Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 June 1936 — Page 16
rlington Club Host at Annual Event to Be Held Under Lights; Many Entries From Other Cities
Innovation of Night Change
Performance to See in Customary Styles;
Numerous Parties Arranged.
BY BEATRICE BURGAN
Society
Editor
8 far as members of the equestrian set are concerned, nothing must
interfere with attendance at
the annual Arlington horse show,
h opens at 8 tonight at the R. H. Brown Stables. For these veterans to miss the show is as disheartening as the dis-
appointment of a Kentucky colonel
In other years, dark glasses, wide-brimmed hats and the sheerest ;
kept home from the Derby.
dresses were in fashion for protection from the burning June sun. Styles will change for this year's show, as all the events are to be held at night beneath electric lights. The wise spectator will carry along a light coat, for cool breezes usually are felt on the grounds after
sundown.
Decorations in Order Mrs. William Low Rice and Mrs. William H. Wemmer judges’ stand were draped with!
morning seeing that the boxes and
spent this
bunting in the blue and yellow club colors. Mrs. L. V. Hamilton, who gathered the trophies and ribbons, surveyed them with satisfaction today, for they present an impressive array.
Don Bose is to take over the, microphone as announcer and August C. Bohlen is to be ringmaster. Alex Metzger, Robert Ray Bunch, Frank Hoke, Volney Brown, William Low Rice, Hubert Hickam 2nd Don Test will be roaming the grounds to see that all goes well. Harry Gorham, Morris, Ill, is to judge the hunters, jumpers. road hack and horsemanship classes, while Sam L. Haynes, Columbus, 0. is to decide on the merits of the three and five-gaited saddle horses, the harness and pony classes. Favorites Are Back
Miss Sally Jones, Granviile, O., whose masterly handling of her jumpers delighted spectators last year, is to be back with five horses. Mr. and Mrs. H. A. Lockwood's horses from Rolling Meadows Farm, Cincinnati; Mr. and Mrs. Charles Tachaw’s mounts from Magnolia Farm, Louisville, and Mr. and Mrs, 8. Huttenbaurer's favorites from Cincinnati are to be shown another year. : Other out-of-town exhibiters inclue Mr. and Mrs. Garrett Smith, Watterson Trail Stables, Middletown, Ky.; C. E. Doll Jr., Mount Clemens, Mich.; F. C. Whitehouse, Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Lumpkin, Mattoon, Ill; L. S. Dickey, West Baden; Charles M. Williams, Cincinnati. Stephen Black, Silver Lake Farm, Frankfort, Ky.;: Misses Anne Gordon Washburn, Ann Kyle Curran, Polly Burgess, Virginia Elizabeth Cronan, Mina Jones and Mary Rita Ewing, all of Rock Creek Riding Club, Louisville, and Charles Cook, Shelbyville, Ky. Others to Show Others include Stanley Ross, CoJumbus, O.; Mr. and Mrs. E. G. Rivens, Palas Park, Ill.; Fred Sharp and Miss Martha Wheeler, both of Franklin; Mr. and Mrs. William H. Ball, Orchard Lawn, Muncie, and John R. McFall, West Terre Haute. A few of the local exhibitors are, to be Misses Anne Ayres, Lucy Kaufman, Cynthia Test, Anne Lucile Cantwell, Marlow Hyatt, Anne Elder, Ethel M. Miller, Janet Rosenthal, Letitia Sinclair, Eva Taggart, Joan and Dorothy Metzger, Margaret Caldwell, Jo Ann Rice, Virginia Armstrong, Barbara Klein, Mary Anne Resor, Mesdames C. D. Haisley, Clayton Mogg and Conrad Ruckelshaus. Robert B. Rhoads, Myron A.| Feinberg, Burford Danner, James McNutt, Robert Bohlen, J. S. Williams, George Sadlier, Robert Mannix, Emory Sharp, Ab Metzger, John Frenzel, Dr. C. E. Stout and Dr. P. O. Bonham have entered their horses in anticipation of winning ribbons and trophies. Ten Events Scheduled The showmen are to compete in ten events tonight. The classifications listed for the program for the opening day include amateur hunters, five-gaited mares, three-gaited horses 15 hands to 15.2; five-gaited stallions or geldings; three-gaited amateurs; horsemanship for children from 10 to 14; three-gaited horses 152 and over; three-gaited horses under 15 hands; fine harness stake and open jumping. Boxholders will entertain friends. Many of them have been inviting different groups for each evening. Among them are Messrs. and Mesdames William Griffith, Orland Church, Skiles Test, Jack Adams, Paul Hancock, Samuel Sutphin, Frederick T. Holliday, Sylvester: Johnson, Eugene C. Miller, Charles A. Latham, Cornelius O. Alig, William H. Wemmer, Eli Lilly, Thomas Kaufman, Otto Frenzel, Fred Norris, George Sadlier, J. L. Hiatt, Morris Rosner, M. H. Fuller, William Low Rice, P. O. Ferrel, Volney Brown, August Bohlen. Mor: Arrange Parties Bowman Elder, Frederic M. Ayres, W. Richardson Sinclair, Don Test, Wallace O. Lee, Edward E. Petri, Charles Mayer, George Klein, Robert Ray Bunch, Clayton Mogg, Alex Meuger. Hal Keeling, Harry McNutt, : M. Bailey, Robert Rhoads, ind K. Landers, Ralph Boozer, Alfred Piel, William Munk, Maurice . Mendenhall, Walter C. Marmon, Carl Mote and J. E. Resor. ~ Others to take places in boxes h guests iritlude Mesdames Elsa t, Frank Binford, Frank Tracy, Dorothy Alford, W. J. Young; Col. Philip McAbze; Misses Ellen Willis, Marjory Snowdie, Brownle
Esther Finchum, Kenneth Mount Marry Tonight
Miss Esther Finchum, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Pinchum, and Kenneth W. Mount are to exchange marriage vows in a ceremony at 8:30 tonight in the Beech Grove Methodist Church. The Rev. E. E. Gillette is to officiate. The ceremony is to be read before the altar decorated with palms, ferns and candelabra, The bride, to be given in marriage by her father, is to wear a white satin and lace gown, designed with long sleeves and train. Her veil is to be tulle and her bouquet of white roses and lilies of the valley. ‘The bride’s sister, Mrs. James Barrett, as matron of honor, is to wear a peach chiffon gown and a rose bouquet.
Miss Electa Finchum, another sis- |
ter of the bride, is to be a bridesmaid, wearing a blue organdy gown, The other bridesmaids, Mrs. Lester Wordeman, Misses Helen Kautsky
rand Roma Burton, respectively, are
to wear pink, yellow and green organdy gowns. They are to carry bouquets of roses. James Bailey is to carry the ring on a satin pillow and Mary Jane Bailey, as flower girl, is to appear in a white organdy frock, carrying a pink basket of rose petals. Don Duncan is to be best man. Ushers are to be Richard and Elmer Finchum, the bride's brothers; Thomas Duncan and Woodrow Whitaker. Miss Marie Gilliland is to sing “At Dawning,” “I Love You Truly” and’ “Always.” Mrs. Herbert Brunsma, organist, is to present a program as guests are béing seated. A reception is .to follow at the church. The couple, is to leave on a short wedding trip and will be at homie in Indianapolis. Mr. Mount’s parents, Mr. and.Mrs. James W. Mount, are to come from Fort Wayne to attend the wedding.
VAN SICKLE PUPILS WILL GIVE RECITAL
Miss Bernice Van Sickle, Arthur Jordan Conservatory of Music instructor. is to present Florence Elizabeth Evans, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Leonard T. Evans, 3740 Guil-ford-av, and Betty Marie Starr, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Campbell, 1443 King-av, in a dramatic recital at 8:15 tomorrow night. . The recital is to be given in the Caroline Scott Harrison D. A. R. chapter house. Billie Lemen is to be master of ceremonies.
- SOCIAL
SPO
THIS EV ENING
Auxiliary [ists Committee for State Meeting
Mrs. Jennie L. Goldén, Bloomington, Ladies Auxiliary, of .the Veterans of Foreign Wars department president, has named committee members to serve at the eleventh encampment at Bloomington June 25, 26 and 27. They are:
olis; Mrs. Helen Reitenour, Bloomington, and Mrs. Naomi Roesner; South Bend, credentials. Mrs. Margaret Dietz,’ Evansville; Mrs. Hester Glover, New Albany, and Mrs. Maude Massey, Bloomington, resolutions. . Mrs. Mary Doud, Muncie; Mrs. Mabel Kraft, Indiana Harber. and Mrs. Pauline Winters, Huntington, greetings. Miss Laura M. Foist, Indianapolis; Mrs. Ruth Donely, Marion, and Mrs. Mamie Nalley, Lafayette, hospital. Mrs. Gertrude Kremer, Indianapolis;, Mrs. Margaret Myers, Bloomjingtén, and Mrs. Cloye Tabor; Terre Haute, reception. Pages are to be Miss Mildred Ray, Evansville; Mrs. Kathryn Stump, Lafayette; Mrs. Merline Romine, Bloomington; Mrs. Mabel Flynn, South Bend; Mrs. Bertha Cook, New Albany, and Mrs. Margare{ Cole, Madison. : :
EMMA GENE TUCKER AMONG GRADUATES
ter of Mr. and Mrs. Fred C. Tucker, was graduated from Bradford Junior College, Bradford, Mass. this week. She took part in the dance fete presented as part of the commencement program. She was a member of the glee club and was active in athletics.
Miss Ora E. Vandagritft Weds
R.D. Hammer in Church Chapel
Mr. and Mrs. Robert D. Hammer are to bs at home in Indianapolis after June 29. They were married yesterday at the McKee Chapel of the Tabernacle Presbyterian Church. The bride, before her marriage, was Miss Ora Emiline Vandagrifft, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Vandagrifft, 3143 Central-av. Mr. Hammer is the son of Mr. and Mrs. O. F. Hammer, 5427 N. Delaware-st. The ceremony was performed before an altar banked with palms and ferns. Miss Luna Fessler played bridal music and Mrs. Norman
, Hammer sang “Ah Sweet Mystery of
Life” and “I Love You Truly.” During the ceremony Miss Fessler played “Delta Shelter.” The bride wore a powder blue crepe with a fitted jacket trimmed in hand-made lace. Her picture hat and sandals were of powder blue, and her corsage was of pink roses and gardenias. She carried a white silk embroidered handkerchief
which was carried by Mrs. Christine Hammer, the bridegroom’s grandmother, at her wedding. Miss Mary Shelby, the bride's only” attendant, wore dusty pink,
made on the same lines as the bride’s costume. Her corsage was Talisman roses and delphinium. Norman Hamer was his brother’s best man and the ushers were Howard Hammer, another brother of the bridegroom, and Hubert Vitz. Mrs. Vandagrift wore aqua crepe with navy accessories and a gardenia corsage. Mrs. Hammer wore powder blue lace with pink accessories and a gardenia corsage. An informal reception was held at the church following the ceremony. Out-of-town guests included Mr. and Mrs. George Davis, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Gill and Gerald Gill, all of Colfax, Ind.; Mr. and Mrs. Robert. Wilson, Mrs. Ida Gillette, Mr. and Mrs. Louis Allen, Mrs. Goldia Inskeep, all of Chicago; Mr. and Mrs. Walter Steiner and daughters, Marjorie and Dorothy Steiner, Evanston, Ill.; Mr. und Mrs. Curtis Scheunemann, Highland Park, Ill; Mrs. Walter Bartman, Paris, Ill; Mrs. Louise Moses. Detroit; Mr. ang Mrs. Howard Hammer, Richmond, and Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Hill, Cincinnati. The bride attended'De Pauw Uni-
Junior Riders
Mrs. Blanche Scudder, Indianap-.
Miss Emma Gene Tucker, daugh- |
—Photo by Virginia Edwards
The junior riders at R.. H. Brown Stables have been spending a greater part of their days on the bridle*paths and in the training ring preparing for the annual Arlington horse show opening tonigiic
at the Brown stables. night.
The show is to continue tomorrow and Saturds
(Leff to right) Dorothy Metzger, Ann Lucille Cantwell, Jo Ann Rice and Cynthia Test are mounted on their favorite horses, ready for a ride.
sey, 513 N. Drexel-av, hostess. CHURCH
~air court.
- Bingo. Ladies Auxiliary, Eagles Lodge. st. Cards. St. Catherine Hall. man, Queen’s Department Store. pect-st and Virginia-av. picnic.
EVENTS
SORORITIES " Verae Sorores Chapter, Verus Cordis. Tonight. Miss Margie Will-
Holy Rosary Young Ladies Sodality. . 8:30 tonight.
CARD PARTIES St. Joseph Men's Club. ‘Tonight.
8 Fri. Eagles Hall, 43 W. Vermont8 Sun. Beano. Mrs. Timothy McMahon, chair2:30 and 8:30 Thurs. June 25. Pros-
Cards. ‘Mrs. Edward Trimpe, chairman,
GROUPS
Dance. Open
Church hall, 617: E. North-st.
Benefit of Father Downey's
Local Tri-Delt Group waSoad?
Ten Delegates to Convention
The ‘local Delta Delta Delta Sorority members expect to be among the 800 delegates to attend the eighteenth national ‘and third international convention at Colorado Springs, Col., June 28 to July 2. Mrs, Otto K. Jensen, District adviser, is to go to the convention June 27 to attend conferences before the official opening. Others to join her include Mrs. Robert Renick, Alliance president;
Kitchen Shower Given for Bride
Miss Vivian Claffey, 5025 Centralav, is to give a kitchen shower to-
“| night in honor of Mrs. Willian Guy-
ton, who, before her marriage June 12, was Miss Virginia Cochrane.
Decorations are to be carried out in blue and yellow. Miss Claffey is to be assisted by her mother, Mrs. Harry G. Claffey. Guests are to include Mrs. Guyton’s mother, Mrs. Henry M. Cochrane; her mother-in-law, Mrs. William Guyton Sr.; Misses Rachel Cartwright, Louise Fitch, Virginia Fleming, Myla Smith, Margaret Quizonie, Carolyn Hofft, Louise Scott of Greentown, and Mesdames Joseph Coffin, William Randoiph, Marvin Cochrane and William Harger of Noblesville.
2 CHORAL GROUPS TO GIVE OPERETTA
The Progressive Chorale, directed
| by Mrs. Josephine Foster, and the
Y. M. C. A. Chorus, directed by Roscoe Polin, are to present “The Enchanted Isle,” an operetta with theme and music based on Chopin's works, at 8:30 tonight. The performance is to bhé given at the Simpson Methodist . Church, Missouri and 11th-sts. Ernest Maye is to play the leading role, and Mrs. Mabel Overton and Mrs. Teresa Saunders are to be accompanists. Roger Hurd is to be in charge of
dramatics and costumes, assisted by
Mrs. Merrité” Thompson, national house chaperon board member; Miss Mary Evelyn Daniel, Butler University Chapter president; Misses Helen Tichenor, Frances Longshore,
Iyy Fuller, all alumnae members; Carol Langfitt, Betty Thomas and Jean Anderson, all of the Butler Chapter. Miss Josephine Maple is to be the De Pauw University delegate and Miss Sidney Sitwell, East Chicago, is to represent Indiana university. Eighty-seven active chapter delegates: and 147 alumnae groups are to be represented at the sessions, to be presided over by Mrs. Joseph D. Grigsby, Washington national president. The program is to feature round table discussions of campus politics, sorority problems, vocational guidance and the college woman’s opportunity of service in.her community. Speakers are to include Dr. Dorothy Bird Nyswander, University of Utah professor of psychology an a field representative of woman’s work division, Federal Emergency Relief Administration, and Beulah Wright Comstock, Los Angeles author and lecturer, who is to counsel members on developing programs in personality building. Others are to include Mrs. William N. Hudson, New York vocational guidance director, and Mrs. Frederick M. Coleman, Lincoln, Neb., Mortar Board, national president. ' Rosa Zagnoni Marinoni, Fayetteville, Ark., is to read her own verse.
Card Party Set
The Woman's Auxiliary to Altenheim is to hold a card party at 2 tomorrow. Hostesses are to be Charles Kistner, Eda Malpes, Minnie Balweg and William Schul-
- meyer.
Firmer Custard, Tip.
If you scald the milk before you |
make the custard for your pie it will be Jess likely to be watery. :
|
jor. Arlington Horse Show
Eye Color Held Key to Selection of Makeup Needs
By ALICIA HART NEA Service Staff Writer
On the theory that costume colors which flatter a woman'’s eyes always are most becoming to her, a cosmetic firm now insists that eyes
should serve as a keynote to selec-: tion of suitable cosmetics as well as|
clothes. he “If you ‘consider your eyes seriously, it will help you to realize your potential type more effectively,” the bulletin reads, and goes on to suggest that makeup be the color of your eyes firmly in mind. To save trouble and confusion, this eompany puts out an inexpensive, eye-matched makeup kit in which powder, rouge, lipstick, eyeshadow and mascara are all keyed to one of the four major eye colors —brown, blue, gray and hazel. 5
Hints for Makeup
A brown-eyed business girl has simply to buy a kit marked “brown,” then to forget about cosmetics to keep in her desk drawer for the rest of the summer. A blue-eyed traveler can get one marked “blue,” tuck it into a corner of her bag and go merrily on her way to see strange people and places without worrying about where she packed this or that. Speaking of eyes, if you are going to use eye makeup at all in the daytime, he sure to pick mascara that never runs or smears. And learn how to put it on correctly. Nothing looks worse than lashes which show beads of makeup here and there, or those which look coated. Whether you use cake, liquid or Cream mascara, never go over your lashes many times. Three or four upward sweeps of the brush should suffice. If any spills over on your lids, remove it immediately with a piece of cleansing tissue and abit of cleansing cream. Don’t blink uutil the color has had time to set.
HILLCREST JUNIORS ARE TO GIVE DANCE
Hillcrest Country Club juniors are to attend a club dance tomorrow night. The committee includes Misses Jane Woodward, Julia Rowe and Anna Mae Jones; Frank Jones Jr., Frank C. Thompson and Peter Lambertus Jr.
Cleaning Pot Handles
Joints of pot handles and corners of cookie pans should be kept free from grease. Thi hagid be dug out with the tip of a knife and the place scoured with steel wool. Don’t forget, too, that the bottoms of pots as well as the insides should be scoured with
chosen with.
“her traveling costume. On the way
Receiving Line and: Serving of
Refreshments
Described as.
Important After Weddings
| Guests Invited Following Ceremony May In-
clude All Who Attended Rites or Relatives and Friends.
-~
BY MARIAN YOUNG
Immediately following the actual wedding ceremony there are two
musts: a receiving line and the seryin
g of some sort of collation. Guests
invited to partake of the refreshments may include all who attended the ceremony or only relatives and a few friends.
If the marriage service has been. performed in a church, the bride and bridegroom, their parents, bridesmaids and ushers go directly from there to the place where the reception is to be held. This may be in the bride’s home, at the house of one of her best friends or in a private dining room or ballroom of a hotel. It never takes place in the home of the bridegroom's parents. The moment the bride, bridegroom, parents and attendants arrive, they form the receiving line and await the guests wno should get there as quickly as possible. = After a formal ceremony, it is customary for the bride’s mother to head the line. Her husband stands beside her, then the bride, bridegroom, his mother and father, the matron of honor, best man, maids and ushers. At a reception after a home wedding, only the bride, bridegroom and attendants stand in the receiving line. Parents mingle with the guests.
Lead Way to Food
When the last guest has had a chance to felicitate the bride and groom and their parents, the receiv-
ing line is broken up. A few min-| _ | utes later, the newly married couple,
followed by the best man and maid of honor, lead the way to the room where food is to be served. If the wedding takes place before, the feast is called a wedding breakfast. If after ‘4, it is a reception. After an early morning wedding, a regular breakfast, consisting of fruit served in some fancy manner, eggs, bacon, toast and coffee, is served.’ For a noon wedding breakfast, fruit or clear soup, an entree such as creamed chicken, breast of squab or lobster Newburg, a salad, dessert and coffee are correct. After an evening wedding, this same type of menu, with perhaps an extra course, will serve the purpose.
Prepared Carefully
In any event, wedding reception food should be prepared carefuly and served meticulously in the daintiest fashion possible. This is one time when a caterer who provides dishes, linen and silver as well as preparing the food is practically a necessity. If there is ample space, guests may be seated at small tables. Otherwise, the refreshments are served buffet style. However, there must be one table for the bride, ‘groorg and attendants. In the center of it is thg handsomely decorated bridal cake from which the bride cuts the first slice. This cake is not to be confused with the wedding cake—usually a heavier, fruit variety—baked several weeks before the ceremony, which is cut in tiny pieces that are done up in small white boxes the day before the wedding. The boxes are piled on a small table beside the door and each guest takes one home.
Throws Bouquet Away
When breakfast is finished, the bride goes upstairs to change into
up, she turns and tosses her boudquet to her maids. Superstition has it that the girl who catches the bouquet will be the next to marry. The bridegroom, in a room especially provided for him, changes, too.
When they have dressed, their fam-:
lies go upstairs to bid them goodby. Then they leave amidst a shower of rice and rose petals. It 4s no longer considered smart to throw old shoes at departing newlyweds, to paint their car with
absurd signs or to delay their departure. Guests are expected to live up to the standards of dignity and good taste that the bride and her mother set when they planned the affair. One who receives an invitation to a wedding reception is expected to accept or decline within a week. The reply follows the form of the invitation itself. For instance, if you receive an informal note from the bride-to-be, asking you to drop around to her wedding breakfast, you answer simply and informally. If the invitation is formal, your reply is written in the same manner (third person singular). Write it in longhand, with black or dark blue ink on pure white paper. And space the letter exactly in the center of the paper.
. Send Gift
It is customary for one who is invited to the reception to send a present. It should be addressed to the bride. Have it mailed direct from the store, enclosing your card, of course. Always have an understanding with the store that your present can be exchanged by the bride. You may have picked a perfectly handsome silver platter or bowl, but, if she gets 10 bowls, the chances are that she will want to exéhange some of them.
Most schools of etiquette hold that the bride's own monogram always should be used on wedding gifts. Some, however, allow the monogram to include the initial of the bride’s first name, the initial of her maiden surname and the initial of her new name. Thus, Mary Elizabeth Jones who married Tom Smith can expect some of her prese ents to be marked MEJ, and others MJS. The bride or some member of her family should make a careful list of wedding gifts and their do= nors. ‘Within two weeks ‘after the ceremony, the bride herself must write -a thank you note to each giver. Incidentally, nowadays wedding gifts are seldom displayed on a table for the reception guests to see. If they are, cards should be removed.
WEEK-END PARTY ON SORORITY’S PROGRAM
A week-end party at Muncie Saturday and Sunday is to be arranged at a meeting of Epsilon Chapter, Epsilon Sigma Alpha Sorority, at 6:30 tonight at the Y. W. C. A. Miss Bernice Van Sickle is in charge of tonight's educational program and Miss Betty Presnall, new president, is to lead the business session.
P.-T. A. TO SPONSOR PICNIC JUNE 25
The New Bethel P.-T. A. is to sponsor a picnic on June 25 zt Luyster’s Camp. A basket dinner is to be served at noon, followed by a program, games and swimming. Transportation is to be furnished from New Bethel between 9 and 10 for those without cars.
Whether your arches
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are high, medium or
