Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 July 1937 — Page 11
THURSDAY, JULY 29,
F' Plan Teas
Jo Follow
Programs
Symphony Society Is to | Entertain Guest | Artists. | |
Plans are being made to have a | number of informal teas following | the Friday matinees of the Indianapolis Symphony Series, Miss Jane Weldon, publicity cochairman of the Women’s Division of the In- | diana State Symphony Society, an- | nounced today. Guest artists would be honored at the teas. The Friday concerts, | popular in other cities, are to be presented here for the first time in | the coming season. Ten concerts | are booked for the programs. Reports of 150 volunteer workers in the drive to sell the concert tickets show an almost complete sell-out of the Saturday night sub- | scriptions. Out-of-town subscribers are interested in the Friday afternoon concerts, according to the | report of Mrs. Elsa Pantzer Test, | out-of-town subscription chairman. |
1 |
Manager Pleased Franklin Miner, Symphony | Society manager, upon his recent | return from a New York music fes- | tival said, “I am amazed at the number of seats sold during my abscence and very pleased.” Mrs. William Herbert Gibbs has sold the largest number of tickets | to date. Ten prizes are to be offered in the autumn to workers selling the greatest number. Mrs. Frederick Ayres is head of | the seat subscription division, assist- | ed by Mrs. P. R. Mallory and Mrs. J. A. Goodman, membership cochairman. The subscription drive is organ=ized on an individual worker basis this year. A branch office has | been installed in the home of Mrs. Mallory from which printed lists of former subscribers and prospective ones are BY to the volunteer workers. Ass:®ing in the office are Mesdames Harry W. Hobbs, H. H. Arnholter, Marian K. Thomas, Charles R. Weiss and R. Noble Ropkey. After a subscription worker contacts a subscriber, a motor member under Mrs. J. L. Michael, | chairman, picks up the subscription | and takes it to Mrs. Mallory's or | the Murat Theater for posting. ! Motor committee members are Mesdames Louis Segar, Luther Shirley, E. G. Loy, Walter Woolf, Arthur Cassell and Misses Laura Miller and Jean Goldsmith. A musical broadcast is sponsored | on Saturday mornings by the Society.
Personals
Miss Hattie Lou Bridgford and Miss Grace Joy McIntyre have motored to Madison, Wis, to visit friends in the University of Wisconsin. They are to visit friends in | Chicago on their return trip. Mr. and Mrs. Lowell S. Fisher, 31 E. 45th St., have as their guests Mr. and Mrs. Merrill Fisher, Cedar Rapids, Towa; G. Raymond Fisher, Chicago, and Mrs. J. Orr Powell and her daughter Joan, Upland. Mr. and Mrs. Fisher entertained with a dinner party for their guests last night. Mrs. Levi Nichols and daughter Inez, Kokomo, and Mrs. W. G. Becker and Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Hutton, Louisville, have returned to their homes after visiting Mrs..H. A. Run- | yon, 928 English Ave. Miss Rosemary Cruzan, 2138 N.| New Jersey St. is spending the | week in New York. | Miss Dorothy Fallon, 305 N.| Hamilton Ave. left recently for a | trip to Yellowstone National Park | and Salt Lake City | Mr. and Mrs. William Clemett and Miss Hannah Shay, Brooklyn, N. Y., are the guests of Mr. and Mrs. John T. Carr, 4008 E. 11th St. Mrs. Ben Carter, 4001 College Ave., is the guest of Miss Eleanor Holt, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Holt, at the Holt’s cottage, Leland, Mich. Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Carrington have returned from a trip to the West coast. Mrs. A, E Miller and her grandson, Robert Gemmer, returned recently from a trip to Niagara Falls and New York City. Mr. and Mrs. H. M. ‘Thompson are on a trip to Florida.
Mrs. R. G. Justice Will Entertain Margaret Heagy
Mrs. Russell G. Justice, 731 Audubon Rd. is to entertain with a luncheon today for her niece, Miss Margaret Jessica Heagy. Miss Heagy is to be married Sunday to Lawrence G. Kiewitt in the Irvington Methodist Church. Mrs. Justice is to be assisted by her
daughters, Misses Jane Kathryn and Josephine Justice. { Guests are to include Mesdames Henry D. Kiewitt; Charles F. Heagy, Estelle Kesler, Carrie Bowers, I watt Pugh, Harry McKee Jr, Charles Watt, E. Guy Robbins, Charles Allen, Forrest - Crosby, Raleigh Watt, Arnold Frenzel and Misses Mary E. Watt, Thelma Watt, Madeline Pugh, Martha Robbins, Jean Frenzel, Bessie Greenwalt, Marjorie Allen and Bernadine Patrick.
July Jamboree
Planned by Guild
Plans were completed this week by members of the Hoosier Athletic Club Women’s Guild for a July jamboree and roof garden hop to be held Saturday night. Al, Andy and Doc's orchestra is to play and a floor show is being arranged. Assisting Mrs. Leo Shelter, gens | arrangements chairman, are Mesdames D. L. Young, Albert Hermann and
.
cheval,
a
1937
Enjoy Life in Their
§
corps | -
Mrs. William P. Anderson IIT (left) with her sons, Billy (center) and Vachel are vacationers who enjoy
Josephine Kern
"To Be Bride of Harold Waddy
Miss Josephine Kern
1:15 p. m. today at the home of
W. Kern. Mr. Waddy is the son of Henry
A. Waddy. The Rev. E. E. Moor | man officiated at the ceremony in| gtreet, Crawfordsville, in 1862,” en- |
the presence of the
| families.
Miss
JOR gd
RE a Ne a 5
Se Ri Times Photo.
trailer life. They left today in their house on wheels for Rhode Island.
Photograph of Girls Pictured
On Cigar Bands Wins Contest
By KATHER An original photograph of two
INE CARTER little sisters made famous on cigar
became | bands won first place today in the state old photograph contest spon- | the bride of Harold A. Waddy at sored by William H. Block & Co.'s photographic department.
Oo A daughter of one of the somber little sisters, Mrs. Hugo W. Pfenher parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charies | ing 3354 Carrollton Ave. entered the picture, which appeared on “Our | Pets” cigars, manufactured for many years by Mrs. Pfenning’s great-
| grandfather. “Green Street North of Main
immediate | tered by Frances A. Parker, Craw- |
| fordsville, won second prize. The
Kern, who was given in| street pictures a heap of debris,
| |
Newly W ed Pair | To Livein N.Y.
marriage by her father wore a white | the township trustee’s office and a |
lace tunie¢ dress, picture hat and gardenias, The couple left immediately following the ceremony on a wed ding trip to Chicago.
after Aug. 4.
Today’s Pattern
ITH black sheers prominent in the summer fashion pic-
| ture, make up this stunning dress
in black chiffon trimmed in white. The fitted bodice, darted at the waistline, is very trim and the full umbrella skirt flares gently toward the hem. The wasp waistline, so new in fashion, is accented by short puffed sleeves. Accents of white, for a frosted look, can be added with collars and cuffs. Pattern 8018 is designed for sizes 14, 16, 18, 20, 40 and 42. Size 16 requires 44 yards of 35-inch material and 3% yard of contrasting for collars and cuffs. Two yards of edging required to trim as pictured. To obtain a pattern and Step-by-Step Sewing Instructions ine close 15 cents in coin together with the above pattern number and your size, your name and address, and mail to Pattern Editor, The Indianapolis Times, 214 W. Maryland St., Indianapolis. : The summer selection of late dress designs now is ready. It's 15 cents when purchased separately. Or. if you want to order it with the ttern above, send an additional
They are | to be at home at 1217 Parker Ave.
| fated Greely expedition to
' general store.
| An ambrotype entered by | Estelle C. Dollarhide, 4406 Carroll- | ton Ave., picturing her great-grand- | father, Edmund Dollarhide, won
third place.
An ambrotype picture was one of |
the earliest forms of photographs, | according to Maxwell Farabee, pho- | tographic department head.
Picture First Prize
An heirloom miniature bridal
| picture done by brush and mounted
handsomely was first prize. Second and third prizes were minia-
| tures done in light oils.
A series of pictures of the illthe North Pole was entered by Mrs. Laura C. Fredericks, 863 Middle Drive, Woodruff Place, whose husband was one of the five explorers to survive the trip.
Included in the group ave pictures of the rescued party, including Mr. Frederick and A. W. Greely; the hut where they were marooned; an Eskimo family, a huge polar bear on the ship returning home and the rescue party.
Posed in Studio The latter is a picture that was posed in a New York studio against a painted Arctic background amid a blizzard of white ink. One of the
snowdrift in front of the other three.
“Father, dear father come home with me now” might well be the title of another entry taken in the Nineties. Gay young blades, elbows on a bar, with derby hats atop hair parted in the middle and smoking long cigars make an interesting addition to one family album. Hair and whiskers resembling shaving brush bristles and woven into a design, framed one picture of a bewhiskered gentleman of the same period. It was entered by Herbert W. Arnold, 4321 College Ave. Wedding picture entries illustrate the evolution of brides. Modern bridegrooms have surrendered their place in the picture's foreground and faded into photographic oblivion, it seems. In former days the husband sat in ‘the foreground while | his bride stood meekly by his side.
‘Mrs. Paul Cook Entertains for Kathryn Ryan
Mrs. Paul M. Cook entertained with a miscellaneous shower recently for Miss Kathryn Ryan at the home eof Mrs. Victor Adams, Acton. Miss Ryan is to be married to Raymond J. Monaghan Aug. 7 in the Holy Cross Catholic Church. Guests were Mesdames Robert Bills, Jerry Pearson, Katherine Galbreath, Walter Smith, Fritz Gruner, and Pauline Smith and Misses Ella B. Medley, Marjorie Sperry, Bernice Topmiller, Viola Gearries, Wanda Farr, Ruby Palen, Helen Zink, Harriet Scantland, Ann Conway, Flaherty,
Miss
men is reclining supposedly in a
After Sea Trip
New York was the destination of Mr. and Mrs. Francis Xiques fol-
yesterday in St. Joan of Arc Catholic Church. Mrs. Xiques was formerly Miss Elaine Eastman, daughter of Mrs. William M. Eastman, 4462 Central Ave. Mr. Xiques is a son of Mrs. | Francis Xiques, Buffalo, N. Y. | The ceremony was read by the ' Rev. Fr. Thomas Fields. The bride | wore a white lace gown with a | train and a white turban with a | fingertip veil. She carried a bridal bouquet of white roses and blue delphinium. Miss Mary Louise Carpenter was maid of honor and William Eastman was best man. After a week in New York, Mr. and Mrs. Xiques are to sai’ for Bermuda. They are to live in New York.
Omega Nu Tau To Install New Chapter Here
Installation services for a new local chapter of Omega Nu Tau, to be known as Kappa Chapter, are to be held at 8 p. m. today in the
Hotel Lincoln. Kappa Chapter officers to be installed are, Miss Agnes Fussner, president; Miss Irene Anderson, vice president. Miss Wilma Shields, secretary; Mrs. Lewis Annee, treasurer, Miss. Virginia Gill, council representative; Miss Anita Biltz, chaplain; Miss Marion Woods, sergeant-at-arms, and Miss Virginia Woods, publicity chairman. Miss Christine Cabe, national sorority president, Anderson Delta Chapter representative, is to preside during the initiation. Other national council members who are to assist are Mrs. Wilbert V. White Jr, Indianapolis Alpha Chapter; Mrs. Ertel, Muncie Beta Chapter; Mrs. J. Nelson Marks, Indianapolis Gamma Chapter; Mrs. John A. Lyons, Indianapolis Gamma Chapter; Miss Oneita Richardson, Bedford Epsilon Chapter, and Mrs. Robert Trees, Indianapolis Lambda Chapter. A party honoring new members and Miss Helen Wanner, Indianapolis Gamma Chapter, is to follow.
New Shoe Patented You can buy canvas shoes with a patented device that insures against flat feet. This new type of shoe has been made with a regulation rubber sole, but containing a rigid piece of material inserted under the heel. This prevents the collapse of the bone structure. It provides the proper foundation for the foot and correctly distributes the weight of the body.
——NISLEY CLEAR CHIFFON
Pure Silk HOSIERY 59¢ PERFECT N
QUALITY
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES House on Wheels
lowing their marriage at 2 p. m.
¥
PAGE 11.
Andersons’ Trailer Has Homey | Look
Family Left Today for Vacation in Rhode Island.
By MARJORIE BINFORD WOODS All the comforts of home took to the high road today when Mr. and Mrs. William P. Anderson III and family set out for Rhode Island.
Their 20-foot house on wheels, trailing their automobile, may be regarded merely as “another trailer” by passersby along the way, but to those fortunate enough to have a peep inside it’s another story. Mrs. Anderson’s hobby is interior decoration, and in this movable summer home she exercised all tne ingenious tricks of the trade. | A quick, kaleidoscope view of the | interior presents a comfortable | combination living and dining room | with mahogany wall finish and | | cool green and cream decorative | | accents.
Trick Furniture
Closer inspection of the covered | wagon’s accommodations brings to | light the fact that all things are! not exactly what they seem. The] mahogany console table beneath | one of the broad windows opens | up and discloses a modern white | gasoline stove. On the opposite side | of the room, only a step away, the
SERVES BEST os
7S LESS
center board of the kitchen cabinet becomes a sink with running water at the twist of the wrist . . . and the green and brown covered overstuffed davenport seat pulls out and forms a studio bed. There's no blinking the fact that most houses on wheels boast of many of these accommodations, but few of them offer the homey touches which Mrs. Anderson has installed. Metal hooks are everywhere for convenience, Grooves have instailed to hold the bread box, cookie jar and all gadgets which are not otherwise attached to ta-
ble tops. Table Has Glass Tops
The dining table, with its built-
|in seats on each side, is covered
with a plate glass top which secures dainty doilies. The table may be lowered and the upholstered seats joined together to form another bed. A refrigerator, electric iron, electric toaster and electric fan offer all the facilities for comfort, convenience and hospitality. One of Mrs. Anderson's novel housekeeping ideas is carried out in the chromium shelves which she had installed overhead. A spacious
wardrobe is equipped with all the |
touches of home, even to the chintz shoe-bag which hangs on the inside of the door. A miniature cars pet sweeper is another gadget which Mrs. Anderson considers ims portant to this mode. of houses keeping. Medicine Provided When Junior scratches his finger, he can receive the same medical treatment he would get at home, Mrs. Anderson said, pointing to the medicine cabinet which hangs in the small bathroom. The Anderson family dotes on
been |
Plan Dance At Hillcrest On Saturday
‘Mr. and Mrs. Springer Are New Entertainment Chairmen.
A moonlight garden dance is to be given Saturday night at the Hillcrest Country Club for club members and their guests. Colorful lanterns will be strung
about the lawn which is to be dotted with tables. The music for dancing on the terrace is to be provided by Sherry Watson and his orchestra. Mr. and Mrs. A. M. Springer have been recently appointed to | serve as entertainment chairmen | for the year. They are to succeed | Mr. and Mrs. Frank Jones, who | have been in charge of entertainment for the past 12 months. Mr. Jones has been elected club presi-! dent. Committee members in charge of
trailer life as they have come to enjoy it in their ultra-modern home on wheels. When they arrive at Watch Hill, | R. I., they are to visit Mr. Ander- | son’s mother, Mrs. Vachel W. Ander= | son, but the trailer will bé in con- | stant use for week-end and plea-
| sure trips during the next month.
Saturday night's dance are Messrs, and Mesdames Joseph Fulton, W, L. ‘O'Connell, Nelson C. Sears, A. D. Schaefer, Ray Roberson, William H. Binder, Carl W. Stiess and C. D. Jewell,
* Another of the Saturday night dances is to be given at the Highland Golf and Country Club. Tables are to be arranged on the terrace and dancing is to be in the south lounge: Barbecue Tonight
The weekly barbecue is to take place tonight under the direction of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Dowling. The supper is to be cooked and served on the south terrace. Members of the Indianapolis Country Club are looking forward to a formal reopening of the grill room which has been undergoing repairs. The date has been set teme porarily for next week-end. The Meridian Hills Country Club men’s golf team has invited the Hillcrest team to play a match on their course Saturday. W. H. Diddel and B. K. Cohee are sponsors. The Hillcrest guests who attend the match are to be entertained with golf and swim ming.
Headresses Are New At the recent Paris openings all dresses were presented with headdresses made of ribbons or flowers. Among the most appreciated gowns were a moire dress spangled with silver, with a court mantle of red taffeta, trimmed likewise with silver, and a white organdie dress eme broidered with black flowers, with a black moire ribbon belt and wings. This dress was accompanied by a headdress made of black tulle and
ribbon.
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