Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 June 1936 — Page 6

une Presents Full Schedule of Weddings

Four Couples Choose 13th as Date for Nuptials.

i June, traditional month of brides, |

presents a full schedule of weddings/ this year. Nuptials are to be read in many of the Indianapolis churches during the month, while home weddings have been announced by a number of local young couples. Miss Josephine McElhany, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A. E. McElhany, is to be among the first brides of the month. She is to be married Thursday in the McKee Chapel, Tabernacle Presbyterian Church, to Norman 1. Hanna, son of Mr. and Mrs. L. R. Hanna, Cincinnati. Wedding Next Sunday

Miss Rebekah Shideler is to be married next Sunday at the hgme of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Fred W. Shideler, “Four Winds” in Brendenwood, to C. Lawrence Price Jr. Mr. Price is the son of Mr. and C. Lawrence Price. Dr. Ambrose Dunkel is to perform the ceremony. On June 10 Miss Janet Marie Bradley, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Homer Guy Bradley, is to be married to Donaldson Brown, son of Charles Brown, Logansport. The wedding is to be at the Tabernacle Presbyterian Church. Christ Church is to be the scene of the wedding of Miss Lillian Belle Steinmetz to A. Elwood Tarr June 12. Miss Steinmetz is the daughte of Mr. and Mrs. Edward L. Steinmetz, and Mr. Tarr is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Alfred M. Tarr.

Select June 13

Four weddings of prominent]

young people are scheduled for June 13. Miss Margaret Jones, Fort Wayne, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Lucell Jones, is to be married in the Wayne Street Methodist Church, Fort Wayne, to Charles W. Moores, Indianapolis, son of Mrs. Charles W. Moores, Rosemond, Pa., formerly of Indianapolis. On the same day Miss Delma Vestal, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George K. Vestal, is to be married at the Irvington Methodist Church to Charles Franklin Rohm, Cleveland. Mr. Rohm is the son of Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Rohm. Miss Marilois Meek also has chosen June 13°as her wedding date. She is to be married to D. Forrest Bowman, son of Mr. and Mrs. O. E. Bowman, at the Irvington Presbyterian Church. Miss Meek is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Homer G. Meek.

Chapel Chosen by Two Others

Miss Mary E. Frey is to be married on the same day in the McKee Chapel, Tabernacle Presbyterian Church, to Russell V. Barton, son of Mr. and Mrs. O. D. Barton. The McKee Chapel is to be the scene of another wedding June 19, when Miss Louise Brown, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. S. Merrick, is to be married to Robert D. Beckmann, son of Mrs. Philip S. Brown. MiSs Mildred Warner will be married in Third Christian Church June 20 to John G. Turnbull, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Turnbull. Miss Warner is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Millard V. Warner. A garden wedding has been scheduled June 22, when Miss Barbara Oakes, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Mansur Oakes, is to be married to Charles Wendell Taylor in the garden of the Oakes’ home. Mr. Taylor is the son of Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Taylor.

Nuptial in New York

Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Zeller are to attend the wedding of their daughter, Miss Eleanor Zeller, New York, to Jerome C. McGehee, New York, at the Park Avenue Presbyterian Church in New, York City June 27. Miss Zeller formerly lived in Indianapolis, and Mr. McGehee formerly lived in Montgomery, Ala. Two other weddings are scheduled for the same day. Miss Mary Jewell Fargo, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Chancellor O. Fargo, is to be married June 27 to Berkley Wilson Duck Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Berkley W. Duck. The ceremony is to be read in the Second Presbyterian Church. Miss Emma Lou Lutz is to De married the same day to Dudley M. Hutcheson, son of Mrs. Henry Albert Hutcheson, at the home of her mother, Mrs. Draper Lutz.

Mail Auxiliary to Install New [Leaders Soon

Mrs. E. H. Hughes, newly elected president of the Woman's Auxiliary to the Railway Mail Association, is to be installed at a luncheon meeting at the Claypool Thursday. The meeting is to open at 10:30. A Other officers to be installed are Mrs. Floyd W. Doddridge, first vice president; Mrs. Carl E. Pluess, corresponding secretary, and Mrs. Dan Hutchinson, executive board member. ‘Luncheon speakers are to include Mrs. Clarence J. Finch, Seventh District Federation of Clubs president; Mrs. B. B. McDonald, Indianapolis Council of Women president, and Mrs. Walter H. Vinzant, national auxiliary vice president.

WOMEN ARRANGE

MEETING AND TEA

A business meeting is to precede the bridge tea for the St. Joan of _Arc Women's Club members at 2 Wednesday in the school hall. Mrs. Bahra Jones 5s io Se. chairman in

BY MARJORIE BINFORD WOODS Times Fashion Editor

ADS have no place in riding clothes, believes Mrs. Margaret Abraham Feore, widely known in this part of the country as an accomplished

horse woman.

Mrs. Feore (shown above with her horse, Bachelor King), recently opened the Fairground School of Equitation and is in a position to give

counsel to all riding aspirants.

One of her pet dislikes is a feminine rider flying along in flapping sleeveless jackets or combinations of loud colors that are enough to

frighten any self-respecting horse! “Almost more than any other sport, tHere are definite clothes and colors for riding,” Mrs. Feore says. “Any deviation from them makes the rider look sadly out of place and is generally impractical on some count or other.” Here we see her-in correct riding apparel. She has selected a white salt sack riding coat with the slenderizing Kentucky jodhpurs of beige cavalry twill, made exclusively by Meyers. Her shirt is bark brown with a four-in-hand tie of brown crepe decorated with tiny white horse heads. Brown jodhpur shoes, matching sports hat of felt and yellow pigskin gloves complete the out-

fit.

» ” #

discussing riding clothes, Mrs. Feare doesn’t refer to habits seen in show ring riding, for there are numerous other rules that govern thé formality of dress on those occasions. “I'm discussing habits for the girl

of moderate income who rides per-

haps once or twice a week, or one who is just thinking of taking it up and is not well acquainted with the ins and outs.” She counsels that one is always safe in sticking to tans and browns in jodhpurs and she points to the new Kentucky jodhpurs without ‘the peg top as the more comfortable and becoming, rather than breeches and boots. Riding coats may be of checks or plaids in brighter blending colors. If a riding coat seems out of the question, then complete informality should be attained. A simple cotton shirt with rolled sleeves or a knitted polo shirt in conservative colors will do. “Of course, if you plan a vacation on a dude ranch,” Mrs. Feore adds, “you’ll see smart women wearing loud shirts, regular blue denim jeans and high-heeled cowboy boots. Fit your riding habit to the occasion and the locale in which you intend to ride.”

T og=sys Bg

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' | founder,

Mrs. Meyer Weeps, and for Good Reason, as Mate Scores Third Speedway Triumph

BY HELEN LINDSAY WIFE'S tears baptized the third victory of Lou Meyer, winner of the 1936 Speedway classic. While the crowd cheered and applauded as he swept by the checkered flag, Mrs. Meyer dropped her face into her hands, and sobbed. For hours she had remained almost motionless in the front row seat of the paddock box, where she was surrounded by other drivers’ wives and racing attaches’ wives. Even when the last gruelling eight laps were being run, and the sound of the announcer’s voice came over the loud speaker, revealing that the race nearly was run, she continued her silent, restrained attitude. : All about her, other wives dis-

City Musicale Will Be Feted By Mrs. Carey

Mrs. John N. Carey, life member of the Indianapolis Matinee Musicale and Children’s Museum is to entertain Musicale members at a garden party from 3:30 to 6 Friday at her country home, W. 86th-st. The program, in charge of the museum’s music room committee, is to include a talk on “Museum Movement in the Far East,” by Wilbur D. Peat, John Herron Art Museuc director; “Japanese and Chinese dances by Karoun Tootikan, and a musical recitation, “All- Beautiful Things Come From the East,” by Mrs. Ovid Butler Jameson. Each member is to bring one guest. The arrangements committee, headed by Miss Ethel M. Moore, includes Mesdames William H. Coleman, James W. Lilly, Herbert M. Woollen, George Dailey and Harold Trusler.

Sorority Seniors Will Be Honored

Seniors of Kappa Alpha Theta Sorority are to be honored tomorrow with a luncheon given by the sorority’s mothers’ club at the Butler University chapterhouse. Mrs. Walter Holt is luncheon chairman. She is to be assisted by Mesdames Glen Heard, A. E. Smith, G. H. Hockensmith, Charles Rau, Kenneth Woolling, C. H. Over, O. L. Scales and Earl Shaffer. : Music is to be by the Theta trio, and the house is to be decorated in spring flowers. Seniors to be honored are Misses Marion Ballenger, Martha Coddington, Jane Crawford, Elysee Crozier, Esther Hoover, Mary Ella Julian,

Southard, Gayle Thornburgh and Afton White.

{DINNER ARRANGED

BY LEGION WOMEN Marion County Salon 126, Eight and Forty, the American Legion

the home of Mrs. Elsie Johnson, 1741 Parker-av.

.

cussed the possibility of the gas lasting = throughout the race. Standing behind Mrs, Meyer, Mrs. Lawson Harris, wife of Meyer's riding mechanic, joked with a friend in the next box. “You bet we'll celebrate if Lou wins!” she said Mrs. Meyer turned her head from the track, and gazed stoically at the floor. Hundreds of

. miles away, in California, her 4-

year-old son was waiting to hear the results. In the next box were Mrs. Babe Stapp, Mrs. Rex Mays and Mrs. Tony Gulotta.

# 2 »

UDDENLY the car driven by Rex Mays, in fifth place, was called out of the race. “Out of : gas!” Indignation was revealed in the. remarks-of the drivers’ wives. “I guess these racing officials are satisfied now,” one leaned over to say to Mrs. Harry Miller, silverhaired wife of the man who has built the motors of many of the winning cars. “They can see by this year’s results that they can’t run this race with that mich gas.” Mrs. Meyer glanced up at the speaker, and the knuckles of her left hand whitened, as she clenched her fist, nervously. She turned again. from the track, as if determined to keep trom’ watching the cars flashing by. But as each one came into view in front of the paddock space, she jerked her head up quickly, to catch the number. When the .car numbered 8 raced by, with her= husband at the wheel, she halfrose from her chair, and watched it go speeding down the track. Back it came again, to leap by the blue flag which signified there was only one more lap to go. Both driver and mechanic raised their hands in triumphant salute to their wives as they passed.

# » 2

DOZEN hands flashed into the air, their index and middle fingers crossed in the traditional symbol of “good luck.” “Look, June, we're pulling for Louie!” Mrs. Stapp said! Mrs. Meyer smiled at Mrs. Stapp and dropped her head again. The others teetered on tip-toes on their chairs, to watch the finish, but she remained seated. A few seconds later,

ARRANGE FETE FOR SORORITY SENIORS

Seniors of Kappa Kappa Gamma Sorority are to be entertained at the last meeting of the year of Mu Alumnae Association of the sorority Tuesda

! y. It is to be a supper meeting at the home of Mrs. E. D. Campbell) 510 Blue Ridge-rd. Reservations are being made with Mrs. E. E. Linegar.

LEGION AUXILIARY

Meyer

ARRANGES PARTY|

A luncheon and bridge party is

NURSES’ irr

TO SPONSOR BENEFIT) §

speeded by the checkered flag, the winner. Mrs. Meyer dropped her head into her hands and wept. Her shoulders shook convulsively, and other drivers’ wives, gamely concealing their disappointment at their own husbands’ failure to win, crowded about to congratulate her. A few minutes later Mrs. Meyer regained her composure and hurried out of the paddock to cross the track and greet her husband. Twice before she had seen him /win the great 500mile classic.

“She never was this nervous before,” a friend explained, and then, confidentially: “You see, she’s expecting another baby in September.”

Academy Seniors to Be Graduated Wednesday Eve

Bishop Eimer Joseph Ritter is to attend commencement excerises at St. Mary Academy Wednesday night, to see the largest graduation class in the school’s history. Miss Lucille Ittenbach, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William Ittenbach, is to be given a special award for a perfect attendance record. Girls to be graduated are Misses Rosemary Bloomer, Mary Louise Booker, Margaret Boyle, Ruth Cain, Lois Clements, Gertrude Cochrane, Bernice D’Alton, Mary Donnelly, Betty Ann Fox; LaVerne Gardiner, Gladys Hagemann, Anne Hanley, Martha Hickey, Allean Hollis and Jeanne Hornaday. Others are Miss Ittenbach, Misses Mildred Koers, Rose Koma, Mary Rita Landers, Florence LaVelle, Rosemary Marston, Mary Catherine Masse, Catherine McKibben, Marjorie McDonough, Ann McHale, Bernice Miller, Mary Murdock, Alice Murphy, Rita Murphy and Catharine Naughton. Diplomas also are to be given Misses Mary O’Brien, Jean Robinson, Marcella Roell, Rosemary Rolles, Rita Royse, Thelma Schmidt, Mary R. Topmiller, Mary Traub, Dorothy Walpole, Rita Walpole, Marilou Walsman, Bernice Waters, Helen Wilhelm, Bernice Williams, Catherine Williams and Geneva Wilson.

MISSION WORKERS ARE TO BE GUESTS

The Woman’s Missionary Society of the Tabernacle Presbyterian Church is to give a breakfast at 11:30 tomorrow in the church, hon-

By Mrs.’ Franklin D. Roosevelt |

E PARK, N. Y., Sunday.—Some toon not long ago of a gentleman * phone in a newspaper office, looking extremely wild because

ne sent me a care itting at the teles

I was reporting that nothing of interest had happened for

my column that day.

1 doubt if the cartoonist knew that I am often looking forward to a day when I will do nothing, and therefore have nothing to chronicle as far as comings and goings are concerned, It will be interesting to see whether one’s mind stagnates as well as

one’s body.

This Memorial Day and Sunday in the country have had some activity. The skies were gray and it was more like autumn than sume

mer, but that made it all the pleasanter

exercise, After going on

a hike I had a glimpse of my grandchildren. They are delighted at the prospect of having the horses and their own dogs here by the end of the week, when they return to Hyde Park for good. I sat for some time with my mother-in-law who is going to sit up tomorrow and insists that the next day she is going to dinner downestairs in a wheel-chair. The doctor tells her she is a most cheerful patient and is taking this whole thing very well. She, with the philosophy which comes from her early bringing up, I am sure, insists that she is quite comfortable and that she has her lovely trees to look at, and an oriole, which came twice yesterday and perched on the branch of a tree outside her window just so she could

have a good look at him,

She told me once, that in her youth her father used to say they

complained,

“all weather is good weather.”

When they said they

had not had time to do a certain thing, one of his aunts always

remarked, “Ybu had all the time there was.”

losophy in later life.

A good basis for. phie

I read Mr. Heywood Broun’s column on tolerance with joy. Nothing is more irritating than some one who agrees with every one he happens to be thrown with. Once that was called “being all things to all men,” but I think some of us have found that you can not be all things te all men and remain anything yourself. So more power to you, Mr. Broun, may you always be sure of what you think and continue to be as courageous in expressing it. My trouble is that I am not always sure of what I think, A peaceful Sunday in Hyde Park, and back to Washington on the

midnight.

(Copyright, 1936, by United Feature Syndicate, Inc.)

Pool at Hoosier Athletic Club to Be Open Daily for Summer

The Hoosier Athletic Club’s swimming pool is to be open daily throughout the summer for mixed swimming, Dr. Paul Kernel, athletic director, announced today. Under the new policy, members and their families may swim from June 15 to Sept. 15. Marking the opening of the pool, a swimming party is being arranged for this month. Other parties and social events also have been arranged for this month at the club. Nightly parties are to be held on the roof garden, which was opened formally Saturday. Club parties on the roof are to be under direction of Thomas W. Kercheval, entertertainment committee chairman. Guest night activities are to be di-1 rected by Peter B. James, club manager. New members are to be welcomed at a dance June 24.

Women’s guild, Booster Club and.

the: Woman's Athletic Club ‘committees are arranging parties this month’ for picnics and outings at Kernel Lake. The Women's Athletic Club is to give its annual outing at the lake June 21, Miss Marcia

‘| B. Kinder, president, announced to-

day. Swimming, hiking, games a barbecue supper are sc ed. Committee members are Misses Edith = Ambuhl, Helena Wanner, Betty McMahon, Mildred Kinkbinner, Virginia Fellinger, LaVerne Phillips, Leona Wiemar and Margaret’ Rudbeck. Business meetings are to be held by the club’s board of directors and the women’s guild this month, and guild members are to elect officers Thursday. The Boosters Club is to entertain

new members and women guests June 21, with informal dancing en tertainment. Mrs, Virgil Rupp is to have charge of the final meeting of the contract bridge group. A special meeting to organize for next year is to be held this month. A monthly sport dance is to be held on the roof by younger club members. A committee is to be named tonight. ; , A business man’s gym class, instruction in fencing for or and advanced students, and dancing lessons for women are to be are ranged.

ALLIANCE ELECTS ALDRICH AS HEAD

Prof. Clide E. Aldrich, Butler Unie versity, is the newly elected presie dent of the Alliance Francaise. Other officers are Mrs. W. Li Richardson, first vice president; Edward J. Meunier, second vice

president; A. W. Shumaker, third vice president; Miss Jane Hampson, secretary; Mrs, Jacqueline Ulbrich, treasurer, and L. A. Tolle, librarian, The Saturday luncheons are to be continued by the alliance through out the summer months at the

Washington. 1

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Kinney’s Shoe Store

138 East Washington Street

Pairs of Lodior Full-Fashioned Silk Hosiery

Penney’s Invites You to Meet MISS ANN CARTER

Internationally Famous Corsetiere demonstrating FLEX-0-BACK CORSETRY

There is a FLEX.O. BACK foundation or

girdle for every figure type! Miss Carter will show you how YOU can

| rLEX-0. BACK CORSETRY