutheran church, will play a double role in an unusual wedding ceremony tonight hen hLS daughter. Miss Ellen Meinzen, will be married to Arthiu L Amt. Chicago. The daughter ano father will walk to the altar to stand before the brides brother, the Rev Richard E. Meinzen. Wmnepeg Manitoba. Canada, as the father gives her In marriage The father then will perform the wedding ceremony. The altar, lighted with cathedral tapers will be banked with palms and decorated with baskets ot gladioli and rose. Miss Irene Burger, La Porte, will sing "O Perfect Love ” and -The Lord Is My Shepherd ’* to the accompaniment of the organ, to be played by Bernard Mieger. Chicago. The bride, clad in an ivory satin gown, will wear an heirloom veil sent to her from India by her brother, the Rev Erwin H Meinzen The yell of embroidered silk net will be designed with chin strap and cap, caught with orange blossoms. Sister Maid of Honor The gown will have a train, cowl neckline and points falling over the hand . The bridal bouquet will be of gardenias, wocthcart roses and lilies of the valley. The bride sister. Miss Paula Memzen. will be maid of honor. Her gown of blue lace will have a decolleiage, cape sleeves and a skirt flaring below the knees into a slight train. A satin sash will be tied into a bow of three loops. Her flowers will be of gayety roses and blue larkspur. The bridesmaids, Misses Selma and Erna Meinzen. also sisters of the bride, and Miss Norma Amt. the bridegroom’s sister, will wear gowns fashioned like the maid of honor’s. They will be of pink, green and yellow lace respectively, and their bouquets will be of mixed garden flowers. Hugh Gehrke, Chicago, will be best man. and John Roth and Rudolph Hasemann, both of Chicago, and Ralph Bernecker, Saginaw, Mich., will be ushers. Out-of-Town Guests The bride’s mother will wear a white voile dress, embroidered in black, sent to her by her son. Cantain L. W Meinzen of the Philippine Islands. Mrs. Emilie P. Amt, Indianapolis, mother of the bridegroom. will wear a W'hite crepe gown. Among the out-of-town guests will be Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Meinr/n. Ft. Wayne; Miss Louise Schumaker, Louisville, Ky.; Miss Lydia Rcrcer. La Porte; Miss Ruth Brews, Chicago; Mrs. Richard E. Meinzen. Wmnepeg. Manitoba, Canada; Harold Albers and Emil Holtzman, both of Milwaukee. A wedding reception at the MeinTen home will follow the ceremony. Assisting will be Mrs. Alfred Mein•n and Mrs. Richard E. Meinzen. ie couple will leave on a wedding * and will live at Chicago. The ' will travel in a brown sheer crepe dress with tan and brown accessories. Moose Picnic Set Annual all day picnic of the Junior chapter. Women of the Moose 21. will be held tomorrow at Garfield park. Mrs. Georgia Grant us governess and Arvada Strub, president.
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COSCERT IS SET FOR RIVIERA CU B Guests will be entertained by the Riven* Club tomorrow night when a concert will be presented by the Federation of Civic Club's orchestra under the direction of Leslie Troutman. The orchestra is composed ot fortv-flve members. Dancing solos will be presented by Jane Croan. Dolly and Mildred Snyder, Irvin Sudbmclt and Mary Catherine Troutman Vocal selections will be given by Harry Shelby. Noble McCormick and Juanita Marvel.
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Enclosed find 15 cents for which please send me pattern No. 261. Size Name Street • City State
USING either gingham or percale, you'll have a fine time making your young daughter this going-back-to-school dress. It comes in sizes Bto 16 years and size 12 requires 2 5 i yards of 35-inch fabric with k yard contrast. * To obtain a pattern and simple sewing chart of this model, tear out the coupon and mail it to Julia Boyd, The Indianapolis Times. 214 West Maryland street. Indianapolis, together with 15 cents in coin.
Delta Tau Delta Fraternity Will Sponsor Picnic Wives and families and friends of all Delta Tau Delta fraternity members have been invited to attend the annual picnic which will be held ny the Indianapolis Alumni chapter the afternoon and evening of Friday. Aug. 24, in Forest Park, Noblesville. Maurice T. Harrell is chairman of the local committee. Harold L.
A Day ’s Menu Breakfast — Frpsh pears. cereal, cream, toast, milk, coffee. Luncheon — Corn custard. lettuce, sandwiches, Dutch peach cake. milk, iced tea. Dinner — Fruit cup. lamb loaf, vegetable salad, blueberry dumplings, milk, coffee.
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Tharp, national president, is on the committee, also composed of John Paul Ragsdale, Hilbert Rust, Fred C. Tucker, Foster Oldshue and Kleber Hadley. The Noblesville committee is composed of Judge Noel Neal, Elmer Brown, Marcellus Paskins. Earl Barker, James Jump. Donald Zeis and Albert Haas. Arrangements will be made for bridge playing in the afternoon. Other entertainment will include golfing, swimming, softball games and playground facilities for children. A dinner will be served in the park lodge. ME ROM CHAUTA UQ U HEARS MRS. LEWIS Mrs. Olive Beldon Lewis has gone to Merom, to address the Merorn Chautauqua on “Contemporary European Affairs.” The Merom Chautauqua Association is holding its thirty-first annual program. This afternonn Mrs. Lewis will speak on “Europe and Her Fatal Alliances” and tonight on "Remaking the Map of Europe.”
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Miss Boyer to Receive Linen Gifts Dorothea Dalson to Be Hostess at Shower Tonight. Miss Dorothea Dalson will be assisted by her mother. Mrs. R. L. Dalson. tonight when she entertains with a linen shower and bridge party at the Blueberry Muffin tearoom in honor of Miss Virginia Boyer, bride-elect. Miss Boyer's marriage to Alfred George Wagner will take place Aug. 25. Mrs. Walter T. Boyer, mother of the bride-elect, will attend. Other guests will be Mesdames Bichot Gremillion, Hobart Martin, Joseph Niesse, Frank Ballinger, Arthur Sachs, Mary Stevens, Carl Weaver and Devota Toby. Misses Elizabeth Nugent, Helen Newby, Susan Hill. Madge Murray, Marie Good, Bessie Watson and Helen Hamilton also will be guests. Decorations will be in tea rose and blue. Church Fete Planned Sacred Heart church, Union and Palmer streets, will hold a carnival Thursday. Friday and Saturday, Sept. 6 to 8, on the church grounds.
A Womans Viewpoint BY MRS. WALTER FERGUSON
IF there is one person more than another I am heartily sick of hearing about, it is Ninon de Lenclos. In case you have forgotten the details, she was a lady of old Touraine in the seventeenth century who numbered among her gentlemen friends Gaspard de Coligny, Marquis de Rochefou-
cauld, St. Evrcmond and the great Voltaire. But her chief claim to fame is the story that she remained chipper and charming and kept the foen crazy about her until she turned 90. I doubt the truth of-that. The chances are th e r e’s
Mrs. Ferguson
more fable than fact in these tales about the perennial old beauty. Her youth has become a legend with us, just as the antics of Billy the Kid and the James boys have become heroism. Very probably she was only fairly well preserved in an era when most women were old at 30. Anyway the beauty experts certainly work her overtime. The modern matron, prodded constantly from a comfortable lassitude into a strained juvenility, has Ninon dinned in her ears, decade after decade. “Are the years piling up?,” chants the chorus of would-be adolescents. “Don’t worry, dear. Remember Ninon de Lenclos, who kept her sex appeal and her men friends until she was 90.” Don’t let’s put too much credence in the story. It strikes me that a woman of 75 or 85 or 90, especially if she had had a popular heyday and plenty of lovers, would have grown rather w’eary
Patronizing *Toe Parlor
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You watch for nails at the beach this year, and not only the rusty kind, cither! Just to keep in step with style, girls are having their toenails colored to match or contrast with their swim suits. Here two bathers, well, anyway, two beach beauties, are getting their favorite colors at the Ocean City <Md.) “toe parlor.”
of men in that capacity by the time she arrived at four-score years. Probably she retained several old friends, since w'e are told by biographers that her distinguishing characteristics neither were beauty nor wit, but high spirits and a perfect evenness of temperament. The last would account for most of her popularity, and she undoubtedly had intelligence and common sense. All the rest is likely to be a fairy tale. The remarkable women of ancient times were remarkable chiefly because they had brains—a rare feminine development in those days. The stupidity of the average female, who was given few chances for education, would strike us now as almost incredible. One who had marked evidence of gray matter was a neighborhood
Daily Recipe BAKED APPLES 1 1/2 lups sugar Vi cup icater 6 apples 1 or 2 bananas 1 tablespoon butter 6 marshmallows Make a syrup by boiling sugar and water together three minutes. Core apples and pare tops. Fill cavities with thinly sliced bananas and arrange in a baking pan. Pour syrup over them and bake about half an hour, until tender, in moderate oven (385 degrees). When done, dot each apple with a little butter and baste well with remaining syrup; then place marshmallow on each and put back into oven to brown. Serves six.
wonder. She probably was regarded by the men as a freak — and. like all freaks, got her name in the papers. It took brains then, girls, and it takes brains now. Don't let them fool you about that.
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Bride-Elect to Be Guest at Shower Maxine Rigsbee Will Wed Ft. Wayne Man Aug. 25. Miss Maxine Rigsbee tonight will attend a party to be given by Miss Doris Hair at the home of her parents, Mi. and Mrs. E. R. Hair. 4121 Central avenue. Miss Riesbee. who will be married to Dr. K. H. Stephens, son of E. B. Stephens. Ft. Wayne, on Aug. 25. will be presented miscellaneous gifts by the guests. Assisting the hostess will be Mrs. Hair and the hostess’ sister, Miss Margaret Hair. Among the guests will be Mesdames Gregg Rarisburg. August Hook, Betty Puett, Guy Dixon and Herm Endee and Misses Jean Winchel, Marian Powers, Dorothy Screes, Marian Olive, Betty Sahm, Winifred Cassell. Grace Avels and Kathleen Rigsbee, the bride's-elect sister. Mrs. John H. Stanley. Chicago, formerly Miss Pauline Becker, will be an out-of-town guest. Mrs. Stanley is visiting her parents. Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Becker, 215 East Fiftieth street. Pink and blue will be the colors predominating in the decorations and appointments. Miss Rigsbee, daughter of A. L. Rigsbee, 4002 North New Jersey street, is a graduate of Butler university and member of Pi Beta Phi
PAGE 5
RECENT BRIDE IS GUEST AT PARTY Mrs. Albert Bloemker was hostess last night at a bridal party honoring Mrs. Thomas Sheridan, formerly Miss Bee Madden. Miscellaneous gifts were presented to the bride, who headed the serving table, centered with a pink and blue wedding cake. Guests were Mesdames Herman Schcndel. John Carr. Edward Vincent. Ronald Propts, Edward Bechtold. Edward Miller, Ruth Watson, Robert Vollmer, Neal Burke and Misses Helen Reidy. Mary Powers, Genevieve Stetzel. Mildred McGUnchey, Elvera Klafzinsky, Mary Finnegan and Anne Maloney. sorority. Dr. Stephens is a graduate of the Indiana university school of medicine and member of Phi Canima Delta fraternity.
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