Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 August 1938 — Page 4

August Vacationists Begin Trek to Seashore: And Michigan Lakes

Miss Lucy Taggart Will Entertain Relatives at Gloucester; Harry Hammonds Have Guests °° At Their Summer Home.

Early: August finds Indianapolis residents dashing off on vacation jaunts or leaving for lake or seashore homes to spend the few remaining weeks of summer. Michigan lakes and Eastern resorts are attracting a large share of the Indianapolis travelers. Mrs. William Rockwood and her daughter, Mrs. Charles Greathouse Jr. and son, Charles III, have left for Northport Point where they will remain until the middle of September. Others treking eastward include Mrs. William Young and Mrs. Frank Rogers. They were to leave today for Gloucester, Mass., for a visit with Mrs. Young’s sister,

Miss Lucy Taggart.

| scra

Yacht Race Postponed Once Again Lake Marinkackes Socie-

ty Continues Activities Despite Rains.

By MARGARET B. JAMESON Times Special Writer

, Aug. 2,

LAKE MAXINKUCKEE, .| —No Yacht Club races here for

three weeks makes the scorekeepers almost eligible for unemployment insurance. : iy Last week was a busy one as the lake folk prayed for fair winds and ped barnacles off the bottoms of sailboats in preparation for resuming the races on Sunday. Howe ever the day dawned with a long, warm rain, the boring kind that makes one wish for a good drenching downpour that offers some hope of surcease,

Removing Gadgets Fea

1. Mrs. Sidney R. Levi was Miss Mildred Lob before her marriage July 10. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Bernath Lob. The

Mr. and Mrs. William H. Thompson aré in Fremont, Mich., where they are staying with Mrs. Thompson's uncle, Harry Hammond, and

Other events included the ‘come ings and goings of guests, the tear-

Mrs. Hammond, Indianapolis, at their summer home. Higgins Lake, Mich, draws large numbers of local residents.

Miss Estelle Rauh Burpee and Mrs. John Hendricks left yesterday for that resort to visit Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Taggart at their summer home. Also at the Taggart cottage will be the Taggart’s daughters, Miss Elizabeth Taggart and Mrs. Robert Montague of Saginaw, Mich. Miss Theodosia Burr and her sister, Marcia, were to leave today for Evanston, Ill, where they will join their mother, Mrs. Charles Cutler Dawes and Mr. Dawes. The Misses Burr have been the guests of their grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Hugh McGibney, Golden Hills, Mr. and Mrs. McGibney plan to leaVe THrsaay for Greenwich, Conn., where they will visit Mr. and Mrs. omas McInnerney at their sumer home. Recent guests of Mrs. McGibney were her sisters, Mrs. Alexander Peddie, Kansas City, and Mrs. Marybelle Burnard, Carey, O. : Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Alexander Lemcke Jr. have returned to their home in Cleveland after visiting several days with friends here. Mrs. Jackson Hazelwood is visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Leonard L. Campbell, 3065 N. Delaware St. : Mrs. Lafayette Page of Woodstock Drive and her son, Dr. Irvin Page, will spend the week-end with Mrs. Page's daughter, Mrs. Thomas Fisher and Mr. Fisher, Hubbard Woods, Ill. Mrs. Fisher is known professionally as Ruth Page, the dancer. Miss Agnes Cruse left today for Egg Harbor, Wis, with her nephew, Herbert Joseph Shimer. Miss Jane Anne Evans, formerly of Indianapolis, has been the guest of Miss Janet Sinclair at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs, Archer V. Sinclair in Golden Hills. Mr. and Mrs. Morris Lanville Brown are ‘in New York for a few days. Other Indianapolis residents visiting in New York include Mrs. Carl Semans, Miss Eleanor Semans and Miss Mary Elizabeth Sawyer. Miss Marguerite Bernatz and Miss Kathryn Bernatz, daughters of Mr. and Mrs. Louis J. Bernatz, 4445 Washington Blvd, left recently for a two weeks’ trip to Banff and Lake Louise. They also

EVENTS

SORORITIES

Beta Chapter, Rho Delta. 7:30 p. m. tonight. Hoosier Athletic Club. Chi Delta Chi. Tonight. Mrs. Charles J. Gisler, 5429 Central Ave., hostess. Supper. Mrs. Russell Fisher, assistant. Phi Gamma Rho. Wed. eve. Mrs. Cleston Berry, hostess. Gamma Sigma Phi. Fri. eve. Mrs. Jack Pietts, hostess. Alpha Chapter, Sigma Phi Kappa. Wed. eve. Miss Erna Meinzen, hostess. Delta Zeta Psi. Lambda Gamma. 8 St., hostess.

Wed. eve. Miss Naomi Lawler, hostess. p. m. tonight. Mrs. James Cahill, 223 W. 32d

CLUBS

Rosicrucian Fellowship. 8 p. m. 410 Pennsylvania Building. Regular astrology club meeting. Miss Frieda Noltin will speak on “Astrology and Reincarnation.” Ladies Auxiliary to the Indiana Firemen’s Association. 7:30 p. m. Thurs. Hotel Lincoln, 4 REUNION

Mapleton Reunion Association. Sun. Pavalion at Brookside Park. Annual” meeting. Program, basket dinner.

Virginia Holt Becomes Bride Of John Russell Townsend

plan to tour the Canadian Rockies. 2 ” 2

2 2 8 ;

William H. Wemmer is the newly elected? president of th Traders Point Hunt, it was announced today. Other officers are Charles Mayer, vice president; Otto N. Frenzel Jr., treasurer, and Ralph G. Lockwood, secretary. Cornelius O. Alig

is master of foxhounds.

New directors are Mr. Frenzel, Samuel B. Sutphin, Herbert M. Woollen, August C. Bohlen and Thomas M. Kaufman. Mrs. William Ray Adams has been appointed entertainment committee chairman and Mrs. Mayer is to head the house and grounds committee for the

coming year.

Program Is Announced for Women at Editors’ Meeting

Mrs. Frank Finney, Martinsville, today announced the program of entertainment for women attending the Indiana Democratic Editorial Association’s meeting at French Lick Friday and Saturday, Aug. 26 and 27.

Mrs. Finney is chairman of the

association’s women's committee.

An elaborate style show by a leading Indianapolis department store, featuring fall and winter fashions, Saturday afternoon at a garden party in the Japanese Garden will be a highlight of the social calendar.

Twenty professional-models and children of association members are to take part. A feature will be a showing of school children’s costumes. » A card party is to be held on the mezzanine floor of the hotel Friday afternoon. Prizes valued at $25 are to be awarded winners. = A mystery program has been arranged for both men and women Friday night. Ray E. Smith, entertainment chairman, has announced that it will feature “something direct from Hollywood.” Dancing will conclude the day’s activities. A banquet will climax the two“day ’ meeting. Rep. Virginia E. Jenckes of Terre Haute will speak.

3 New Couples

Announce Homes

Times Special LOGANSPORT, Aug. 2-—-Two couples married here recently are to be at home in this city and a third will live in Indianapolis. Miss Nellie Schrougham became the bride of Roy Newberry, Indianapolis, in a ceremony read Saturday by the Rev. Dale Beatty at the Broadway Methodist Church parsonage. Mr, and Mrs. Chester Overly attended the couple. They will reside in Indianapolis.

At Home in Lafayette

Mr, and Mrs. Howard Moery are at home in Lafayette following their marriage in that city Thursday. Mrs. Moery formerly was Miss Dorothy Jackson of this city. Mr. Moery is a former Indianapolis resident and a student at Purdue University. He is a member of Sigma Pi Fraternity. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Roach are on a wedding trip through southern Indiana and will be at home here. Mrs. Roach was Miss Pearl Wendling before her marriage here Sun0a i Rev. E. L. Gates offiCc ated.

Personals

Mrs. Edward A, Lawson, 3350 E. Fall Creek Blvd. is spending two weeks in Detroit, Mich. Her daughter, Miss Jane Lawson, and Miss Mildred Scull, are at Camp Kosciusko, Lake Winona.

Mrs. Walter L. Brant and Miss Dorothy Ellis were in French Lick today for the two-day medal play open to women golfers during the Indiana men’s amateur golf championship tournament. Mrs. Leo Rassow is at Lake Wawasee for the summer. Miss Annette . Lyon, formerly of Indianapolis, is the guest of the Misses Kathryn and Phyllis Lamson. . Judge and Mrs. Clarence ‘E. Weir, 2428 Broadway, have gone to Ludington, Mich, where they are to spend the remainder of the summer. Mr. and Mrs. Maynard H. Kaburick _and their daughter, Patricia 2 1, are to arrive Sunday from Cleveland to visit Mr. Kaburick’s gparents, Mr. and Mrs. J. Edward urick, 1335 N. New Jersey St. st Sei Croan ud :

i

Waked TRI House Fine for

Warm Weather

By MRS. GAYNOR MADDOX

A baked ham in the house is an excellent form of intelligent warm weather laziness. Once cooked, the ham will be ready to help you entertain for several days without extra kitchen work,

Baked Stuffed Picnic Ham

(Serves 6 to 10) One boned picnic ham (approximate weight 32 pounds), 2 cup chopped cooking apples; 3% cup seedless raisins, 2 tablespoons of the liquid in which the ham boiled, % cup soft white bread crumbs, 2 cups

fruit nectar, 2 tablespoons brown sugar, 1% cup seedless raisins for sauce. ’ Have butcher bone and tie ham. Cover with cold water, bring to a boil and continue boiling about 4 hours or until tender, adding more water as needed. Remove from liquid, cut strings and peel off skin. Combine apples, raisins, liquid and bread crumbs. Blend and use to fill center of ham. Roll up and tie together again. Place in baking pan, fat side up, and add nectar and sugar. Bake in moderate oven (400 degrees F.) for 1 ‘hour, basting frequently. : Add 3% cup raisins about 15 minutes before meat is done. Serve remaining liquid as sauce for ham. If evaporation is rapid or more sauce is desired, more nectar may be added. If thick sauce is desired, thicken with 2 or 3 teaspoons cornstarch moistened in a smal quantity of water and added with raisins. Or serve ham cold with sliced avocado and ripe olives.

Ex-Service Women Will Hear Attorney

Howard Meyer, attorney, will speak at the fourth annual dinner reunion of the ex-service women, sponsored by the American Legion Nurses of Indiana Aug. 22 at the Antlers Hotel. The event is to be held in connection with the Legion convention Aug. 20 to 22. Miss Joan Miller, harpist, and member of the McElvain-Kothe post junior auxiliary, will present a musical program. Reservations may be made with Miss Florence Martin or Miss Theresa Magruder. Other committee members are the Misses Gertrude Hasenjaeger, Margaret Cody, Catherine Lory, Peal Claybaugh, Maude Hamilton, Flora Kennedy, Tulie Robinson, Elizabeth Gabler, Mary Canary, Mrs. Birda Wood, Lela D. Clark and Elizabeth McDermott.

Earl M. Sweet Weds Miss Irene Downing

Times Special ; DELPHI, Aug. 2.—Mr. and Mrs. Earl M. Sweet are to be at home at Monticello,

evening at the Delphi Methodist Church by the Rev. Wilbur Day. Attending the couple were Mr. and

Mrs, H. B' Wilson. The bride was

formerly Miss Irene Downing

‘| members of the North Side Recrea-

The couple was married Saturday |

Sept. 1 at 730 Carrollton Court. Mrs. Townsend was Miss Virginia Holt, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Holt, 5240 Cornelius Ave., before her marriage at 4:30 p. m. vesterday at the Tabernacle Presbyterian Church McKee Chapel. Mr. Townsend is the son of Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Townsend, 3234 Washington Blvd. ; The Rev. J. Ambrose Dunkel read the ceremony before an altar banked with cibotium ferns and decorated with two blue delft vases filled with white gladiolas and lighted by tapers in a pair of sevenbranch candelabra. The bride, who was given in marriage by her father, wore a gown of white organza embroidered in a fine needlepoint floral design with a full-length illusion veil crowned with a coronet of tiny seed pearls.

Bouquet of-Gerdenias Her gown, fashioned on old-fash-ioned lines, had a fitted bodice and a bouffant skirt which ended in a sweeping train. The neckline was

sweetheart styled and sleeves were short and full. She carried a round: formal bouquet of gardenias, stephanotis and white gladiola fleurettes. Miss Barbara Jean Holt was her sister's maid of honor. She wore a garden-flower printed chiffon gown with a shirred bodice and a streamer sash of hyacinth blue and American beauty. Her picture hat of matching blue hair braid was trimmed with grosgrain ribbon and she carried a tiny nosegay of summer garden flowers to match the gown. William Hoffman was best man. Ushers were H. Edward Raffensperger, G. William Raffensperger, Mayburn Landgraf and Dr. Wendall A. Shullenberger. Bridal airs were played by Miss Donna Alles, organist, Chooses Blue Chiffon

The bride’s mother wore hyacinth blue chiffon with navy accessories and a corsage of pink rubram lilies "and deep red roses. Mrs. Townsend was gowned in blue and white print which she wore with white accessories and a corsage of white bouvardia and roses. The bride traveled in a brown and white redingate dress which she wore with white accessories. The bride was graduated from Butler University where she was a member of Delta. Delta ‘Delta Sorority. Mr. Townsend is.a graduate of Butler University and Wharton School of Finance, University of Pennsylvania. He is a member of Phi Delta Theta Fraternity. Among out-of-town guests were Mr. and Mrs. L. W. Worth, Two Rivers, Wis.; Messrs. and Mesdames Weldon MeGlaun, Earl Schulmeyer, Mrs. Herbert Bertermann and Misses Helen and Dorothy Bertermann, all of Clncinnati; Mr. and Mrs. Robert Collins, Tipton; Mr. and Mrs. Edward Wilson, Danville, IlIl.; Mr, and Mrs. Clifford Peterson, Crawfordsville; Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Berg, Bloomington; Mr. and Mrs. James L. Russell, Columbus, Ind.; Mr. and Mrs. Karl Hahus, Evansville; Mr. and Mrs. Lowell T. Boyd and Miss Alice Boyd, Kokomo; Miss Emilie Schmuck, North Manchester, and Mr. and Mrs. Bert Fer~ rara, Terre Haute.

Club Meetings

The K. P. Club will meet at 7:30 p. m. tonight at the home of Miss Dorothy Beckerich, 3319 College Ave. Members are planning a dance for Aug. 10. Miss Gloria Hewitt is president. 3 » » » The Woman's Lions Club of Indianapolis will hold a 12:30 p. m. luncheon tomororw at the Hotel Washington. Mrs. Glenn Halstead will present a travel talk and a musical program will be given by Miss Joan Parr and Miss Mary Lambertus, we » » ”

Mrs. E. L. Porter was to entertain

tion Club today at her home, 2012 N. Delaware St.

. The Forest Hills Garden Club 1 to meet tomorrow at the Hillsdale

Nurseries. Alex Tuschinsky will

Mr. and Mrs. John Russell Townsend. Jr. were on a motor trip today to Quebec and the New England States. They are to be at home after

@> 8

More Women Are Urged for Public Offic

BUDAPEST, Aug. 2.—Two tasks— self-protection and service to the state—were outlined for professional and wage-earning women throughout the world by Lena Madesin Phillips, New York City, president

of the International Federation of |

Business and Professional Women

at the opening session of the organization’s third international congress here last night... ° “ “Pach of us must bring to the national policy of her own eountry her courageous, aggressive thought and action,” Miss Phillips said. “Today’s problem is as much social and spiritual as material. It has been found possible to create enough for all, but we have not yet been willing to seek a pattern

wholeheartedly which will distribute

that plenty in a way to insure peace and protection for all men and women everywhere. “In the countries where the rights of the individual are of paramount importance, we must defend our right to work on equal terms with men. In the present chaotic struggle for jobs we can easily, if illogically, be sent back to the home.

Says Women . Apathetic “Probably every country has seen a partial attempt in this direction. Labor legislation, presumably for our protection, laws against work by married women, discriminations

without law, these and their kind are familiar to all. And for them, women, because of their apathy, are primarily to blame. “Therefore I commend to you once more the Three-Year Objective adopted by our organization last year in Sweden. .I urge you to put more women in public office, that they may assist in doing directly what they have long tried to do indirectly, that they may bring their social consciousness and experience to bear upon a crisis which is deeply involved in human relationships. “I urge you to put more women in executive positions because they have the experience and the abilities, because. they are primarily responsible for the support of aged parents or needy brothers and sisters, and also because a maladjusted economic system needs the humanizing, realistic touch which has come to be primarily feminine. “I urge you to expose the fallacies, relics of another age, if they ever had vitality, concerning business and professional women. More than all else, I urge you to arouse women th®mselves to a sense of their own power and responsibility.”

Local Clubs Attend House Party at Lake

Several members of the Lo-Sin-Loy Club and the Zeta Chi Theta chapter of the Sub-Deb Club are attending a house party at Lake Wawasee. The party includes the Misses Martha Sturm, Martha Jane Dickover, Anna Embry, Kathleen Bohannon, Helen Powell, Mary Green, Luana Hill, Glena Broder, Betty Lou Homsher, Harriet Kinnaman, Martha Gene Heiney, Doris Crane, Mary Katherine: Jones, Carolyn Creek, June Darrow and Josephine Forest. :

Mrs. Pearl Benham To Head Committee

Mrs. Pearl Benham is arrangements committee chairman for the 43d state session of the Daughters of America meeting Aug. 23 and 24 at the Hotel Lincoln. = Other committee members are Mesdames Martha Coryell, Maude Foxworthy, Fern Lineback, Genevieve Myers, Leona Nield,: Sophia

‘speak on’ “Roses and How to Grow dianapolts, ~ and Mrs, Gertrude

7 Ie] 0) 11)

Hoosler Leaders Are En Route to W. C.T. U. Mee

Indiana temperance leaders, headed by Mrs. Elizabeth T. Stanley, Liberty, Women’s Christian Temperance Union state president, are en route to San Francisco today to attend the 64th annual national convention of the W. T. C. U. opening Thursday and - continuing through Aug. 11. ~ Mrs. Floyd Sonafrank of Peru is to speak Tuesday, Aug. 9, on “Oratorical Contests.” Official delegates are Mesdames May Himler, Robert E. Hinman, Samuel Thomas and Miss Flora Lyons, all of Indianapolis; Miss Ella May Lyons, Brook; Mrs. J. H. Whiteman, Winona Lake; Mrs. G. A. Snider, North Manchester; Mrs. Robert F. Donnell, Greensburg; Mrs, S. C. Stimson, Terre Haute; Mrs. M. B. Addison, New Palestine; Mrs. Robert L. Julius, Muncie; Mrs. DeWitt . Johnson, Ft. Wayne, and Miss Grace Leigh Scott, Greenville. Other Indiana members will atténd.

To Welcome New Members

Plans are to be adopted for celebration in 1939 of the birth of Frances Willard, The convention is to welcome 30,000 new- members. It also will welcome several growing youth movements. It is expected to urge the importance of multiplying popular counter-atirac-tions to taverns and other liquor selling resorts. :

has been raised toward a million-

The problem of the drunken driver is to be considered. Fruit juice hour is to be observed every afternoon as a social feature of the convention. : Mrs. Ida B. Wise Smith, national president, is to deliver her address at the opening session Thursday night. Mrs. Ella A. Boole, world's W. C. T. U. president, is to speak Saturday. Other - speakers are to include Judge Harry H. Porter, chairman of the comittee on tests for intoxication of the National Safety Council; the Rev. G. A. Miller, Bishop of the Methodist Church for Central and South America; N. J. L. Pieper of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, and Dr. E. Guy Talbott of the National Council for Prevention of War. : Mrs. C. W. Ackman, Marion County W. C. T. U. president, has invited Mrs. Boole to stop in Indianapolis en route from the convention to address a mass meeting Aug. 16 in the World “War Memorial.

Y.W.C.A. Group Holds Honor Tea

The Y. W. C. A. World Fellowship Committee will hold a tea from 3 to 5 p. m. today at the home of Mrs. Fermor Cannon, 4235 N. Pennsylvania St., in honor of Miss Lena Abellera, Girl's Work secretary of the Manila, Philippine Islands, Y. W. C. A. : The Y. W. C. A. board of directors, contributors to the World Fellowship Fund and interested Y workers will attend. Miss Abellera came to the organization’s. Camp Friendly, McCormick’s Creek State Park, last month and has been teaching the campers songs and dances. She will leave Thursday for Toronto, Canada, to | attend the Y. W. C. A. World Council. After visiting associations on the west coast she will return to Manila. ’ Miss Abellera will speak on the association’s work in the Philippines. Miss Essie Maguire is one of 10 United States women chosen to attend the World Council which she will discuss in her talk. Miss Elizabeth Ann Blaisdell, program correlator, will discuss the work of the fellowship committee in Indianapolis.

Legion Auxiliary’s Council Will Meet

Annual reports and the election of a new president are scheduled for a meeting of the 12th district American ‘Legion Auxiliary Council at 1 p. m. tomorrow at the World War Memorial. Mrs. Helen Clarridge will preside. Mrs. Walter Fuller is the newly elected president of the Broad Ripple unit 312. Other officers to be installed in September are Mrs. Roland Armentrout, first vice presi=-

president; Mrs. Fred Whicker, recording secretary; Mrs. Girtsle

Mrs. Paul Talbott, chaplain; Mrs. Joseph Coul, sergeant-at-arms, and

| Mrs. Robert Alley, historian.

Miss Peters Named Sorority President - Miss Winifred Peters is the newly elected president of Beta chapter, Phi Delta Pi Sorority. : Other officers are Miss June Lollar, vice president; Miss Evelyn Ressler, secretary; Miss Annabell Cox, treasurer; Miss Othelo Bristow," pledge captain; Miss Marian

|

It will be announced that $600,000

dollar fund for alcohol education:

dent; Mrs. W. R. Miller, second vice |

2467 Finley Ave. Mrs. Coombs was marriage June 26 at the Garfield Photo.)

Photo.)

Photo.)

couple is at home at 3462 N. Illinois St. ‘(Porter Photo.) 2. The at-home address of Mr. and Mrs. Carl Berland Coombs is

; 3. Mrs. William G. Tuel was Miss Dorothy Pennington before her marriage July 16 at the Central Avenue Methodist Church.

4. Mr. and Mrs. John Roberts are at home in Indianapolis following a motor trip through the South and several days at the northern. lakes. Mrs. Roberts was Miss Dorothy Louise Head, daughter of Mr. .and Mrs. Charles O. Head, before her marriage July 20. (Voorhis

Miss Mildred Rugenstein before her Park Evangelical Church. (Fritsch

(Porter

ortion of the city’s social news. ertained this week. Mrs. John S. Pearson Jr., will

Aug. 12, at her home on Pickwick; Drive, Golden Hill, for her sister, Miss

Dorothy Young. Mrs, Pearson is to be matron of honor at Miss Young's marriage Aug. 15 to Frederick Geofirey Johns at the home of the bride's parents, Mr: and Mrs. Howard S. Young, 4353 N. Pennsylvania St. Thomas Bunch is to be best man. : Dr. J. Ambrose Dunkel, pastor of the Tabernacle Presbyterian Church, is to read the ceremony. 8 2 8 Miss Ann Pritchard, whose engagement to Robert W. Straughn was announced several days ago, today named herfattendants and dates for parties. ase Miss Virginia Straughn, sister of the bridegroom - to - be, * will be maid-of-honor, and: Miss Barbara June Doebber and Miss Mary Aughinbaugh are to be bridesmaids. The wedding is Aug. 20 in the Central Christian Church. William Irwin, Dayton, O., will be best man; and Paul Miller, Dayton, John Sumners, William Smith and James Mulane are to usher. Joan Hitchcock will be flower girl: Misses Aughinbaugh and Doebber are to give a linen shower for: the bride-to-be a week from today at Miss Doebber’s home, 3818 N. New Jersey St. Misses Jane Norton and Betty Behrmann will entertain with a luncheon-bridge and personal shower Aug. 13 at the Norton home, 3921 Washington Blvd. Miss Jean Knight, 3905 Broadway, will give a party Aug. 11, and: Miss Carolyn Hawekotte will entertain Aug. 16 at her home, 804 E. 40th St.

#® 2 &

Miss Ann Bey, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Bey, 1 W. 28th St., today announced that her sister, Miss Marion Bey, is to be her maid of honor when she is married to Herman W. Kramer tomorrow in the chapel of SS. Peter and Paul Cathedral. Paul Kramer is to be his brother's best man. A wedding breakfast at the Marott is to follow the ceremony. 2 8 8

Mrs. Marvin Haley is to entertain Thursday night for Miss Martha Fussner, whose engagement to William J. Greener, son of Mr. and Mrs. John Greener has been an-

The wedding is Aug. 16 Sacred Hear?

Fussner. at the Church. Assisting the hostess is to be Miss Esther Owens. Guests are to be Mesdames Mark Thompson, John Gerlach and Claude Lindeman; Miss Lilyan Voyles and Miss Alberta Gerlach. - ”

Friends Holding Parties for Several Young Brides-to-Be

Activities of Indianapolis future brides continue to occupy a large Several young women are being en-

entertain with a bridge-tea Friday,

| Butler Campus To Be Scene of

Party for 300

More than 300 guests were expected to attend the tea for prospective Butler University students from 2 to 5 p. m. today on the campus.

- Prof. George A. Schumacher was to show motion pictures and representatives of various sororities were to play piano selections, according to Miss Betty Noonan, program. committee chairman. Miss Dorothy Durham was general chairman of the event. Appearing on the program were to be Miss Mary Hazeldenz, Butler Independent Association; Miss Mayguerite Ellis, Delta Gamma; Miss Betty Bates, Alpha Chi, Omega; Miss June Blake, Kappa ‘ Kappa Gamma, and Miss Ruth Duckwall, Delta Delta Delta. : Sorority members were to act as hostesses. Honored guests were to be Mesdames James W. Putnam, William L. Richardson, Gino A. Ratti, George A. Schumacher,

ing of gadgets from windshields and the finishing of a course of shots for the hayfever season, so close upon us. The Dads of the Woodcrafters and Midshipmen of Culver Military Academy had a busy week end going through the daily proe grams with their sons despite the

Miss Susan Gatch, daughter of Dr. and Mrs, Willis D. Gatch, is visiting Miss Patricia Jameson, Mrs. Louis Haerle’s niece, Miss Peggy Morton, Mishawaka, and Miss

Haerle. A guest at the Fletcher cottage is Miss Hebérton Weiss, who is to spend a week with Miss Mary Elizabeth Fletcher. Mr and Mrs. Charles Weiss and Miss Betty Weiss spent Sunday with Mrs. Fletcher.

Return to Culver

- Mrs. Edwin MacDonald and Edwin MacDonald Jr. spent several days in Indianapolis recently as the guests of Mrs. Mae N. Perry, Mrs. Elvan Tarkington and Miss Jeanette Tarkington returned to Culver with Mrs. MacDonald. On Saturday Miss Tarkington was the guest of Luther Bridgman at his father’s home on Faculty Row. Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Perrin, Pasadena, Cal, have taken the Edward J. Bennett house for August. They will remain until after the close of the Academy summer school. Their son, John Perrin, is enrolled in the Woodcraft School. . Guests at Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Vonnegut’s cottage during the week will include Mr. and Mrs. Carl Wilde and Miss Louise Wilde. Miss Jean Wilde is attending a camp at Lake Winona.

Visiting Friends Here

Mrs. Henry Langsenkamp and her children are visiting Mr. and Mrs. Gideon Blain. A week-end visitor at the juke was Miss Edna Christian. she formerly owned a summer home here: and has many old friends among the summer colony. Mr. and Mrs. Russell Sullivan spent Saturday and Sunday with Mrs. Henry Bliss. A family reunion was held at the Holliday cottage recently. Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Holliday joined Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Holliday, Chicago, and Mr. and Mrs. Perry O'Neal, who are visiting Mr and Mrs. Frederick Hol-

James H. Peeling, Clyde L. Clark, |°

Gray Burdin, Warren R. Ison and Miss Chloris Bell, Butler Panhellenic Association president, and Miss

Mary Katherine Mangus, Women’s |

Council office assistant.

L. Olsen, Esta Cunningham, Charlotte Hodsen, O. D. Archer, H. A. Johanningsmeier, Donald Broadway, Walter Powell, Fay Ellis, Clifford Barnes, Paul Hoelke, Theodore Rugenstein; Misses Louise Steinbarger, Wilma Sonnefield, Oliva

University summer school to spend a month with his mother, Mrs. John Brandon, at her cottage. :

Flower Board Will Meet The Indianapolis Flower Mission board of directors will meet at 10 a. m. Thursday in the Fletcher Trust Co. board of directors’ room,

Glascock, Helen Cunningham, Frances Wetsel and Helen Olsen.

HI

A

nounced by her mother, Mrs. Adam |: Catholic | £

Miss Dorothy Wilder and Miss |

Frances Davis are to entertain tomorrow night at Miss Wilder's home, 4128 N. Capitol Ave., for Miss Alsie Corn. : Miss Corn, daughter of Mr. and

Mrs. John A. Corn, 3504 Kenwood

Ave.,, is to be married ‘Aug. 9 to

Bend.

Decorations and appointments

Joseph Wilbur Nesbit, son of the |3 Rev. and Mrs. B. R. Nesbit, South

\ {

are to be in the bridal colors, blue | 2 and white. Assisting the hostess |S

will be Mrs. Ada Davis. Guests are to include Mrs. Corn and Mrs. Walter Striebeck, a sister of the bride-to-be; Meséames Clyde Lorton, Ralph Holton, Don Roberts, Faye Sutton, Lee Boling and F, F. Mills; Misses Bessie Lemar, Janet Margaret and Martha Van Talge, Jane Rotherburger, Schort, Alberta Douglas, Powell and Jane Colsher; Winifred Sanders,

Miss

Gwendolyn = Thelma | &

Frenklin, and

Miss Lois Ann Buchanan, St. Louis. | E

Mr. and Mrs. Walter H. Eggert |8

and their son, Louis Eggert, entertained last night at their home, 4158 Park Ave, with a bachelor dinner in honor of Wilbert O. Eggert Jr. Miss Marjorie Miner and the latter are to be married Aug. 14 at St. John’s Evangelical Church. £! » 2 2 Miss Ruth Punk, 438 N. Beville Ave, is to be hostess tonight at a miscellaneous shower to be given by Beta Chapter, Phi Theta Delta Sorority for Miss Marianne Wolfe. ~ Miss Wolfe, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Allen K. Wolfe, is to be married Saturday to Dan E. Watson, son of Mrs. Maude F. Watson. . 4 8 8 Miss Dorothy Olsen was honor guests recently at a shower in the home of Mrs. Max Herrell. Mrs. Otto R. Roos was cohcstess. Miss Olsen will ‘be married Aug. 14 to

hg.

Mrs. David Ross will preside.

FROCKS

REGULAR

5% 10410 Gotton and Sports

Fashions

J

Brand new models, bought at end-of-the-season prices, and better dresses from our regular stock, reduced!

Dimities ~ Dotted Swisses

Cottons Linens Spun Rayons

Ree