Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 June 1937 — Page 5
' by he daughter,
. Terre Haute and Culver.
5 \TURDAY, JUNE 1,
House L Used 60 Years Is Ready Again
Percil Sketches by Booth Tarkington Decorate Its Walls. -
B: MARGARET B. JAMESON Times Special Writer LAKE MAXINKUCKEE, June 12. —The parade of the summer cottagers has started. Mrs. John Brandon has arrived to open her house on the East Side Road. One of the coldest and most interesting houses on the lake, it has been used for-50 summers by some, member of the P. H. Jameson fami] 7. Mrs. Brandon's husband was |a grandson of Dr. Jameson.
On the walls of the living room !
|are some pencil sketches of house[party guests by Booth Tarkington, made when he was summering there (more than 30 years ago. Then, there is a self portrait of Octave Thanet, drawn on the wallboarc¢, and varnished for preserva-
‘tion. Many carved initials bring back
memcries of days past.
L. This summer the house will be
occupied by Mr. and Mrs. Hervey Bates Perrin, Pasadena, Cal. Both Mr. 2nd Mrs. Perrin were “raised” at Maxinkuckee. They are bringing their son John who is to enter the Woodcraft School at Culver Academy. Mrs. Perrin was the former Alice Schaf, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph C. Schaf who owned a cottaie near that of Mr. Perrin’s grandfather, Maj. Hervey Bates.
‘Bean Pot’ Occupied
“Tha ' Bean Pot,” Mrs. Wilbur John¥in’s cottage now is occupied Mrs. Ruth Johnson Guedelhoefer and her son Billie. Mrs. Johnson is to come for the week-2nd. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Rockwood and ‘their sons harles Jr. and Clyde are staying at their cottage until Charles Jr. leaves for a camp in New Hampshire. Mrs. Billie Teel Tappan’s guests at. the Wagner cobiage left today. They included her cousin, Mrs. Frederick Gaff, Chicago; Mrs. Wil-
liam Teel and William C. Arthur,
Meadville, Penn. Hendrick’s House Opened
Mrs, John Hendricks is opening her house preparing to receive Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Hendricks, their daughter Cynthia and Blythe Q. Hendricks who are to spend the summer here. A district conference of the D. A. R. is to be held at the Academy Monday. Delegates will have luncheon at the Maxinkuckee Inn. Mrs. Eleanor Y. Hord always is a ‘first comer” on the shore. Mrs. Hord used to live in Indianapolis, but now divides her time between
DeMilt-Barrett Wedding Rites Sg: fos for [Ivins
Miss abies Barrett is to become the bride of Roland F. DeMilt in a marriage ceremony at 4:30 p. m. today in the McKee Chapel, Tabernacle Presbyterian Church. The Rev. Ambrose Dunkel is to officiate. ‘Miss Donna Ales, organist, is to provide the music. The bride's father, Perry P. Ba: rett, is to give her in marriage. Miss Barrett is to | wear chalk white satin fashioned with a fitted bodice and satin loops forming the neckline t imming] Her tulle veil is fingertip length with tulle petals forming a! crown. She will carry bride roses and delphinium. Miss Joanne DeMilt, the bridegroom’s sister, is to be the maid cf honor. She will wear yellow marquisette with shirred neck and waist
lines. A tiny cap made of yellow | velve: flower petals is to hold in
place a four-cornered shoulderlength tulle veil. Her flowers are to be yellow roses.
Attendants’ Dresses Alike
The bridesmaids’ dresses are
fashioned alike in bolero style. Miss.
virginia Wickard will wear turguoise blue lace with a peach petal cap and will carry Talisman roses. Miss Katherine Bach’s gown is of
- peach lace with tw ‘quoise hat and
accessories. Her fowers will be
blue delphinium. Doris Mayer will act as the flower
girl. Her dress is of green organdy made on princess lines with ruffled skirt and puffed sleeves. She will wear a poke bonnet of the same color and will carry a basket of rose petals. Allison Maxwell is to be best man. The ushers will be Earl Armstrong and Robert McDowell. Following a dinner and reception at the Marott Hotel, the bridal couple will leave for a motor trip
to Florida.
Miss Lorentz
To Marry Today
Miss Catherine B. Lorentz, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. ‘George Lorentz, and Eugene Eskew, son of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Eskew, are to married at 5 p. m. today in the Hillside Christian Church. The Rev. R. O. O'Haver is to officiate. ‘Miss Eva Lorentz, maid of honor, is to wear blue mousseline de sbie and carry yellow roses. Miss Opal Hedrick and Miss Eileen Eskew bridesmaids ,are to wear yellow and blue dresses, respectively, and carry pink roses. Janice Weyls, flower girl, is to wear orchid organdy, and Loretta Lorentz, another flower girl, is to wear rose organdy. The bride is to wear white sateen with a tulle veil and carry white roses. Mark Griffith will be best man and George and Billy Lorentz, ushers.
Announce Marriage Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Munson announce the marriage of their
daughtep Nellie tc Thomas Leslie |
son of Mr. and Mrs. The wedding
Baldwin, Thomas Baldwin. took place June 8.
1937
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
: SUMMER RESIDENTS OPEN COTTAGES AT MAXINKUCKEE
| Ply
\Drers Diversions Attract Local Society—Travel, Sports, Parties, Dances and School on Schedule
S)
Sarah Jane Millikan’s Friends ‘Arrange Prenuptial Series
Several friends of Miss Sarah Jane Millikan, a bride-to-be, are to entertain with prenuptial parties preceding her marriage to George V.
. Underwood Jr. on June 19.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Millikan Jr. are to entertain with a dinner Monday night at the Highland Golf and Country Club. Miss Jane Drake,
Newly Wed Pair ToGo to Quebec
Mr. and Mrs. George William Hanna were to leave on a motor trip to Quebec, Canada, following a bridal luncheon given at noon today at the home of the bride's mother, Mrs. Philip Ahl, 914 N. Tuxedo St.
Mrs. Hanna was Miss Hazel F. Ahl before her marriage this morning. The ceremony. took place in the McKee Chapel, Tabernacle Presbyterian Church, with the Rev. Ambrose Dunkel officiating. The bride wore a white : lace street-length dress with powder blue accessories and a blue off-the-face hat. Her bridal bouquet was composed of Aaron Ward roses and blue delphinium. Miss. Carolyn Townsend, Martinsville, her only attendant, wore blue chiffon and carried tearoses. Terrence Kleckner, Winns, was best man. bridal couple is to live in puth after July 1
who is to be Miss Millikan’s maid of honce, will entertain with a party Tuesday afternoon and Dr. and Mrs. George Underwood, parents of the bridegroom-to-be, are to give a party at Meridian Hills Country Club that night. Mrs. William Johnson, grandmother of Miss Millikan, has invited several guests to a party in Bloomington on Wednesday. Trousseau Tea Set On Thursday Miss Millikan is to entertain her friends at thé Marott at a trousseau tea. Mr. Underwood is to hold his stag dinner. | On the following day Mr. Underwood’s best man, James Hunter Drum, West Point, is to entertain with an informal party at the Indianapolis Athletic Club, followed by the rehearsal for the ceremony and the bridal dinner to be given at the Columbia Club by the mother of the bride-to-be, Mrs. Harry Boyd Millikan. The ceremony is to be read at 8:30 p. m. next Saturday.
Meridian Hills Sets
Luncheon and Bridge
Mrs. Roy Slaughter is general chairman of the monthly luncheon bridge party for women members of the Meridian Hills Country Club to be held at 1 p. m’ Tuesday at the clubhouse. Mrs. Slaughter’s assistants include Mesdames Louis Belden, Louis
Mohlenkamp, A. L. Wright and T. M. Rybolt.
Helen Sellmeyer Is Married to John Roach Jr.
Palms, ferns and baskets of- summer flowers were used, with seven | branch candelabra, in the altar decorations for the marriage ceremony of Miss Helen Sellmeyer and John J. Roach Jr., which took place today in St. Anthony’s Catholic Church. ! The bride is a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Edgar H. Sellmeyer. The
ceremony was performed by the Rev. Michael J. Gorman.
Mrs. Roach, who was given in marriage by her father, wore a white
‘bridal lace gown fashioned on fitted
lines with a long tulle veil which fell from a coronet of orange blossoms. She carried bride roses and lilies of the valley.
Sister Wore Blue
Miss - Dorothy Sellmeyer, sister of the bride, was maid of honor. Turquoise blue mousseline de soie fashioned her gown and she wore a wide-brimmed leghorn hat and carried Joanna Hill roses. Miss Julia Cronin, Cincinnati, the ridegroom’s cousin, was bridesmaid. Her gown was of peach mousseline de soie. She carried Premier roses. : Miss Eileen and Marguerite Sellmeyer, also sisters of the bride, were junior bridesmaids. Their gowns were fashioned alike in summer green mousseline de soie over satin and they wore green halo hats and carried colonial bouquets. Margaret Ann Duffy, the bride's cousin, was flower girl and wore a pink net dress with a flower wreath in her hair. John Gilbert Roach was ‘ring bearer. Joseph M. Roach was his brother’s best man and the ushers were Charles P. Hill and Joseph A. Clark. -
Broadmoor Club Is to Entertain
Wednesday will be guest day at the Broadmoor Country Club, Mrs. Wilfred . Borinstein, chairman, announced today. Golf in the morn--ing will be followed by.luncheon and cards. Mrs. Borinstein’s committee includes Mrs. L. E. Taylor, Mrs. Bernard Lehman and Miss Barbara Barskin. Mrs. Milton Sternberger and Mrs, Edgar Joseph will conduct the games. The hospitality committee includes Mesdames J. L. ‘Mueller, L. L. Goodman, Joseph
Block, Charles Sommers, Louis Borinstein and Dora, Wolf.
Delta Theta Chi. 8
Madison Ave., hostess.
1637 Kessler Blvd. hostess.
fit card paruy.
EVENTS
: SORORITIES p: m. Mon. Hotel Lincoln. Beta Chapter, Phi Chi Phi. Mon. night. Miss Opal Gribben, 1501
Phi Beta Tau. Mon. night. Miss Cuba-Rae Flagg, 127 S. Butler Ave. hostess. Rush party. Miss Edna Silcox, entertainment chairman. Alpha Chapter, Tau Delta Sigma. 8 p. m. Mon. Mrs. G, V. Ryan,
CARD PARTY Lavelle Gossett Auxiliary, V. F. W. 6:30 p. m. today. Supper. Bene-
PROGRAM
Townsend Club, 11th Congressional District and Marion County. 2 p, m. Sun. Dearborn Hotel, 3208 E. Michigan St. Mass meeting.
Box Parties Being Formed for Seventh Arlington Horse Show
Box parties are being formed and entries made for the seventh annual Arlington Horse Snow to be held June 17 to 19 at the R. H. Brown
Stables, 46th and Arlington Ave.
Arlington is among the first recognized outdoor horse shows to be —a»held in Indiana and is an outstand-
Indianapolis Girl Is Given Diploma
Times Special BRONXVILLE, N. v, June 12.— At the ninth annual commence-
ment exercises at Sarah Lawrence |p.
College today, Miss Nina Brown, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Garvin M. Brown, Indianapolis, is to receive a diploma. Twenty-one bachelor of arts degrees and 105 diplomas, the largest number in the history of the college, are to be presented. Elliott Dunlap Smith of Saybrook College, Yale University, and Sarah Lawrence College board of trustees’ president, is to give the commencement address on “Individuality Con-' fronts Discipline.”
Maid of Honor Gives Party for Helen Wood
Miss Dorothy H. Wilson, who is to be maid of honor at the marriage of Miss Helen Wood to John B. Mosier June 20, is to entertain for Miss Wood today." Miss Wood is a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. B. B. Wood and Mr. Mosier is a son of Mrs. Bertha Mosier. The hostess will be assisted by her mother, Mrs. A. W. Wilson. Guests with Miss Wood, her mother, and Mrs. Mosier wil be Mesdames Carleton Heiberger, Mark Gant, Wyatt Wood, Charles Mosier and Misses Martha Mosier, Frances Newby, Marian Yocum and Katherine Maurer,
ing event of its kind staged in this country. Among the parties preceding the show is to be a dinner at the Highland Golf and Country Club, given by Mr. and Mrs. Russell White. Sixteen guests are to attend the show afterward. Box holders include Mesdames Dorothy Alford, Margaret Flore, Katharine Mushrush and W. A. Miskimen. Messers. Sam Freeman, F. €. Whitehouse, M. H. Fuller. O. Ferrell, Richardson Sinclair, Frederic Ayres, Margaret Saitzman, R. R. Bunch, L. V. Hamilton, Clayton O. Mogg Alex Melzgers Morris Rosner, Morris Rr R. McNutt, Orland Church, Walter Maroy Otto Frenzel, Arch Grossman, Leo McNamara, J. L: Hya M. J. QeVietion. L. FP. Dwyer and Ethel Sai, William Low Rice, George Sadlier, G. B. Ely, Frank McKibben, Herbert Piel, A. L. Piel, William H. Wemmer, Volney M. Brown, Meier Block, Frank B. Shields, August Bohlen, Robert Rhoads, Tom Kaufman, Eugene Miller, Bowman Elder, Wallace O. Lee, Hal Benham, Charles Mayer. Edward E. i, Irwin Bertermann. Cornelius O. Alig, Bon Aspy. Carl Mote, J. A. Reis. Ernest K. Fic ts Raseel] White, Reece Howe, Hal Keeling, P. C. Dootey, Wayne; Will Kivits, Terre Haute; ; Lockwood, Cincinnati; -Roy Amos, Edinburgh, and Drs. F. C. Stout and W. C. Moore, Yorktown, sit Misses Carclyn Stelck’ and Mary Ellen Willis
Alumnae to Give Dance on June 18
St. Agnes Academy Alumnae are to entertain with their annual dance June 18 at the Highland Golf and Country Club.
Miss Mary Louise Drew is gensral chairman; Miss Eileen Rocap, publicity, and Miss Dorothy Sheppard, ticket chairman. Assisting Miss Sheppard are Mrs. J. H. Blackwell and Misses Margaret Jordan, Dorothy Brickwedde, Dorothy Keene, Rita Connor, Mary Louise Keach, Dorothy Ann Brown, Mary I. Schneidey* and Helen Bosler.
Pair Wed Today Is to Live Here Following Trip
Mr. and Mrs. James T. Gaughan are ‘teuring Canada and are to be at home after June 26 at 2258 N Meridian St. Mrs. Gaughan was formerly Miss Kathryn Regina Feeney, daughter of Mr. and Mts. Martin W. Feeney.
The marriage took place at 9 a. m. today in St. John’s Catholic Churth with the Rev. Clement Bosler officiating. A wedding breakfast wi held after the ceremony at Hollyhock Hills.
The bride, who was given in ma - riage by her father, wore white satin, fashioned on princess lines with a Queen Anne collar trimmed with seed pearls: Her white tulle fingertip veil fell in points from’ a pleated halo. Her flowers were brides roses, sweet peas and orchids.
Cousin Maid of Honer
Miss ‘Theresa Marie, Greensboro, N. C., was her cousin’s maid of honor. She was gowned in blue mousseline de soie with a shculder veil of blue tulle and carried Roosevelt roses and delphinium, Miss Dorothy Lee and Miss Kathryn Marren, bridesmaids, wore blue and carried similar bouquets. Robert Gaughan was his brother's best man and the ushers were John O’Neal Jr. and Thomas Flanary. The bride’s traveling costume was a white sharkskin suit with wedgewood blue accessories and a blue delphinium corsage.
Reader to Give
Drama Cutting
A scene from “Smilin’ Through” is to be presented by Mrs. Albert Leslie Marshall Jr., dramatic reader, at the June outing of the Monday Club next week at the Ulen Country Club, Lebanon. Mrs. William Hyde Pearl and Mrs. O. N. Kranz, entertainment chair-| men, have arranged several surprise features for the members.
Mrs. W. D. Keenan, Seventh Dis
trict Federation of Clubs’ president, is to be a special guest. Mrs. Edward V. Mitchell, club president, will announce her committee chairmen for the coming year. Luncheon is scheduled for 1 p. m. |
1. Miss Jane Reynolds, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Fred N. Reynolds, is to sail June 15 from New
. York City aboard the S. S. Chris-
tobal for Panama, the Canal Zone and South American ports. She plans to return to New York City July 9 via Kingston, Jamaica.
2. The women’s golf committee of the Indianapolis Athletic Club is making. plans for the “Sunshine and Water Carnival” at the Highland Golf and Country Club on June 17. Members of the committee are (left to right) Mesdames Charles L. Smith, chairman; Joe seph A. Brower, Paul R. Browning and F. J. Wurster.
3. Miss Jane Ludwig is assisting with plans for the Pi Beta Phi Sorority Junge dinner dance to be given Monday by the Butler.
University chapter in honor of its -
senior members at the Ulen Country Club.
4. Mrs. J. William Wright is to leave Wednesday for New York City.- She is to sail June 18 for travel abroad. | (Times Photo.) 5. Mrs. Gaylord B. Wood is a ardent devotee of swimming and frequently indulges in her favorite sport at the Woodstock Club. (Times Photo.)
6. (Bottom to top) Misses Fayette Ann Miller, Margaret and Patty Jamzson are to attend a house party this week-end at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Leo Burnett, Glencoe, Ill., given for their son, Peter. Miss Jeanette Tarkington and Miss Nancy Goodrich also are to attend. (Photo by W, Hurley, Ashby, F..R. P. S.)
7. Miss Margaret Eaglesfield, dauzhter of Mr. and Mrs. R. D. Faglesfield, is to leave the last week in July for Ecole Champlain, a French camp on Lake Champlain, Vt. (Times Photo.)
Kappa Phi Delta Marks Birthday
Kappa Phi Delta Sorority marked its 15th anniversary with a nautical luncheon and bridge party today at the Lake Shore Country Club The table was centered with a miniature ship on a blue mirrorlake, surrounded by corsages. Four small ships bearing the numbers 1922-1937 were anchored at the four corners of the table. Members received a log book summarizing the sorority’s achievements. Mrs. Norman G. Wilson, arrange ments chairman, opened the pro gram, which included a toast by Miss Christian Valentine, Pregioent, and a response by Mrs. J. D ding, social chairman.
- Covers were laid for the follow ing charter members: Mrs. Leon Stanley, Mrs. Wilson and Miss Clara Vollmer. | Mrs. Wilson's assistants with the arrangements [included Mrs. Stanley, Mrs. Erpelding, Miss Valentine and Mrs. Carl Siler.
NSSLEY™
Clear Chiffon
Pure Silk HOSIERY
5 Oc PERFECT
QUALITY
TIYTH woh sui | a Wash Suits 60¢
11) {ses clei Laundry and Dry ar E aiid
44 N. Penn FOR HATS SKINS .
I U R COLLARS
INDIANA FUR CO.
PAGE 5' |
. Erpel-
ll el
