Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 91, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 August 1934 — Page 5

AUG. 25, 1934

Hunt Group to Be Host Next Month Traders Point Season to Be Preceded by a Community Party. RV BEATRICE BORGAN T iirm H'nmin'i Fifv F4itor WHILE the active season of the Traders Point Hunt Club will not open until Saturday, Ort. 13. th wa.'-on never really ends for George M. Bailey, master of fox hound?, and Mr?. Bailey. All summer Mr. Bailey ha? been rising at 5 in the morning to exercise the hounds.

AH the huntsmen are proud of the pack which now includes twenty or more couples Last spring Mr?. Samuel Sutphin was in charge of the puppv show before they wer** put in the pack, com posed of both English and American breeds. The breed-

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Miss Kurgan

lng is carried on systematically to bring out the hounds’ most valuable qualities for hunting, namely, conformation, stamina, speed, nose, color and cry. Mr. Bailey has been teaching the young hounds to pack on the road. As he trains them, he must learn the name of each one. also the duty of the whippers-in and members of the staff One hound may start a riot in the park and cause it to split and the staff must know the name? in order to end the confusion and to whip in all straggling hounds. Book Shows Breeding Before the hounds are taught to hunt, thev must be trained to come to the horn. Mr. Bailey has prepared a stud booklet for subscribers, which lists all the hounds and their breeding. The hounds also are listed in like manner with the Master of Fox Hounds’ Association of America, to which the hunt was admitted last Mr. Bailey also has elaborated on the “Riding to Hounds” article, which was published in the JuneJulv issue of the Hoosier Equestrian, publication of the Indiana .Saddle Horse Association. This booklet, also will include hints for proper dressing for the hunt. Mrs. Bailey is active in paneling the country and is responsible for the opening of many of the 7.000 arres of land, which has been paneled to provide ways for horses and hounds to go easily from one field to another. Party Scheduled Before the hunt season opens the fourth annual community party will be held for farmers and landowners at New Augusta on Saturday. Sept. 29. Mrs. Bailey is chairman of the committee, which has requested every one to arrive riding or driving. Prizes will be awarded for the most authentic, original, effective, beautiful and funniest turnout. Judging will be at 5 at the community house, and the Ladies’ Society will serve dinner before the dance and motion picture. Assisting Mrs. Bailey will be Me<.dames Cornelius Alig. Angus* Bohlen. Edgar S. Oorrell. Conrad Ruckelshaus. Robert Adams. Otto Frenzel. Samuel Sutphm and Miss Anne Ayres.

MISS BOYLE TO BE AUTUMN BRIDE

Mr. and Mrs. Charles A. Bovle announce the engagement of their daughter. Miss Dorothy Louise Boyle, and O. Paul Hiatt. The wedding will take place Sept. 1. The bride-elect is a graduate of Butler university and a member of Alpha Onncron Pi sorority, and Mr. Hiatt is an Indiana university graduate and a member of Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity. Several parties are planned to fete Miss Boyle. Mrs. R. C. Webster and Mrs. A C. Joss will give a luncheon and shower Tuesday afternoon and Miss Charlotte Piel will entertain at a bridge party Wednesday night. GARDEN PARTY WILL RE GIVES BY GUILD Games and contests will entertain members of the Hoosier Athletic Club guild and their guests at a roof garden party Thursday night at the club. Mrs. Edward Bradley, general chairman, arranged the events, assisted by Mrs. Robert Mannfleld and Mrs. Paul Kernel, reservations, and Mrs. Harold Arnholter and Mrs. William Shreve. tickets, assisted by the guild membership. Al Feeney. Leonard Kernel. Joe Sexton and Jack Lyons have been named judges of the contests.

Couple to Wed Sept. 1 Will Be Honored Guests In compliment to Miss Lois Graham and Charles Du Puy. Miss Sybil Stafford and her brother. William Stafford, will entertain several guests at dinner tonight. The party is occasioned by the approaching marriage of Miss Graham, daughter of Dr. Alois B. Graham and Mr. Du Puy. son of Mrs. William A. Atkins. The ceremony will be read at 4 30 Saturday. Sept. 1 at the Graham home. 1940 North Delaware street. Dinner guests tonight with Miss Graham and her fiance will include Charles Davidson Mitchell. Pittsburgh. Pa.. Mr. and Mrs. Richard Fairbanks Jr.. Miss Jane Watson and her fiance. Thomas Mfrhaffey Jr.. Miss Betty Wallerich. John Watson and Coleman Atkins, Miss Stafford and Mr. Stafford. Rcbrkahs to Meet Temple Rebekah lodge will meet at 8 Tuesday night at the hall, 230 East Ohio street.

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Martha Wegehoft Will Be Wed Tonight in Church Rite

Mrs. Helen F#lhob Lawall will sing bridal airs, aeompanied by Mrs. Arthur Baumer. organist, at the wedding tonight at the Pleasant Run Boulevard Reformed church of Miss Martha Weaphoft. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Wegehoft. and William Raasch. son of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Raasch. In the bridal party will be Miss Alberta Wegehoft. sister of the bride, maid of honor: Miss Gertrude Raasch. sister of the bridegroom, and Mlss Adelaide Taylor, bridesmaids: Lois Ann Aufderheide and Shirley Mae Wheezler, flower girls; Fred Wilde, best man. and Richard Wegehoft and Edward Raasch. ushers. The maid of honor will be gowned in green taffeta fashioned with a ruffled hemline and Miss Raasch and Miss Taylor will wpar blue and pink taffeta gowns of similar design All will carry- arm bouquets of rases. Lois Ann and Shirley Mae. in frocks of yellow point d'esprit, w-ill carry baskets of garden flowers. Mrs. Raasch will appear in a brown printed crepe dress, and Mrs.

Wegehoft will appear in green with white satin trim. Both will have rose corsages. The bride's ivory satin wedding gown has a lace yoke and short train and will be worn with a net veil falling from a halo cap. She will carry white roses. Immediate families and intimate friends will assemble at the Wegehoft home Bluff road following the ceremonv for an informal reception. after which the couple will leave for Chicago and Wisconsin. The bride will travel in a brown and yellow linen outfit with brown accessories. Mrs. James Pebworth will return tomorrow after a visit with her parents. Mr. and Mrs. George Mendenhall. in Bicknell. Mrs. Frank Dalton and Mrs. Morton Cox have returned from Green lake. Michigan, where they visited Mrs. George Gartman. Mrs. Daltons daughter. Miss Dorothy Dalton. recently returned from Camp Vacrannrlra WIS.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Mr. and Mrs. Walter A. Snodgrass announce the engagement of their daughter, Miss Annabess Snodgrass, to Franklin Monroe Adams, son of Mrs. Frank Adams. The wedding will take place Oct. 6. Miss Snodgrass attended Butler university and is a member of Pi Beta Phi sorority. Mr. Adams, graduate of Culver Military academy, attended Purdue university and belongs to Sigma Nu fraternity. Miss Ruth Pauline Luckey has been awarded a scholarship in Arthur Jordan Conservatory of Music on the basis of a state-wide contest conducted by the conservatory last year. Miss Peggie Ann Williams, who was graduated from Tudor Hall last June, will enter Radciiffe college in September. She is a daughter of Mr, and Mrs. O. A. Williams and president of the student council at Tudor Hall. Miss Leila Belle Shipman s marriage to Wallace Pickens Daggy took place last Saturday at Tabernacle Presbyterian church. Miss Virginia Frank, of Calumet City, 111., has been visiting her aunt, Mrs. C. O. Robinson.

LEGION AUXILIARY TO SPONSOR BOOTH Mrs. A. H. Worsham is chairman of a refreshment booth which the auxiliary to Indianapolis post. American Legion, will sponsor at the Indiana state fair. Her assistants are Mesdames A. H. M. Graves, Charles Bebinger, G. W. Ream, Herbert Winkler, W. R. McGeehan and Hiram Stonecipher. The proceeds will be added to the auxiliary’s fund for welfare work during the winter. Committees in charge of the booths and the dates are: Saturday. Sept. 1, Mesdames John Downing,

J. R. Stembach, G. M. Ream, and Agatha Ward; Sunday, Mesdames A. H. Worsham,. Herbert Winkler, H O. Spring, E. P. Brennan, Ruth Innis and Catherine Coleman; Monday, Mesdames A. H. M. Graves. Grover Parr, W. R. McGeehan and Harry Green; Tuesday, Mesdames Herbert Winkler, Louis Yochem, Eugene Westerveldt and C. R. Parker; Wednesday. Mesdames John Royse. Ralph Hesler, Joseph Speakes and W. J. Overmire; Thursday. Mesdames H. Nathan Swaim, A. J. Steinberg, C. R. Martin and C. J. Studebaker. and Friday. Mesdames E. P. Brennan. J. B. Little, E. R. Newville, Harry Ransome and J. D. Petty,

Maxine Rigsbee and Dr. Stephens Wed in Church Ceremony

With the immediate famiies as witnesses. Miss Maxine Rigsbee and Dr. K. H. Stephens were married today in the parlor of the Central Avenue M. E. church with the Rev. Charles Drake Skinner officiating. The bride wore a two-piece dress of salmon and brown mossy crepe, with brown accessories. Her corsage was of gardenias. The bride s sister, MISS BRANDAU TO WED IN HOME RITE The Rev. Robert C. Kuebler will officiate at the marriage of Miss Reva Brandau and Charles Spilker tomorrow afternoon at the Brandau home, 615 Prospect street. A reception will follow the ceremony. Mrs. Keith Yake, New- Orleans, La., will be matron of honor. She will be gowned in pink lace with a rose corsage. Mr. Yake will be best man. The bride will appear in white crepe and also w-ill wear a rose corsage. Mrs. Yake entertained Thursdav mght with a miscellaneous shower for the bride.

Miss Kathleen Rigsbee, wore a frock of light and dark blue crepe. The couple left immediately following the ceremony on a trip North. After Sept. 1 Dr. and Mrs. Stephens will be at home in Lawrence. The bride, a daughter of A. L. Rigsbee, is a graduate of Butler university and member of Pi Beta Phi sorority, and Dr. Stephens was graduated from Indiana university school of medicine and belonged to Phi Gamma Delta fraternity. E. B. Stephens, father of the bridegroom, came from Ft. Wayne to attend the ceremony. GUESTS FROM EAST WILL BE HONORED Miss Mary Lou Metsker will hold open house tomorrow in honor of Mr. and Mrs. Ward Barrick, Orange, N. J. Miss Metsker will be assisted by her mother, Mrs. George Metsker, and her sister, Miss Jane Metsker. Mr. and Mrs. Barrick will leave Monday for Tiffin, 0.. to visit for two weeks before return ipopu-jme. i. number are girls.

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Freedom of Husband and Wife Needed Licentiousness Is Quite Different; Verities Never Change. BY HELEN WELSHIMER VEA SerTir# Slff Writer TNTELLIGENCE is the capacity to -•- know or understand. That is | the opinion of Daniel Webster. And | Daniel had a way with the alphabet. A man with a most excellent brain remarked the other day that an ini telligent woman should feel no resentment toward another woman if the intelligent woman's husband suddenly decided to turn his sixteen cylinder power—yes, some motors do run that high—on another womI an. That is. of course, if it was the man who went hunting and the woman who was caught. Yes. my dear sir, we will admit that the second woman may be as blameless as Sir Galahad's white horse. Maybe she didn't poach or even peek. Where Difference Lies But the man’s wife could no more help experience a natural resentment against her than a fired secretary could toward the girl who took her place at the boss’ typewriter. Intelligence and emotions do not run the same gantlet. An emotion is an exicted state or feeling. No one ever likes his successor because he is his successor. Maybe he will, in spite of it, after a while. After a very long while! Funny, isn't it, how men ran win women and yet not understand them? There were three men who sat and talked of love and life and women and the glory of the harem, the other night. Three men who were sophisticated, experienced, successful. resperted and well informed. Except, about women. Three men going on 40. Men Agree in Views The general concensus of opinion was that the pursuit of pleasure, happiness and the other sex is a man's recreation. A woman, being annexed emotionally to a man, must straighten his tie. polish his steel armor, and wish him luck w f hen h© r es out to clank his spurs for some o.ner woman’s diversion. The three men w'ho were going on forty shook wise heads as they reflected that there are women, yea verily, in your town and mine, w'ho still believe in the single standaid. Well, why not? After all, you can’t ask a woman to cut off her nose without administering some kind of anaesthesia. The knights of the round table admitted that no man ever desires to hurt a woman, but if a woman w'ants all the popcorn in the bag instead of just part of it, what can a man do? Classed as Chattel A woman, the conversation revealed—though the speakers themselves did not know it, and politeness would have kept them silent had they known —is a chattel who should be happy to take what a man offers and not complain because he understands division. She must be an intellectual chattel—one w'ho makes no complaint, but who understands that love may reach a limit. Forty is an age at which some wisdom should be garnered. By 40 every one should know that w r e are human beings, first of all, before W'e are men and women. If a man expects fidelity and fair play in a woman he must pay her in the same coin. If he is going to request reduced rates, he should search for an inferior brand of devotion. Tw r o persons can not and should not limit each other's interests and scope of activities. Tw'o minds never can become one. It would be a bore if they could. Freedom is as necessary to marital happiness as sunlight to a garden, water to the grass. But there is a difference between freedom and licentiousness. Eternal verities such as decency and honor and loyalty do not change. (Copyright. 1934. NEA S*rvic**, Inc.l

WAR MOTHERS WILL PLAN MEETING

Mrs. E. M. Hahn, state president of American War Mothers, ha3 called a meeting of the state advisory board for Wednesday and Thursday to plan for the October state executive board meeting. Attending will be Mrs. Lynn C. Boyd, Newcastle; Mrs. W. S. Morris, Frankfort; Mrs. Emma Slick, Indianapolis; Mrs. Daisy Douglas Barr, Indianapolis, and Mrs. K. L. Root, Kiwana. All are week-end guests of Mrs. Hahn. Belts Are Important Belts on simple early fall gowns are generally quite important. Box calf cut in a wide plaque in front, with ft silver dagger thrust through, patent leather designs with a plaque of leather leaves in front and little narrow string belts no larger than a linger, are all being seen.

Miss Warfel and Dr. Collins Will Be Wed Sept. 29 The engagement of Miss Lucine Warfel, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Warfel, and Dr George Frederick Collins, son of Dr. and Mrs. George Collins, New Philadelphia, 0., was announced last night at a party at the Warfel home, 825 East Fortieth street. The marriage w-ill take place Sept. 29. Miss Warfpl entertained several guests in compliment to her cousin, Miss Mary Rieman, Connersville, whose engagement to William Maurer recently was announced. Asters in fall shades, wisteria and pink predominating, decorated the Warfel home. Guests with Miss Rieman were her mother, Mrs. Charles Rieman, and Mrs. George Lennard, Connersville, and Misses Joan Boswell, Dorothy Arnholter. Mary Amelia Schmidt. Elizabeth Hodges, Magdeline Adams. Eleanor Moran. Harriett McGaughey, Katharine Palmer, Washington, and Mrs. Christian Carlson, Mrs. Georg- Lewis and Mrs. Calvin Lenox, Lebanon.