Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 July 1938 — Page 11

THURSDAY, JULY 7, 1038

Attendants Named for

4 Weddings

Prenuvtial Parties Fete July and August Brides-to-Be.

Four Indianapolis young women today named attendants for their weddings in July and August. Several brides-to-be are being feted at prenuptial parties. Miss Barbara Jean Holt, whose marriage to J. Russell Townsend Jr. will be an event of Aug. 1, today named members of her bridal party. Miss Barbara Holt, sister of the bride-to-be, will be her maid of honor, and William Hoffman will be best man. Ushers will include H. Edward Raffensperger, G. W. Raffensperger, Mavburn Landgraf and Dr. Wendell A. Shullenberger. Miss Holt is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Walter G. Holt, and Mr. Townsend is the son of Mrs. J. Russell Townsend, hf 5 @#

Miss Dorothy Louise Head's at-

tendants are to include Miss Bea- |

the | Misses Virginia Carter, Betty Loos, |

truce Ponders, maid of honor;

Wilma Cisco, Rita Jane Dueutal, Dorothy Maroney and Pauline Roberts, bridesmaids. Miss Head wil] be married July 20 vo John P. Rob- | erts. Best man will be William Messling. Ushers will be Thomas Cisco,

Eugene Ponders, Roy Cantrell, Orion Starks Jr, George Beasen and Edward Gehring. The ring bearer will be Tommy Cisco, and | Jane Rae Okey will be flower girl. |

Miss Vida Marie Bennett today announced attendants for her July 16 wedding to Guy W, Bennett is a daughter of Mr. and | Mrs. Thomas K. Bennett, and Mrs. | Gertie Ray is the mother of the bridegroom-to-be. { Mrs. Richard Frantz and Miss Margaret Houston are to be bridesmaids. Junior bridesmaid will be Beverly Ann Clendenin. Acie Ray wiill be best man, and ushers are to include Norvel S. Boyd and Edgar GeLarden. Mrs. George Morrison will enter- | tain with a personal shower this | evening at the home of her mother, Mrs. W. E. Gatrritson in Miss Ben- | nett’s honor. She is to be assisted | by Mrs. Garritson and her sister, | Miss Dorothy Ann Garritson. Guests, with the bride-to-be, are to include Miss Bennett's mother | and Mesdames Frantz, J. H. Clen- | denin, Arnold K. Nelson, Norvel Bovd. Robert Sheets; Misses Hous- | ton, Marjorie Byrum, Helen Rosen- | baum, Christina Valentine, Ruth Bubeck, Maybelle Smith, Mary Lou Smith and Juanita Wallis. Miss Houston wili entertain for Miss Bennett with a miscellaneous shower Sunday afternoon. Mrs. M. Marie Campbell, 26 E. 14th St, announces the coming marriage of her daughter, Lois Imogene, to Thomas E. Lyons, son of Mr. and Mrs. Clyde T.yons. The |

Princess at Beach on Holiday

Ray. Miss | co

Times-Acme Photo,

With several companions, Princess Josephine Charlotte, daughter

of King Leopold of Belgium, spent

oi Ss is shown riding a bicycle over the sands | os : 1a Punite, elgium, She i ; 2 = __ | at his little attempts to do things? |

[Lack of Interest

a holiday recently on the coast at

in Dolls

Begins Marionette Hobby

: MARIAN Yi |

By MARIAN YOUNG

NEW YORK, July 7

Janet, then six. her mother had spent hours putting® together. She finally did put it on the doll, but none too carefully. And she refused to play with Dolly or any of Dolly's little sawdust pals the rest of that long, dreary, rainy afternoon. “Then and there,” Mrs. Gore said, “1 decided tu find a substitute for the dolls my children obviously had outgrown. Furthermore, I had a vague notion that it had better be something which would come under

wedding will be Aug. 6 at 4:30 p. m. | the heading of hobby rather than |

at the Broadway Methodist Church. |

just play. And that it would be |

Miss Virginia Campbell, sister of | pretty nice if the hobby happened |

the bride-to-be, will be honor, and Earl T. Lyons, the bridegroom-to-be’s brother, will be best man. Among the prenuptial parties planned for Miss Campbell is an aluminium shower in the home of Miss Flossie Noland Tuesday. Lambda Gamma sorority alumnae and active members will be guests. Mrs. Earl T. Lvons is to entertain with a lawn party July 17, and | Miss Eleanor Lyons and Miss Ev- | elvn Calloway are arranging a brid- | al shower for July 22 at Miss Lyons’ home, 2821 N. Delaware St.

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Miss Marjorie Miner is to be honor guest at a personal shower | tonight given by her future moth- | er-in-law, Mrs. Wilbert O, Eggert, | and Mrs. E. J. Hagerty. Miss Miner's marriage to Wilbert O. Eggert Jr. is set for Aug. 14. She is a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Stewart Miner, 3761 Forest Manor | Ave. The house is to be decorated | throughout with garden flowers in | the bridal colors of pink and white, | and refreshments are to be in the | same motif. Guests will include Mr. and Mrs. | W. L. Walmsley and Mr. and Mrs. | Howard Walmsley, Putnamville, and | Mesdames Howard Schurmann, Stephen Crane, William Polk, Wil- | ma Mueller, Paul Eggert, Alfred | Eggert, Francis Gregg, Stewart | Miner, Dorothy Herr, Walter J, Eggert, Alvin Eggert, Walter H. Eg- | gert, Lewis Eggert, J. L. McDer- | med, William H. Schneider and | Misses Betty Herr, Lois Jean Eggert, | Marie June, Mae and Martha | Walmsley.

Missionary Society To Honor Officers

Indianapolis District Women's] Home Missionary Society of the | Methodist Church will be enter- | tained Sept. 7 at the Meridian Street Methodist Church. Plans for the meeting will be completed by Mrs. J. H. Smiley and the district executive board on Mrs. | Smiley's return from a vacation in the East. Arrangements for the national convention of the society here Oct. 12-18 will also be com- | pleted. | Mrs. Smiley is to be accompanied | on the trip by Miss Helen Smiley, Sparta, Ill, and Miss Dorothy Neuman, St. Louis. The group is to in- | clude a trip in the Great Smoky | Mountains in its itinerary. The district recently held a group of zone meetings, which closed the fiscal year. New program material and literature for | the coming year’s program were introduced.

Teams Selected for | Polo Game Sunday |

Announcement was made today of the teams selected for the Sunday polo game to be played at 3:30 p. m. | at the Ft. Benjamin Harrison | grounds. The games will continue each week throughout the summer season. Competing with Conrad Ruckelshaus, Thomas Ruckelshaus, Lieut. McDonald Brown and Samuel Sutphin are to be Maj. T. Sapia-Bosch, Maj. Ernest Williams and Jesse Andrews and Jesse Andrews Jr. both of Lafayette.

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Officers of the auxiliaries of the | ;

maid of | to be something which wouldn't |

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Today’s Pattern

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These little dresses are so charming, and so easy to make, that everybody's small daughter deserves to have them both! The little princess, | Pattern 8886, with square neckline and a saucy flare of skirt, is ideal foi every day, made up in linen, gingham or bright percale print. Pattern 8178, with tight bodice, rippling full skirt, sash bow at the back and a perfectly devastating point at the waistline, makes a beeyutiful party frock in taffeta, organdy, dimity or dotted Swiss. Pattern 8886 is designed for sizes 4 6, 8 and 10 years. Size 6 (with panties) requires 3 yards of 39-inch material. Dress alone, 2 yards and 4'; yards braid or ribbon for trimming. 1'2 yards of bias binding. Pattern 8178 is designed for sizes 4 6, 8 10 and 12. Size 6 requires 2's yards of 39-inch material with

| 3% yards of contrast for collar, and

neck-bow. To obtain a 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 Times, 214 W. Maryland St. In-

dianapolis, Ind. |

[l

SUMMER SALE NOW ON!

Every Pair, Every Style Reduced! 44 NO. PENNSYLVANIA ST,

| Gore's Pelham home.

| known people.

| creasing

| (NEA) —Less than four years ago, attractive | brown-haired Mrs. Challis Gore put the last stitch in a tiny dress she | [ had just made for her youngest aaughter’s newest doll and handed it to Janet showed little, if any, interest in the new gown

| bore me to death as the making of |

doll's dresses often had.” She found the substitute. Puppets. And they more than mea-

sure up to both specifications. Mrs. Gore enjoys making puppets and | planning puppet shows only slightly less than do her children. “We started out on the proverbial shoestring—literally,” says Mrs. | Gore. (The children call her Rud- | dy.) “Plus a couple of other pieces | of string I found in the house, a | few scraps of blue cotton and the | padding out of three or four old | powder puffs. From these, Wilfred | the Clown came into being. Out of | a soap box and another remnant, we made a slage, complete with curtain and backdrop. Then we prac-

| ticed until each one of us could |

make Wilfred do an act on that

| stage without once losing his bal- | ance.”

Since then, “Ruddy” and her | daughters, now ranging in age from | 10 to 14, have made hundreds of little marionettes all from odd scraps and bits of this and that. More than one hundred simply charming ones hang by their control strings from nails on the walls of the attic in the There are all sorts of animals, from Peter Rabbit to Minnie Mouse, as well as the

Instead of putting | dolls to bed, the Gore children put on a puppet show every night.

“Public”

There are shows for playmates | several times a month, too. And | an occasional professional per- | formance for some community | charity, hospitals and orphans’ homes. Indeed, Ruddy and her | puppets and her children are much in demand these days. I “Even a very small child can learn to work the control strings,” | the creator of the rapidly in- | fam'y of Ruddy Gore | Marionettes went on. And, with

Now Have a

|a good pattern, any little girl who | Bettis and Mrs

can sew at all can make puppets | as easily as dolls’ clothes. The | virtue of these marionettes is that | they require no wood carving | ability. but are literally ‘rag uolls’| that can be made from the scraps | of material found in every house. | Also, judging by the reactions of | the boys in our neighborhood, | they like marionettes as much as | girls do.”

2 Primary Fears Rule

All Babies|

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Writer Says They're Born with Bugaboo of Falling, Constriction.

By OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON

We don’t know exactly what is going on in a baby’s mind. But one thing has been decided on, and that is fear. The bugaboo has come | right into this world with him, | strange to say. Two bad fears are guite noticeable; one is the fear of falling, the other, dread of constriction. So. mother, it will be wise to aveid anvthing that increases this natural fright. Later obsessions are sometimes based upon early experi- | ences that parents have never sus- | pected at the time. Babies today are no « longer | ‘swaddled,” thank goodness. They | are dressed in almost nothing at all for many weeks, and even when | they don real clothes to take the] place of the didy, shirt and | sweater. the dresses are short and | allow for kicking. This is not a physical advantage alone, but also | a mental one. The baby senses strength and security. This is undermined if he is made into a football by daddy, too early in his new life; daddy, who is determined to make a brave lad of his son. Well, father, you may | actually be fixing in him a fear that | will feed on itself later on. A maid dropped me when I was | a tiny baby. Today, a height not only makes me ill, but the thought of one dismays me. Then there is something else that I consider important. We are forever talking about inferiority. Why Is it that some children have it and others escape? Because the

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

“makings” of inferiority are somehow born in a baby. If this were not true, then why does the baby cry or hang his head after the first few when somebody mocks him or laughs

laughed May-

He won't mind being “with.” but “at” is different. be it attention at all ‘ricks. He is smart, however, and senses the difference between pride and teasing almost every time.

Phi Mus Hold Ist Rush Party

Miss Margaret Stewart is general arrangements chairman for the first of several informal parties to be held by the Indianapolis Phi Mu Alumnae Club tonight at the home of Mrs. H. D. Eberhart. Assistant hostesses will W. E. Brown of the St. Louis Alumnae Club; Mrs. George Burkert Jr.,

weeks of life, !

is best not to pay too much | to his cute baby |

|

rush |

he Mrs. |

Miss Virginia Moore and Miss Ju- |

dith McTurnan.

Mrs. Eberhart, organization pres- |

ident, and Mrs. Wilbur C. Shannan will leave Saturday for Asheville, N. C., where they are to attend the Phi Mu national convention at the Grove Park Inn. A motor trip in the Great Smoky Mountains will be included in their return itinerary. Miss Mona Jane Wilson, Delta Alpha Chapter, Indiana University, and Miss Marian Moreland. Rho

| Chapter, Hanover College, will be

active chapter delegates.

Mrs. Turner Chosen Mission Treasurer Mrs. C. M. Turner was appointed

Flower Mission treasurer to fill the unexpired term of Mrs. Edward

| Ferger at a board of directors meetLO | ing today. | familiar story-book characters and | Hf | a fine selection ot replicas of well- |

Mrs. Ferger -died last week. Resolutions of tribute Ferger and sympathy to her family

| were adopted. The organization has

received a $400 bequest and some jewelry from the estate of Mrs. Elizabeth Shoppenhorst, city woman who died last year,

Phi Theta Deltas

To Dance Saturday

Beta Chapter, Phi Theta Delta Sorority, will hold a membership dance from 9:30 to 12:30 o'clock Saturday night at the Ulen Country Club, Lebanon. Miss Lillian

Jensen {s general chairman,

assisted by Miss Joy J. F. Iselin, Max Miller is chapter president.

Say It With

FLOWERS

ALLIED FLORISTS ASS'N OF INDIANAPOLIS

to have a supply on hand.

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15 Prs. Misses’ Shoes Reg. 1.98, 2.98, 4.50

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445 Prs. Growing Girls’ Footwear

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1.85 3.19

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