Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 July 1937 — Page 9
TUESDAY, JULY 27, 1937
+ Key Largo © City Group's Destination
Doctors Look Forward To Deep Sea Fishing. By MARJORIE BINFORD WOODS While the majority of road-map
followers is studying the twists and |:
turns of northern highways and byways, at least one local group of vacationers is planning to head south for the lower point of Florida. Deep sea fishing is the main objective of Dr. A. G. Funkhouser and family, Dr. Oliver Greer and family: and Miss ‘Edith Roberts. - They plan to leave ‘Saturday for Key Largo, Fla., and will make the motor .trip- via Charleston, N. C,, and the eastern seaboard route. Trout: fishing in Wisconsin has long been a hobby of the two doctors, but this summer they have decided to angle for bigger catches. ‘Mary Jane and Suzanne Greer and Sally Funkhouser, the younger members of the party, aren’t the only ones who are excited over the prospéct of sighting sharks and whales from the glass-bottcmed boat, which is to serve as their fishing craft. It is the first experience of this sort for the grown-ups as well, and they are all eager to be on their way.
House Leased
The vacationers have leased a house in Key Largo for a week's stay.
They have arranged to obtain their |
fishing equipment when they arrive there so that they may travel “light” with only slacks, shorts, and amphibious clothes as impedimenta. Swimming parties can be indulged in only on the way down to Key Largo, Mrs. Greer says, as the baracuda and shark-infested waters surrounding the Key make ocean bathing a bit unhealthy. After a week of fishing on the high seas, the group will return home by the central route, through Georgia and Tennessee. Despite a decided march of holiday seekers to points north, south, east and west, there still remain in town enough fun-loving residents to keep the country clubs from being completely deserted.
Plans House Party
Miss Ann Jackson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Clarence A. Jackson, 4202 Central Ave, is to aid and abet this week's gaiety among a crowd of school girls by giving a house party for three of her Newcastle friends. The girls, who are to arrive tomorrow for a few days’ stay are Virginia MacDonald, Marian Thompson and Rosanne Rawlings. The hostess has arranged for a picnic party to be given tomorrow night at her home. The guests, with the trio of out-of-town visitors, will be Shirley Montrose, Mary Jane | Metzger, Nancy Suiter and Betty | Dislar.
A swimming, tennis and luncheon | party is to be given Thursday at the
the same guests. Ann will Junior this fall at Tudor Hall.
Miss Nancy Golden, daughter of | Mrs. Grace. Golden, is another of the | local school girls who is enjoying her | holiday. She is on a two weeks’ out-| ing at Camp Koscuisko, at War-| saw and from there she plans to go | lo Evanston, Ill, to visit a camp | mate. Next fall Nancy is to enter | Ladywood School as a freshman. |
be
a
Highland Golf and Country Club for | |
Shower Honors Maxine Jones!
Miss Maxine Jones was honor | guest at a miscellaneous shower last night given by Miss Jewell Martin, 6064 Broadway. The hostess was assisted by her mother, Mrs. Ralph L. Martin, ’
Miss Jones is to be married to George H. Marshall Aug. 14 in the Meridian Heights Presbyterian Church. Decorations and appointments were in the bridal colors, biue and yellow. . .
Guests were Mesdames Walter L. Jones, Jesse G. Marshall, John Harvey, Eugene Ingman and Misses Alice Livengood, Marian Wolfe Frances Stalker, Dolly Wilkening, Margaret Heidt, Betty Helen Jones | and Betty Rose Martin.
Mind Your |
Manners |
1 your knowledge of cor- || rect social usage by an- || swering the following questions, then checking against the authoritative answers below: 1. Would a frilly organdy blouse be suitable for office wear in hot weather? 2. Is a backless sport dress suitable for hot weather office wear? 3. Should perfume be worn on office clothes? 4 Is it good office manners to drum or tap one's fingers on the desk while taking dictation? 5. Should one write “on the 15th of August” or “on August 15th”?
What would you do if— You are a secretary whose employer receives a personal telephone call while he is out of the office for a short time? Say— (A) “He's again”? “I am sorry that Mr. Davis is not in now. Would you care to leave a message for him”? “Mr. Davis is out just now. Will you call back back in an hour"? = = »
not in. Call
(B)
1. No. 2. No. 3. No. 4. No, it suggests impatience. | 5. The former. Or it could || be “on August 15.” |
Best “What Would You De” solution—<(A.), for it might do a with the second .call netated by (OC). (Copyright, 103% by
“Mistress Mary, quite contrary . reads Mrs. Herman Lauter, 3046 Washington Blvd,
Alice McGowan Is Married to W. C. Kennedy
Joseph A. McGowan, 2021 N. Meridian St, announced today the marriage of his sister, Miss Alice Kohling McGowan, Indianapolis, to William Cornelius Kennedy.
The marriage took place yester- | in the St. Ambrose Church, |
day Richmond, Me. The Rev. William K. McDonough. cousin of the bride,
. . how does your garden grow?”
to her two sons |
on the terrace.
Times Photo.
“With silver bells and cockle shells,” pipes up Laddie
left) . . . “And pretty maids all in a row,” adds John Lee beamingly.
Lambda Gamma.
Alpha Theta Chi. Tonight. Gladstone Ave. hostess. Gamma Sigma Phi. ville, hostess.
Theta Tau Psi. Noon, Fri.
Co-Wa Ma Club. Friday night. way, hostess. Miss
officiated. Miss Alice Liston, Boston, was maid of honor and Mr. McGowan was best man. The bride wore a frost white silk crepe ensemble with white accessories. After a motor trip through Canada, the couple is to be at home at 3537 N. Pennsylvania St. after Sept. 15. The bride attended Trinity Col-! lege, Washington, D. C.
Evadne Club. Wednesday. St., hostess.
S. Delaware St.
ner, 215 Bicking St. hostess. invited.
Hall Bldg. Regular meeting.
Atwells on Trip
After Wedding ie” Beauty Experts Disagree on ‘Miss America’s’ Dimensions
Mr. and Mrs. William Atwell are to be at home at 2020 E. Maryland
St. on their return from a wedding !
trip. Mrs. Mary Dorn, daughter of Mrs. Philip Dorn, 341 N. Hamilton Ave. and
Mr. Atwell is a son of Mrs. Eliza- |
beth Atwell, 1616 Finley Ave. The Rev. Fr. Francis Early read the ceremony Saturday in St. Philip
Neri Catholic Church. Miss Ger- |
trude Dorn was her sister's attendant and James Fleetwood was best man. A wedding breakfast for the immediate families and the bridal party followed at the home of the bride's mother.
Personals
Mr. and Mrs. Herman W. Kothe are to be the guests of Mr. and Mrs.
James B. Nelson at Bay View, Mich., |
next month. Dr. and Mrs. L.- A. Ensminger have returned from a visit with Mr. and Mrs. Louis Rappaport at Elkhart Lake. Mrs. Arturo Grassl, Florence, Italy,
|is to sail tomorrow from New York
for her home. She has been the house guest of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph A. Lemcke, 1308 Central Ave. Miss Mary E. Griffin, Marott Hotel, sailed recently from New York for Paris, France. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur G. Monninger have gone to their summer home at Pon-she-wa-ing, Mich. Dr. and Mrs. Walter E. Rogers
| are to leave next week for a motor
trip to Harwichport, Cape Cod, where they are to be the guests of Mr. and Mrs. F. F. Blackwell Jr. for three weeks.
Dr. and Mrs. Russel W. Lamb
| who have been visiting friends and | relatives here for the past few | weeks, have returned to New York.
They are to sail Friday on the S. S. Santa Lucia for Guayaquil, Ecuador, where Dr. Lamb is to head the medical staff at Ancon Hospital. Mrs. Lamb is a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Bridgford, 60th St. Perry Lesh is visiting John D. Gould Jr. at the Gould's summer home on Georgian Bay, Lake Huron, Canada. : Dr. and Mrs. J. M. Whitehead and their daughters, Misses Betty Jean and Helen, have returned from a vacation at Indian Lake, Mich. Mr. and Mrs. R. T. Schmidt, 514 W. Bernard Ave. are staying at the Barbizon-Plaza, New York. ¥ Mrs. James Parrish has gone to Long Island for a visit with her granddaughter, Mrs. Henry Newell Beers, and Mr. Beers. Mrs. C. C. Crumbaker is the guest of Mrs. Clarence N. Warren at Power Lake, Wis. Miss Elizabeth Stella Smith is on a trip to Colorado. Miss Gertrude Link and Miss Ethel Crawford are vacationing at Old Point Comfort, Va.
Mrs. Isaac Born has been visiting her daughter, Mrs. Herbert W. Salus, Philadelphia, at her summer home, Ventnor, N. J. Miss Jeannette Fickle and Miss Lorraine Hatfield left yesterday to winter season in or-
Saint George's Episcopal Church.
EVENTS
SORORITIES
8 p. m. tonight. Sheridan St., hostess. Pledge services are to be held for Mrs. Alice Cahill and Miss Helen Quakenbush. Miss Georgette Grottendick, 416 N.
1 p. m. today.
Mrs. Herschel Hause, hostess. L.uncheon, ~ Mrs. Walter Beanblossom, program chairman. CLUBS Miss- Hazel Karsner, 2160 Broad-
CARD PARTIES Indianapolis Saengrbund Ladies Society. 2:30 p. m. Wed. Hall, 49'2 {
Gold Mound Council 445, Pocahontas.
LODGES |
Myrtle Temple 7, Pythian Sisters. To present 25-year service pin to Levi Ballard. Minneola Council 31, Degree of Pocahontas. 8 p. m. Wed. Castle ||
PROGRAM
Miss Flossie Noland, 41 N.
Miss Myrtle Stafford, Fort=
Virginia McIntice, 338 N. Denny |
{ Noon, Wed. Mrs. Eva Tur- | Covered dish luncheon. Public | Hall.
Tonight. Entertainment.
8 p. m. Thursday. Parish hall.
Atwell’ was formerly Miss |
| Times Rpecial
when it comes to measurements for
| Atlantic City, Sept. 7 to 12. The girl who feels she is too tall can find consolation in the fact that Eleinor Guthrie Neff, beauty editor of Harper's Bazaar, believes the ideal beauty height is 5 feet 7 | inches. On the other hand Armando, art director of Buchanan & Co; New York, likes his beauties to be only 5 feet 4 inches tall.
Mrs. Neff and Walter J. Reagles, art director for the General Electric Co., Schenectady, N. Y. agree that 125 pounds is the ideal weight, but Cecile B. DeMille, film director, says 110 pounds, while Lejaren | A. Hiller, Underwood and Underwood Illustration Studios, states 105 is best. : Suggested hip measurements vary from 34 inches to 37, bust from 33 to 36, waist 23!'2 to 30, calf 12% to 14, ankle 6'c to 94 and wrist 5 to Ts. Others participating in the poll included George B. Petty and Arthur William Brown, artists; Max Factor, Hollywood makeup expert; Vincent Trotta, art director for ‘Paramount Pictures; Edward F. Molyneaux, art director Newell-Em-mett Co., New York; Dean Cornwell, New York mural painter and illustrator; Emert D. Button, art director for Young and Rubican, New | York advertising agency; Joe E. | Brown, screen star; and Antoinette | Donnelly, art director for a Chicago | newspaper syndicate. The latter four | believe any measurements are sat|isfactory as long as the girl is well | proportioned. Striking an average from the varjous opinions of all these beauty experts one finds that “Miss America” should be 5 feet 5'¢ inches tall, weigh 1171 pounds, have a 34inch bust, 25-inch waist, 35-inch hips, 18%-inch calves, 8-inch ankles and 5%-inch wrists.
White Cross Guild Units Meet Today
North M. E. Church, Berean and the Clara Barton units, White Cross Guild, are to meet today in headquarters in the Methodist Hospital nurses’ home to work en surgical dressings. \ The PFifty-first Street M. E. Church unit met yesterday and the Quaker Guild is to work all day tomorrow. The women are working in small groups in the surgical supply room to replenish dressings.
Pleasant Memory Picnic Attracts 27
Twenty-seven members of the Pleasant Memory Club attended the annual picnic at Garfield Park Sunday afternoon. - Out-of-town guests were William Shea and daughter, Blocker, Ind. and Albert Rucker, Terre Haute.
’
=o
Fish pond and orchestra. Mrs. Kate Chaler, chairman. |
ATLANTIC CITY, July 27.—The opinions of beauty experts vary “Miss America.” This was revealed in returns to a questionnaire sent out by the Jubilee committee as it continued preparations for the beauty and talent contest to select “Miss America 1937” in ¢
Mrs. Richard Duncan,
Chorus Feted by | Mrs. John Ladd
Mrs. John R. Ladd, Plainfield, was hostess to a picnic and chicken dinner at her home recently for members of the Seventh District Federation of Clubs chorus. Mrs. Ralph Neller is a new chorus member, Two hours were devoted to practice. The group was conducted through the Indiana Boys’ School in the afternoon by Mr. Ladd and Frank Johnston. The meeting closed the season’s activities, which are to be resumed
in September.
Jack D. Flints Take Wedding Tour in South
Mr. and Mrs. Jack D. Flint are on a wedding trip through the South following their marriage at 7:30 p. m. last night in the Memorial Baptist Church. Mrs. Flint was formerly Miss Maxine S. McPeek, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William E. McPeek, 1240 Belle Vieu Place. The ceremony was read by the Rev. George G. Kimsey in the Memorial Baptist Church. Miss Bernice McPeek, cousin of the bride, was maid of honor and Miss Thelma Findell, another cousin, was bridesmaid. Dallas Flint, twin brother of the bridegroom, was best man. Ushers were Harold Henderson and Edward and William McPeek. Music was furnished by Miss Elizabeth Bolinger, violinist, and organist. Following the ceremony, a reception was held at the home of the bride's
parents. |
Brides Choose Attendants for Two, Ceremonies
Two late July brides-to-be announced attendants for their marriages today. Miss Margaret Borst is to be maid-of-honor at the marriage of Miss Margaret Mars to James Marvin McIntosh at 9 a. m. Wednesday in St. Philip Neri Church. Mrs. Clarence Matthews is to be bridesmaid and Louis McIntosh is to be his brother’s best man. Mr. and Mrs. Chris Greenwood
| are to be attendants at the mar- | riage of Miss Mona Orme to Paul
W. Baker at 8 p. m. Saturday in the Orme home, 2508 Carrollton Ave.
Moccasins for Tennis Tennis players who follow the stars for styles may find themselves switching to a new style of tennis shoe next season. Bunny Austin, the English player was spotted by style scouts at the English championship tournaments wearing buckskin moccasins with crepe rubber soles.
~ Couple to Be at Home Here
Department Club Names
Committees
Directors and Officers for Coming Year Are Listed.
Mrs. Paul T. Hurt, Woman’s Department Club president, has announced officers, directors and committee chairmen for the coming year.
The board of directors is to be composed of Mrs. Clayton H. Ridge, first vice president; Mrs. A. C. Rasmussen, second vice president; Mrs. Hezzie B. Pike, third vice president; Mrs. John R. Curry, recording secretary; Mrs. Malcolm Lucas, corresponding secretary; Miss Pearl F. Kiefer, membership secretary; Mrs. Myron Jay Spring, treasurer, and Mrs. Harold K. Bachelder, auditor. Directors-at-large are Mesdames Arthur S. Ayres, Leonidas F. Smith, Oscar L. Watkins, Irving Blue, Edward A. Brown and Hugh J. Baker. Department chairmen include Mrs. Carl P. Weinhardt, American home; Mrs. Walter S. Grow, art; Mrs. Charles H. Smith, community welfare; Mrs. Merritt E. Woolf, garden, and Mrs. Herman H. Sielken, literature and drama.
Founders on Board
Founders composing the honorary advisory board are Mesdames H. B. Burnet, Alvin T. Coate and Felix T. McWhirter. Mrs. E. C. Rumpler is parliamentarian and Mrs. Edward Franklin White is legal adviser. Committees and committee chairmen for the year are: Mrs. William H. Hart, civic committee affiliated with the Chamber of Commerce; Mrs. Coate and Mrs. Rasmussen, education committee affiliated with the Chamber of Commerce; Mrs. James T. Hamill, president's aid; Mrs. A. C. Barbour, bulletin; Mrs. McWhirter, courtesy; Mrs. Philip A. Keller, curator; Mrs. Fred L. Pettijohn, decorations. Mrs. Charles B. Crist, door; Mrs. Coate, educational funds; Mrs. James D. Ermston, finance; Mrs. John M. Williams, historian; Mrs. Bartholomew, house and grounds; Mrs. John Conpor, records; Mrs. Levi Morton Edwards, charter membership club; Mrs. Isaac E. Woodward, life membership committee; Mrs. Harold M. Trusler, prospective membership.
Music Head Named
Mrs. George W. Bowman, music; Mrs, Horace G. Casady, nominations; Mrs. Walter J. Slate, election board; Mrs. Ridge program; Mrs. Rasmussen, publicity; Mrs. Frank C. Walker, president's day; Mrs. J. E, Barcus, life members’ day; Mrs. Pike, annual day; Mrs. Keller, rentals; Mrs. Edgar R. Eskew, revisions; Mrs. Edwin J. Young. telephone; Mrs. Lewis G. Ferguson, ushers; Mrs. J. B. Phillips, foundation fund; Mrs. Bartholomew, year book; Mrs. Claude T. Hoover and Mrs. John Connor, promotion; Mrs. William C. McGuire, reservations; Mrs. Louis A. Fleury, bridge; Mrs. Connor, decorations; Mrs. Paul T. Hurt and
Rush Captain
a
Miss Jeanne Wintz is out-of- - town rush captain for the Butler University Chapter of Pi Beta Phi.
Hospital Guild Dance Will Aid Children’s Ward
Proceeds of the St. Francis Hospital Guild benefit dance Wednesday night are to go for the installation of a new department in the hospital’s children’s ward, Mrs. Leo Steffen, general chairman, announced today.
The event is to take place tomorrow night in the roof ballroom of the Hoosier Athletic Club. More than 100 couples are expected to attend.
Garden flowers and Japanese lanterns are to be used in decorations. Assisting Mrs. Steffen on the general committee are Mesdames kverett Schmutte and Bernard Weiraer. Other dance committee members include Mesdames Edward Heidenreich, Glenn Conway, John Gedig, Roscoe McKinney, Arthur Heidenreich, Edward Trimpe, J. C. Gali, Raymond Boehm, Edward Connerty, V. A. Lapenta, Henry Gardner, Anthony Lauck, Fred Koch, Richard Tubbs, Herbert Roeder, Wiiliam Shine, William McKinney, Edward Dwyer, John Weber, Thomas Quill, Helen Cassey, Eugene Kconnerknecht, Charles McDonough, Alma Schulsky, Ruth McDonough, Pierce Brady and Louise Young.
Club Is to Take
Nurserv Tour
Members of the Garden Club, Woman’s Department Club, are to be guests of Homer P. Wiegand at the Wiegand nursery, Kessler Blvd. and 30th St. at 2 p. m. Friday. Mr. Wiegand is to conduct his guests on a tour of the grounds assisted by R. Morgan Smith. Mrs. Wiegand is to preside at the tea table at the close of the afternoon. Mrs. Charles’ T. Hanna and Mrs. Horace Casady are the Garden Club
Mrs. John Berns, Little Club.
Between Sc
Mrs. Juliette Low of Georgia, 25 dous advantages being harvested by
who became to growing youth what | Froebel had been to the little child, | one of the greatest educators of | character since time began. Miss Low went on the theory that | girls and boys alike need the same fundamental development, that character-building is not a matter of sex, and innate qualities are the same. However, it is not my purpose to dwell on history, but to write into this tribute some thoughts of my own on a movement that can stand up under almost any analysis and deserves the heartfelt thanks of the nation. Something Missing
Long an observer of conditions, I find a peculiar situation in our educational and home conditions that leaves a gap in the child’s or youth's life. Home and school both accent the ideal of the “individual.” We have almost completely lost sight of the word “co-operation,” as parents and teachers are largely intent on building up the boy or girl as a person, with his own interests at heart. Even the group or sports interest of our schools cannot cancel this entirely, because the youth wants to shine in his group, as well as to gain for his group. I want to quote a line or two from the credo of the Girl Scouts: “To be good is of little interest to the girl. To do good is another matter. . Believes in the immense, educational value of the ‘small’ group, managing its own affairs and making its own plans as far as possible, and learning in this way the first lessons of co-opera-tion and good citizenship. . . . There are certain patterns for the women of tomorrow that we shall do well to set before ourselves.”
Family Is First
The woman of tomorrow. That is it, altogether. Only so far are our schools preparing the mothers and wives of tomorrow. The entire tendency is to individualism that does not include the manifold other things that go into the making of a good wife or a good mother. The mother’s attributes should be directed to the small group or family, and develop the same ideas of service and loyalty in her family. Co-operation. Service. The unselfish interest in the small—small, mind you—group. The home is the intimate world that must be worked for and that should come
this is the “patrol,” that stands in miniature for all social hE a ue 5 home
ment started in England (her new ¢ home) by Sir Robert Baden-Powell, |
tour committee.
Scout Organizations Fill Gap
hools and Home
By OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON
As this is the Silver Anniversary of the Girl Scouts in America, it is timely for us to give them a cheer.
years ago, was alert to the trementhe boys in a four-year-old move-
Nicknames Play Important Part In Lives of Boys
By MARJORIE VAN DE WATER Science Service Writer Youngsters have a way of saying, with suspicious emphasis, “Sticks and stones may break my bones, but names can never hurt me.” Actually, the nicknames bestowed upon a child by his pals are important to him. They may be liked. They may be hated. The average boy has about three
nicknames, confidential revelations of nearly 100 New York schoolboys told Dr. Stephen Habbe, psychologist of that city. Some are merely adaptations of his given or his last name. Others may refer to some outstanding physical or mental characteristic that appeals to the imagination of others in the gang. Boys like being called by their surnames, Dr. Habbe found. They often like being called by some other boy's name. Max likes to be called Joe, Herbert prefers the name Sammy. “Probably most boys could think of names which they would prefer to their own given names,” Dr. Habbe comments.
Tough Names Favored
Liked also are those rugged appellations that signify tough or undoubted masculine qualities. Butch, Spike, Skipper are favorites. Nicknames that refer to personal characteristics, whether physical or mental, are usually among the hated names. Some are liked, however. One boy liked to be called Blondie, another Squarehead. A possible explanation, Dr. Habbe thinks, is that the liked nickname may be merely the least disliked one. It may be, too, that the manner of calling the name is as important as the name itself. In a famous speech, the Virginian said, “When you call me that, smile.” But boys do not like to be called Buckteeth, Baldy, Shrimp, Balloon or Football Head. Neither do they enjoy such terms. as Show Off, Blubberhead, Shyster or Eggy. Some boys, revealingly, wrote their liked nicknames in big letters, the hated ones in small. In these cases the hated names were of this type. Deaf boys, strangely, reported no nicknames referring to their particular sense defect.
children * good behavior
“= expect him to meet later rents | need ad thus : being
PAGE 9. Arabians on
Horse Show Entry List
Hoosier-Owned Animals Will Be Seen at Muncie Event.
Many Arabian horses of dise tinguished lineage are to go on parade at the Muncie Horse Show this week-end. Despite the fact that few classes for Arabian stallions and mares have been offered in Indiana shows until this year these animals, the ancestry of which is very close to the desert, are fast gaining in popularity at horse exhibitions throughout the state. Spectators who may have had the erroneous idea that Arabian horses are ferocious are begining to appreciate them Zor their intelligence and trulv gentle and affectionate natures. Rhythm of movement and grace in action are characteristic of their carriage.
Characteristics Are Listed
The layman has come to recoge nize a pure-bred Arabian horse by its solid color, thinness of lips, dila= tion of nostrils and leanness of flesh encircling the veins of the head. Breadth of chest and fore=head, the large joints and the soft coat are other distinguishing features. Among the Arabian horses en= tered in the Muncie Show are four sons and daughter of Domow 267, one of the most famous Arabian mares in America today. Domow is the last daughter of Wadduda 30, a renowned war mare in Arabia, She was presented as a gift from Hashem Bey to the journalist, Homer Davenport, in 1906. Domow’s ‘sons, which will be en= tered in this week’s showing, are Abu-Selim, a mahogany bay owned by Fred Sharp; Ahamed, a beautiful gray stallion belonging to Mrs. Forrest Lee Thompson; Mahomet, owned by Jackson K. Landers and Reuel, the last son of Domow and the property of Mr. Thompson. Reuel was sired by Saoud who was bred at the Royal Stables of King Ibn Saoud, Hal, Nejd. Hegra, the mare, mothered by Domow, is owned by Donald Schutz, North Manchester. Three to Make Debuts
Three Arabian young bloods are to make their debuts in this horse show. They are all 3-year-old stallions, bred by the late John A. George. Ahira, a beautiful bay sired by Ahamed, is one of the trio and is owned by Leo C. McNamara; Ybarra, a sorrel . stallion, is the property of Dr. C. D. Pettigrew, Muncie, the third is Mr. Thompson's bay, Reuel. Rais, a two-year-old stallion owned by E. Arthur Ball, is also to be shown. He won second place in the model Arabian class at the annual Arlington Horse Show this year. Two winners of classes at the 1835 National Arabian Horse Show, Nashville, Tenn., are to be entered in the Muncie show. They are AlMashoor and Aabann. Al-Mashoor, grand champion was bred in Damascus, Syria, and imported by Michel K. Bistany, Buffalo, N. Y. Mr. Ball purchased him in 1935. Aabann, owned by H. V. Tormohlen, Portland, Ind. won first place in the three-gaited class at Nashville. Saharah, a burnt-chestnut year-old which will compete in the model-mare class, was a champion of the Illinois State Horse Show in 1936, and won the colt class at the Indianapolis Saddle Horse Association Roundup last year. Last week the mare's father, Asil, won third place in the Green Mountain Horse Association 100-mile endurance ride ending at Woodstock, Vt. Asil, owned by Mr. Ball, will no doubt be among the Muncie Show entries. Mr. Ball is the owner of the largest number of Arabian horses in Indiana. He has 32. Mr. and Mrs, Thompson own six purebred Ara= bians. Nineteen owners and breed= ers are now registered in this state. In speaking of the Arabian blue bloods or “true drinkers of air,” Homer Davenport wrote: ‘Nature, when she made the Arah, made no mistake, and man has not yet been able to spoil him.”
Attendants for 'Hertz-Blubaugh Wedding Named
Miss Loretta Stucker is to be maid of honor and Leo N. Hurley is to be best man .at the wedding of Miss Mary Olive Blubaugh to Walter Everett Hertz Aug. 5 in St. Patrick's Catholic Church, it was announced today. \ Miss Blubaugh was honor guest at a surprise miscellaneous shower given recently by Mrs. Robert Hertz, 730 E. Morris St. Guests included Mesdames Francis Griffey, Conrad Erdman, Edward Wehrling, Clarence Wehr= ling, Norbert Sack, William Round, John Hertz, Miss Stucker and Miss Eleanor Young.
Bridge Party Honors
Minneapolis Guest
Mrs. William Haslet, 6016 Haver= ford Ave., entertained with a bridge party yesterday for Mrs. Roy Fuller, Minneapolis, who is visiting Indianapolis friends Guests included Mesdames Clar= ence Schmdt, F. A. Melchiors or, George Stalker, Tom Berry, Her=man Hess, E. M. Demlow, Charles Retmier, D. G. Banta, C. C. Lloyd and Harold Honderich. -
Shepherd-Vesh Rites \To Be Held Aug. 7
Times Special LOGANSPORT, Ind, July 27.— The engagement of Miss Evangeline Vesh, Indianapolis, daughter of Mr, and Mrs. Frank Vesh, Logansport, to Louis Shepherd, Indianapolis, is announced. The wedding is to take place Aug, 7 in SS. Peter and Paul Cathedral, Indianapolis. :
MERIT
Shoes for the Family
Thrift Basement Sh ‘ Merchants Bank 1 ] 8 Ee Woh a
Bldg. Mer. ant Wash, . ‘Neighborhood Stores: 930 -8. Meridian
2=
-
1108 Shelby
