Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 August 1941 — Page 18
PAGE 18
Approaching Marriages Of Three Young Women Announce
oe p 7
1. Mrs. Kathryn Willsey has announced the engagement of her daughter, Marjorie L., to John A. Coyle. The wedding will be Sept. 28 (Ramos-Porter Photo.)
Society—
Mary Jane Alford Will Attend Classmate's Debut in Bay View
A FINAL FLING at vacation fun before the re-open-ing of schools is a major mterest of the younger set at this time of the year. One of the more crowded engagement books is that of Miss Mary Jane Alford, daughter of Mrs. Dorothy H. Alford, who enters Pine Manor Junior
College at Wellesley, Mass., this fall.
She and her sister Joan, a Tudor Hall School student, have just returned from a two-week trip to Deland, Fla. Later this month Mary Jane will have as her house guest Miss Roys Jeffris of Rhinelander, Wis. In September Mary Jane will go to Bay View, Mich, to attend the debut, on Sept. 13, of Miss Elizabeth Ahn Frost, a classmate at Dana Hall, Wellesley. from which they were graduated in June. Mrs. Alford is at home following a visit in Knightstown. Miss Ann Browning, daughter of the Henry L. Brownings, will spend the week-end in Bloomfield as the guest of Miss Jo Ann Hendren, daughter of Mrs. William F. Hendren, formerly of Indianapolis.
In a Personal Vein
RAY C. FATOUT will go this week-end to Dunes Acres where his sister, Miriam, has been the house guest of Miss Edith Barnard since late in July. The girls are roommates at Western College, Oxford, O. Ray and Miriam will return home the first of the week. Their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ray T. Fatout, are leaving this evening by motor for Columbia, S. C., where they will attend the wedding of their niece, Miss Catherine Justice, on Sunday. En poute they will pick up another niece. Mrs. Paul Shriver, in Cin@innati. They are to return Monday. Dr. and Mrs. Howard J. Baumgartel will return this week-end from a trip through the East. . . Mrs. Frank C. Balke will be back in the city Monday from Palisades Park, Mich, where she and her daughter, Mildred, have been vacationing. .. Miss Margaret Merry, San Antonio, Tex, is arriving this weeknd to visit Miss Eliece Aiman., daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Burrell Wright. Eliece's sister, Miss Mary Catherine Wright, has returned from Saratoga, N. Y., where she has been studying sculpturing Under Robert Davidson at his studio there. Miss Selena Alig and her mother, Mrs. Cornelius O. Alig, are remaining at their Michigan summer home until mid-Septem-ber. Selena will return to the Garland School in Boston this fall. Dr. and Mrs. George J. Garceau and their daughters, Dolores and Diane, returned yesterday from their camp, Northern Lights, Lake Kabetogama, Minn, where they have been for the past three weeks.
Dorothy Durham Will Be Her Sister's Attendant
MISS DOROTHY DURHAM will be the only attendant for her sister. Katherine, when she becomes the bride of Robert Arnold of Michigan City on Aug. 30. The ceremony will be at 3:30 p. m. in McKee Chapel of Tabernacle Presbyterian Church. Parents of the betrothed couple are Mr. and Mrs. C. B. Durham of this city and Mr. and Mrs. Walter H. Arnold, Michigan City. The bridegroom's attendants will be William Southard, best man, and Hobart Crosby, usher, both of Michigan City. and Robert Durham, brother of the bride, who also will serve as an usher. Among parties planned for Miss Durham before her wedding are several showers for which hostesses will include Mesdames Paul D. McClellan, Roy Siaughter and Charles Hagedon. Misses Mary Kershner, Gerry Gates, Margaret Lorenz, Ann Henderson, Nancy Kegley and Betsy Hutchings. " Both the bride and bridegroom-to-be have attended Indiana University where she is a member of Delta Gamma Sorority and he of Delta Tau Delta Fraternity. They plan to return this fall to Bloomington to complete their studies.
Hilltop Camp Closes Tomorrow
THE ANNUAL Hilltop Art Exhibit and tea, plays and dancing will be on the program tomorrow for the closing day of Hilltop Camp for Girls and Brown County Camp for Boys near Nashville. Miss Kate Andrews of Chicago and John Baker of Hillsboro, O, have been directors for the summer's eight weeks of activities. Indianapolis youngsters who were enrolled during the camping season this year were Constance, Portia and Ted Hurd, Nancy Iles, Bob McCord, Ronhy Loy and Richard Holmes, < an miend} and parents of campers are invited to the exhibit all day tomorTow, plays during the aftermoon and evening and a dancing program directed by Miss Mary Lou Lemon of Hilisboro, ©. Mrs. Harriett Mueller of Lafayette, dramatics instructor, will present her pupils in three plays: “Dolls,” given by the younger group; “The Indian Captive,” with a cast of junior girls, and Molieres “The Imaginary Invalid,” interpreted by senior girls at the camp. Activities during the last week at camp have included the third annual horse show held at the Gregg Stables in the Brown County State Park, directed by Miss Jean McCartney of Shelbyville, and the annual water carnival in the park pool under the direction of Miss Margie Lou May of Bloomington.
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2. Miss Mary Scheidler, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph T. Scheidler, will be married to John J. O'Malley at 4:30 o'clock Sunday afternoon. (Photoreflex Photo.)
Joan Anderson, Chester Long To Be Married
White lattice work massed with late summer flowers and paim branches will form the background this afternoon for Miss Joan Adele Anderson's wedding to Chester Stewart Long in the All Souls Unitarian Church. The Rev. F. A: Hayward will read the 3:30 o'clock double-ring ceremony at an altar banked with ferns. Miss Anderson is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Claude H. Anderson, 133 Buckingham Drive, and Mr. Long is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Stewart I. Long of Orlando, Fila. Mr. Anderson will give his daughter in marriage. Preceding the service, Miss Elsie McGregor will play a quarter-hour organ program of bridal music. The wedding procession includes Miss Muriel Anderson, the bride’s sister, as maid of honor; Miss Joan Punton, Kansas City, Mo.; Miss Vara Judd of Sturgis, Mich, and Miss Geraldine Getz, bridesmaids. William McCrory will stand with his brother-in-law as best man and ushers will be Pete French, Harry Skornia and Charles Dimling. The bride's gown of white satin will be made on princess lines with a sweetheart neckline, pointed waist and full skirt with 'a long train. She will wear a white flowered tiara, holding a fingertip illusion veil, and will carry a bouquet of orchids and white roses, Satin and lace in a shell pink shade will form the maid of honor’s frock, which she will war with a tiara of blue and white flowers and a French bouquet of white and blue Similar gowns of ice blue will be the bridesmaids’ costumes, accented by pink and white flowers in their hair and in French bouquets. Mrs. Anderson will wear an afternoon dress of aqua blue with dubonnet accessories and a gardenia corshge.
Reception to Follow
Following a reception at the Anderson home, Mr. and Mrs. Long
will be at home later in Indianapolis. For traveling the bride will wear a sheer wool dress in a terra
and an orchid corsage. Miss Anderson is a graduate of Indiana University and a member of Pi Beta Phi Sorority. The bridegroom atended Purdue University and the College of Music at the University of Cincinnati. He is an announcer at WIRE.
Outlines Plan To ‘Sell’ Art
To Hoosiers
Times Special WABASH, Ind, Aug. 15.—Outlining a plan to “sell” Indiana art to Indiana buyers, Mrs. Leonidas F. Smith of Indianapolis spoke as chairman of the Hoosier Salon Patrons’ Association at a luncheon yesterday for Indiana art patrons at the Mark C. Honeywell Garden Festival here. The Festival opened Sunday on the Honeywell estate near here and will continue through next Sunday. Mrs. Smith charged that the weak link in Hoosier art history is “that we produce more than we have been able to consume. It is this public which must be reached, whose sales resistance to works of art must be annihilated. Exhibitions . arp not enough. If a person says to me again, T would love to own a pieture but I cannot afford it’ we will have a picture he can afford, at terms to suit the budget.” In a program celebrating the establishment of Association headquarters in Indianapolis rather than in Chicago, Mr. Honeywell, vice president of the Association, also spoke to pay tribute to the organization’s members. Other speakers included 8. B. Walker, Hilton U. Brown and Mrs. Clayton Hunt Ridge of Indianapolis. Following luncheon, guests attended the exhibition of Hoosier paintings, sculpture and prints in Mr. Honeywell's Norman studio, which is being shown throughout the Festival. Many of the exhibiting artists were present at the Tuncheon. Indianapolis guests were Dr. and Mrs. ‘H. E. Barnard, Dr. and Mrs.
{ erick G. Baiz, E. C. Rumpler, Wal- | ter S. Grow and Frieda Robinson; | Miss Jane Allison, Miss Marion | Gruelle and Elmer Taflinger.
Squash Unscorched
Ce ———————
will leave on a wedding trip and;
cotta shade, light green accessories {Waldorf of Plymouth, Mich,
(Entertains Sorority
(Photo Craft Photo.)
The Bridal Scene—
Miss Margaret Berry,
2238 Carrollton Ave. The Misses
At the 3:30 p. m. ceremony in the Main Street Christian Church there, Miss Berry also will be attended by a cousin, Miss Marilyn Alexander of Rushville. She is a graduate of Indiana University and a member of Kappa Alpha Theta Sorority. Harrison Thurston of Dayton, O, will stand with his brother as best man; ushers will be Robert Winkler and Max Gilson of Rushville and George McKamey of Indianapolis. Sergt. Thurston is a Butler University graduate and a Sigma Chi Fraternity member. * 4 = | Following their marriage Sunday in Rockford, II, Mr. and Mrs. Norbert H. Olsen are on an Eastern wedding trip and will be at home next week in Newburgh, N. Y. The bride was Miss Margie Lou Knotts, formerly of Muncie. The ceremony was at 1 p. m. in the Court Street Methodist Church, Rockford. Mr. Olsen is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Carl L. Olsen, 923 Eastern Ave, He is a graduate of Purdue University. 5 = = Attendants at Miss Harriett Louise Bray's wedding Aug. 28 to] Troy Wallace Scott Jr. will include
Mrs. Robert Quillin as matron of} honor; Miss Bray’s sister, Catherine. | as bridesmaid and a cousin, Judith as flower girl. Fred Miller will be best man and ushers will be the prospective bridegroom's three brothers, Howard, Thomas and Charles Scott. The bride-to-be is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. Lewis Bray, 4321 Guilford Ave. Mr. and Mrs. Troy W. Scott Sr. live at 6519 Ferguson St. The wedding ceremony will be at 4:30 p. m. in the Broad Ripple Christian Church. Mrs. Scott and her two daughters, Mrs. James Coffey and Mrs. F. V. Hern, were hostesses at a recent party for Miss Bray. A shower Thursday night will be {given for her by Mrs. Quillin and {Miss Sara Wright in the former's home, 1015 E. 61st St.
= ” »
Miss Nelda Shepherd, whose j marriage to Robert Ricketts will {take place Sept. 14, was guest of (honor last night at a fiesta supper {given for her by Mrs. Francis E. [Carter, 1949 Valley Drive. She is ithe daughter of Mr. and Mrs. | Arthur Shepherd, 4929 College Ave. Guests included Mrs. Shepherd, Miss Dorothy Huddleston, who wiik be Miss Shepherd's maid of honor, and her mother, Mrs. Clarence Huddleston; Mrs. Calvin Burnham, the hostess’ mother, and other friends of Miss Shepherd and their mothers. »
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Mrs. John Kerlin, Montpelier, announces that the marriage of her daughter, Mary Katharine, of Indianapolis, to Emanuel F. Miller, also of Indianapolis, will take place at 4 p. m. tomorrow in the Indianapolis Athletic Club. Mr. Miller is the son of Mrs. Emanuel Miller of Brazil. = ” » Miss Betty Lamb and Miss Mildred Benson will give a personal shower Monday evening for Miss Anna Klein, who will become the bride of Robert Crull Sept. 1. They will be assisted by the latter's mother, Mrs. Ralph L. Benson, 1620 Winton Ave. Speedway City. Among guests at the shower will be Mrs. Josephine Crull, Mrs. Rosemary Moore and the Misses Betty Bailey, Gene Holmes, Virginia Crull, Alice Sullivan and Mary Frances Arnold.
Mrs. Ross Bennett will entertain
at her home, 1711 College Ave, Apt. 11, at 8 p. m. today.
BETTER THAN A DEODORANT T0-
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Phi Delta Beta Sorority members|"
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JVET ar 20.82,
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3. Mrs. Robert Allan Johnson was- Miss Betty Flinn, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Austin Flinn, Franklin, before her marriage July 24.
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Margaret Berry Selects Sister As Attendant for Wedding; Harriett Louise Bray Honored
Pre-nuptial news today includes announcements of wedding attendants and of past and approaching marriages. 1450 College Ave, Helen Ruth Berry, to be maid of honor at her wedding Aug. 24 in Rushville to Sergt. George Riley Thurston, son of Dr. H. S. Thurston,
has chosen her sister,
Berry are the daughters of Mrs.
Donald A. Alexander and Mr. Alexander of Rushville.
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For Matron
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Your very next dress should be this button front style—it fits so smoothly and is so simple to make. You can't find a better frock for comfort—it is buttoned from neck to hem and may be taken off and put on like a coat. The cleverly shaped shoulder yokes help wonderfully in adjusting the shoulder fit—these may be trimmed with buttons to match tiny cuffs on the short, puffed sleeves.
Pattern No. 8966 ranges in size from 36 to 52. Size 38 takes 5 yards 35-inch fabric for the short sleeve version. A detailed sew chart giving full directions for cutting and making is sent with the pattern.
For this attractive pattern, send 15¢/ in coin, your name, address, pattern number and size to The Indianapolis Times Today's Pattern Service, 214 W. Maryland St. Pattern, 15¢; Pattern Book, 15c. One Pattern and Pattern Book ordered together 25c.
New Fall Styles Arriving Daily
Fifty-seven years pleasing the public in
HOME «vw FAMILY SH
i| formation Division of the OEM is
y
4. Mrs. David Rinaldo Compton announces the engagement of her daughter, Katherine, to Leon The wedding will be Aug. 3L
Lawhead. Photo.)
Capital Paper Has Story on Ruth Bledsoe
Times Special WASHINGTON, Aug. 156A comely blonde, who came from the Indiana State House to Washing-
ton and progressed from a minor position on Capitol Hill to personnel director of the Information Division of the Office of Emergency Management, recently was credited with being the “common sense” of that division by one of the Capital newspapers. She is Miss Ruth Bledsoe and she still calls her ; home Sullivan, Ind, although her allegiance |; shortly may be changed to San Antonio, Texas, because of Glenn Blackshear, one - time secretary to § Maury Maverick when he was in Congress. 3 Meanwhile Miss Bledsoe exercises both her charm and sense in seeing all job applicants in her office at the swank new Social Security Building where the OEM Information Division functions. Writing in The Washington Times-Herald, here is what Inga Arvad said of this Hoosier miss and her present job: “The ‘common sense’ of the In-
Miss Bledsoe
a 27-year-old girl with golden blond hair, huge hazel eyes, a peachy complexion and a certain way of wearing clothes on a slim, graceful body. “Ruth Bledsoe is an excellent example of what brains plus good looks and a cartload of energy can do for a girl who comes from a small town—incidentally Sullivan, Ind.—and makes good in the world’s capital. “It all started way back in 1935, when Ruth became the secretary of Indiana's Senator VanNuys. That was soon followed up by a job in the Farm Security Administration in the information division. “Then the National Emergency Council and through a few more jobs until one beautiful day in June last year. Dozens of men and women come around every day trying to get jobs. It is up to Miss Bledsoe to size them up and see if they seem any good. “She does this the minute you set foot in her office. in a firm, yet kind, way. “Should any applicant ever say that he or she does not like overwork, I naturally dyop them like a hot brick,” says Ruth. “In times like these we should not think of hours. Se much has to be done and those who don't understand this are just not people for us. I work about 10 hours a day’ “What Ruth Bledsoe does when she is not in the new Social Security Building is really not hard | to understand. When she talks she gesticulates and a diamond flashes on her left hand. “It looks as if the ‘common sense’ will leave Washington. She denies it, but if you want to see how becoming a blush is on her sweet face, then just mention the word Texas.”
Painting Furniture When painting unfinished furniture. before applying the paint, be sure that the surfaces are well sanded, so that they will be perfectly smooth and even. Different types of paint require different methods of application—so study the directions on the can and follow them closely. It’s important, too, that each coat be absolutely dry before the next is applied. Many of the new paints, however, dry very rapidly, so the job need not be long and tedious.
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We know shoes and how to
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{ will stand with Mr, Robbins as best
and Mrs. H. W. (Block
ried to James E. Bettis Aug.
RIDAY, AUG. 15, 1941
Two A re Recent Brides
5. Miss Martha Ann Forsythe, daughter of Mp,"
Forsythe of Noblesville, was mare 9 in Noblesville,
(Nicholson Photo.) |
Jean Elizabeth Lane to Be Wed To Richard Guy Robbins Tonight in the McKee Chapel
Wagnerian selections, including grin,” will be used in a program of
brs |
the Wedding March from “Lohene organ music by Paul Matthews. at
Miss Jean Elizabeth Lane's marriage tonight to Richard Guy Robbins,
The ceremony will be at 8:30 o'cloc nacle Presbyterian Church.
k in McKee Chapel of the Tabérs
Miss Lane is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harry S. Lane, 4258
Carrollton Ave. and the bridegroom Robbins, 734 E. 28th St.
The service will be read by the Rev. Stewart W. Hartfelter, who will stand with the wedding party before an altar banked with greenery and lighted by candles in seven=branch candelabra. White satin bows will mark the family pews. John Lane, brother of the bride,
man and ushers will be James Bolling of Lansing, Mich.; Charles Haas and Richard Clay.
Maid of honor for her sister will be Miss Mae Henri Lane, who will be in a gown of pale blue heavy taffeta made with a full skirt and worn with a short jacket bound with braids of the taffeta. With it she will carry a bouqgeut of Talisman roses and gladioli, tied with blue satin ribbon. Miss Martha Robbins, sister of the bridegroom and bridesmaid, will have a similar frock of American Beauty taffeta, but with a bodice trimmed with the | braid. Her flowers will be red roses and rubrum lilies.
Bride to Wear Satin
Miss Lane will be given in marriage by her father. Her gown of cream white satin will have a sim- | ple bodice gathered at the waistline, | long sleeves tapering from large
puffs at the shoulders to tiny but- |:
toned cuffs, satin-covered buttons down the back and a very full skirt. Her two-tiered veil of tulle will fall from a halo of the satin and her bouquet will be of stephanotis, white gladioli and a white orchid center, tied with white satin streamers. Corsages of peach glamellias will accent Mrs. Lane's light blue crepe dress and Mrs. Robbins’ gown of dark blue lace. At a reception in the Lane home, assistants will be Mrs. Edward Wurtz, Mrs. Florence Petty, Miss Dorothea Smock, Miss Pauline Putts and Miss Phyllis Matzke. The wedding cake will be placed on a bride’s table, covered with a lace cloth and lighted by tall white tapers. An out-of-town guest will
is the son of Mr. and Mrs. E. Guy,
be Mrs. George Chochos of Marion. The bride's going-away ensemble will be a blue dress and plaid cape, worn with blue accessories and a white orchid. Mr, and Mrs. Rob= bins will be at home in Indianape olis Sept. 1 following a wedding trip. She attended Butler University and the Arthur Jordan Cone servatory of Music and he is a ‘Bute ler graduate.
Mrs. Jean S. Boyle Is Legion Candidate
Hayward-Barcus Unit 55 of the American Legion Auxiliary has indorsed the candidacy of Mrs. Jean S. Boyle for secrétary of the Indiana Department, subject to election Tuesday at the state convention in South Bend. Mrs. Boyle is re« tiring presidént of the Auxiliary's 12th District, which also has ine dorsed her cane didacy. During her leadership the membership 8 standing has * moved up to fifth place in the department as coms pared with 12th place a year ago. She was district secretary in 1940. A member of Hayward-Barcus Unit for over 15 years, Mrs. Boyle has served as its president and secretary in addition to work in other offices and committees. She will attend both the state conven=tion and the national meeting at Milwaukee in September as a dele gate,
Mrs. Boyle Bretzman Photo.
old Mapleton Reunion
The Old Mapleton Reunion will be held Sept. 7 at the Brookside Com-= munity House. All former residents of the district have been invited to attend. .
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