Indianapolis Times, Volume 47, Number 197, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 October 1935 — Page 5

OCT. 26,1933

wS-IrreXf* r,it,-,>ki,3. son of Dr. and >LS David Joseph Cimmmit:, TT _ FvplniKJO 1 rinb KaPPa A * Pha IhCU Alumnae I Mr. and Mrs. Harold F. Coppes, Nappanee. announce the engage- L_r XT j.* I\T i I \.,jS I WK Jmik i Proceeds are to be used for the | mp ™. of thcir daughter. Miss Virginia Coppes. to Walter J Huehl. The jUI 1M Up' ll3.l V OWS mSBHKSKtm '€ if V J & lj|BM^ the H. Coleman Hospital; For the dance of St. Mary-of-thc-Woods Alumnae Club to be held i Dr. John H. Booth united his yitfb § E and to; die sc toiaistup .unct ,o a.o Saturday. Nov. :’. at the Indianapolis Athletic Club. Mrs. Edward F. daughter. Miss Mabel Corinne Booth. . y V ,f'* .jliL.v ■•• .l s uuen s o una e i0 con- Kinney is cliairman rs place and reservations and Mrs. Richard and Oscar Wilhelm Bergesen. Los AoilflM f™£Bt " %* W " : M 1 Assisting the chairman are Me ' v - Hennessey, orchestra chairman. j Angeles, son of Peter Bergesen, Min- BH ' >tj?j v K z * W ' t§ dames Layman Schell, Emory Bax- Miss Margaret Ann Sutton is to be married to Richard Evans jin Graham ChapeL Mission bldgfj ter. Clifton Donnell. Russell C. Fish, Coulter. Milwaukee, Wis.. son of Mrs. James A. Coulter. Ridgeway, Pa., i Irvington. He was assisted in perwh^^ofxm'^' siir *lf L jßoy'° C u:~ 1: ‘ a oorcnno ”>' '*’*'* December. Miss Sutton is a daughter of Mrs. Eliza- rites by Dr. William A. Carpenter. \v. Clark. Roggie and Mr. and Mr.>. Charles W. Wright announce the engagement of th.eir companied Misses Marjorie and Jean y", 1 - '%, Miss Marv Eleanoi Davis. daughter. Miss Dorcihy Wright, to Wayne C. McMahan, son of Mr. Booth, the bride's sisters, when they Bg|Mß^|fe||ajjfe.>;v•. •• j . "" |ffF V M and Mrs. Orville W McMahan. Summitville. The wedding is to be - an S i Love You Truly.” The wbmfavifc RlbH ILA 10 RE Nov. 24 at the Tabernacle Presbyterian Church. p ’ ~ ®. U . ar . with c|Jjf fWW SORORITY EVENT Before her recent marriage. Mrs. John Joseph Hoffmann was Miss autumn shaded chrysanthemums, jII HreL ,'KWk I- I I W§f : 7 - \ I rwh t'\ ; 1 Betty Mae We. Ah. daughter or Dr. and Mrs. Thomas K. Walsh. The brides white georgette gown f'' Ah gw*#*^**** Hetty Pohlman to Become Bride {£* bm^sn*•>■ 'k of Gordon Hinshaw in Ceremony S ; Bss.Sfi£i c | ; . WM Wm/$ - m(^ ls lo :: -s-'.t'..- Wearing Iter mot iter's wedding nr.themums. The bride is to carrv lace gown and carried bronze and B harp se.. -• ; :i. Roberta May dress of white satin and the veil of a praver book. Mrs. Pohlman has' yellow chrysanthemums. .* Kul'mer'*-’; : o' N'N A T3 Ha:: " ' v " : - B: ' :v Poh; - fhosen Florentine velvet and Mr? Cayi'wd. Los Angeles, was tte ,A , t .e Itwe : hN'T‘T' t- ’ j L - ?f ’' :h ' r - : :h: 3-h :i 'T cA y?A-Td ehyh . Snor-m^;t:r: X ''of Al ihe Momam is *o play a Th. w ev":o make'thci? S n'wred'lu? ShS'f cS’ar Ila " ' W 4 sorority nit: yr.-vam ot bridal on the hent- :n Indiar.acolis. H u_; , ll 1 * V 0 ‘ a ‘ '£&&£s&■ Other nn. • v M- - harp pn v dm; am; tit' cere- Out-of-town cue-ts am to in- ‘“o- ‘NANn A'T'Z u dames Oscar C. Hagemier. ciell mony. Edwin Eichorn is to be elude Miss Ruth Bledsoe. Linton; c Shultz the b- " erandmoLher I- X^gS^HaWL^ Dodd, Paul Cook. McClellan Con-j Mr. Hrnshaw s best man. Mrs. Kate Aunt. Cincinnati, and Des Moines la •Mrad Mo O W TfISS 'DoroifjV &HQ lit \ til lit fr ** don, Donald Griffin, Phillip Oaks; Miss Mary Jo Harvey, maid of Mrs. Harry Bevington. Cleveland. Eawrenc- Clinton- Mr and Mr i \7YrS.Mn Joirph ftoffntMrt W jmp and Donald H. Smith; Misses Mar- honor, is to wear ashes of roses and Mr. and Mrs Hinshaw Lapel ‘G G Gore and S’ E Berlin aii ; ' WWW *~~~i jone Hamilton and Ellen Labcn. 1 moire and carry tea roses and chrys-, parents of the briaegrS ’ *' S' CMc^L S ' - - - ' I** If.ZZZ-S C "tJF™ -„■■

.Voters League Slogan Contest Winner Chosen Slate-wide .slogan contest conducted by the Indiana League of "Women Voters for the league's twoyear campaign for better government personnel has been won by Miss Virginia Hill, Bloomington. Her slogan is "Efficiency depends upon qualifications, not affiliation.” Judges were Hal R. Keeling, Mrs. Alice Bidwell Wesenberg and Frank C. Dailey. Mrs. George Gcllhorn, St. Louis, is general chairman of the national campaign committee, with the following assistants: Mrs. Jasper King, Chicago; Mrs. Malcolm Mcßride, Cleveland, O.; Mrs. Laura Hughes, Chicago, and Miss Florence Harrison, New London, Conn. Miss Margaret Denny, Indiana campaign chairman, announces that ‘‘a handbook to set the course and method for its non-partisan campaign in behalf of better trained public personnel has been issued by the national league.” Compiled by Mrs. King, vice chairman of the personnel campaign committee, the handbook tells the “what, why, how, when and where” for the drive to be conducted by leagues. It is to serve as a guide to league members, in arousing citizens to a “realization of the seriousness of the problem of public personnel in the non-elective or administrative positions of government because of the increasing demands being made upon government.” An essential first step of the campaign, according to Mrs. King, is the study of the campaign textbook, "Trained Personnel for Public Service,” by the thousands of members in the 550 leagues throughout the country. The publication, already in its second edition, has been accorded praise from editors and public personnel experts, according to reports from national headquarters, Washington. Alumnae Club Will Sponsor Bridge Party Mrs. Walter Shirley is chairman of the fashion show and bridge party to be sponsored at Wm. H. Block & Cos. auditorium. Saturday, Nov. 9. by the Kappa Alpha Theta Alumnae Club. Proceeds are to be used for the social work done by the group at the William H. Coleman Hospital and for the scholarship fund to aid students otherwise unable to continue college work. Assisting the chairman are Mesdantes Layman Schell, Emory Baxter, Clifton Donnell. Russell C. Fish. Harold Mercer, Frank Levinson. Edwin Rogers Smith, Hoy Coats, George Collins, H. D. Keehn. A. O. Carpenter. W. Clark Roggic and Miss Mary Eleanor Davis. RUSH TEA TO BE SORORITY EVENT Rush tea is to be held tomorrow afternoon at the home of Mrs. John A. Lyons, S. Emerson-av, for members and guests of Gamma Chapter, Omega Nu Tau Sorority. Black and gold, the sorority colors. are to be used as the decorative motif. The program is to include harp selections by Roberta May Bland; violin numbers, Marv Ann Kullmer and Roberta Prent, and readings, Joellen Burroughs and Ednarnae Bertram. Mrs. J. Nelson Marks, chapter president, and Mrs. Will Wertz are to pour. Among the guests are to be Mrs. Loren O. Cabe, grand secretary, and Miss Dorothy M. Sexson, Alexandria, editor-in-chief of the sorority annual. Other invited guests include Mesdames Oscar C. Hagemier, Clell Dodd. Paul Cook. McClellan Condon, Donald Griffin, Phillip Oaks and Donald H. Smith; Misses Marjorie Hamilton and Ellen Labon,

AND AIRS. C. FRED FITCHEY announce the engagement of their daughter, Miss Kathryn Fitchey, and James A. Stuart Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. James A. Stuart Sr. The wedding is to take place Nov. 24. Aliss Joanne Dissette and Airs. William Jungclaus are making clay moulds for the marionette shows to be presented in Sculpture Court of the John Herron Art Institute by Harry Fowler. The first presentation is to be •’Sokar the Crocodile.” Miss Dissette and Airs. Jungclaus and several other members or the arts and interests groups of the Junior League are assisting in the shew preparations. Mrs. Horace Hill 111 is chairman. The engagement of Miss Irma Frances Drake to Joseph Irwin Cummings, son of Dr. and Mrs. David Joseph Cummings. Brownstcwn, is announced by her parents, Air. and Airs. David Monroe Drake. Mr. and Mrs. Harold F. Coppes. Nappanee, announce the engagement of their daughter. Aliss Virginia Coppes. to Walter J Huehl. The wedding is to take place next month in Nappanee. For the dance of St. Alary-of-the-Woods Alumnae Club to be held Saturday. Nov. 2. at the Indianapolis Athletic Club. Airs. Edward F. Kinney is chairman cf place and reservations and Mrs. Richard W. Hennessey, orchestra chairman. Aliss Alargaret Ann Sutton is to be married to Richard Evans Coulter. Milwaukee, Wis.. son of Airs. James A. Coulter. Ridgeway, Pa., in a ceremony in December. Aliss Sutton is a daughter of Airs. Elizabeth S. Sutton. Air. and Airs. Charles W. Wright announce the engagement of their daughter, Aliss Dorothy Wright, to Wayne C. McMahan, son of Air. and Airs. Orville W. AlcAlahr-.n. Summitville. The wedding is to be Nov. 24 at the Tabernacle Presbyterian Church. Before her recent marriage. Airs. John Joseph Hoffmann was Aliss Betty Alae Walsh, daughter or Dr. and Airs. Thomas H. Walsh.

Betty Pohlman to Become Bride of Gordon Hinshaw in Ceremony

Wearing her mother’s wedding : dress of white satin and the veil of Mrs. Harry Weil, Miss Betty Pohlman is to be married late this afternoon to Gordon Hinshaw. The exchange of vows is to be heard by the Rev. Frederick R. Daries at the home of the bride’s mother. Mrs. Louise Pohiman, 5514 ; N. Delaware-st. Pasquale Montani is to play a program of bridal music on the harp preceding and during the ceremony. Edwin Eichorn is to be Mr. Hinshaw’s best man. Miss Mary Jo Harvey, maid of | honor, is to wear ashes of roses ‘moire and carry tea roses and chrys-

anthemums. The bride is to carry a prayer book. Mrs. Pohiman has I chosen Florentine velvet and Mrs. C. J. Hinshaw, Lapel, mother of the bridegroom, is to wear blue. Both are to have gardenia corsages. A dinner for immediate families and a few friends is to follow at the Pohiman home, after which the couple is to leave on a wedding trip to Florida. They are to make their heme in Indianapolis. Out-of-town guests are to include Miss Ruth Bledsoe, Linton; Mrs. Kate Aum, Cincinnati, and Mrs. Harry Bevington. Cleveland, | and Mr. and j/lrs. Hinshaw, Lapel, , parents of the bridegroom.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Bride’s Father Hears Exchange of Nuptial Vows Dr. John H. Booth united his daughter. Miss Mabel Corinne Booth, and Oscar Wilhelm Bergesen, Los Angeles, son of Peter Bergesen, Minneapolis, in marriage this morning in Graham Chapel, Mission bldg., Irvington. He was assisted in performing the rites by Dr. William A. Shullenberger. Miss Louise Swan, pianist, accompanied Misses Marjorie and Jean Booth, the bride's sisters, when they sang "I Love You Truly.” The chapel altar was arranged with palms, lighted cathedral tapers and autumn shaded chrysanthemums. The bride's white georgette gown was fashioned shirtwaist style, with a tucked front and rhinestone buttons. Her tulle veil was fingertip length and her bouquet of white roses, lilies of the valley and gardenias. Her sister, Mrs. W. G. Barnett, attended her and wore a brown lacs gown and carried bronze and yellow chrysanthemums. Ernest Cayford. Los Angeles, was best man, and ushers were John H. Booth Jr., the bride's brother, and Mr. Barnett. A breakfast was given for the family at the Booth home. The couple left by motor for Los Angeles and will be at home there after Nov. 15. The bride traveled in a brown tweed suit with beaver collar and brown suede accessories. Out-of-town geests were Mrs. H. C. Shultz, the Des Moines, la.; Mr, a. J Mrs. O. W. Lawrence, Clinton; Mr. and Mrs. G. G. Gore and B. E. JBergesen, all of Chicago.

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