Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 April 1937 — Page 5
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SATURDAY, APRIL 3, 1987
NUPTIAL RITE AND BRIDAL PARTIES
Miss Mueller
ToBeWedin
Home at 3:30
Charlene Buchanan and Mabelle Sherman To Be Honored.
A wedding ceremony and three prenuptial parties figure in today’s news. Principals in. the marriage ceremony are Miss Bertha Jane Mueller, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Otto N. Mueller, and Jack T. Godfrey, son of Mrs. John T. Godfrey. The ceremony is to be read at 3:30 p. m. in the Mueller home, 3268 Washington Blvd, by the Rev. William A. Shullenberger. The wedding is to take place on the. birthday of Miss Mueller's maternal grandmother, Mrs. J. I TemTwo Parties Set
pleton. Miss Charlene Buchanan, who is to be married to Donald B. Keller on April 10, is to attend two parties in ‘her honor. Miss Marcia Morrison is to entertain with a luncheon in the Columbia Club and Mr. and Mrs. J. I. Cummings are to give a buffet supper tonight for Miss Buchanan and her fiance. Miss Buchanan is a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Paul J. Buchanan and Mr. Keller's parents are Mr. and Mrs. John G. Keller. Miss Mary Cregor is to be hostess at a party in compliment to Miss Mabelle Sherman, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. N. S. Sherman, whose marriage to Thomas J. Blackwell Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas J. BlackNe, is to be solemnized on April Cibotium fern, smilax and spring flowers will decorate the Mueller home for the ceremony. Miss Aleene Mueller is to be her sister’s maid of honor and Mrs. Edward Paul Gallagher, Mrs. Ray Bishop, Paris, Ill. and Miss Margaret Godfrey, sister of the bridegroom, will be bridesmaids. Ann Roberts and Lenore ‘Caldwell, Birmingham, Ala., will be Junior bridesmaids. Skirts to Be Full The maid of honor will wear peri- | winkle blue mousseline de soie, fashioned with short puff sleeves, and carry spring flowers. The other attendants’ gowns, of crepe, are de- - signed with full skirts, deep V-neck-lines and cap sleeves. They will carry colonial bouquets. Mrs. Gallagher and Mrs. Bishop will wear chartreuse and Miss Godfrey, Miss Roberts and Miss Caldwell, periwinkle blue. The bride is to wear Mrs. Gallagher’s satin wedding gown trimmed with lace and Mrs. Mueller’s veil. The bridal bouquet will be of roses and lilies of the valley. Mrs. Mueller is to appear in a blue lace gown and Mrs. Godfrey will. wear black with a beige lace tunic. Following a reception, the couple is to leave on a southern wedding trip. They will return to 3402 Carrollton Ave., to make their home:
. 9 ‘Seeing Eye o Albert G. Hahn, Evansville, accompanied by his . “seeing eye” dog, is to be speaker at the White Cross Guilds fifth annual luncheon April 28 in the Scottish Rite Cathedral. Mr. Hahn, a former president of the Indiana State Hospital Association, is chairman of the American Hospital Association Committee on National Hospital Day.
Mrs. Robert Fox Is to Speak to
Women Voters
Mrs. Robert Fox, Hagerstown, is to talk on “The State Department As Our First Line of Defense” at an open meeting of the Indianapolis League of Women Voters’ foreign policy department Monday. Mrs. Ralph Showalter, 5661 N. Meridian | St., is to be hostess. - Mrs. Fox is the | Hagerstown League's chairman of | the department of government and | foreign policy. | Mrs. Showalter’s assistants will be | Mesdames Donald Gerking, Fred! Gifford, John Kautz, Ernest Rupel, Horace Shonle and Harry Wenger. The Indiana League’s budget committee is to meet Tuesday morning in state headquarters. The group is to prepare the budget for the fiscal year beginning May 1, and.is to report at the state council meeting May 18 and 19.
Sunnyside Guild To Dine Monday
Sunnyside Guild is to have its regular luncheon meeting at 12:30 p. m. Monday in the Columbia Club; Mrs. Charles Renard, chairman, has appointed the following assist ants: Mesdames Sydney Rice, Thecdore E. Root, Charles W. Richardson, Gaylord T. Rust, John T. Sawyer, James Seward, G. G. Schmidt, Kurt W. Schmidt, Charles Seidensticker and Wayne O. Stone. Spring flowers will be used for table decorations.
Miss Arnold to Wed Everett B. Davis
Miss Alice Louise Arnold, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A. M. Arnold, and Everett B. Davis, son of Mr. and | Mrs. Kenneth Young, are to be married at 8 p. m. today in the First United Brethren Church. The Rev. George F. Snyder is to officiate. The bride is to wear a white satin gown and) a veil edged with Jace. Her shower bouquet is to be of whjte roses and sweet peas. Miss Helen Davis, the bridegroom’s sister, is to be maid of honor; Lioyd
Cain, best man; | Everett Fosnot and |
Richard Land, ushers." z John Sloane Kittle Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. John Sloane Kittle, KessJer Blvd. and his roommate; David Sanders, Evanston, Ill, are in Bermuda for spring vacation with a
group of Corn University & students.
wails
of Ty mime
Dances, Sports and Musical Events Hold Attention
E INDIANAPOLIS i
Page |
SCHALTTIDT TODA
of Indianapolis Women's Groups
Barbara Brown, Ballet Pupil, Turns Recital Choreographer
By BEATRICE BURGAN Society Editor
ARBARA BROWN is Mrs. William Byram Gates’ first dancing pupil | ! Barbara has been the premiere danseuse of Mrs. Gates’ spring recitals for several years but it wasn't until this
to. turn choreographer.
season that she attempted to crevge an Srigingl dance.
The number, “Claire de Lune,”
{ is included in the program of Mrs. [
Gates’ annual recital to be given April 16 in the Murat Temple Ballroom. |
Barbara has attracted attention | in the recitals for her grace and Russian-ballerina-like- appearance. dressed in her short white costume at Mrs. Gates’ studio ' today, she halted her practice to explain how | she worked out the dance. “Debussy’s ‘Claire de Lune’ fasci- | nated me, and I listened to it over and over until I had a picture in my mind. Then I|tried arm exercises and positions to convey the effect which I had imagined,” she said. Others Join in Ballet - Now several of er dancing classmates are rehearsing with her. They include Madrjory Flickinger, Leora Wood, Elizabeth Weiss, Helen Rudesill, Mary Ann Zinn, Nancy Briggs, Nanty Ragan and Peggy Trusler. Barbara is to appear in a solo, “Gitanara,” and in a tango with Robert McNeely -as well as in “Autumn Leaves,” a group number, Emily Flickinger, Constance Miller, Nancy Briggs, Elizabeth Weiss, Helen Rudesill, Peggy Trusler, Leora Wood, Patricia Mushrush, Alice Greene and Mary Jo Clapp are rehearsing for this same dance. Betty Lewis, Sally Stewart, Joan Atlass, Barbara Kiger, Mary Lou Dreiss and Mary Margaret Carroll are to do a military tap, and Martha Frances Dunn, a doll dance. Jewel Jean Lain is to be soloist in “Roses,” with Sally Page, Sally Ann McBride, Hulda Pfaff, Jeanette
| in the recitak
i Jean Pile and Vincent Alig;
| Deux,”
| Briggs: | and Nancy Ragan.
Jinks, Suzanne Pearson, Mary
lingsworth, Misses Elva Stokes,
Washington St., Johnson Ave.
Party. Public invited.
St. Music.
EVENTS
SORORITIES
Kappa Phi Delta. 7:45 p. m. Mon. Y. W. C. A. Beta Chapter, Phi Theta Delta. Mon. p. m. Miss Juanita Wilcox, 2005 Hoyt Ave., hostess. To plan initiation services for Mrs. Kay Hol-
LODGES
Sahara Grotto Women’s Auxiliary. Entertainment Committee. 1 p. m. Mon. Hamilton Food Shop. Luncheon. Irvington Chapter 364 O. E. S. 8 p. m. Mon. Masonic Temple, E.
Englewood Auxiliary O. E.. S. 8 p. m. Mon. 2117 E. Michigan St.
PARTY Incianapoliy Club. 8:30 p. m. today. Castle Hall, 230 E. Ohio St. PROGRAM \ Townsend Club Circle 3. 7:30 p. m. Mon. Castle Hall, 230 E.Ohio
Heath, Ann Parry and Ann Spaulding.
Many young dancers visit the
i studio to rehearse for their parts
Other numbers include a tap dance, Martha Ann Bower; a fox trot, Jean Goldsmith and William Patrick; mazurka, Nancy Briggs; ballroom exhibition, “Valse Elizabeth ‘Weiss; “Pas de Alice Greene and Emily Flickinger; cakewalk, Patricia Mushrush; “Petite Polka.” Alice Greene; ballroom waltz, Mary Jo Clapp and Thomas Tanke; waltz, Leora ‘Wood; soft shoe, Nancy “Trepak,” Helen Rudesill
Lento,”
Dancers Named Several girls are to be disguised
as Russian .dolls for an animated
number. These girls include Ann Caldow, Ann Clark, Marlou Hyatt, Suzanne Littell, Nina Lockwood, Betty Mayer and Katherine McClure. Patricia Mushrush will be
the clown in a bareback rider's interpretation by Marjorie Home, Betty Lee Washburn, Alice Gates, Martha Lois Adams, Mary Johnson, Mary Jo Gray, Elizabeth Lieber, Dorothy Sheerin, Margaret Rogers, Martha Frances Dunn, Mary Ann Zinn and Constance Miller. High school seniors, who have been in the classes, will usher guests. These girls, who have been in other recitals, include Helen Griffith, Nancy Campbell, Patricia Eaglesfield, Ruth Fishback, Ann Holmes, Harriet Patterson, Jeanette Tarkington, Eleanor Winslow, Sue Anne Eveleigh, Margaret. Wohigemuth, Catherine Kemp and Jane Rottger.
Marianna Wolf.
oe a -
Council of Women to Conduct F orum and Elect 5 Directors
The Indianapolis Council of Women is to conduct ‘a forum on
“Present Day Economic Problems,” |.
and elect five directors at its allday meeting Tuesday in Ayres’ Auditorium. Miss Emma C. Puschner, American Legion child welfare division director, is to open the forum at 1:30 p. m,, following luncheon. She will introduce Fermor S. Cannon, Railroadmen’s Federal Savings & Loan Association president, who is to talk on “Finance From the Banker’s Point of View.” S. B. Walker, William H. Block Co. controller, will discuss “Business From Businessman’s Point of View.” Mrs. Clayton Ridge is to speak on “Education From Educational Point of View,” and Mrs. Arthur R. Robinson will talk on “The Home From. the Homemakers
| Point of View.”
Committee Reports Due
Committee reports are to be rnade at the morning session. Mrs. Charles H. Smith, education committee chairman, is to present Mrs. Bessie Rasmus, University of Iowa instructor of. speech and supervisor of the articulatory speech clinic. Mrs. Lowell S. Fisher, recreation committee member, is to introduce Mrs. Kin Hubbard, who will talk on SKINS
F U W FOR HATS .
INDIANA FUR CO.
29 E. Ohio St.
COLLARS
the Biennial Federation of Music Clubs’ Festival. International Relations and World Peace Committee, headed by Mrs. E. J. Unruh, is to present Mrs. Fred Dickson, who will show slides on “Foreign Trade and Domestic Welfare.” Miss Sara Lauter, supervisor of WPA women’s and professional projects, is to talk on a new service to business and professional women and mothers. Mrs. J. D. Smith, welfare committee chairman, will introduce Mrs. Marian Gallup, Indiana Woman's Prison superintendent.
New Members Entertain
New members of the Alpha Tau Chapter of Alpha Zeta Beta Sorority entertained other members at the home of Miss Louise Taylor, 1525 E. Michigan St., last night.
(Byrom
®
Times Special
in the Drake Hotel. hostesses.
Canada and Mexico which will send two delegates. members will choose their representatives at the annual meeting April 13. The delegates will decide whether or not the leagues will enter the field of legislation and sponsor bills intended to further their social welfare programs. Mrs. Harvie has announced that a legislative meeting is scheduled for May 19. On the opening day, May 17, prize winners in the association’s annual art exhibition will be announced. This display will include fine arts, handicraft and an open class and will be on view in the Chicago Historical Society Building. Only entries which have won first or second prizes or honorable mentions in the regional or Canadian exhibitions are eligible for the show.
Couple to Entertain
For Norman Gilmans
Mr. and Mrs. Frederick S. Ballweg are to receive from 3 to 6 p. m. tomorrow at their home, 5234 N. Capitol Ave., in honor of Mrs. Ballweg’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Norman H. Gilman. Mr. and Mrs. Gilman are to leave Mona.y to live in Peterboro, N. H. The Gilmans are to visit Mrs. Gilman’s sister, Mrs. Wiliam E. Schorr, and Mr. Schorr at Hamilton, O., before going to their new home. Mrs. Noble Ropkey entertained with a luncheon bridge party today for Mrs. Gilman.
now 25c¢ at any Hook drug store
Everybody's Going to the
16th Annual Home Show
APRIL 15-25 Save 15¢ by Buying Your Ticket Now
Regular Gate Admission 40c after April 15th. Advance Sale Tickets
or from any Garden Club member.
Issues Call for Junior League Conference in Chicago May 17
The Indianapolis League is among 145 leagues in the United States, lia
The Indianapolis |
April. 24 Chosen As Wedding Date]
Miss Joan Hammond Aufderheide, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Rudolph C. Aufderheide, and William Herbert Thompson have set April 24 as the date for their marriage. The ceremony is to be followed by a reception. Miss Laura Owen Miller is to be maid of honor; Miss Sue Lohmiller, Cleveland, T. and Miss Frances Duckman, Dallas, Tex. are to be bridesmaids. Richard Thompson is to be his brother’s best man, and Shannon Hughes and John F. Engelke Jr., ushers.
®
Mothers to Lunch
Sigma Chi Mothers’ Club is to hold its regular meeting Tuesday in the Butler University fraternity chapter house. Luncheon will be served at 1pm,
today issued
1. Elizabeth Monyhan, Mare garet Bigane and Joan Miller (left to right) look over scrapbooks their mothers have made for the St. Vincent's Hospital. The Hospital Guild is sponsoring a supper dance May 1 in the Indianapolis Athletic Club. (Times Photo.) 2. Among the committee workers for the Civic Theater's Stage Door Ball next Saturday is Mrs. Kirby Whyte. The dance is to be in the Columbia Club. (Photo by Porter.) ‘i. 3. Misses Joan Metzger (left) and Miss Mary Stewart Kurtz play a round of golf at Woodstock Club while they are at home during the spring. vacation of Connecticut College for Women. (Times Photo.) 4. Miss Prudence Brown (left) and Miss Alice Vonnegut (cene ter) watch Miss Nina Brown take a practice swing at Woodstock. Miss Nina Brown is a vacationing Sarah Lawrence College stu= dent. (Times Photo.) 5. Mrs. Paul Bernard Hoffman, Birmingham, Mich.,, tells her sons, Paul (center) and Peter the story of the picture in the book she is reading to them. Mrs. Hoffman and her sons are visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Cameron Moore. (Times Photo.) 2 * 5. Mrs. Wayne Ritter is occupied with details in preparation for three musical events. She is a team captain for the National Federation of Music Clubs’ festival April 23 to 29 and is a worker on the women’s financial. committee drive for donations to the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra. She also is rehearsing for a piano recital with Miss Elizabeth Stigall, to be sponsored by the Tudor - Hall Advisory Committee May 12. (Photo by W. Hurley Ashby,
$F. R P.S)
Two Cathedral Units Are Party Sponsors
The SS. Peter and Paul Cathedral Men's Club and Altar Society are to sponsor a party Tuesday night in
NEW YORK, N. Y., April 3.—Mrs. Peter Harvie, Troy, N. Y., presi- | the Cathedral High School Audident of the Association of Junior Leagues of America, Inc., a call to the 17th annual conference to be held in Chicago May 17 to 21 | william L. O'Connor, the organizaChicago and Evanston league members will be | tions’ presidents, are cochairmen.
torium. James H. Drew and Mrs.
Their assistants are Mesdames JuAlexander, Thomas Broden,
! Louis Dugan, Kathryn Halliman, {| William C. Fox; Richard Graham,
Fy Dunn, Charles Moran, Robert Boyle, John Connor, Kevin Bros- | aT and John Herrington.
Party Arranged ~ By Fayette Club
Proceeds from a card party of the Fayette Club will be used to send a child to the Bridgeport Nutrition Camp. The party is to be held at 2 p. m. Friday at the home of Mrs. Ross E. Winder, 1057 W. 31st St. The arrangements committee in=cludes Mesdames Carl' Shupp, Thomas Langston, Jennie G. Sparks, Ador Krueger, I. A. Snyder and Arthur Ferris,
NISLEY =
EAR CHIFFON
Pure Silk HOSIERY
5 2 c PERFECT
QUALITY
arena 1 N. Penn. _
Opportunity! for Beginners We Furnish Violins," Vi- _ olas, Cellos and String Bass
If You Do Not Have One For 10 Lessons No Music to Buy No Charge for Lessons; Starts April 5th—4:30 P. M.
For Details Telephone * LL 7811
% 1 &
Te raf
Arthur Jordan Conservatory 1204 N. Delaware St.
