Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 June 1940 — Page 14
By JOAN YOUNGER United Press Staff Correspondent
- PHILADELPHIA, June 28.—Mrs. Wendell Willkie couldn’t stand fo watch her husband's nomination. She sat in the balcony at Convention Hall with a friend, Mrs. Frederick Atwood of New York City, until it seemed fairly certain that he was the Republican choice. Then she rushed back to her hotel. Only a few people knew she had been at Convention Hall at all. Wearing a new big blue straw hat that
tors. Instead, Edith Willkie
went directly to their hotel
apartment—and telephoned her husband. : : “Do I have to come over, Win? > were her first words
to the G: 0. P.’s nominee.
s
“Not if you don’t want to darling” he answered. Nervously she hung up but called back quickly and con-
gratulated him and told him
to hurry home.
He did. After a brief statement of gratitude to the’ press, he arrived at their apartment. She rushed to him
"and kissed him.
When asked how she felt, she looked
she got a Sob § in the Hiwood firey ond she and young Wendell—called “Win” by his friends—were constant com- J
panions.
For the last 11 years the Willkies have lived in New : York City—in a Fifth Avenue apartment across from the > Metropolitan Museum of Art. Their one son, 20-year-old Philip, attended Princeton, and this year received the “most likely to succeed” vote of the senior class although
he failed to graduate.
If and when Mrs. Willkie reaches the White House,
‘more years of study, some other fellow will get her.
matched her blue eyes, and a pair of dark glasses; she sat in the gallery unnoticed. That was as she wanted.
For Mrs. Willkie doesn’t like too much public attention
In fact, her first words to her husband after his nom: They were those of a Mr. Willkie was scheduled to make a joint broadcast with his wife from the Willkie headquar-
. ination, weren't congratulations. shy, aloof woman.
SOCIETY—
.Sylvester Johnsons Entertain Tonight For Sarah Frances Kackley and Fiance
ov
Mr. and Mrs. Sylvester Johnson will entertain tonight with a supper for Miss Sarah Frances Kackley and Raymond Edward Gregg, whose marriage will be at 3:30 p. 'm. tomorrow in the Episcopal Church of the Advent. Miss Kackley is the sister of Thomas Reid Kackley and Mr. Gregg is the son of Mrs. Samuel
Grant Gregg. Guests will include Mrs. Gregg, Messrs. and Mesdames Kackley, Henry C. Atkins, Henry C. Atkins Jr. Elias C. Atkins, Keyes Winter, Atkins, Noble Dean and George Rose; Miss Margaret Jane Hamilton, West Lafayette, Ind.; Mrs. Allen H. Stem, St. Paul, Minn.; George Clark and Misses Mtrth-. Ellen and Rachel Clark, Colum- _ bus, O.: Charles Hole, Dayton, O.; Ralph Nagle Jr., Philadelphia; Miss Mary Edith Foster, Lawrence Knowlton and James Hurt. Out-of-town guests arriving for the wedding tomorrow include Mrs. Theodore H. Hinchman, Detroit, Mich.; Mr. and Mrs. John Q. | Holmes, Anderson, Ind.; W. E. Fager, Chicago; Richard Mansfield and Miss Marjory Shalty, Evansville, Ind.; Dr. and Mrs. Harold Smith and Dee McCurdy, Kokomo, Ind.; Mr. ‘and Mrs. W. D. Root, Mr. and Mrs. Cldta Bebout, Mrs. R. P. Lakin, Mrs. Clem Miller, Miss Sue Gregg and Douglas Morris, all of Rushville, Ind.; Misses Edith and Amanda Hamilton, Earl and George Hamilton, Messrs. and Mesdames Thomas Hamilton, I. R. Bailey, D. A. Batterton and Carlos Harrison, all of Greensburg, Ind.; Dr. and Mrs. Albert Gregg and William Gregg, Connersville, Ind.; Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Cowger, St. Louis; Mrs. Thomas Giffin and Miss Evelyn Giffin, East Chicago, » Ill, and Lyndon K. Beals, Noblesville, Ind.
Barbara Haines and Fiance to Be Guests
Barret Moxley and his dauzhter, Miss Irving Moxley, will entertain tonicht with a bridal dinner for Miss Barbara Haines and Taoms:s Chandler Werbe Jr., whose marriage will be at 6:30 p. m. tomorrow at Haverway Farm, home of the bride-to-be’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Morris Haines. Mr. Werbe is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Chandler Werbe of Anderson, Ind. Guests with the couple and their parents will include members of the wedding party: Miss Anne Elliott, maid of honor; Miss Volinda Lewis, Washington; Mrs. Alfred J. Stokely and Miss Mary Sheerin Kuhn, bridesmaids; Richard Werbe, best man; Robert Bailey and Frederick Sauter Jr. Evanston, Ill... Homer iL. Dixon and Charles Dering, Chicago, and Robert Smith and William Diven, Anderson, ushers, O‘her guests will be Miss Martha Ann Schaf, Miss Nina Brown, Mrs. E I. Lewis and Miss Phoebe Carey Lewis, Washington; Mr, end Mrs. Ernest Oswalt and Benjamin Oswalt, Batavia, Ill.; Burton Cameron, Chicago; John Carey, Appel, Sampson B. Moxley Jr., Mr. Stokely, Mrs. Sauter, Chicago; Mr. and Mrs. Reily G. Adams, Miss Virginia Deuel, Buffalo, and Miss Joan Roberts, Milwaukee,
Mrs. Frederick G. Appel and Daughter Give Luncheon
Mrz. Frederick G. Appel and her daughter Eleanor entertained at luncheon: yesterday at their home, The Patch, near Noblesville, Guests with Miss Haines and her mother were Mrs. Adams, Mrs, Lewis and her daughters Volinda and Phoebe Carey; Misses Deuel, Roberts, Schaf, Elliott and Moxley and Mrs. Werbe. Miss Kuhn will have a garden buffet luncheon tomorrow at her home for the bridal party and out-of-town wedding guests. Among those attending will be Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Taggart Sinclair of Richmond, Va. Mrs, Sinclair was Miss Josephine Mayer, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Mayer, before her marriage in March.
Dr. and Mrs. Fletcher Hodges Entertain Guests
Guests of Dr. and Mrs. Fletcher Hodges are Mrs. Hodges’ brother, Francis M. Andrews Jr., and Mrs. Andrews and ‘their chile dren, Nancy and Richard, of Watertown, Mass., where Mr. Andrews is principal of the Perkins Institute for the Blind. The Hodges’ daughter, Mrs. Jesse J. Garrison and her daughter, Rebecca, will arrive this week-end frem Lansing, Mich, and their nephew and niece, Dr. and Mrs. Frederick Andrews, West Lafayette, Ind. will visit them Sunday: Mrs. Hodges will entertain a party of 20 at the Propylacum contract bridge dinner tonight.
Arthur Millers Give Bridal Dinner
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur D. Miller will entertain with a bridal dinner at 7 o'clock tonight at the Columbia Club in honor of their daughter, Mary Lucille, whose marriage to Thomas L. Kemp Jr, wili take place tomorrow at the bride’s home. The bridal colors, ‘pink and chartreuse, will be used in appointments. ~ Guests will include Miss Constance Meyer, Pittsburgh, maid of ‘honor; Mrs. Thomas H. Osborne, matron of honor; Mr. Osborne, best man; Mr. and Mrs. Robert A. Miller, Knoxville, Tenn.; Mr, and Mrs. Dwight W. Coultas Jr., Atlanta, Ga.; Mrs. Howard Meyer, Richard T. Meyer, Miss Frances McCaslin, William McCaslin and Mrs. Anna L, McIntyre, all of Pittsburgh; Mr. and Mrs. Thomas L, Kemp, Miss Elouise Kemp and Miss Mary Jane Kemp; Dr. Stanley Garner and the Rev. and Mrs. Roy Ewing Vale.
CHILDREN
“YOU CAN'T GET MARRIED,” said Donald’s father sharply. *You have to finish college and after that there will be several years of special preparation fo get an M. A. and Ph. D. Your mother and I have been saving against that for years and years, Donald. You yourself would always regret it.” “But I haye been talking to Prof. Small,” said Donald. “He said that after he had his degree he went for ages before he got a position in economics, and he gets a very low salary. He said it was a sort of a Will o’ the Wisp he had been chasing. And he can't afford to get married even yet. And he’s a lot over 30. “I tell you, I love Lura and she loves me. They tell me at the service store that if I stick and don’t mind hard work, I can be sales manager in a few years. And we could live on that. “I could keep Lura now, if—if—well, it’s this way, Dad. You and mother are wiiling to spend several thousand dollars more on my education. Could you reason it out that a few dollars a month .spent on my family would mean greater happiness?” : ein = 2 8 8 “QH. I BEGIN TO SEE. You mean that we are to help keep you ' and a wife from now on. Not.on your life, boy. I have watched your mother do without a lot of things to lay by the money for your _ education. I never had one, you know, and she has planned ever since you were born to have a professor in the family. Her peo- - ple were all highly educated. It has been her dream. Now I can’t see her sacrifice going to keep a snip of a girl.” : “It's strange. She has always said she wanted me to be happy above everything else in the world. I agreed with her idea about degrees and all that, but it was before I knew anything about life and having some ideals of my own. «I like this work. I love to do things with my hands, I really don’t care for study much. And Lura is so fine. She is so economical and knows how fo manage on almost nothing. If I go away for She isn’t ' fickle and I believe she'd wait for ever. But she’s human, and if ' someone came along and carried her off her féet, while she’s wait - ing forever for an uncertainty, I couldn’t blame her.” x ® » = 8. =n ” i “THERE'S NO USE talking, Don. If you could make enough -to | support her now, maybe there wouldn't be too much objection on your ' mother’s part. But IL feel that marriage is a privilege to be earned. - Not so ething handed to a young fellow your age.” ; t's true. I understand. But I just thought aa if I could - work this year and save, and you could spend the amount it would { cost eventually in education on my getting settled, it would be bes + for me not to go back to college. Maybe I will be far enough ahet ‘not to need 8 penny. But a third or fourth of my school expenses 3 i a year would ‘be ‘a great help. 2 “Parents put money into education so often that | doesn’t bens And they are so opposed to using that same money to es ish 8 Joung man. However, I won't say any more. about. it. 1 won't go & back on mother or you. Ill do whatever you say.” Joie ¢ to be said for Donald’s point of view. After. all,
By OL!VE BARTON
01s
“was the maid of ‘honor; he was an usher.
bewildered and said: “1 feel a little bit numb.”
; ; » ” ” . ® 2 ”» a 3 Wendell Willkie and Edith Wilk met at a wedding. She It was a
she will be one of the prettiest First Ladies this country has ever seen. She is small—about five feet four inches— with chestnut, curly hair and a sweet 16 look about her
. {and a high neckline finished with
‘tstaff will be best man. |
{Picnic for Monday
annual picnic Monday at the home ; Mrs. El
home wedding of an old family friend of both the Wilks and the Willkies, in Elwood, Ind., and although Edith Wilk lived with her family in Rushville, some 70 miles away,
i
Rauh Memorial Library Sponsors Musical Circus
The Rauh Memorial Library yesterday sponsored " the first of a series of Musical Circuses for its young
There would be a great
- Willkie.
tra, directed by R. P. Whistler, played a one-hour concert. The orchesirs was composed of WPA musicians.
Moore-Strait Wedding Today
The Calvary = United Brethren Church will be the scene at 7:20 p. m. today of the wedding of Miss Maxine Strait, daughter - of Mrs. Lola M. Strait, 816 Olive St., and Herman Orval Moore, Dayton, O., son of Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Moore, 1411 Castle Ave. The Rev. R. J. Simmerman, Terre Haute, Ind., will perform the ceremony before a background of palms, ferns and candelabra. Mrs. Maurice Rooker, organist, will play a program of bridal airs and George Riley is to sing “At Dawning” and “Ich Liebe Dich.” The bride who will enter alone will be gowned' in white satin designed with leg-o’-mutton sleeves
a small, round collar ornamented with seed pearls. The fitted girdle also is trimmed with seed pearls and the skirt sweeps into a train. Her fingertip-length tulle veil will fall from a cap caught with orange blossoms and she will garty. white Killarney roses.
Sister Is Attendant
- Her sister, Mrs. Clyde S. Armel, will be her.only attendant. She will wear a bouffant style pink organza gown made with short, puffed sleeves and a high neckline. She will have gardenias in her hair and will carry Premier roses. The Rev. Bennie Morgan, Belleville, Ind., will be best man and ushers will be Harold J. Strait, brother of the bride, and Arthur Moore, ' the bridegroom's brother. Mrs. Strait has chosen a black and white crepe dress and Mrs. Moore will wear blue and white crere.
Reception to Follow Rite
After an informal reception in|g the church the couple will leave on a short motor trip and will be at home in Dayton, O., after July 15. The bride will travel in a Balkan gold knitted costume worn with white accessories. Mr. Moore was graduated from Indiana Central College where he was a member of Alpha Phi Omega Fraternity and is now a student at the Bonebrake Theological Seminary at Dayton.
Reception Will Follow Rite
Miss Martha Ann Sylvester, daughter of Mrs. Verna Sylvester, 35 N. Sherman Drive, will become the ‘bride of Ben H. Gaither Jr., son of Ben H. Gaither and Mrs, Norma Gaither, in a ceremony at 8:30 p. m. today ‘at the home of the bride's mother. The ceremony will be performed before an improvised altar of palms and ferns by the Rev. U. 8. Clutton. George Osborne will sing, accom-{ panied ‘by Mrs. Osborne.
A heavenly blue silk poplin gown will be worn by the bride. The shirred bodice is made with short, puffed sleeves and three shirred gores form the back fullness of the skirt. She will wear a halo of tiny pink rosebuds in her hair and will carry Talisman roses.
be her only attendant. Her salmon pink gown of embroidered lace will have a taffeta bolero and she will carry yellow roses. William Blinkin-
The mothers of the bride and bridegroom will be in olive green gowns and will wear yellow rose corsages.
low the ceremony. After a short motor trip the couple will be at home at 18 N. Linwood Ave. The bride will travel in a navy jacket dress and ‘White accessories.
Carnelian Club Plans
The Carnelian Club will have its
club's season. - Sessions ' will ‘begin again in the fall. The hostess will be assisted by the Mesdames Frank Ebert, John C.
tLousks ana M. 8, Elstun,
patrons on the lawn back of the library. An orches-
Musical Program Announced For Garden Party to Benefit | Red Cross War Relief Fund
J.
a
The program for the garden musicale tomorrow afternoon at the ‘I. Holcomb estate on the Cold Springs Road was announced today by confmittee from the speakers’ bureau of the Indianapolis Chapter,
Her sister, Mrs. Scott Bénder, will |-
A reception at the home will fol-
Americal Red Cross, the sponsoring group. Proceeds will 80 to the
Red Cross War Relief Fund.
A group called the Folk Singers will present “Country Gardens,”
“No, John, No!” ‘Bells of St. Nicholas Tower” and “Dancing Song.”
Emily Jean Lewis will give acro-
batic dancing numbers and Alis Hapwood, piano selections. Trio Opus 99 will be played by | Georgia Bauman Leonard, violinst; Virginia Leyenberger, cellist, and Mde Engle, pianist. Lenore .T. Frederickson will sing “Lovely Night” and “Tarentella.” The Louise Purcell Schilling Dancers will present “Valse Svelt” and “Fleuretta.” Helen Coffey; Whistler, and Minna Edenharter, pianist, will offer “Pale Moon,” “The Merry Lark” and “A Heart That's Free.” Irish Cradel Song, Allegro Grazioza and two Negro spirituals will be played by Roberta Trent, violinist; Lorenda Howell,, viola player; Harriet McGuire, violinst, and Susan Branch, cellist. Edmund Brucker of John Herron Art Institute faculty .will paint a landscape as a feature of the program. Tours of the gardens will be conducted by members of the Boy Scout Sea Scout Patrol, Paul Crockett, Iryin Heinreich Jr., Richard M. Hill, Ralph Kelley and Stanleigh McDonald and members of Troop 61, Jerry Asher, Robert Collins, Stanley Gray, Dood Greenleaf, Maurice Hardy, Roger I_erriman, Billy Ragan, Larry Stuart and Myron Weaver. Mrs. F. W. Shulmeyer and Miss Susan Cook are additional members of the arrangements committee, announced earlier. Groups will ¢ tend from Columbus, "Anderson, Gromsbuts: Muncie and ‘Greenfield.
Knitted Bedspreads Launder Easily
Hand crocheted or knitted bedspreads : can be dry-cleaned, of course, but if you prefer to wash them yourself, it can be done quite successfully at home without difficulty. Use plenty of warm, mild soapsuds
j=
| and keep the suds active during the
entire cleansing by adidng more soap when the lather- appears to deaden. Immerse the spread and squeeze the suds through it over and over, If the spread is very soiled, use a second suds bath. Rinse several times in clear warm water, pressing out the excess water carefully and holding so that the weight
‘of the water does not stretch the
spread out of shape. Pinning the spread on a sheet before drying over the line also helps to keep it even. Pressing usually is not necessary, but if - you wish accenfuate the design, press on the wrong side with a cool iron.
Recent Bride
Photoreflex Photo. Mrs. Irwin ‘Miller was Miss Dorothy Hughes, daughter of My, and: Mrs. Perry Hughes before iid Mariage. June 8. A 3
Mr. and Mrs. Samuel P. VanHoy,
Miss Wedding Marries Today
The marriage of Miss Lucille M. Wedding, “daughter of Mrs. Alonzo Hurt, 127 S. State Ave, to William Messersmith Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. William Messersmith of Pottsville, Pa., will be solemrized at 7 p. m. today in the home of the bride’s sister and brother-in-law,
1650 N. Temple Ave. The Rev. Richard O. McRae is to perform the, ceremony. The bride will wear a white crepe ensemble and white turban and Mrs. VanHoy, her only attendant, will be in a white, street-length, crepe frock. Mr. VanHoy will be best man. The ceremony will be followed by a reception at the VanHoy home after which the couple will leave for a trip to New York. They will be at home after July 13 at 1702 N. Alabama St. The going-away costume of the bride will be a black net dress worn with black and pink accessories. Mr. Messersmith attended the Naval Academy at ‘Annapolis, Md.
Thrift Lesson
Major Feeds Army Men For 89 cents a Day
Per Person.
By MRS. GAYNOR MADDOX Times Special Writer A
NEW YORK, June 28.—Maj. Charles "Carlton, in charge of the consolidated mess’ at Govere nors Island, is feeding his men today on a daily food budget of a little over 39 cents a man. He calls his budget a ration—which
includes - breakfast, dinner and supper, all for $.3983. There'll be: lima beans, beets and tomatoes on the dinner menu, just as there should be on any economically managed domestic menu, because these are low cost. vegetables of good quality in the current market. When the soldiers stick their feet under the table today at' noon, they'll be eating vegetable soup, crackers, boiled cornbeef, cabbage, lima beans, beets, dill pickles, sliced tomatoes with salad dressing, bread and butter, home\made ice cream, coffee and. ice cold lemonade. Maj. Carlton says the men like dill pickles better than any other kind and eat great. quantities of them. For breakfast the army boys had stewed prunes, assorted dry and hot cereals, hot cakes made from a ° commercially prepared flour, sirup, fried bacon, toast and | butter, coffee and 3% pint o milk for each yman:
Florence Schwartz Is Engaged °
Mr. and Mrs. William Schwariz, | 2311 N. Meridian St.; announce, the engagement of thelr Saughter I Flor-
ence to Harold Schwartz, son of Mr.
|and Mrs, Abe Schwartz, 2402 Ken-| woud Ave, : @ Wedding: wil take i Sept. 8. i p
Brideto-Bodetod
Alpha Chapter - of Rho Delta Sorority entertained last night with | A Boas, Ti 3 eh , ‘who married 30 Richard M in’
that belies her 40-odd years.
contrast between the active
Mrs. .Franklin Roosevelt and the retiring Mrs. Wendell
®
Stuttering, Advises Doctor
By SALLY MACDOUGALL Times Special Writer NEW YORK, June 28.—If your child stutters, for goodness’ sake, don’t scold him. Don’t even let him know that you notice it. Dr. James S. Greene, head of the Natilonal Hospital for Speech Disorders, wouldn’t even ask him to say the sentence again. A far better way, he pointed out, would he to turn on the music and let the child dance. “Dancing, especially folk dancing, where the movement must be definite, is a good way to coordinate disorganized nerves. It’s nerves that cause stuttering. Nothing else,” the speech doctor said. Another of his cures is rest—lying flat on a mattress or stretching out on a beach chair and doing just nothing. He Pa this advice for parents whose children have any speech disorders: Build up the child's
Avoid tension or quarrels in the home. Enlist the co-operation of teachers to spare the stutterer from being laughed at’ by other children. A child with any speech disorder should not be required to read or recite before other children. Speech example at home is very important. “The way most parents talk is awful,” Dr. Greene deplored. “There isn’t much that can be done about that, and it’s a great disadvantage to the thildren. We call these parents poor speech models. That's a mild classification. Many of them haven't sense enough to know that stuttering comes from social neurosis. And they don’t realize that stuttering is not a speech defect; that it is caused, rather, by churning up of nerves for which home conditions may be responsible.” He said articulation defects he has been working on include the tendency to say “I” for “r,” “sh” for “s.” “When teachers in public and parochial schools aren’t able to cope with these cases they send them to us. Many teachers do not realize the tragedies that haunt the speech cripple’s life. You have {o be in daily contact with those sufferers to realize what the handicap means to them.” .
Guild Arranges Garden Party
St. Francis Hospital Guild: will hold its annual garden party at the hospital Sunday. The public is invited to attend fhe chicken dinner which will be served. from 11:30 until 2 p. m. Cards will be played at 2:30 p. m. Mrs. Arthur Heidenreich will be chairman, assisted by Mrs. Pinkney C. Davis. Mrs. Lafe Lockwood will be in charge: of -dinner arrangements; Mesdames Richard Tubbs, Ora Tipton, John R. Carr and Erwin Hoeing, fancy work; Masdames Edward Trimpe, James P. Mugivan, Gus Gatto, Louis Topmiller, Emmett Staggs and Colin Fulle, country store. Other committees will be Mesdames Albert Casse, Carl Xiefer Jr. and Edward Volz, fish pond; Mesdames Edward Heidenreich, Eugene Lepple and Martin Fahey, ite cream and cake; Mesdames Fred Koch, Walter Stumpf, William Nyfieler and John Mullin, card games. Mrs. John Gedig will be in charge of the special prize., The Guild will hold its monthly meeting Tuesday at the hospital. Hostesses will be Mesdames Tipton, James Cashman, Topmiller, Phillip Smith and Hazel N. Lalley. ’
Dance Aid
: Holland Photo. Miss Josephine Niles (above) is assisting with arrangements for - the annual June Rose Dance of Lambda Alpha Lambda to be held Saturday night at the Lake Shore Country Club. Freddie Maar’s Orchestra will
Dance to Stop
confidence. Don’t ever tear it down.
¥
Bridal Dinner Tonight Will Honor Maryella Julian and Fiance; J. L. McDermeds Plan Supper
A bridal dinner and a buffet supper appear with news of showers in today’s nuptial notes. Mrs. Clarence E. Marshall will entertain tomorrow night at the Marott Hotel with a bridal dihner for her daughter, Miss Maryella © Elizabeth Julian, and Charles W. Hutchings whose marriage will be at 3:30 p. m. Sunday in the Fairview Presbyterian Church. Mr. Hutchings is the son of Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Hutchings, 3158 Kenwood Ave. Guests in addition to Miss Julian
and Mr. Hutchings will include his parents, Mr. Marshall, the Rev. and Mrs. Virgil D. Ragan, Mrs. Mary W. Brinkman, Misses Ruth Cooke, Jane Hamilton, Resemary Corwin, Martha Wright, Helen Ross Smith, Eleanore Pangborn and Arda Knox. Other guests will be Mr. and Mrs. Norman Peine, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bruce; Mr. and Mrs. James Knox Julian, Jimmy Julian and Miss Jane Julian, ail of Miami Beach, Fla.; Mrs. J. Frank McConnell, Miss Mary Louise McConnell and Miss Dorothy Greene, all of Scipio, Ind.; Mrs. Willard Johns, Ralph Schofield, Langdon. Gueutal, William Ellis and Miss Gretchen Hoham, ‘Plymouth, Ind.; Mrs. Edward Geiss, Mrs. Jessie Swaim and Manson Swaim, all of Evansville, Ind.
2 8 8 - A bridal buffet supper for Miss Joann McDermed and J. Wayne Huston whose marriage will be at 4:30 p. m, Sunday in the Irvington Presbyterian Church will be given tomorrow night by her parents, Mr and Mrs. J. Lee McDermed, following the wedding rehearsal. Garden flowers and the bridal colors of aqua and pink will be used in decorations. Guests will include the bridegroom’s parents, Mr. and
Mprs. Joseph Huston; Mrs. J. A. Huse, sister of Mrs. McDermed, and her daughter Betty, Detroit; Mrs. Charles McGarvey and her daughter, Sharon, who will be flower girl; Miss. Charlotte Moore, Mrs. L. W. Wallace and members of the bridal party: Miss Eulah Skinner, maid of honor; Mrs. Merrill Hamilton, Misses Jean Meek, Bette Shanks A Jane Ann Gardner, Esther Howe and Betty Huse, bridesmaids; William Purcell, best man; and Lloyd Decker, Warren McDermed, brother of the bride, ‘Ray Elliott and Halbert Gauker, ushers. » » s x Mrs. William Nimal, who was Miss Betty Behrmann, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. H. J. Behrmann before her marriage May 18, will be honor guest at a crystal shower given tonight by Miss Jean Beale and Miss Dorothyann Young at Miss Beales home. Guests will bee Mesdames Richard Behrmann, Clee Davidson, Morris! Snider, Thomas May, Harry Behrmann, James Nimal, Robert Straughn and James ‘Genders and the Misses Doleene Billingsley, Doris and Helen Ellis, Jean Meek, Ruth Rehm, Audrey Shearer, Gertrude Fox, Betty Bauer, Juanita Rominger, Kitty Lou Fitzegerald, Norma Conder and Mary Habich.
” » » Miss Mary Jane Laatz will gntertain tomorrow with a luncheon bridge and shower at Holly Hock Hill for Miss Margaret Rohr whose
marriage to Dr. William Koss will be Sunday at 4:30 p. m. in the garden of her parents home. She is the daughier of Mr. and Mrs. William
Emma Sugars Becomes Bride
The wedding of Miss Emma L. Sugars, daughter of Mrs. Luella Sugars Willard, to Herschel Fogarty, son of Mr. and Mrs, James Fogarty, took place at 9 o'clock this morning
lat the home of Mr. and Mrs. Law- |
rence -Stum, 1759 Alton Ave., sister and brother-in-law of the bride.
mediate families were present. The bride wore a black an street ensemble with a black hat.
e delphinium
i Following s wedding trip to to north |
The ceremony was performed i | the Rev. Pearl B. Turner, pastor of | the Church of God. Only the im-|
white | |e bouquet was of pink roses and|
Rohr, 5510 Broadway. Dr. Koss-is the son of Dr. and Mrs. Harry Koss, Guests will be Mrs. William Hane ning, Mrs. Anna Gordner, Mrs. Richard Howard, Boston, ;Ind., and the Misses Virginia Sawyer; Susanne Merrill, Betty Hurd and Rosematy Byrket. ” ” ”
Mrs. Edward N. Messick, 4144
her- daughter, Miss Marian Messick, and Joseph Harold, Davidson, who will be married tomorrow. Appoint ments will be in the bridal colors of turquoise and pink. The supper will precede the wedding rehearsal, Guests will include Kenneth Here ron, best man; Thomas Elbreg, Ale bert Buennagel and Val Jurgell,ushers; Miss Harriett Neu and Miss
Frances Messick; maid of honor, and John E. Messick, uncle of the bride-to-be.
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Marjorie Mueller, bridesmaids; Miss,
‘
Central Ave. will entertain with a , +| buffet supper tonight in honor of
7
