Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 July 1941 — Page 17

Mary Ellen Foresman to Be Maitied To Myron Harrison Green Aug. 9

THE SETTING OF WEDDING DATES highlights .

social news of the day. Saturday, Aug. 9, has been chosen as the date for the marriage of Miss Mary Ellen Foresman, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William B. Foresman, and Myron Harrison Green, son of Mr. and Mrs.

Myron R. Green. The ceremony will be at 3:30 o'clock” in the Stlenoon, at the Propylaeum. The btide-to-be’s sister, Miss Gloria Ann Foresman, vill be her only attendant and the prospective bridegroom’s brother, Thomas E. Green, will serve as best man. Miss Foresman attended Purdue University and is a member of appa Alpha Theta Sorority. Mr. Greep, an Indiana University + jraduate, 1s a member of Beta Theta Pi Fraternity. Miss Foresman is to be honor guest at a bridal Shower given fuly 23 by Mrs. Donald Hampshire, Mrs. John Brink and Miss Afton Nhite at Mrs. Hampshire’s home. Mr. Green, who is. with the

indiana R. O. T. C. Medical Reserve at Carlisle, Pa. will return’

to Indianapolis July 25. Saturday, Aug. 16, will be the date of the wedding of Miss Vesle S. Stadstad to John Ralph Fenstermaker, son of Mr. and Mrs. +J. Ralph Fenstermaker. The ceremony will be read in St. Michael's | Episcopal Church in New York. The bride-to-be is the daughter of Mrs. Ole Stadstaq, Beechhurst, Long Island, N. Y. She attended Hunter College in New York and was graduated from DePauw University where she was a member of Alpha Gamma Delta Sorority. Mr. Fenstermaker was graduated from Purdue University and is a member of Beta Thole Pi Fraternity.

P. H. N. A. Picnic Is Tomorrow

THE ANNUAL PICNIC for officials, board members and the nursing staff of the Public Health Nursing Association will be held at 4 p. m. tomorrow at the Meridian Hills Country Club. Mrs. Benjamin D. Hitz and her telephone committee have been busy: #0% the past several days making arrangements for attendance. at the event. Officers=f the group are Mrs. Donald A. Morrison'Sr., president; Mrs. Frank B. McKibbin, first vice president; Mrs. A. C. Rasmussen, second vice president; Mrs. Montgomery S. Lewis, third vice president; Mrs. J. K. Lilly Jr. correspondnig secretary; Mrs. Ernest Rupel, recording secretary; Wilson Mothershead, treasurer, and Mrs. J. T. McDermott, assistant to the treasurer. Directors include Mesdames Smiley N. Chambers, Othniel Hitch, Edwin M. McNally, John. A. Roberts, Wendell Sherk, Alexander Yavins, F. R. Kautz, Charles F. Neu, Walter Montgomery, Theodore B. Griffith, Roy K. Coats, Byron K. Rust and Hitz and Miss Deborah Moore.

Artists Club Exhibition to Be Oct. 20.25

ARTISTS OF INDIANA are an unusually busy lot this summer as they look forward to an active fall and winter season. Removal of the Hoosier Salon Patrons Association offices from Chicago to Indianapolis at the end of this month and the opening of a yearround exhibition gallery in connection with the offices in the State Life Building are among events adding impetus to art activity.’ In addition, the date for the annual Indiana Artists Club’s exhibition at Ayres’ has been set as Oct. 20 through 25, with the usual preview dinner scheduled for Saturday, Oct. 18. C. Curry Bohm, Nashville, club president, recently announced the appointment of Gordon Mess as exhibit chairman. Mr. Bohm also announced the appointment of “Randolph L. Coats as chairman for the Artists Club Ball with Floyd Hopper as decorations chairman. Messrs.. Mess, Coats and Hopper are among directors of the club. Early rumors on the Ball itself, always. one of the most gala of social events, is. that it may be held a week before the opening of the Ayres’ exhibit, probably on Friday, Oct. 10. Heretofore it has occured in the late winter or early spring. Whenever it is staged, it promises to be a ‘‘double-barreled” explosion of fun to make up for omission of the event last spring.

Dolores Covert to Have Entry In Lexington Show

ONE OF THE LOCAL EXHIBITORS at the Lexington, Ky., Junior League Horse Show next WedneSday through Saturday will be Miss Dolores Covert, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. Irwin Covert, This week-end she is taking her pony, Little Buccaneer, and her five-gaited horse, Holiday Pleasure, to the South Bend Reserve League Horse Show. Miss Jane: Abraham is another who will be at the South Bend Show. She will show the entries of the Dudley Willistons and will ride in amateur and ladies’ classes. 3 ” ” ” . i ” 2 o Local residents are expected to have entries and be among the spectators at the fifth annual Shelbyville Horse Show on Sunday afternoon and evening, Aug. 3, at the Shelby County Fair Grounds. Classes planned include jumpers, three-gaited ‘saddle horses (ladies to ride), fine harness class, horsemanhip (for children 14 years old or under), hackney pairs, five-gaited saddle horses (ridden

by amateur owner), three-gaited championship stake, five-gaited ;

championship stake, hunter and jumper championship stake, hunters, three-gaited saddle horses, five-gaited saddle horses, road hack, hackney single in harness, saddle ponies, five-gaited saddle horses (ladies to ride), three-gaited combination and hunters and jumpers (knock down and out).

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‘| bridge game in the auditorium.

1¥. A. Mulbarge and Mrs.

Y. W. Arranges Outing at

Boating, swimming and fishing will be on the program for members of the Young Women’s Christian Association Sunday as they continye their “Hoosier Holiday” schedule. This week’s trip will be to McCoy Lake near Greensburg. The vacationers (and their lunches) will leave the Central Y. W. C. A, 329 N. Pennsylvania St., by bus at 8:30 o’clock Sunday mornign, returning that evening. Plans for the day are being made by Misses Jane Jenner, Wilma Bradford and Helen Deerburg and Miss Lucy Schulte of the Y. W. C. A. staff, In-town trips’ on the holiday schedule, open to all employed girls in Indianapolis, include a coed picnic this evening at Longacre Park. Plans for the picnic were made by the summer program committee under the direction of Miss Marie Risk and Erwin Leslie. A bus for the picnic will leave the. Central Building at 6 p. m. » Last night a trip was “made to Perry Stadium for a baseball game, Miss Bradford was in charge.

Jelly Drive for Nutrition. Camp

Jams? Jellies? Preserves? If you have any of the above tasty products or anything similar to them on your shelves iat home, or if you are one of those housewives who delight in making the same, listen. The Ben Davis Grade School Par-ent-Teacher Association has opened its annual jelly drive for the benefit of the Julia Jameson Nutrition Camp at Bridgeport. It will continue until July 21. - There are six places to where the jams and pellies can be taken, or, if you wish, call these places and the association members will come for them. The products may be left at the homes of Mrs. Hubert Blair, 1310 S. High School Road; Mrs. Allen Swift, 1301 Glen Arm Road; Mrs. Wallace Benson, 1935 Fruitdale Ave.; Mrs. Clarence Bereman, 1515 Lawndale Ave.; Mrs. Bradley Rossetter, 5235 W. Washington St., or the Old Trail Cleaners, 5764 W. Morris St.

Block’s Announces Bridge Winners

Mrs. Dorothy EHis, director of Block’s bridge forum, has.announced winners of“ the recent duplicate

The winners are: Section 1—North and South, Mrs. Arthur Pratt and Mrs. Keith Johns, first, and Mrs. J. A. Conkey and Mrs. C. C. Matthews, second; east and west, Mrs. TV Stiers, first, and Mrs.” William PF. Kreig and Mrs. T. A. Stewart, sec-

Miss Anna Mae Gilday, daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Martin Gilday, will be married to Riley E. Miles Saturday in St. Philip Neri Catholic Church,

(Kindred Photo.) |

The Bridal Scene—

. The marriage of Miss Phyllis Jane Blank to Ralph Mason Shott will take place July 27 at 4:30 p. m. in the West Washington Street Methodist Church,

Lee Lacy and Edward Schurman Will Be Married Aug. 9; Hamblen-Carpenter Rite Ang. 1

Miss Lee Lacy, daughter of Mrs. Helen E. Lacy, 2263 N. Pennsyl-

Boosters Will Dance at

Riviera Club

A “Summertime” dance will be held tomorrow night at the Riviera Club by the Riviera Boosters, it was ‘announced today by Raymond Cashon, president. The dance will start at 9 p. m. in the main ball-

room. The first meeting of the Riviera Casting Club will be held at the club Tuesday at 8 p. m. William Mager Dickson, chairman of the sports committee sponsoring the group’s organization, invites any Riviera member to attend. Membership will be open to women. Mr. Dickson advises that plans will be made gt the first meeting for future gatherings, exhibitions and instruction in the ‘art of casting. Boosters’now are in the midst of a shuffleboard tournament, 24 of them having entered the ‘contest. The group meets each Wednesday evening for play-offs. The tournament will continue for six weeks when the Booster champion will be acclaimed. Registration in the free swimming school still is open to club ‘members. More than 400 persons are ‘enrolled for the courses held during week-day mornings.

Make An Apron

vania St., has set Aug. 9 as the date for her marriage to Edward W. Schurman, son of Mr, and Mrs. Edward J. Schurman, 1329 Comer Ave.

Miss Lacy has chosen her sister, Mrs. William Martz, as her matron of honor and Miss Judy Peele as bridesmaid. Mr. Schurman’s brother, Robert Schurman, will be his best man and Russell Finch and Courtland Coghill will usher. The bride-to-be’s brother, Egan Leck, will give her in marriage. The

*| ceremony will be performed in SS. |}

Peter and Paul Cathedral. EJ o [J Aug. 1 has been set as the date for the wedding of Miss Mary Louise Carpenter, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Paul C. Carpenter, 23 E. 71st St., to Floyd R. Hamblen, son of Mr. and Mrs. Orval Hamblen, Shelbyville. The service will be read in the Second Presbyterian Church. 8 8 ” Announcement has been made of the marriage of Miss Dorothy Louise Carder, daughter of Mrs. Louise Carder, 2341 S. Pennsylvania St., to Roy Levens Derrett, son of Mr. and Mrs. Granville Derrett. The wedding was May 31 in the Central Christian Church in Hattiesburg, Miss. Mrs. Derrett attended Arthur Jordan Conservatory of Music and is a member of Beta Chapter of Omega Phi Tau Sorority. )! ” ” ” Miss Theodora Mills Morgan, daughter of Mrs. Lucy Morgan, was honor guest at a shower given recently by her sister, Mrs. Clarence B. Kerberg, Franklin, and Mrs. Burton E. Morgan, her sister-in-law, at the home of Miss Morgan’s aunt, Mrs. Frank P. Endsley, 218 N. Keystone Ave. Miss Morgan will be married to Richard Pfister at 7:30 p. m, Saturday, in St. Matthews Episcopal Church. Guests at the shower were the Mesdames Cleveland Noell, Albert Walle, Andrew White, H. I. McClain, Frances Rhoades, Ralph Waggoner, Bertram Benson, Naomi Campbell, Edward Bowers, Harry Kirschbaum, Evelyn Vargo, James Ruegamer and Mrs. William Pfisie, mother o. the bridegroom-to-

Other guests were the Misses Helen Marie Ruegamer, Betty Keuthen, Elinor Estich and Marjorie Hillsmeyer. Miss Ruegamer, who will be maid of honor at the wedding, entertained recently for Miss Morgan. Richard Erwood will be Mr. Pfister’s best man and Robert Taylor ‘will be the usher,

To the Wives

Esquire Suggests List For Packing for Men.

If “let’s get away from it afl” is

“|home at Jackson

Miss Virginia Lee Lenfon will be married to Robert E. Mockbee Sunday. The bride-to-be is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Fyed Stephens, (Kindred Photo.)

Misses Ober Entertain

The A. G. Club will meet tonight with Misses Jean and Joan Ober, 676 E. Fall Creek Parkway.

Attend Convention In Hollywood

Leaving tomorrow to attend the national Sotyentiion of Alpha Zeta Beta Sorority in Hollywood, Cal, will be Misses Alice and Ann O'Donnell, Frances Beyer, Josephine Dillon and Helen Wewee of Kappa Gamma Chapter and Miss Mary Louise Walpole of Alpha Upsilon Chapter. The convention will be from July 17 through 19. Misses Alice O'Donnell and Walpole are voting delegates of their respective chapters. Alpha Upsilon Chapter will present Mrs. Dorotha Heiden Shannahan as a candidate for Opheleo Editor, the organization's national publica-

ion. Kappa Gamma Chapter will meet

Return from Visit

Mrs. Lee Ratliff, 2009 Stuart St. has returned from a 10-day visit with her uncle, Harry Shepherd, St. Paul, Minn.

W. C. T. U. to Hear Rev. Jack ‘E. Jones

The Rev. Jack E. Jones, pastor of the Camby Community Church, will speak at 2 p. m. tomorrow before the Bay Laurel W, C. T. U. Mrs. Claude H. Faulkner, 1938 Wilcox St., will be the hostess. Mrs. William G. Morgan will give the scripture lesson and Miss Alta

[Paul F reclands

{To Live on

Long Island

Caroline Ransom Becomes Bride

Times Special

AUGUSTA, Ga. July 10 —Mr, and‘ Mrs, Paul Freeland will be at Heights, Long Island, following a wedding trip to the Carolina Low Country, Mrs, Freeland was Miss Caroline Vane Dyke Ransom, daughter of Elmer Ransom, the author, and Mrs. Ran- ’ som, Mr. Freeland's parents are Dr. and Mrs. L. T. Freeland of il dianapolis. ’ : The ceremony was performed at high noon Monday in the Episcopal Church of the. Good Shepherd with Rev, Lawrence Fenwick, the rector, and Dr. Freeland officiating. Wilbur F. Pell Jr, Shelbyville, Ind, was Mr. Freeland's best man and the ushers were Thomas A. Gibson Jr. and Harold L. Russell Jr, of Atlanta, Ga. Mrs. L. L. Smith, sister of the ridegroom, from Laramie, Wyo.; Jack Wilson, Milwaukee, Wis., and Miss Sue Ransom, sister of the bride, were Mrs. Freeland’s attendants,

riage by her father, wore an embroidered organza frock, made on princess lines with a sweetheart neckline and full skirt falling into a long, court train, A full-length veil of tulle fell from a wreath of ‘orange blossoms. The bride carried an arm bouquet of rubrum lilies, The three attendants had gowns fashioned with bouffant skirts and long full sleeves, Mrs. Wilson and

sette and carried bouquets of light blue delphinium, pink asters and ’ California daisies, Their hats were natural leghorns with ribbon streamers matching their dresses. Miss Ransom wore debutante blue and a leghorn hat and carried rubrum

A wedding bréakfast at the Ran= som home followed the service. Mrs. Freeland was graduated from Bryn Mawr College and spent the’ following year as an assistant to the research librarian at the school, . She #8 now assistant editor with Frank A. Munsey Co., New York. Mr. Freeland was graduated from DePauw University and the Columbia University Law School. He.is * now associated with Dunnington, Bartholomew and Miller in New

tonight with Miss Jeanne Walton. 'Hansill will preside. .

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your theme song these summer -week-ends and you're dashing out of town as if pursued, then packing is probably a major family problem. Maybe YOU know just what to pack so that you never get stuck with the wrong kind of clothes but chances are the man in your family - |is way out on a limb when it comes to selecting the Friday to Monday essentials. . Esquire suggests this check list for him for week-end packing . . . if he sticks to this he} can’t go wrong, says the magazine, Glen Urquhart plaid tweed jacket. White washable jacket. Grey flannel slacks. ~~ Sandune slacks. Two daytime lightweight shirts. Woven fabric sports shirt. Six white linen handkerchiefs. ~ Two figured. foulard ties.

ond. Section II—North and south, Mrs. H. M. Willingham and Mrs. Arthur Prine, first, and Mrs. Irene McCormack and Mrs. Mary Goldstone, second; east and west, Mrs. R. C. Goodwine and Mrs. C. E. McClain, first, and Mrs. Bertha P. ‘Montfort and Mrs. C. M. Combs, second.’ Section . III—=North and south, Mrs. E. R. ‘Jones and Mrs. Paul Givens, first, and Mrs. R. F. Pasho and Mrs. William Salladay, second; Mrs. Fred Mitch and ‘Mrs. W. C. Whipple, first, and Mrs. J. 'W. Trotter and Mrs. C.’A. Fredeking, second.

Handy Beauty Shelf

To help the housewife look just as _|efficient as she is, a small beauty shelf in the kitchen is pretty convenient. On the shelf she may keep . |toilet soap that is kind to her skin, | hand lotion, powder, even rouge and lipstick, comb and orangewood stick for nails.. Too, she might have a rack for hand towel and wash cloth under the shelf.

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Plan Summer . Guting

Plans for a Sumner outing wi be made by mem of Gamma’ P= | pelt, the pocket and the bu ‘|ter, Phi Gamma Sigma. Sorority, |pytton hole in the back | Toe ho, of alae Mahia an apron is made. : the home of Miss Mahala '| “Pattern No. 8042 is in sizes 1434 N. Pennsylvania St. i 20; 40, 42 and 44. Size 16 27% yards 32-inch material No. 1. Style No. 2 takes 3% For this attractive pattern

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95 Sauey summer styles in shahtung weave Spun A garden party for members of 15¢ in coin, name, the Tomahawk Chapter, Sub.Deb| pattern nunber and prog : Wr Sal as “cokes "—smooth a your Federation, and their escorts will| diana Times Today’s a woneo! add | be held at 8 p. Ix. Satunday ay Mad- V, Maryla rioita Hl © "line." We sketch jot neve have, many.

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: The showing dozens of new egsy day.

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