Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 December 1937 — Page 4
oodstock to Become Replica of Night Club For Ball This Evening
Misses Kuhn and Mayer to Fete 400 Guests at Event; Gold Predominates Decorations at Dance for Miss Jane Adams.
By VIRGINIA MOORHEAD MANNON Woodstock Club is to become a replica of El Morocco
when the stage is set for the dance Miss Mary Sheerin Kunn and Miss Josephine Mayer will give this evening. As in New York’s popular night club, white is to be the keynote of the decorations with a snow scene as the principal theme. With their daughters, Mr. and Mrs. Walter ~ W. Kuhn and Mr. and Mrs. Charles Mayer are to receive
the guests. : ] The ballroom ceiling is to be lined with white Florida fern and the walls will be hung with silver garlands. White-leaved palm trees are to stand in each corner of the room and on guard before the red curtains at the windows will be tall snow men with cocked
silk hats. The lights are to be covered with snow balls and the snow
motif also will be carried out in the other club rooms. Breakfast tables in the dining room are to be covered with silver cloths with snow men and candles in the center. The hostesses’ gowns will be in keeping with the color scheme of the decorations. Miss Kuhn is to wear a full-skirted white chiffon evening dress with red accessories, and Miss Mayer is to wear white moire trimmed with red velvet. Among the 400 guests will be a number from out of town. Miss Betty Smith and Messrs. William Diven, Thomas Werbe, Robert Dorste, Robert Smith.and Peter Carr will come from Anderson. From Ft. Wayne will be Miss Joan Lohman and Messrs. Robert Lohman, Ned Hoffman and Ropert Wilson. Others are to be Miss Nancy Egbert, John Egbert and William Howell, all of Hamilton, O.; James Hess, Richmond; Miss Mary Birch Ingram, New York, and Midshipman William T. Ingram II, Annapolis, Md.
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King Midas touched the evergreens which decorated the Indianapolis Athletic Club ballroom when Miss Jane Adams, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William Ray Adams, made her bow to society Saturday .night. Gold and fuschia were the color notes carried out in one of the season’s loveliest parties. : Miss Adams, her sister, Mrs. Louis McClennen of Boston, who is the former Sarahanne Adams, and Mrs. Adams received the guests in the Pompeian Room adjoining the ballroom. They were gowned alike in Mariana Fortuny robes of finely pleated satin girdled in self-fabric entwined with gold. Miss Adams’ robe was cream color; Mrs. McClennen’s, fuschia; and Mrs. Adams’, violet, Mrs. Adams wore violet ostrich tips flecked with gold in her hair. The ushers wore boutonnieres of the same colors. Mrs. Adams and her daughters wore wristlets of flowers. Miss Adams’ was white violets with gold leaves and Mrs. Adams’ and Mrs, McClennen’s were carnation petals and nch violets. > rom the ballroom ceiling and chandelier hung gold lacquered balls of spruce and ferns. Garlands of hemlock were festooned from the corners of the room to the lights in the center. Bordering the dance floor were red, pink anc white poinsettia plants nearly 10 feet high, set in gold foliage and lacquered evergreen. Beside the fireplace and at the opposite end of the room stood ceiling-high “totem poles” of gold lacquered evergreen in which colored lights were set. Opposite the door stood a golden Christmas tree revolving on a base of four silver pyramids from which colored lights also flickered. Groups of sofas and chairs as the edge of the dance floor were partitioned by screens of evergreen forming a hedge.’ At one end of the Pompeian Room the long buffet table was covered with a cloth of gold lame with an overcloth of fuschia satin. The breakfast tables in. the Green Room also were covered with fuschia satin. Members of the Cornell musical clubs who had earlier given a performance in English’s theater proved entertaining guests with their singing, card tricks and mind reading act. Virtually everyone joined in the dancing of the Big Apple. :
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‘Mr. and Mrs. George L. Denny announce the engagement of their daughter, Harriet, to Paul H. White Jr, son of Mr. and Mrs. Paul ite. ¥
® = = 2 = = Mr. and Mrs. Thomas D. Sheerin announce the engagement of eir daughter, Mary Jane, to John A. Bennet, Washington, D. C,, n of Mrs. Robert Sinclair, Indianapolis. Miss Sheerin is a senior
in Bennington College and Mr. Bennett was graduated from Cornell :
University in 1934. E ” » » 2 EJ Mr. and Mrs. Walker W. Winslow are to entertain with a house
party in their cottage at Lake Maxinkuckee from Friday to Sunday. -
Guests are to includge Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Medlicott and a group of
young friends of Mr. and Mrs. Winslow's daughter, Eleanor, and son,
Walker Jr. # » » » i » Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Anderson, Louisville, arrived yesterday to visit Mrs. Anderson's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Marshall T. Levy. Mr. Anderson is here to attend the American Association for the Advancement of Science convention. .
Mrs. John Sloane Kittle is to fly East Dec. 30 for a 10-day visit with her daughter, Mrs. Burton Hart Jackson, and Mr. Jacksen in Greenwich, Conn. She then will take the Bermuda Clipper from Baltimore to Bermuda and go by boat to Nassau, B. I, to visit her cousin, Mrs. Guy Myers. From Nassau she is to fly to Florida to
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visit her sister, Mrs. O. B. Iles, in Ft. Lauderdale, and she will return
to Indianapolis by plane in February. :
Local Persons at Miami Beach
Awaiting Arrival of New Year
Indianapolis people who hive made the annual winter trek to Miami Beach, Fla. are awaiting the stroke of 12 Friday night to celebrate the
arrival of New Years in the usual elaborate manner.
Among them are Mr, and Mrs.& Guy A. Wainwright and their family, 4139 N. Capitol Ave., who have
taken a bungalow at the Flamingo Hotel for the season. They are ac- - ‘companied by Mr. Wainwright's "mother, Mrs. L. M. Wainwright. Mr. and Mrs. A. R. Heiskell, 5050 N. Merician St., are spending the winter at a villa in the Nautilus Hotel where they are annual visitors.
‘Luncheon Party Given - Mrs. Harry S. Bastian, Indianapolis, and Mrs. Oscar Thompson, Marion, were among guests at a luncheon party given recently by Dr. and Mrs. L. O. Bricker, Atlanta, for Mrs, Harrison Howell, Wilmington, Del, at the Surf Club's formal opening luhcheon and dance. . \ Among those making reservations at the Whitman Hotel are Mrs. Donna Harter, Indiauapolis, and Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Kunkel Jr, and their family, Bluffton. Miss Jessie Holcomb is a houseguest of Mrs. John B. Orr. Mrs. _ Sara ©. Allison, formerly of Indianapolis, and her daughter, Mrs. John C. Frazure, have returned to their home in Miami Beach for the win-
ter season. . Other Indiana cities are being rep-
" . resented by Mr. and Mrs. Joseph M.
enson and their children, Sieph Bend, and C. W. Barker, acting dean of the Indiana University Business Administration School, who is spe his sixth winter at Van Hotel.
Ness Pair to Be Honored By Bridal Dinner
Dr. Maly Weds Miss Dreibelbis,
Dr. J. Ambrose Dunkel officiated at the marriage of Miss’ Thelma Lorraine Dreibelbis to Dr. Charles Henry Maly at 1:30 p. mn; yesientay in the Tabernacle yterian Church. : The bride is a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Wright M. Dreibelbis, Oklahoma City, Okla. Dr. Maly is a son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles J. Maly, Chicago, formerly of this city. She wore an azure blue and black suit with black accessories and a corsage of violets, gardenias and sweetheart roses. Miss Virginia Showalter was the only attendant. She wore a gray
dress trimmed in American: Beauty with gray accessories and a corsage
} Hotel Hunters lodge.
3 Photo-Reflex Photo. Mr. and Mrs. William R. Humphreys, 31 W. 33d St. have announced the engagement of their daughter, Betty (above), to Julien C. Kennedy, son of Mrs. N. Kennedy, 1733 N. Meridian St. The wedding is to take place Jan. 29.
Betty Thomas Is Married to William Butler
An attractive holiday wedding took place at 4 p. m. yesterday in the Tabernacle Presbyterian Church McKee chapel when Miss Betty Wallace Thomas became the bride of William Austin Butler. The bride is a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. S. H. Thomas, Chicago,
formerly of Indianapolis. Mr. Butler is a son of Mrs. Mary A. Butler; Jackson, Mich.
mas greenery interspersed with white Christmas trees. The center aisle was marked to the altar with cathedral tapers. :
Dr. Dunkel: Officiates
Preceding the ceremony, bridal airs
organist. Violin and vocal music was provided by Miss Jean Pennington and Miss Rhoda Jane Finch, Hillsboro. The bride, who was given in marriage by her father, wore a white moire princess-styled gown with & Queen Ann collar. The skirt descended into a long train and her fingertip tulle veil fell from a coronet of seed pearls and orange blossoms. She carried white roses and gardenias. Miss Dorothy Jean Bond was maid of honor. She wore rose moire and carried Talisman roses. The bridesmaids, Misses Jean Anderson and Betty Finch, wore blue moire and carried yellow roses. Barbara Jane Correll was flower girl.
Reception Held
_ Harry Dietz was best man and Robert Williams and Edward Walz ushered. Following the ceremony there was a reception in the Marott: Assisting at the reception were Misses Lenore Snethen and Ruth Stultz. Mr. and Mrs. Butler left following the reception for Roanoke, Va., where they are to live.’ | The bride, who attended Butler University, was graduated from DePauw University. She was a member of the Delta Delta Delta Sorority. Mr. Butler is a member of the Kappa Psi Fraternity. Out-of-town guests were the bridegroom’s mother and Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Wallace and their family, Ashland, O., Mr. and Mrs. Will Coffin and Mr. and Mrs. R. K. Howe and family, Cincinnati.
William Whites Are to Establish Residence Here
After Jan. 1, Mr. and Mrs. William Gayton White are to be at home at 5418 Julian Ave. : Mrs. White was Miss Nelle Aileen Griter before her marriage at 4 p. m. Friday in the White home. The Rev. C. H. Winders read the ceremony before an improvised altar at the fireplace. The home was decorated with poinsettias, blue and silver flowers and blue Christmas trees. The bride, who entered alone, wore a gown of Wallis blue marquisette with rhinestone clips. The sleeves of royal blue marquisette were draped into a train. She wore a blue chrysanthemum halo and carried an arm houquet of Talisman roses and ehrysanthemums. Miss Elizabeth Stayton, bridesmaid, wore an off-the-shoulder dress of silver brocade and carried a colonial bougeut of Talisman roses and chrysanthemums. She wore chrysanthemums in her hair. The flower girl, Paula Cherry, wore Wallis blue taffeta with net edging and a royal blue sash. She carried a colonial bouquet of Talisman rosebuds and blue chrysanthemums. Otto Mit, St. Louis, was best man. Music was provided by Miss Mary ‘Stueber, pianist, and Arnold Davis, violinist. During the reception which
of white button hyacinths and lilies | carois
of the valley. :
Luncheon Is Set In Propylaeum
Mrs. C. Fred Davis and Mrs. George Underwood are to entertain with a luncheon today in the Propylaeum for Mrs. Carter Darrow and Mrs. Nona James, New York. f Mrs. Darrow and Mrs. James have been: visiting Mrs. Roy E. Blossom and Mrs. William Masters, Assisting the hostesses are to be Miss Jean Underwood and Mrs. Henry C. Churchman Jr. The table is to be
laid in white and silver.
Mrs. Darrow and Mrs. James are to spend New Year’s with Mrs. Peter McHugh, Wilmette, Iii, formerly Miss Fhelma Blossom, Ingianapolis.
‘Mary ohn Farley, both of Indianapolis, has been announcea ~The ceremony took
| Marott
The table centerpiece at the reception was blue chrysanthemums
and Janet Stayton assisted. Out-of-town guests were Mr. and Mrs. Otto Mit and their daughter Virginia, St. Louis; Miss Pearl Griter, Cleveland, and Mr. and Mrs. W. F, Stevens, Chicago.
C lay pools Ate On Wedding Trip
Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin F. Clay-
pool are on a wedding trip. Upon their return they are to be at home in the Marott Hotel. Mrs. Claypool was Miss Dorothy
J. Leflang, 3315 N. Pennsylvania St.,| the| She
of Mr. and Mrs. A. C.| |
Leflang, o, fi } D 2 dianapolis. - Mr. Claypool is & son|
before her marriage Saturday in First Co tional Church. is a daughter
of Mrs. Jefferson The Rev. n
. 18,
The altar was banked with Christ- |
Dr. J. Ambrose Dunkel officiated. |
were played by Miss ‘Donna Alles, |
followed, they played Christmas
and silver candles. Misses Patricia
Photo-Craft Photo. Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Greenwood, 3721 E. Vermont St, have announced the marriage of their daughter, Thelma Lee (above), to: Emil L. Prokl, 2101 E. Garfield Drive, which took place June 25 in Greenfield.
Dexheimer-Carlon Photo. The engagement of Miss Irene Spurgeon to Robert E. McKee has been announced. Miss Spurgeon is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Howard D. Spurgeon. The wedding is to take place at 4:30 p. m. Saturday, Jan. 8
lo 5
ton, hostess. Holiday party. hostess. : Gamma, Sigma Delta Zeta. Comer, hostess. lege, hostess.
N. Meridian St., hostess. Beta, Phi Theta Delta. Tonight.
Lo EVENTS
.Tri C. Thurs. night. Mrs. Mary Eades, 3427 E. 10th, hostess. Inter-Nos. Wed. Mrs. Harold Gossett, hostess. Discussion, “Peace.”
] SORORITIES \ Alpha, Phi Tau Delta. Thurs, night.
Kappa Sigma, Wed. night. Mrs. John Heim, 3420 N. Meridian, Tonight. Miss Susan Larmore, 142 Kappa Delta Theta. Wed. night. : Alpha, Pi Theta Delta. Wednesday night. Mrs. John Shampay,
igan, hostess. Holiday party, gift exchange. ry
Mrs. Keith Brunson, Castle-
Miss Florence Schaub, 2206 Col-
Miss Jean Gorton, 1601 E.
Euvola Club’s 20th Annual MN Dance Scheduled for Tonight
The 20th annual dance of the Euvola Club is to be held tonight in the
Columbia Club ballroom.
Miss Jean Stewart is arrangements chairman, assisted by Misses Jean York, Shirley St. Pierre, Marty Bartlett and Mary Stewart Socwell.
A WV
Smith-Willsey Rites Are Read In New Bethel
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Edgar Smith are at home in New Bethel following their marriage Saturday night in the New Bethel Baptist Church. : Mrs. Smith was formerly Miss
‘Thelma Louesa Willsey, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Richard Wwillsey. Mr. Smith is a son of Mr. and Mrs. Ferdinand Smith, New ‘Bethel. : ! The Rev. Archer C. Shirley read the double ring ceremony before hn altar of palms and interspersed with cathedral candles. He was assisted by the Rev. W.'F, Buckner. The bride’s twin sister, Miss Lucille Willsey, maid of honor, wore rose faille. Miss Mary Virginia Pfendler, bridesmaid, wore salmon lace and Miss Helen Smith, the bridegroom’s sister, junior bridesmaid, wore blue lace. Geneva Crum, New Palestine, was flower girl. She wore a pink taffeta dress and carried a basket of roses. The bride, who entered with her father, wore a gown of bridal satin with a long satin and lace train. A finger-tip veil fell from a wreath of orange blossoms and she carried a shower bouquet of Bride's roses. Lester I. Smith was his brother's best man. Earl Willsey, John Adams and Richard and Robert Willsey, the bride’s brothers, ushered. Bridal ‘airs were sung by Mrs. John Lombard, accompanied ,by Mrs. Archer C. Shirley. A reception followed the ceremony in the home of the bride’s parents.
-
Goucher Colleg Tea Is Arranged
Hostesses for the Goucher College tea to be held tomorrow in the Propylaeum were announced today. They are Mesdames Charles Ford Carman, Frederick C. Albershardt, Harry D. Case, M. Steele Churchman, Edward H. Deldority, Ben Franklin, George R. Jeffrey, John F. Lance, Charles Richardson, Russell I. Richardson, Joséph W. Ricketts, Paul Schaffner, Herbert E. Wilson and Misses Marguerite Dice, Grace Emery, Jean L. IZirlin, Charlotte Twitty and Ruth F, Stone, Dr. Kathryn McHale, Washing. ton, D. C, former professor o! phychology at Goucher College; i3 to be honored guest and speaker. Qut-of-town guests sre to includa Mrs. John A. Rhue and her daughter, Rebecca, South Bend; Mrs. George Chambers, Ifuncie, and Mise Sarah Jane Vanl)yke, Winona e. ; -
Weds Jan. 8
Chaperons are to be Mr. and Mrs. FP. N. Reynolds, whose daughter, Jane, is club president, and Messrs. and Mesdames F. G. Marshall, Harry Hood Martin, C. C. McDermott and Weir Cook: Alexander M. Stewart and Miss Florence Fletcher Barrett. The S. T. A. G. Club is to entertain with a dinner before the dance. Guests are to include Misses Betsy Medlicott, Marian Sturm, Bette Bowes, Marian Wilcox, Peggy Trusler, Mary Roberts, Irma Berry and Joan Eunice Dougan. ;
Candidates Listed Club members are Andrew Diddel, Edward Taylor, Robert Pitcher, Steve Minton, Howard Burkholder, Jack Busch, Roger Sheridan and Robert Meyer. Euvola Club members are Shortridge High School and Tudor Hall
girls. Other members are Misses] -
eanne and Virginia wills, Rose Jane Boggs, Peggy Lee Bridges, Maxine Buser, Patty Hill, Peggy Hussey, Jeanne Shirk, Marjorie McAbee, Perky Marshall, Barbara Martin, Martha Jean Simms, Eleanor Winslow, Joyce Lindsay, Suzanna Cook, Betsey Barlow, Dorothy Street and Jo Ann Bayer. : Candidates for membership are Misses Catherine Peet, Virinia McCracken, Betty Terhune, Martha Jo Runyan, Martha Wynne, Jacqueline Wells, Carol Kreusser, Suzanne Calwall, Caroline and Norma Hyman, Mary Ann Sladinger, Nancy Regan, Virginia Stoddard, Peggy Clayton and Sally Evans.
Fraternity for Women to Hear - Science Leader
Dr. Alice Evans is to speak at the luncheon meeting of Sigma Delta Epsilon, national Graduate Women’s Scientific Fraternity, tomorrow in the Claypool Hotel. The fraternity is holding its national convention here in conjunction with American Association for the Advancement of Science sessions. All women .in the field of science have been invited to the con-
vention, Dr. Evans is senior bacteriologist at the National Institute of Health, Washington, D. C., and an honorary member of Sigma Delta Epsilon. The fraternity is to hold a breakfast Wednesday morning in. the Claypool. Hotel Florentine . Room. Other sessions of the convention are to be held this afternoon and Wednesday afternoon. Officers of the national organization include Dr. Evelyn I. Fernand, Rockford College, Rockford, Illi, president; Dr. Katherine Palmer, Ithaca, N. Y., first vice president; Dr. Helen A. Mowry, Skidmore College, Saratoga Springs, N. Y., second vice president; Dr. Margery Carlson, Northwestern University, Evanston, Ill, secretary, and Dr. ‘Echo D. Pepper, University of Illinois, Urbana, treasurer. : : The Indiana committee jn charge of ts is Dr. Edith Haynes, chairman, and Dr. Laura Hare, Indianapolis; Dr. Martha Doan, Westfield; Dr. Floy Hurlbut, Muncie, and Dr." Cecilia Schuck, West Lafayette, :
Reservations Made
- For Cabaret Dinner
‘More than 100 reservations are enlisted for the Propylaeum Club’s
| cabaret dinner to be held Jan. 15 nsec
‘| Sloane Kittle,
: Porter PI 3 Miss Ruth Naomi Eldridge (above), daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Eugene R. Eldridge, is to become the bride of Ralph E. Waltz, son of Mrs. Ida Temple, Feb. 6 in the Eldridge home, 436 Alton Ave.
Capacity Crowd ~~ Sponsored
Photo-Craft Photo. The marriage of Miss Kather-
ine Lawless (above) to Kenneth Sasser, Muncie, is to take place Friday evening in the Woodruff Rlace Baptist Church. Miss Lawless is a sister of Mrs. Leonard Massena, 355 S. Bradley #t.
Sees Show
by’ Cornell Club
Seats in English’s Theater Saturday night were sold out for the Cornell Club’s show, “O What a Night” presented by the university's
musical organizations. Cast members were entertained with a tea dance in the Indianapolis Athletic Club Venetian Room in the afternoon preceding the performance, The walls were decorated with silver laurel wreaths and poinsettias, and there was a silver Christmas tree. Cast members, who wore red carnations, sang school songs during the afternoon. : SE On the arrangements committee for the event were Messrs. and Mesdames Nicholas H. Noyes, John Anton Vonnegut, Owen M. Mothershead, Mrs. D. Foscue Modrall a John Sloane Kittle Jr., a Cornell student, who is manager of the Cornell Glee and Instrumental Clubs.
Skit Is Highlight
A. highlight of the show was a dramatic skit by a member of the cast who took the parts of Miss Genevieve Tripe, the heroine; Rudolph Razzle-Dazzle, the villain, and Jackie, the hero cadet from Pulver Millinery Academy. Sn Also featured was an ochra bas ensemble, a magic act and a young man who tore from a newspaper a banner reading “Greetings, Indianapolis and Cornell.” The scene, laid in a “Town Tavern,” was typically collegiate with red-checkered table cloths, a
picture of a blond bathing béauty and the Cornell banner.
Dance Proceeds Are to Go Into St. Agnes Fund
Proceeds from the St. Agnes Alumnae Christmas dance tonight in ‘' the Indianapolis Athletic Club are to go to the organization's scholarship fund. ; Mrs. Paul S. McNamara, ticket chairman, is being assisted by Misses Mildred Gallagher, Winifrecl O’Brien, Dorothy Wagner, Mary Habich, Gretchen Mary Yeazel, Mary Jane Schmitt and Eileen Sweeney. Also assisting Mrs. McNamara arg Mrs. John Rocap and Misses Virginia Keene, Mary Ann Kibler, Rita Comber, Helen Hegarty, Patricia Shine, Jean Kelleher, Mary Jo Mayer, Mary Louise Pyle, Marie Warren, Frances Courtney and Mrs, John Harold Blackwell. Miss Helen Bosler is reservations
Engagements of 2 Young Women Are Announced
The engagements of two local young women were announced this week-end and the engagement of another from Edinburg is to be announced at a tea, 4 to 6 p. m. tomorrow, in her home. The marriage of Miss Rose Ann Doebber to Bert Ferrara is to take place in the Tabernacle Presbyterian Church McKee Chapel Jan. 29. She is the daughter of Fred A. Doebber. Mr. Ferrara is a son of Mr. rand Mrs. Frank Ferrara, Clinton. : Mr. and Mrs. Max Weil, 5104 CGiraceland Ave., announced the engagement of their daughter, Lillian, to Dr. Charles Bass, Indianapolis, formerly of New York. He is a son of Rubin Bass, New York. The wedding date has not been set. Announcement of the engagement of Miss Betty Kathleen Amos, doughter of Mr. and Mrs. Roy Amos, Edinburg, to Dr. Wilson Weisel is to be made at the tea tomorrow. Dr. Weisel is a son of Mr. and Mrs. L. W. Weisel, Milwaukee. Miss Amos was graduated from Tudor Flall. She is now a student in the Lucy Wheelock School, Boston. Mr. Weisel was graduated from the University of Wisconsin and Harvard Medical School.
Personals _ |
el
Miss Mary Adelaide Rhodes, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. R. Rhodes, is spending the wiiter at Palm Springs, Cal. Linn D., Hay is spending a few days in Nashville, Tenn. as a guest of his son, Roger Hay, and Mrs. Hay. He is also to spend several weeks in Florida. : Mrs. O. P. Renchen and her grandson, J. D. Alexander, have returned from New Orleans where they have been visiting. Miss Josephine Meyers has returned to Indianapolis after a visit with Mr. and Mrs. Charles Rau, Denver. : M. A. Reddle is spending the week at the Hollywood Beach Hotel, Hollywood, Fla. Mr. and Mrs. Erwin Coburn are spending the winter in their home at Winter Park, Fla. Samuel Pickens Adams, Ft. Wayne, is spending a few days with his
chairman and Miss Mary Rosalie Beck is music chairman.
Club Federation
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Henry O. Adams.
Council and
Board Meeting Is Scheduled
The advisory board and council of the Indiana Federation of Clubs is to meet Jan. 18 and 19 in the Claypool Hotel.
Announcement has been made by®
Mrs. Edwin I. Poston, Martinsville, president. The conference is second in .importance only to the annual state convention, she said. - Sessions are to begin at 2 p. m. Jan, 18. From 5 to 6 p. m. there is to be a conference for department and district workers, followed by a dinner. , State leaders are to report at the night session. Films of the old Fauntleroy home also are to be shown by Mrs, Frederick G. Balz, federation director. J] The gerteral council meeting is to be held Jan. 19. The speaker for the morning program has not heen announced. Mrs. M. Clifford Townsend is to be hostess at a silver tea at 2 p. m. in the Governor’s mansign. Receiving with her are to be Mrs. Poston, Mrs. Balz and Mrs, Felix T. McWhirter, federation trustee.
Millers on Trip After Marriage
Mr. and Mrs. Max Dunham Miller are on a wedding trip. Upon their return they are to be at home at 5437 College Ave. an Mrs. Miller was formerly Miss Beulah Ruth Head, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Everett Head, 90 N. Brookville Road. ‘Mr. Miller is a son of Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Miller, 2802 N. Dearborn St. ; Dr. J. Ambrose Dunkel read the ceremony Saturday in the presence of the immediate families. The bride wore a dress of aqua blue moss crepe, fashioned on princess lines. Her accessories were brown. She wore a hand corsage of gardenias and lilies of the valley. Lag
Plans Made for Art
Museum Open House
Mrs. Noble Dean is arrangements chairman for open house at John Herron Art Museum from 3 to 6 p. m. New Year’s Day. She is being assisted by J. T. Witherspoon and Mrs. T. G. Wesenberg. Members of the Art Association of Indianapolis who have joined within the past year are to be spe-
| cial guests. Presiding at the tea Evans
table are to ‘be Mesdames Woollen, H. C. Atkins, Frank Stalnaker, James W. Fesler, Donald Mattison, Henrick Mayer, Robert B. Failey, Frederic H. Sterling, Kurt Vonnegut and Miss Blanche Stillson.
Miss O’Mara Is Wed To Phillip Kimmell
Times Special a LAFAYETTE, Dec. 27—The marriage of Miss Mary Jane O'Mara, former dietitian at the James Whitcomb Riley Hospital, Indianapolis, to Phillip Michael Kimmell took place
Church. The bride is a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Fred E. O'Mara. She was graduated from Purciue University where
| she was member of the Kappa Alpha
Theta Sorority. Mr. Kimmell was graduated from Purdue University He is a member of the Delta Alpha
\mell are to live in’ Columbus, O. P. D. Club Members Are Feted at Supper
‘Miss Marjory Geupel entertained P. D. Club members with a buffet
Fifty”
Saturday in the Trinity Methodist pick a rather oily lipstick. Always
Phi Fraternity. Mr. and Mrs, Kim-|.
A
To Precede
Penn Show
Cast and Faculty Members Will Be Guests At Luncheons. |
Several social events are to precede the University of Pennsyle vania’s Mask anc Wig show “Fiftytomorrow night in English’s At noon tomorrow, Dr. George McClellen, Penn English department head and vice provost, is to be hone ored guest at a luncheon in the Ine dianapolis athletic Club Green room, given by the Indianapolis alumni club.
Other guests are to be three facul=
ty members, Dr. Thomas D. Cope, Dr. L. V. Heilborun and Dr. H. H, York, who are to be in Indianapolis attending sessions of the American Association for Advancement of Science meeting. Mr, and Mrs. Conrad ‘Ruckelshaus are to entertain ‘several cast members at a luncheon at their home in Golden Hill. In the group are to be Louis Madeira IV, coauthor of the show and a dancing chorus member; Elliott Hess II, cast lead;
George Wharton Pepper III, How-
ard York III, Graeme Wood Jr, Joseph Sims Jr., singers; Carrington Veale, soloist; John Portser under-
graduate chairman, and dancing
chorus member; Elias Baker, cast member, and Paul Hartenstein, production manager. Other guests are to be Midshipman William Ingram, United States Naval Academy, and his sister, Miss Mary Birch Ingram, Brooklyn, N. Y., who are visiiing their aunt and uncle, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Harvey Bradley; Misses Barbara Stafford, Josephine Mayer, Mary Sheerin Kuhn, Alice Vonnegut, Betsey Home, Irving Moxley, Nina Brown, Estelle Rauh Burpee, Patricia Brown, Jean Brown, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Ruckelshaus, Samuel Sutphin Jr., Edward Groetsinger and Mrs. David Stone. In the afternoon, these Pennsylvania students and the remainder of the staff are to be entertained at
a tea-dance io be given by Bowman
Elder, an alumnus and Mrs. Elder, Invitations have been issued to the younger set. Box Parties Pl
anned ] Boxholders for the show include
Messrs. and. Mesdames Charles R. Weiss, Austin Brown, Kurt Pantzer,
‘Samuel Runnels Harrell and Mr,
2nd Mrs. Donald Teetor, Hagerse wn, * Mr. and Mrs. Weiss are having their box party for their sub-deb daughter, Elizabeth, whose guests are to be Nancy Lockwood, Susanah Jameson, Walter Milliken, Sheldon Sayles and Robert Cusack. Miss Weiss also is to entertain her guests at the supper dance in honor of the cast at the Columbia Club following the show. Mr. and Mrs. Teetor’s guests are to include Mr. and Mrs. Macy Teetor, Newcastle; Messrs. and Mesdames Ralph Teetor, George Keagy, Herman Teetor, Hagerstown, and Mr. and Mrs. Thomas D. Hos= kins, Monroe; La., the Macy Teetor
‘| house guests, . This party also is to
attend the dance. In Mr. and Mrs. Pantzer’s box are to be Mrs. Pantzer’s sister, Miss Emita Ferriday, wilmington, Del.; Julius Birdge Dean Rice and Edward Stokely, who are to be entertained by the Pantzers at the dance. In Mr. and Mrs. Harrell’s box are to be Dr. George McClellen, Philadelphia, Pa., the university vice provost, who travels with the show; Ferguson Mohr, the show director; M. and Ms. Herbet M. Woollen and Mr. and Mrs. Frank B. Shields, Martinsville. : Mr, and Mrs. Brown’s party is to be for their daughter Virginia, M. and Ms. Otto N. Fenzel J. are to entertain at dinner for Miss Jane Adams, who made her debut Christmas night, in their home preceding the show. Guests are to be Misses Nina Brown, Mary Sheerin Kuhn, Sheila Saxton and Mary Birch Ingram, Brooklyn; Mr. and Ms. Wil lidm Ray Adams, Miss Adams’ parents. J. K. Lilly III, Robert Patrick Fortune, William T. Ingram, Syle vester Johnson Jr., and Don Modrall,
Cream or Liquid Cleansers Used
To Banish Lines
By ALICIA HART (NEA Service Staff Writer)
“My skin is abnormally dry.” writes a young mother. “What can I do to prévent lines and wrinkles?” First of all, cleanse with soap and water only at night. For morning cleansings and midday ones, use cream or a liquid cleanser, made especially to correct a dry condition. At night, after washing, apply a rich cream, : With firm upward and outward strokes, massage the nourishing
cream into face and throat. Use
deep, kneading and slapping movements. Rubbing motions are likely to stretch delicate skin. With thumbs and forefingers, pinch along jawbone from center of chin to ears. Repeat eight times. Leave the cream on while you brush your hair and teeth. ( In the morning, cleanse with a rather oily lotion and use a liquid
instead of cream foundation. Cream -
rouge will be better than a- dry variety, too, and your powder’ ought to have enough body to stay on for hours without looking flaky. Even keep cream on your face while you if you have to replenish it oftener,
ars under a hair dryer.
Plans Luncheon
‘To Honor Niece
Miss niece, Miss
day in the Columbia Club.
Miss Carman, who is a freshman
Mr. and Mrs. Ch 324 E. 36th St.
Marguerite Dice is fo ene tertain, with a luncheon for hep Frances T t0=
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