Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 September 1941 — Page 4
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John Herron Art Museum Announces Schedule of Exhibits for, the Season
| THE SCHEDULE OF EXHIBITS st the John Herron Art Museum this season will range from porcelains to paintings, the latter to include works of Gilbert Stuart
and Salvador Dali. In addition to the current exhibition of costumes
from the Museum’s permanent collection, a display of
laces from the permanent collection will open Sept. 21.
: Next month a pictorial photography salon will be featured together with a lecture on photography, the date of which will be announced later. Rare porcelains from local collections will be shown during November and a lecture on them is scheduled for that month. December’s attractions at the Museum will be an exhibit of American water \ golors and living picture tableaux for which the date has not yet been set. + : The traditional New Year's Day reception will open January activities which are to include a showing of the Gilbert Stuart paintings. In February the annual exhibition of American paintings will be held together with a .display of arts and crafts of Africa. / The horse in art will be the theme of the March exhibit and a = series of Tuesday tea talks is planned. April will bring an exhibit of ~ Dali’s paintings and lectures on his work. The annual exhibition of work by Indiana artists will bring the schedule to a close in May. Both lectures and demonstrations are planned to accompany the exhibition. Ye :
~ Names Advisory Committee For Symphony Campaign
- SIXTY-THREE MEN AND WOMEN from 16 Indiana cities including Indianapolis have been elected to serve in advisory capacities in connection with: the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra's season ticket sales campaign opening Monday under the sponsorship of the Indiana State Symphony Society’s women’s committee. In order to serve volunteer sales staffs in action in 23 Indiana communities during the fortnight of the campaign, the advisers - have divided themselves into three groups—the largest to assist the _ local campaign, and a group of seven women and one of nine men, living in various parts of the state, who will work with the campaigns being carried out in the 22 Hoosier cities where units of the women’s committee are organized. Advisers in the local campaign include Dr. and Mrs. G. H. A. Clowes, Mr. and Mrs. William H. Ball, Mr. and Mrs. Herbert M. Woollen, Mesdames Frederick G. Appel, Frederic M. Ayres, Thaddeus R. Baker, George L. Clark, Lenore Coffin, James W. Fesler, Frank J. Hoke, Frederick C. Kroeger, Charles Latham, W. I. Longsworth, . John M. Smith and Boo’h Tarkington, Miss Ada ' Bicking, Miss Lucy Taggart, Bernard R. Batty, William H. Book and Joseph E. « Cain,
Sales Open Monday
ALSO HOMER CAPEHART, Albert O. Deluse, Otto N. Frenzel, Pierre F. Goodrich, Theodore B. Griffith, Wallace O. Lee, Charles J. Lynn, Franklin Miner, DeWitt S. Morgan, Kurt F. Pantzer, Peter C. ‘Reilly, Louis Schwitzer, Elmer A. Steffen, Leonard A. Strauss, Ralph W. Wright, the Rt. Rev. Msgr. Henry F. Dugan, the Rev. Fr. Leonard Wernsing, Col. Walter 8S. Drysdale, Dr. Daniel S. Robinson, * Ferdinand Schaefer and Fabien Sevitzky. ~ "On the men’s State advisory committee are Frank E. Bohn, Ft. Wayne; Don Bollinger, Seymour; G. F. Cunningham, South Bend; . D. Wray DePrez, Shelbyville; Fred O. Eward, Marion; Louis P. ~ ' Ruthenberg, Evansville; Oris Vandivier, Franklin; John Van Osdol, ° Peru, and Dr. Clyde E. Wildman, Greencastle. ; The women’s state advisory committee includes Mrs. J. A. Kautz, Kokomo; Mrs. Edwin I. Poston, Martinsville; Mrs. Don M. Nixon, Wabash; Mrs. G. D. Thatcher, Kokomo; Mrs. Joe McCord, Green- . castle; Mrs. Milton Matter, Marion, and Mrs. C. Lloyd Billman, * Manilla. ; Among members of the central committee of the campaign who personally will direct the corps of volunteer workers are Mrs. Jack A. Goodman and Mrs. T. Victor Keene, co-chairmen, and Mesdames E. Kirk McKinney, Robert M. Lingle and Walter P. Morton.
- Day Nursery Auxiliary Will Meet Tuesday
THE FIRST NG of the Junior Auxiliary to the Day “Nursery will be held Tuesday at the. Propylaeum. An executive ‘board meeting will be held in the morning and the regular meeting will follow a luncheon. . ; | : # 2 8 2 = =
° The final ladies’ golf guest day will be held at the Indianapolis Country Club Tuesday with Mrs. W. A. Miskimen as hostess. Tee time will be 10 a. m. Hostesses for the ladies’ luncheon-bridge the following day will be Mrs. A. Hastings Fiske and Mrs."J. M. Heffel- " finger. Luncheon will'be at 12:30 p. m. » s ”» s t 4 os ”
When Sarah Lawrence College at Bronxville, N. Y., opens its ‘14th year Monday, two Indianapolis girls will register for their fresh- . man years—Miss Frances S. Bloch, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph * M. Bloch, and Miss Carol Anne Noel, the Harry 8. Noels’ daughter. = Upperclassmen will register Wednesday. Among them will be Miss Betty Carrie Reynolds, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Myron B. Reynolds, Anderson. ’ An Indianapolis freshman at MacMurray College, Jacksonville, 711, is Miss Agnes A. Sherman, daughter of Mrs. Sue Sherman. Her _ graduation class of 1945 will be the 96th class of the college. = Miss Margaret Anne Becker, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Stedman Begker, returns next week to Sweet Briar College, Sweet: riar, Va., for her senior year. Last June Miss Becker received the cholarship given the highest ranking member of thé junior class. - : This week Miss Becker, with Miss Sue Virginia Hull and Miss Adeline Lewis, was a guest of Miss Janet Beach, daughter of Mr.’ and Mrs. C. H. Beach. Janet is retuming to Lake Erie College, ' Painesville, O., for her senior year. Sue will attend Duke Uniy and Adeline will return to ‘Western College, *n ~~ Miss Peggy Jane Gray, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. Dolly Gray, ‘will leave next week for Briar Cliff College. Her sister, Mary Jo, jurns to Tudor Hall School this fall. Tomorrow Miss Lucy Kauf- , the Thomas M. Kaufmans’ daughter, will leave™for Mount oke College. She was graduated in “June from the Ogontz
dult Forum to Hear Talk on China China's position in world affairs ill be discussed by Liu Nai-chien when he speaks tomorrow morning pt All Souls Unitarian Church.
government of China.
To Talk on Panama :
h's Adult Forum hour begin-|ternational t 10 o'clock. ~~ {meeting at
Bishop Bergan of Des Moines Officiates at Delaney-Sexton Rite in the Cathedral
The bridegroom’s cousin, Bishop Gerald T. Bergan, Des Moines, Iowa,
officiated this morning at the wedding of Miss Mary Kathryn Sexton, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Timothy P. Sexton, 3034 Washington Blvd., to Frank J. Delaney Jr. -He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank J. Delaney Sr.,
eer. : representing ‘the Chunking
. “Panama” will be the subject of Mrs. C. J. Ancker when she speaks talk: will be given during the | before the Cherokee Chapter, In-Travel-Study C1 ub ,}moon, 1:30. p. m. Monday ‘at|blue wool
Burlington, Iowa, formerly of Indianapolis.
Assisting Bishop Bergan at the 10 o'clock ceremony: in SS. Peter and Paul Cathedral was the Rt. Rev. Msgr. Raymond R. Noll, rector of the cathedral. - The cathedral choir, led by William H. Bradley, sang during the ceremony. Miss Helen Shepard was the organist., The. sanctuary was decorated with palms, ferns and pink and white gladiQli. 5 Gowns worn by the bridesmaids, Miss Rosemary Delaney, Burlington, sister of the bridegroom, and Miss Helen Lawler, were of heliotrope blue faille made .with V necklines and full bodices, the full skirts falling from hands of Dubonnet velvet ribbon. The bride’s niece,
maid and wore a similar frock of pink faille with Dubonnet trim. Mrs. John: Sexton, ' her sister-in-law’s matron of honor, was in rose faille in the same style. All of the attendants wore headdresses of ostrich tips matching their gowns. The junior bridesmaid carried a colonial bouquet of winetoned roses and the other attendants carried arm bouquets of the winetoned roses. . : Entering on the.arm of her father, the bride was gowned in candlelight satin fashioned with a fitted girdle and long train. The V neckline was outlined with a ‘trapunto motif and
the long sleeves were pointed at the
wrists. A seed pearl tiara held her full length candlelight veil and she carried a bouquet of white orchids, roses and baby breath. .
Brother Is Best Man
Richard Delaney, Burlington, was his brother’s best man. Ushers were
the bridegroom. The bride’s nephew, Joseph Sexton
with which she wore brbwn sories and a brown orchid corsage. The bridegroom’s mother wore a gray crepe studded with nail heads. Her accessories were of rose and she wore American Beauty roses. ; A wedding breakfast was fo be served at 12:30 p.m. af the Indianapolis Athletic Club. The couple will motor to Florida on their 2 the bride leaving in a
Miss Mary. * | Catherine Sexton, was junior brides-
Jr., “served at the
orchid corsage. They will be at home, after Oct. 1, in Burlington. The bride is a graduate of St. Mary's of Notre Dame and the bridegroom of the University of Notre Dame. Guests from out-of-town attending the wedding included Mr. and Mrs. Mark Baker and Mrs. T. Paul McGannon, Burlington; Mr. and Mrs. ‘Leonard Sours, Mrs. Samuel Cummings, Misses Stacia Daniels,
Peoria, Ill.; Mrs. E. T. Muir and Miss Virginia Marlowe, Detroit; Miss Theresa Fay, ‘Cleveland; Miss Loretta Reilly, Tucson, Ariz.; Miss Marian Vodicka, Chicago; Miss Helen Carson, Covington, Ky., and Mrs. Thomas O'Neil, St. Louis.
Defense Group Sponsors Talk
Mme. Marie Rose Henry will talk|
on “What Vichy ‘Means to the United States” Wednesday at the second ‘in a series of women’s “morale meétings” to be sponsered by the Indiana Committee for National Defense. The meeting will be in the World War Memorial auditorium at 2 p. m. A nafive of France, Mme. Henry
© Mrs, Felix Vonnegut, chairman of the women’s division of the defense
committee, -and Mrs. Olive Belden|Lewis, t
state, as well as Indianapolis, may attend. oh . Mesdames Vonnegut, Lewis and James T. Wason are speaking today in a symposium on “Democracy and Christianity” before Missionary Society members of the Christian Church at Huntington. Mrs. Lewis
- man and Merrill
Blanche M. Bailey, before h
p.m, Oct. 18, in (Randell Photo.)
/
1 Mr. and Mrs, W. A. Sayler announce the engagement of their daughter, Treva Elizabeth, to Robert D. Millholland, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ray Millholland. The wedding will be at 2 p. m., Oct. 11, in the Broadway Methodist Church, (Dexheimer-Carlon Photo.)
2 Miss Marjorie Rasmussen, daughter of Niels C. Rasmussen, will be married to Clifford Decker, Pittsburgh, Pa., son of Mrs. Ann Decker, , 4:30 p. m., Sept. 21, in the First Baptist Church. The : ttendants will be Miss Mabel .Clift and Mrs. Frederick Siater of Pittsburgh. William Hulley of Pittsburgh will be Mr. Decker’s best ) Matlock, Edward Reed and. Mr. Slater will usher. (Photoreflex Photo.)
3. Mr. and Mrs. George Rice have announced the engagement of their daughter,’ Ann Marie, to Ensign N. R. who is stationed at Honolulu. 4 in Honolulu. Miss Rice attended Purdue University and Ensign Bradley, son of Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Bradley, Cincinnati, also i tended Purdue. (Dexheimer-Carlon Photo.)
4. Miss Catherine Matson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs, George W. Matson, will be married to George C. Conner tomorrow. (Liang Shen SE Tl 3 A 5% 3 : 5. Mrs. Max W. Galloway
was Miss Mary Bailey, daughtér of Mrs. marriage Aug. 30 in SS. Peter and Paul pSalionay 1s the son of Mrs. Jennie Galloway.’ (Dex‘of Miss Mildred Louise Benson to Harry E. .. and Mrs. H. E MeCrady; announced by her
7. A Sept. 5 wedding in the Irvington Methodist Church united Miss Rosemary Gray, daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Mark R, Gray, and 8. Mrs. William D. King was Miss Betty Ruth Henry, ernacle Presbyterian Church. Mr. King is the son of Dr. an U. 8. Dental Corps at th
M. King. The couple is at ho Waukegan, a stationed as » leutenant in fhe U. S. Dental
Lilly, 8907 Guilford Ave.
lis trimmed with rose point lace
| Reception at IA.C, Will Follow
Wedding of Eileen Sweeney To Russell Charles Lilly
. ~The Palm Room of the Indianapolis Athletic Club was to be the scene, at 3:30 o'clock this afternoon, of the wedding of Miss Eileen Sweeney and Toussell Chiatles Lilly. An improvised altar of palms, white lilies, oli and chrysanthemums flanked seven-way can was oom fhe Setting for the rite. y y felahee or the ceremony and the reception following was to be Miss Jean Sanford. The Rev. Fr. Raymond Bosler of SS. Peter an Cathedral was to hear the wedding vows. a Pata ass Sweeney is the daughter ofj ———m™m™M™MmMm™ ————— , an Ss. Russell Thomas } Sweeney, 2910 N. Talbott Ave, and|_>nxed by low bowls of pastel Mr. Lilly is the son of Mrs. William |floWers and candelabra. After Oct. 1 the couple will be at
To entered with her father,|home at 3330 N. Meridian St. The e e was to wear a gown made|bride’s going-away costume will b# of silk net over candlelight satin with a fitted bodice above a fulll> Soon "oo! Sul With, alligator acskirt which formed a slight train.|C®SSOries. The bracelet length sleeves are| Guests from out of the city atshirred and the sweetheart neckline|tending the wedding were to include Mr. and Mrs. Charles Reeves and which was worn on the wedding|family, Kalamazoo, Mich.; Mr. and dress of the bridegroom’s mother. Mss. James Steep. Denoit; Mr. and A heart-shaped halo of satin Ars. BR. 1. ugh ‘and Mr. and matching her gown was to hold the| Mrs. Myron Rees, Mitchell; Maj.
, i Robert L. Stevenson, Ft. Knox, Ky. bride's augertip veil of illusion and yy, © 1 vee Nott Hamilton sadn
she was’ id of | , 0 pear 8 strand of Dearls/son; Mr. and Mrs. Carl L. Willsey
given her by the bridegroom. Her . bo and ‘Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Willse uquet was to be a shower type Mansfield, O,, d Mi Al 37s
of white orchids and bride’s roses. Miss Bernadette Sweeney, her sis-|Miller, Glendale, O. oo ter’s maid of honor, was to wear], Lie bride is a graduate of Butler heather rose faille taffeta also made University where she was a member with a sweetheart neckline and|0f Delta Delta Delta Sorgrity. Mr. shirred hracelet length sleeves, The (Lilly also attended Butler and is frock has a fitted torso bodice and|® member of Delta Tau Delta Frae a corded flounce edging the full|ternity. skirt. Matching ostrich tips were to] - ! be wornt in her hair and she was to SarTy on, arm bouquet of rubrum eS. " :
Wild olive green faille taffeta was
's. William E. Sayer, adv . Robert A. Smith, parliamer
