Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 December 1941 — Page 4
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SATURDAY, DEC. 20, 1941
1. The cast of “Lambs in Toyland,” the floor show to be given tonight at the Lambs Club’s Christmas Frolic in the Columbia Club, listens to a “pep” talk from the director. 2. Mrs. Hubert Hickam, Robert D. Eaglesfield Jr. and Mrs. James L. Rose (left to right) will appaar
in the frolic.
3. Newell C. Munson, Mrs. C. C. Robinson and Mr. Rose (left to right),
4. Standing (left to right) are Stuart Dean, Mrs. G. B. Jackson and Jack Rhoades.
kneels.
Harry V. Wade
5. Mrs. Richard Hoover is the kneeling doll. Mesdames Rhoades, Wallace C. Tony and Frederick ©.
Albershardt are standing (left to right). ; 6. Mrs. C. Basil Fausset (left) and George R. Schneider (right) in conversation with Santa Claus
(Walter J. Stuhldreher).
7. John D. Tebhen and George Fotheringham are concealed by the masks (left and right). Mrs. Mun-
son is at center.
Essilee Hempfling Will Be Wed |Couple Will Be To Charles Richard Hamilton In Ceremony Tomorrow
A reception at the home of the bride's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Wil1 C. Hempfling, 3656 Kenwood Ave. will follow the wedding of Essilee Hempfling to Charles Richard Hamilton at 3:30 o'clock tomorrow - afternoon in the North Methodist Church. Mr. Hamilton is the son. of Mr. and Mrs. John G. Hamilton of Connersville. Palms, ferns and seven-way candelabra will be arranged at the altar where Dr. C. A. McPheeters is to officiate. Mrs. J. Russell Paxton
Speak for Sale Of Defense Savings Bonds
A battery of approximately 100 Marion County women is being organized to speak on the need for the purchase of U. S. defense savings bonds and stamps. The presidents of 35 organizations were to meet this afternoon in the Y. W. C. A to initiate plans for the bureau. Mrs. Henry E. Ostrom, chairman of the women’s division, Marion County Defense Savings Staff, was to conduct a roundtable discussion. The presidents were to discuss the procedure to be followed in “changing over from an ‘informational committee’ to a direct selling organization.” Mrs. Chatles F. Efroymson, representing the Indianapolis Chapter of the National Council of Jewish Women, will be in charge of the organization of the speakers. She will name a special speakers’ committee representative of the 35 organizations. “The extreme urgency of our présent situation can not be overemphasized,” Mrs. Ostrom said, “and neithér can the national peril. I am confident that the women of Marion County will in the future,
Robison Post Party Is Tomorrow
will be the organist. She will play a program of. bridal music including Schubert's “Ave Maria,” “Liebestraum,” “Evening Star” and “Clair de Lune.” David Hempfiing, the bride's brother, will sing “Ich Liebe Dich” and “Because.” As she enters the church on the arm of her father, the bride will wear an ice blue satin brocade fashioned with long sleeves pointed at the wrists, and a sweetheart neckline. She will wear a gold cross given her by the bridegroom and her fingertip veil of illusion will be held by a tiara of orange blossoms. Her arm bouquet will be formed of white roses centered with orchids. Mrs. George W. Prescott, matron of honor, will wear- wine taffeta
with short, full sleeves and & bouf- |
fant skirt. Miss Frances Shaw, bridesmaid, will be in a gown of similar style made of Sahara gold taffeta. They will wear gold clips, gifts of the bride, and Juliet caps of gold sequins and yellow pompons matching the yellow chrysanthemums of their bouqueta.
Theodore Brown Best Man
Mr. Hamilton's attendants will be Theodore Brown as best man amd, as usherd, Forrest Scott, John Stofer, Elmer Wilson and Robert Cook
‘ Hempfling, mother of the
Mrs. bride, will be gowned in gray crepe
At Home In Toledo
The Green Room of the Indianapolis Athletic Club will be the scene, at 1:30 o'clock tomororw afternoon, of the wedding of Miss Evelyn Goldsmith, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. S. M. Goldsmith, 3345 Park Ave, to Ensign Louis Rauchman, son of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Rauchman of Cincinnati. As Rabbi Elias Charry performs the ceremony, the wedding party will stand between flanking ‘arrangements of greenery, bbuquets of flowers and seven-way candelabra holding lighted tapers. Miss Mary Catherine Stair, harpist, will play during the ceremony and the dinner following. The bride, escorted by her father, will wear a gown with white silk Jersey bodice above a long full skirt of embroidered net. Her half-veil will be held by white roses and she will carry a French bouquet of white orchids and roses.
Sisters Attendants
Her sisters, Mrs, Le)» Cohn and Miss Marian Goldsmith, will be matron of honor and bridesmaid. Mrs. Cohn will be in a frosted bluegreen frock and will carry a French bouquet of Talisman roses while Marian will wear pale blue chiffon and carry pale pink roses in a French ‘bouquet. Irvin Rauchman, Cincinnati, will serve as his brother’s best man and Sam Weinstein, Ft. Wayne, a cousin, will be the usher: Mothers of the couple will wear rose corsages with their costumes Mrs. Goldsmith with a deep green and Mrs. Rauchman with a deep ue. Leaving for Toledo where the couple will be at home, the bride
*|will wear a rust and brown wool
wed- geles
and a corsage
suit beneath a beaver coat, a rust and brown h brown accessories orchids. Miss Goldsmith attended Los AnJunior College and Butler
Society Elects Mis. Fred Higbee recently ‘was| Aid Service Club
Society—
'The Lambs In Toyland’ Will Be
Feature of Frolic This Evening
THE HOLIDAY SCENE WILL BE ENLIVENED to. © night by the annual Christmas frolic of the Lambs Club | to be held at the Columbia Club. Dinner will be served in the ballroom from 8:30 to 10 p. m. when dancing will begin. The floor show, “The Lambs in Toyland,” pre
sented by members, will be at 11 o’clock. One group attending the frolic will include Messrs. and Mes» dames Robert N. Bowen, J. I. Cummings, Louis W. Leath, Thomas Mahaffey Jr. Elijah B. Martindale, William N. Wilson and George E. Enos. Guests of Mr. and Mrs, C. Severin Buschmann will be Mr. and Mrs. William H, Krieg and Mr. and Mrs. John Alexander, Mr. and Mrs. Walker W. Winslow will be hosts to Messrs. and Mese dames Carl Wallerich, Irving Lemaux and Howard T. Griffith. Dr. Walter L. Bruetsch will entertain Mr. and Mrs. Myron R, Green, Mr. and Mrs. Jacob 8S. White and Mrs. Helen Hicks Baker, Also holding reservations for parties are Messrs. and Mesdames Ale bert J. Beveridge Jr. Irving W. Lemaux Jr. George Fotheringham, William J. Lochhead and Norman A, Perry, Messrs. George Barde well and Eugene S. Pulliam,
Mount Holyoke Alumnae to Honor Students
INDIANA STUDENTS at Mount Holyoke College who are at home for the holidays will be honored at the annual luncheon given at 1 p. m. next Saturday at the Woodstock Club by thé Ine diana Mount Holyoke Club. : The honor guests will include Misses Sue Ann Eveleigh, Lucy Kaufman and Eleanor Kellogg, of Indianapolis; Miss Suzanne Smith and Miss Helen Howick, Muncie; Miss Suzanne DePrez, Shelbyville; Miss Janet Pierson, West Lafayette, and Miss Barbara Jean Johnson of Indianapolis, who is an instructor at the college, Mrs. Fred Bassett is arrangements chairman for the luncheon.
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The traditional formal dinner bridge party held each year at the Meridian Hills Country Club during the holiday season will be next Saturday with Mr. and Mrs. Ralph L. Flood as chairmen. Mr. and Mrs. Flood have served as chairmen for the party each year since the club's opening 15 years ago. The dinner will be at 7 p. m. Members of the Floods’ committee of assistants are Messrs. and Mesdames Isaac E. Woodard, Frederick Grumme, Hulbert J. Smith, Frank H. Langsenkamp, Arthur E. Krick, Walter Montgomery, Parke A. Cooling, Harry J. Berry and Stacey B. Lindley,
Features Water Color Exhibit
HOSTS AND HOS1ESSES representing the Art Association of Indianapolis at the John Herron Art Museum tomorrow afternoon will be Mrs. Frederic H. Sterling, Miss Lucy M. Taggart, Fermor 8. Cannon, William ©. Griffith and William G. Sullivan. The exe hibition of water' colors by members of the Philadelphia Water Color Club is being featured and will continue through Christmas, The board of directors of the Art Associaiion has accepted a gift of 34 Chinese snuff boxes, given by Mrs. Harris P. Wetsell in memory of her husband. The boxes, of many types, are made .of jade, agate, bronze, crystal, lacquer and porcelain and are richly decorated. Some are 300 years old. The board also has accepted a gift of point de gauze lace pre= sented by Mrs. J. W. Fesler, Art Association president, for the permanent lace collection. According to Miss Anna Hasselman, curator, “it will become one of the finest pieces of hand made lace in the collection. o ” Two notable gifts have-been made to the Museum's library, ace cording to Miss Marian Green, librarian. Mrs. Roger G. Wolcott has presented the three-volume set of the Rockefeller-McCormick New Testament Codex. This is the earliest known manuscript of the New Testament. The McCormick edition is a copy of the original with the monks’ original illustrations in color and gold made by Max Jaffe of Vienna, the world’s most famous color printer. The library also has received as a gift from Miss Helen Frick of the Frick Library of New York the four-velume Lawrence Parks definitive edition of the life and works of Gilbert Stuart. ' The gift was made in recognition of the coming Gilbert Stuart show, which opens at the Museum Jan. 1.
Name Chaperon for Children's Theater Trip
MRS. CHARLES WILSON has been appointed by Mrs. Joseph Walden, chairman of the Children’s Civic Theater, as the official chaperon for the Children’s Theater's trip to Detroit, Mich, Deg, 28. The group will present a demonstration play before the nae tional meeting of the American Theater Association. The Children’s Theater was chosen by the Association from all such groups in the country to present & demonstration play as a laboratory experiment to prove that the child actor is capable of a finished and polished performance. The play chosen for -prese entation on Monday, Dec. 20, in the ballroom of the Statler Hotel, is a one-act adaption of “Hansel and, Gretel” The Theater Ase sociation’s meeting will be held Dec. 20 through 31.
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The sthools of Indianapolis will be represented by the cast chosen to make the trip to Detroit. From Shortridge High School will be Miss Mary McClure, properties chairman; Miss Judith Bright, head of costumes; Richard Tribbe, stage manager, and Paul Lennon, cast as the father. Technical High School representatives dre Miss Barbara Spong, playing the role of the Witch; Charles Caron, appearing as the Sandman, and Ted Lawlis, cast as the Blueb!
ird. Miss Martha Hutchman of Tudor Hall School will appear as the stepmother and Miss Jean Wilson of School 80 will portray Gretel. The group will leave for Detroit on Sunday, Dec. 28, and while there”will attend the Ford Sunday Evening Hour radio broads cast as a part of the program of activities planned for them. Also attending with the group will be Mrs, Walden and R, Edward Green, who will direct the demonstration play.
Shortridge Classes
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(and distributed 800 cookies to the
were Mrs,
Broderick Sr. vice president, and |Army,
Men's Club, 128 W. Wabash St. Members of the class decided on the project, took up a collection
