Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 November 1937 — Page 8
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PAGE 8
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Thanksgiving Feasts Will Be Occasions for Family Reunions Here
Rappaport Home to Be Scene of Gathering for 25th Year Tomorrow ; Many Other Parties Are Arranged.
By VIRGINIA MOORHEAD MANNON There's no denying Thanksgiving’s a little trouble for the one who's having the dinner, but it’s worth it for the fun of catching up on the family gossip and planning
the food.
Not that there can be much elasticity about the menu, or everybody will be disappointed. Still there are little twists in the way of decorating the table and really important decisions as to whats going into the stuffing. Settling themselves comfortably into their accustomed places at Mr. and Mrs. Leo M. Rappaport’s table will be Mr. and Mrs. Richard Lieber, Mr, and Mrs. Ralph Lieber and their daughter, Betty, and son, Ralph Walther; Fred Bachman and Paul Kriml, Syracuse, N. Y. Mr. Kriml, Mr. Rappaport’s cousin, is head of the Syracuse public schools’ physical education department. Mr. Rappaport’s mother for many years entertained the family on Thanksgiving Day. Mr. and Mrs. Rappaport have carried on the tradition and this is to be the 25th year they have had the family dinner at their home. The relatives presented the host and hostess with a leather-bound book in 1927, and each year those who are present write a few words of greeting in it. Miss Jeanette Lieber, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Lieber’s daughter and Mr. and Mrs. Rappaport's niece, was married to Dr. Norman Baker on Thanksgiving Day in 1930. Dr. and Mrs. Baker, who now live. in Fergus Falls, Minn. will not join the family party this year. = EJ on ”n n n
Mr. and Mrs. George H. Denny will have in their Thanksgiving dinner party Mr. Denny's parents, Mr. and Mrs. George L. Denny; his sister, Miss Harriet Denny, and his brother, Caleb Denny. Mrs. Denny's aunt, Mrs. William C. Bobbs, and Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Hurty will complete the “grown-up” table. At a small side table seated in miniature Colonial fiddie-back chairs, the host and hostess’s two older children, Christopher and Linda, are to have their own little party. » ” ” ” » 5 Joining Mr. and: Mrs, S. N. Campbell and Mrs. E. M. Campbell for Thanksgiving turkey will be Mr. and Mrs. Edwin M. McNally and their young sons, Daniel and Alexander, Mr. and Mrs. Leonard L. Campbell, Mrs. Laura J. Truitt, Noblesville, and James M. Cox, Peru. Mrs. Jackson Hazlewood, Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Campbell's daughter, returned yesterday to her home in Easton, Pa. after spending two weeks in Indianapolis. Miss Nancy Campbell, a student at Wells College, will join her sister, Mrs. Hazlewood, and Mr. Hazlewood in Easton for the Thanksgiving holiday. ” ® ” » ” ” Dining with Mrs. Henry Bennett will be her daughter, Mrs. Albert Lord, Englewood, N. J, and her son, Edward J. Bennett, Mrs. Bennett and their children. n » n n ” ” Mr. and Mrs. Ward Dean, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Loftin and H. S. Taylor are to be the guests of Mr. and Mrs. George Maynard Halverson for Thanksgiving dinner. . 5 ” » » » » Mrs. Charles Brossman and Stuart Dean will dine with Mr. and Mrs. Francis Meyer. » = n 4 ” ” Arriving tomorrow to spend Thanksgiving week-end with Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Earle are Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Rolse and W. E. Tarlton, St. Louis, n ” ” on » ” Mr. and Mrs. Carl B. Shafer’s guests will be Mr, and Mrs. Donald Shafer, Mr. and Mrs. F. M. Shafer and Robert Henry, n » ” » »: W Responding to the lure of the open spaces will be Messrs. and Mesdames C. Fred Davis, Wallace J. Barnes and Henry C. Churchman Jr., who will go to Dillsboro to hunt. Eugene Whitehill is to Join a party of men to hunt deer in northern Wisconsin Thanksgiving Day. Gen. William K. Naylor, Ft. Benjamin Harrison, is spending a few days at his farm near Uniontown, Pa. 2 ” ” » » 8 Mr. and Mrs. Walter W. Kuhn, who went the first of the week
to Hanover, N. H., to visit their son, Walter Jr., a student at Dart-
mouth College, will go to New York for Thanksgiving. ” s ® » » ” Mr. and Mrs. R. Ralston Jones and their daughter Mary Elizabeth will be the guests of Mrs. Jones’ aunt, Mrs. E. J. Appleton, Cincinnati, Thanksgiving week-end. 2 ” ” . ” ” Ld The Officer's Club at Ft. Benjamin Harrison will be the scene of the annual formal Thanksgiving dance Saturday evening. On Saturday Capt. and Mrs. H. C. Fowler also will entertain at lunchéon followed by a radio “listening-in” party on the Army-Navy football game in Philadelphia. LJ ” ” ® » ” Assisting Mrs. Garvin M. Brown at the tea she will give today in honor of her daughter, Miss Nina Brown, will be a group of Miss Brown's friends, including the Misses Josephine Mayer, Prudence Brown, Dora Sinclair, Mary Sheerin Kuhn, Joan Metzger, Katherine Porter, Alice Vonnegut, Gloria Geddes and Irving Moxley. The same young women will assist at the Thanksgiving afternoon party at which Mr. and Mrs. Brown will entertain a group of Miss Brown's friend. Yellow chysanthemums are to be used on the tea table and throughout the house. ” » ” ” » » Among the dinner parties which are to take place before the Traders Point Hunt Club ball Dec. 4 at the Indianapolis Athletic Club are those to be given by Otto N. Frenzel Jr., hunt club president, and Mrs. Frenzel“and by Mr. and Mrs. Herman Krannert. Mr. and Mrs. Frenzel's guests will include Messrs. and Mesdames Sylvester Johnson Jr, C. Harvey Bradley, Robert F. Scott Jr. and Edward L. Mayer. Mr, and Mrs. Krannert are to entertain Messrs.
and Mesdames William B. Stokely Jr. John B. Stokely, George M. Bailey, Paul R. Matthews, Kurt F. Pantzer, Mrs. Elsa Pantzer Test
and Robert G. Tucker. ” ” »
» ” »
Mr. and Mrs. Austin H. Brown will entertain 60 guests with a
dinner dance tonight at Woodstock
Club.
Vegetable Meals Must Provide Sufficient Supply of Proteins
By MRS. GAYNOR MADDOX
Most people like an occasional vegetable dinner,
When it is served
to a family, the housewife must provide sufficient food to satisfy hun-
gry children and weary husbands.
She should remember that we all re-
quire a certain amount of protein daily, a good part of which is usually furnished by the meat at dinner so that in planning her vegetable
meal she must provide a substitute. Here are three dinner menus using vegetables as the main course, yet meeting the protein requirements of all the family. 1
Half a Grapefruit Lima Bean Loaf, Cheese Sauce Diced Summer Squash, Buttered Beets Chocolate Nut Blanc Mange with Whipped Cream Coffe or Milk II. Vegetable Plate—Baked Stuffed Potato with Grated American Cheese String Beans, Grilled Tomato : Baked Banana Cottage Cheese and Olive Balls on Lettuce with French Dressing Apple Turnover Coffe or Milk NOTE: Cheese is used on the potato and on the salad to make up for the absence of meat. III.
Canned Consomme with Toasted Crackers Buttered Baby Lima Beans Stuffed Egg Plant Glazed Carrots, Spinach with Chopped Hard Boiled Egg Pound Cake with Chocolate
Sauce Coffe or Milk Lima Bean Loaf (4 to 6 servings) Two cups dried lima beans, 1% onions, 3 carrots, 2 cups bread crumbs, 2 teaspoons salt, % teaspoon mustard, 1 teaspoon paprika, 2 eggs, 2 tablespoons butter, 2 tablespoons bacon fat, 1 cup boiling water, 3 pimentoes. beans over night in enough
cold water to cover; in the morning drain, cover with boiling water, add onion and carrots, and cook until beans are tender. Drain and grind through a food chopper. Add crumbs, slightly beaten eggs, seasonings, melted fat, boiling water and chopped pimentoes. Mix well, bake in a greased loaf pan for threefourths of an hour in a moderate oven (350 degrees F.). Serve with cheese sauce.
3 Generations Linked in Gift
A gift of $4500 just received by the Indiana Art Association from Walter Milliken is linked with three generations interested in the organization, They are Mrs, Addison Bybee, her daughter, the late Mrs. Walter Milliken, and Mrs. Fisk Landers, Mr. Milliken’s daughter, who is presi-dent-chairman of the art school committee, Several years ago, Mr. Milliken
established the Mary Milliken Memorial fund in memory of his wife, which yields approximately $1000 a year for scholarship purposes. This last gift is to be used for extension courses at the John Herron Art School, . Extension of teaching courses, such as the recent series under Eliot O'Hara, celebrated artist, are ade possible by Mr. Milliken’s gen-
Li
English’s, Monday night.
Christamore Society
The ways and means committee of the Christamore Aid Society is busily engaged planning for the presentation of “Stage Door” at Active workers include (left to right) Mrs, Earl B. Barnes, box committee chairman; Mrs, assistant general chairman; Mrs, George T. Parry, general chairman;
por?
Whyte, organization president.
W. I. Longworth
Prepares to Fete Joan Bennett
: Vy ; 7 ‘Times Photo. Mrs. Batist R. Haueisen, telephone committee, and Mrs. R. Kirey Joan Bennett, who has the leading role in the production, is to be honored at a reception Monday in the Indianapolis Athletic Club, Ticket holders for the evening pers formance are to attend the reception from 4 to 6 o'clock,
gr, , 5
a, i. —
Sororities to Give Pledges Flowers; Food to Needy
Both social and charitable activities are included in local sororities’ Thanksgiving programs. Mrs. Leslie Ayres, president of the Phi Beta Tau Sorority, has appointed a committee to distribute food to needy families tomorrow, Miss Ruth Anderson is chairman, assisted by Mesdames Helen Manfon, Dorothea McCune and Ralph
Johnson. The committee is to continue its activities at Christmas, Plans are already under way to entertain the Goodwill Industries kindergarten children.
Schedule Dinner-Dance
Beta chapter, Sigma Delta Zeta Sorority, is to hold its annual Thanksgiving dinner-dance in the Hotel Lincoln Travertine Room tomorrow night. Dinner is to be served at 7 p. m. and the dancing is to begin at 9 p. m. The committee includes Mesdames Fred Clements, Paul Dausch, Charles French, John Polter, Eugene Loeper, and Misses Clara Belle Woolery, Grace Meyer, Dorothy Rearick, Melba Woolery and Caroline Maas, Delta Chapter, Xi Delta Xi Sorority, is to have Thanksgiving Eve pledge services in the home of Miss Helen Scanling, 3422 N. Capitol Ave. Neophytes are Misses Violet Maynard, Josephine Whitten, Mary Aldeia, Euva Sullivan and Mrs. Audra Baldwin. New members are to be given chrysanthemum corsages.
Today’s Pattern
< i B05
HE three pieces Pattern 8087 should bring shouts of joy. The blouse is as trim and tailored as a weskit and can be smartly made in velveteen, challis or rayon crepe. The little callotte cap and muff bag contrast with it and are made up in nubby wool or velveteen. The children’s robe shown in Pattern 8052 is designed on princess lines and gives a slender charm to the silhouette, Pattern 8087 is designed for sizes 6, 8 10, 12, 14 and 16 years. Size 8 years requires 1'% yards of 35 or 39-inch material for the blouse, % yard of 54 inch material for hat and muff, % yard fabric required to ine hat and muff and 2 pounds of cotton batting for filling muff, Pattern 8052 is designed for sizes 6, 8, 10, 12, 14 and 16 years. Size 8 years requires 2% yards of 54 inch material. Robe is perforated for two lengths. To obtain pattern and Step-by-Step Sewing ‘Instructions inclose 15 cents in coin together with the above pattern number and your size, your name and address, and mail to Pattern Editor, The Indianapolis
shown in
Times, 214 W. Maryland St, In-
5
EVENTS
LODGES
Banner Temple 37, Pythian Sisters. 6 p. m. today. 612 E. 13th. Cov= ered-dish supper preceding meeting. Roll call. Mineola Council 31, Degree of Pocohontas. 8 p. m. today. Castle Hall,
CLUB
Emera. Fri. Miss Velma Wiseman, 3525 N. Illinois, hostess. Election of officers, SORORITIES
Rho Chapter, Sigma Beta. 8:15 p. m. today. Miss Virginia Collier, hostess, Alpha Chapter, Omega Nu Tau, 8 p. m. today. Hotel Lincoln,
P.-T. A,
Garden City Study Club. 12:30 p. m. Wed, Dec, 1, Risley, 5 Iris, hostess, Mrs. H. E. Fillinger, chairman, Warren Twp. Council. 1 p. m, Dec. 1. Finance and publication to be discussed. Douglas Brown, high school faculty member, to speak,
Mrs. Claude
Butler Swimmers
Women Doctors Schedule Tryouts
Misses Carleen Becker and Dorothy Durham are to conduct tryouts for membership in Bluegills, women’s swimming organization at Butler University, during the next two weeks. Miss Louise O'Hara is also to aid in the tryouts. All organization members are required to pass swimming tests each year before being admitted to the club, sponsored by Miss Catherine Thompson. The club also participates in telegraphic meets with other state schools,
Jeanette White Becomes Bride
This Afternoon
An attractive pre-Thanksgiving wedding was to be that of Miss Jeanette White and Charles W. Hutchinson, Chicago, this afternoon in the Propylacum, Miss White is a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Floyd E. White. Mr. Hutchinson is a son of Mr, and Mrs, Ralph Murry Hutchinson, South Bend. The Rev. George ¥F. Southworth was to officiate. Preceding the ceremony, a program of music was to be played by Mrs. George Dailey, harpist, and Mrs. Edward Shimer, violinist, Selections were to include “Meditation” from ‘“Thals”; “Evening Star,” “On Wings of Song,” “Liebestraum,” “My Heart at Thy Sweet Voice,” and “Ich Liebe Dich.”
Bride to Wear Satin
The bride was to wear a candlelight satin gown, fashioned on princess lines with a yoke of duchess lace. Her long-tiered veil was to be of candlelight illusion and her only ornament was to be an old-gold cross. She was to carry a cascade of orchids, bovardia and lilies of the valley, Mrs. Edward Longley VanRiper, matron of honor, was to be the only attendant, She was to wear a grown of aquamarine slipper satin fashfoned with an Eton jacket, Her hat was to be a halo decorated with bands of quilting to match the quilting on her jacket, She was to carry copper chrysanthemums, Ralph Murry Hutchinson Jr. Chica£0, was to be his brother's best man, The bride was to be given in marriage by her father before an altar decorated with palms, smilax and chrysanthemums, The aisle was to be marked with white wicker baskets and candles,
Reception Follows Rite
Mrs. White, the bride's mother, was to wear a gown of electric blue crepe with matching sequin embroidery on the sleeves and a hat of the same shade of blue. She was to wear a corsage of gardenias and bovardia, Mrs. Hutchinson was to be gowned in black with a lace bodice and a black hat. She also was to wear gardenias, A ceremony was to precede the reception. The bridal table was to be arranged with smilax and white pompons, Assisting in the dining room were to be Miss Jane McBride, Pt. Wayne; Misses Nelda Jean Roth, Mary Margaret Hill, Mesdames M. Stanley McComas, Henry Marsh, Evanston, and Mrs, John Pearson Jr, The couple was to leave after the reception on a motor trip. They are to live in Chicago. The bride was graduated from LaSalle Junior College, Auburndale, Mass, and DePauw University. She did graduate work at Northwestern University. She is a member of the Rappa Kappa Gamma Sorority. Mr, Hutchinson was graduated from DePauw U . He is a member
And Attorneys Attend Dinner
More than 40 women doctors and lawyers attended a dinner recently in the Business and Professional Women's clubhouse. This was the first meeting of its kind ever held in the state. Medico-legal subjects were dis cussed by Miss Bess Robbins and Miss Lucille Smith, attorneys, and Dr, Jane Ketcham and Dr. Exie Welsch, The Indiana Association of Women Lawyers and Nu Sigma Phi, the only local medical sorority, co-oper= ated in planning the meeting, Members voted to make the event an annual affair. Mrs. Mary E. Ramier presided, assisted by Miss Elizabeth Garber, Nu Sigma Phi president, and Miss Mildred Gallagher, program chairman of the lawyers’ group.
Mary Tobin and Jean Anderson
To Be Honored
Two brides-to-be are being feted prior to their weddings on Thanks giving Day and Thanksgiving Eve, Mr. and Mrs. J. V. Tobin are to entertain with a bridal dinner tonight in honor of their daughter, Miss Mary Tobin, and Daniel Morgan, Detroit, whose marriage is to take place Thanksgiving Day at 12:30 p. m. in the McKee Chapel, Tabernacle Presbyterian Church, Guests with Miss Tobin and Mr. Morgan are to include Mrs, Edith Morgan, mother of the bridegroom; Mr, and Mrs, Joel Tobin and Hal Tobin, Miss Jean Anderson and W, Wallace Wilhite, whose marriage i= to take place tomorrow evening in their future home, 802 Middle Drive, Woodruff Place, were entertained recently by Mr, and Mrs. Arthur Julian and Mr. and Mrs, August Julian in the Julians’ home, 3628 Fall Creek Blvd. Miss Anderson is a daughter of Mrs. J, W. Anderson, Odon, and Mr. Wilhite is the son of Sherman Wilhite, Hall, Ind. Mr. Wilhite is a graduate of Indiana University and a member of Gamma Eta Gamma, legal fraternity, He is a member of an Indianapolis law firm, Attendants at the wedding are to be Mrs. R. Frank Denny, sister of the bride, and Mr, Denny. Guests with Miss Anderson and Mr. Wilhite included Dr. and Mrs, Denny, Messrs. and Mesdames Verne Sholty, Louis Isensee, Harold W. Anderson, John Julian, Claude H. Anderson, Mrs, Lorraine McWilliams and Miss Lois Julian,
Columbia Club’s Bridge Date Set
Mrs. J. Hart Laird, Columbia Club hostess for ladies’ bridge events, has announced Wednesday, Dec. 8, as the date for the next bridge-luncheon, Mrs. George M. Pierce, Anderson, and a group of out-of-town members are to compose the December hostess committee, of which Mrs. Pierce is chairman, Mrs, Albert J, Beveridge Jr. was hostess chairman for the last
play,
-bridge. Thirty-five tables | bicycle
"Tri Deltas Hold
i Founders’ Day Dinner at Hotel
The Marott Hotel ballroom pro vided a setting for the Delta Delta Delta Sorority annual Founders’ Day banquet last night, The sorority was founded on Thanksgiving Eve in 1888 at Boston University, There are row 87 chap- [ ters with more than 24,000 members, More than 120 alumnae, active members and pledges were seated at
| a great golden crescent table laid with yellow chrysanthemums, pine boughs and golden candles, Sorority songs were sung by Misses Ruth Duckwall, Betty Parker, and Mar jorie Pyke, Miss Jean Anderson was toasts mistress. Responses were made by | Mrs, Dorothy Bowser Thompson of [the alumnae chapter; Mrs, Rachel Hull Bruhn, Indianapolis Alliance president; Miss Mary Evelyn Daniel, Butler chapter president, and Miss Joan Elliott of the Northwestern University chapter,
Bomar Cramer Will Appear at Vassar Benefit
The program for the Indiana Vassar Club's benefit lecture-recital at 10:30 a, m, Friday ih the L. 8. Ayres & Oo. auditorium, was announced today, Mrs, Demarchus Brown is to discuss “Arles, the Jewel Oity of France,” Mrs, Brown has recently returned from spending the summer abroad, Bomar Cramer, pianist, is to play a program from Chopin, His selec-
Scott-Smith Service At Central Church
The ceremony uniting Miss Lela Mae B8mith, daughter of Mrs, Blanche B8mith, and Fdward B Beott is to be read at ad m. to day in the Central hristian Chureh, The altar is to be banked with palms and lighted with tapers, The Rev. W, A, Bhullenberger is to offici= ate. Mrs, Pred Jeffrey, organist, is to play a program of bridal selees tions and Mrs. Ruel Saxton is to sing “I Love You Truly” and "O Promise Me.” Miss Bmith is to have Mrs, William Frobenius for her matron of honor, Miss Ruth Smethers for bridesmaid, and Miss _ Betty Lou Beott, sister of the bridegroom, for Junior bridesmaid,
Bride to Wear Satin
The bride, who 18 to enter with her uncle, Walter Baxter, is to wear a fitted white satin gown trimmed fh lace with a train of matching lace, The gown, which is to be fash foned with a cowl neckline, is to have small satin buttons from the neck to the waistline, Her illusion veil is to be fingertip length, caught with a erown of gardenias, She is to carry while brides’ roses and lilies of the valley John Beott, brother of the brides groom, is to be best man, Loy Baxter, cousin of the bride, Donald Boyd and Stewart Tongret are to uisher, Mrs. Frobenius and Miss Smethers are to wear velvet gowns fashioned alike on princess lines with full sleeves, Mrs, Frobenius is to wear sapphire blue and Miss Bmethers is to wear raspberry red. They are ‘o have matching illusion veils and are to earry Johanna Hill and Talisman roses, Miss Beott is to wear aquamarine faille taffeta and to carry pink roses,
Gardenias to Be Worn
The gown of Mrs, Smith, mother of the bride, is to be black velvet, Bhe is to wear a corsage of gars denias, Mrs, Beott, the bridegroom's mother, is to wear black faille crepe with gardenias, Following the ceremony, a reception is to be held in the home of Mr, and Mrs, Walter Baxter, 1133 N, Kealing Ave, Mrs, John Beott and Miss Jane Vernon are to assist, After a short wedding trip, the couple is to be at home at 1120 N, Alabama Bt, Mr, Scott attended Battle Oreek College. Miss Bmith is a member of Pi Omicron, national sorority,
Reception to Be at Steuerwald Home
A reception in the home of the bride's parents is to follow the mar» riage of Miss Venita E. Steuerwald to Harry H, Mann at 8 p. m. today in Bt. Matthew's Lutheran Church, Miss Steuerwald is a daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Henry J. Steuerwald
tions are to include Impromptu FP Sharp, Prelude in B Flat Minor, Nocturne in B Major, Waltz in A Flat, Polonaise in C Sharp Minor and Scherzo in B Minor, A number of reservations foi luncheons to follow the event are being made, Among those going to the lecture and recital are Mes | dames Wymond Beckett, Joe Rand | Beckett, A, M, Baker, Charles A, Bookwalter, Bookwalter Jennings, | Elwood B. Daugherty, H, Mavrice | Angell, Wymond Angell and Miss Gertrude Bleistein, Lebanon,
Schools Given C. A. R. Shrines
Announcement was made today | by the Old Glory Chapter, Children | of the American Revolution, that | presentation of Constitutional | shrines are to be made to state col-
i leges and high schools,
The gifts, in observance of the Constitution sesquicentennial, were made possible by Mrs, Edward Burke Ball, Muncie, Mrs, Ball 1s Cy A, R. national vice president, | Butler University received one of | the shrines at a service yesterday ! in the gymnasium conducted by | Miss Peggy Bosart, society junior | president, Dr. George Arthur | Frantz and Prof, Paul L. Haworth | spoke, |
| |
Personals
Dr, and Mrs. J, Kent Leasure are to entertain with a dance for their daughter, Miss Jane Leasure, Dec, 21 at Woodstock Club, | Mrs. Raymond H, Howard fs (0 | entertain with a Thanksgiving tea | tomorrow afternoon, Cuests are to include Mesdames James Duffy, | Harold E. Williamson, Harry E. Wilson and James Duffy Jr.; Misses Jacqueline Williamson, Jean La Mar Williamson, Judith Anne Duffy and Melda Wilson,
Mr, and Mrs, Harry A. Pathauer, Chicago, arrived last night to spend Thanksgiving day as guests of Dr, and Mrs, Leonard A, Ensminger, Mrs, 8am Blanchard, 55 8, Bradley St, is to leave after Thanksgliving for a tour of the South and old Mexico, Mr, and Mrs, Joseph R, Poole are sailing from New York Dec. 1 on the Manhattan to spend the winter in Europe, They plan to visit France, Belgium, Germany, Italy, Luxembourg, Holland, Poland, Switzerland and perhaps the British Isles. One of the most interesting features of their trip is to be a h the French
throug)
Helps flavor, helps
os To make your dinner a big praise-winner...
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WEDNESDAY, NOV. 24, 1937
Four Couples Will Take Nuptial Vows Today as Others Wait for Holiday,
Seott-Smith and Ferling-Schneider Rites to Be Read At 8:30 P. M. After Mann-Steunerwald and Applegate-Tedrowe Ceremonies,
Pour couples are to exchange nuptial vows in homes and churches ad 8 and 8:30 o'clock tonight as many more local brides-to-be make last minute arrangements for ceremonies to be performed tomorrow Miss Lela Mae Smith is to become the bride of Edward B. Scott in a ceremony to be read at the same time of day as that of Miss Evelva Mae Schneider and Thomas G, Ferling. Two 8 o'clock ceremonies are to unite Miss Venita E. Steuerwald to Harry H. Mann, and Miss Mary Jeanne Tedrowe and Charles W. Applegate, ow
ER a
Mr, Mann is a son of Mr. and Mrs, Harry H, Mann, 222 Parkview Place, The Rev, L. ©. Fackler is to officials, The bride's gown is to be blus chiffon, fashioned shiriwaist style, and trimmed with taffeta, Bhe is to wear a halo hat with a shoulders length veil, and to earry pink roses tied with blue ribbon, Miss Bteuerwald has chosen Mra, Herschel Miller for her matron of honor, Mrs, Miller's gown Is to bs blue velvet and she is to wear a corsage of pink tea roses, Miss Mars jorie Stewart and Mra, Ted Lees, bridesmaids, are to wear blue and green, respectively, Miss Roberta Bteuerwald, sister of the bridestos be, is to be junior bridesmaid, and her gown will be of pink. All bridess maids will wear corsages. The bridegroom has chosen Mp, Miller for his best man, Robert Tuttle and Robert Bteuerwald are to usher,
Ferling-Schneider Nuptial at Residence
The marriage of Miss Evelyn Marie Schneider, daughter of Mp, and Mrs, William HH, Schneider, 327 Poplar Road, to Thomas G, Ferling, son of Mr, and Mrs, G, W, Ferling, is to take place at 8:30 p. m, today ih the home of the bride-to=be’s parents, The Rev, H, G. Rowe 8 to officiate, The bride is to wear a gown of royal blue ¢repe with gold access sories, She is to carty brides roses, The eouple is to be at home after Dee, 1 at 4801 E, Washington St,
Applegate-Tedrowe Wedding Tonight
Another wedding at 8 p. m. tos night is to unite Miss Mary Jeanne Tedrowe and Charles W, Applegats in the home of the bride's parents, Mr, and Mrs, T, 1, Tedrowe, The Rev. 1. L. Latham of ths Traub Memorial Presbyterian Church 1s to read the ceremony by eandlelight before the fireplaces, which is to be banked with palms and autumn flowers, The bride is to be given Ih mars riage by her father, Bhe is to wear a white lace gown fashioned ih coronet style with a two-tiered veil, one of shoulder length and the other falling into a long train, Bha is to earry white roses with lily=of« the-valley sprays, Mrs. Phil Liehr, who is to be ma« tron of honor, is to be gowned ih misty-grape color lace, She is to carry yellow roses ih a bouquet blending with her gown Miss Doris Taylor, South Bend, is to be bridesmaid, She is to wear peach taffeta and is to carry a bouquet of roses to harmonize with her gown, Mr, Liehr 1s to be best man, After a short wedding trip, the cotiple is to be at home in Indianas polis,
hanksgiving guests wait eagerly! Good cooks, heed this suggestion:
Use milk and cream—NOT meagerly.
digestion!
FROM SOUP TO PlE— _ THE THANKSGIVING 7 DINNER WILL TASTE = BETTER... IF YOU
ook with MIL
2
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