Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 31 December 1941 — Page 11
| WEDNESDAY, DEC. 81, 1041
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Society—
Indianapolis Prepares to 'Ring Out the Old and Ring in the New!
, THE PACE FOR A MORE THAN GALA New fr's Eve will be set tonight by the Princeton Triangle B's show at the Murat Theater, “Ask Me Another.” ¢ The production will be prefaced by numerous dinner des while other groups will go on to dances at town
1 country clubs following the performance. IDining together at the University Club before going to the ter will be Messrs. and Mesdames John C. Appel, Frederic M. Jr. and David Laurance Chambers Jr. The Charles A. athouse Jrs. will entertain at dinner in the University Club be- ® the group attends the Triangle Club show. Also dining toher there before going to the theater will be Mr. and Mrs. Earl iRandles and Mr. and Mrs. John K. Ruckelshaus. Bowman Downey will be host at a dinner in the Woodstock th before attending the performance. His guests will be Miss ky Ellen Voyles, Miss Priscilla Blasingham and Harry Richard isingham. The party will return for the club dance after the show. Others welcoming the New Year at the Woodstock will include
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Judge and Mrs. Herbert E. Wilson's party—Messrs. and Mesdames
£. C. Robinson, Frederick C. Albershardt, Newell C. Munson and Mr. and Mrs. Charles A. Nugent's guests will be Messrs, and Mesdames E. Leo Smith, Ray Peterson, Bernard Lacy and B. M. Angell. Another party at the Woodstock will include Messrs, and Mesgames Carlos Recker Jr, Farl Larsen and Thompson Kurrie, Miss Anne Tefft and W. S. Knapp. Parties also have been planned by Jack Adams, Miss Ruth Fishback and Mrs. N. P. Graham.
Entertain at the Country Club
AMONG THOSE ATTENDING the Indianapolis Country Club's bréakfast-dance will be Mr, and Mrs. Charles E. Rogers and their guests, Messrs, and Mesdames Harrison Eiteljorg, Talbott lenny, Robert 8 Stempfel, E R. Vonnegut, Henry E Todd and William Frederick Souder Jr. Guests of Mr. and Mrs. Carl R. Tuttle will include Messrs. and Mesdames Leonard J. Meisberger, Walter W. Grear, Vincent Shea, Gail Eldridge and Tom Hayes, Col. Roscoe Turner and Nish Dienhart. Capt. and Mrs, Daniel Moulton will be at the Country Club dance with Mr. and Mrs. Obie J. Smith Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Chestér G. Pike of Plainfield will entertain a party of 20 at the elub. Attending with Mr. and Mrs. Carl N. Reifsteck will be Messrs. and Mesdames Kjell Gaarder, Fred G. Lofquist and B. E Clatworthy. Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Alexander's guests will be Messrs, and Mesgames Oscar B. Perine, Verne K. Reeder and Harold S. Cheney. Ih & party entertained by Mr. and Mrs. Gerald R. Redding will be Messrs. and Mesdames Gerald Ely, C. J. Mick, R. B. Moore, A. L. Pehrson, Guy Morrison, George VanDyke Jr. and Robert Daily, Miss Betty Fenner and Larry Dimond of Chicago. With Mr. and Mrs. Rollo S. Lewis will be Dr. and Mrs. Clayton Weigand, Dr. and Mrs. Raymond Rice, Dr. and Mrs. Conley Robinson, Dr. and Mrs. C. E Roach and Mr. and Mrs. Fred Hadley, Mr. and Mrs. Charles R. D'Olive and Mr. and Mrs. J. Pahl Brown Will be together. Guests of James Kahler will be Mr and Mrs. James F. Carson, Miss Margaret Swindler, Miss Katie Williams and Bd Sadowski. Mr and Mrs. George E. Enos have made reservations for a party of 25 and Mr. and Mrs. M. Stanley McComas Jr. also will entertain guests at the club. A supper party will be given tonight after the Princeton Triangle ghow by Miss Eleanor Winslow at her home. Her guests will be Mr. and Mrs. John ©. Appel, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Rogers Mallory, Mrs Lawrence Hayes, Miss June Brown of Camby, Misses Prudence Brown, Alice Vonnegut and Elizabeth Weiss, Henry Stephenson, Foster Clippinger, Wesley Dunn, James M. Dill Jr. and Charles
Rockwood Jr.
500 te Attend |. A. C. Frolic
APPROXIMATELY 500 Indianapolis Athletic Club members and thelr guests will attend the club's annual New Year's Eve frolic beginning at 10 p. m. tonight. Louie Lowe's Orchestra will play
for the supper dance and for the annual New Year's Day dinner
dante tomorrow. Dinner tomorrow will be served from noon until 8 p. hh. and dancing will be from 7 p. m. Numerous large parties have been arranged for the supper dance night. Reservations for tables of 10 or more persons have been made by Ralph S. Dyson, Dr. William Shuck, Leroy Sanders, A. C. : W. M. Atkinson, H. O. McElyea, Dr. R. V. Myers, J. W. : Charles T. Moreland, Jack Atkinson, Sam Rose, Harry Shithwaite, Dr. L. I. Shuler, George N. Ross, H. E. Fadely, David §. Ross, Earl Eckard, Herbert Queisser, Paul Starrett and Arthur
B Witt Two Floor Shows to Be Presented
OTHER TABLE RESERVATIONS include those of John O. Servaas, Howard Intermill, Roy Wilmeth, S. J. Drayton, C. C. Cooper, Fred Hoffman, Parker James, Lew Skinner, Allen Smith, Poh G. Kags, C. K. Warble, John Lawler, R. W. Smith, G. EB. Frand, J. W. Pinnell, Sam Regenstrief, Peter Lambertus and Dan Penrod. Amiong Other reservations are those of Roland Rust Harold ben. Miss Juanita Kellar, W. C. Bevington, Howard R. Chapman, GH A. J. Wichmann, Bernard H. Rullman, M. A. Newman, jus ¥. Hamilton, Kenneth E. Kinnear, Major A. Riddle, Ww. J : Harry Hartz, C. W. O'Brien. H. W. Smoots, Miss Marjorie sf. Charles Deets, Miss Mildred Sartor, George Kaufman, lig fate, John EB Smith, Dr W. E Tinney, Lieut. Duncan R. ® Thomas EB. Reilly, Mrs. W. D. Kibler, Emory Baxter, Alexander bh and George A. Bretslaff. Ptertainm t tonight will include two floor shows to be pre two sections. Table decorations will be paper hats and Bers and there will be favors for women guests.
Athenaeum Celebration
Is Tonight
Dances popuiar in both this country and South America will be featured tonight at the New Year's Eve party at the Athenaeum. The dinner dance will be held in the Kellersaal, Virgil Hebert will be master of ceremonies and the floor show will begin at 11 o'clock. One party will include the Messrs. and Mesdames Kris J. Karle, Oscar Peters, A. Wayne Murphy, Mrs. Lena Peters and Mrs. Olga Birk. Dr. and Mrs. Carl B. Sputh, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Pflumm and Mr. and Mrs. William Schnorr will be together, as will Mr. and Mrs. Arthur IL. Strauss, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Dallman and Leslie Aye. In another group will be Mr. and Mrs. Paul BE. Feucht, Mr. and Mrs. Theodore W. Feucht, J. A. Sheedy nd J. Ii. Cromwell, Pittsburgh. At one table will be Mr. and Mrs. John Roland, Mr. and Mrs. F. B. Elliott, Arlington, Ind.; Mr. and Mrs. Herman Mann of Arisona and A. C. Mann of Cincinnati. Attending together will be Messrs. end Mesdames Charles Martin, H. H. Arnholter and Corbin Patrick. Messrs. and Mesdames Don Burge, Hiram D. Keehn and John Schumacher will attend in a party. Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Duncan and Ted Leck, Terre Haute, will be together. Other reservations have been made by the Messrs. and Mesdames Carl Steinbach, F. W. Cornelius, Carl Spickelmier; Messrs. Alex Lee Rice, Charles Zwick and William C. Van Arsdel III. Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Pflumm, chairmen of the entertainment committee, were assisted in arrangements by the Messrs. and Mesdames Schnorr, Keehn, Andrew Bicket, Murphy and Fred Martin.
Dance Tonight At Lake Shore
Members of the Lake Shore Country Club wili celebrate the coming of the New Year tonight with a dance and party at the clubhouse. The “Variety Serenaders” provide dance music and strollers will entertain during the intermission and supper. A feature of the evening will be the community singing. One of the larger cocktail parties which will precede the dance will be at the home of Robert V. Sheehan. He will have as his guests Mr. and Mrs. William T. Babbitt and the Misses Jeanette Steinmeyer, Bernadine Wheelock, Margie Cochrane, Margaret Flynn, Irene Gillespie, Lillian Grieb, Helen Sullivan, Rosemary Walsh and Wanda Wade. Others in the party will be H Thomas Walpole, Lawrence E. Tur« ner Jr, Harry Strodtman, Norman W. McClure, Fred A. Crawford, Robert Rominger, Byron Wilson, Calvin Rhodes, Joseph Lau, Paul V. Hemmer, William Beckwith and Robert Engleking. Out-of-town guests will include Miss Doris Dobson, Bloomington; Miss Betty Sering, Dayton, O., and Thomas F. Fitegibbon, St. Louis.
Paul M. Fletchers
Dinner Guests
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Pelham entertained with a dinner party last night in their home in honor of Mr, and Mrs. Paul Martin Fletcher. Mrs. Fletcher was Miss Whitaker, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lyman B. Whitaker, before her recent marriage.
_ THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
20th Century Colonial "Is The New Mode In Architecture
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New Trend Is a Combination Of American Colonial And Modern Designs
Quietly, America seems to be adopting a new and native mode of architecture and decoration. It's called simply “20th Century Colonial.” Marking the end of an awkward period of trying to be modern, and beginning a mature period of using both our past and present, it promises to be a style that expresses our modern American way of life.
Acknowledging its presence is House Beautiful magazine, which pays tribute to the new trend in its January issue by showing pictures of homes throughout the country to illustrate how universally it is being adopted. What is “20th Century Colonial”? Basically it is this, answers House Beautiful. It borrows from our early American colonial and blends with it the adaptable qualities of modern architecture and decoration, and emerges as a flowering-into-maturity of our contemporary American home culture, To illustrate, the magazine lists the differences and the similarities to the Early American Colonial. It differs first in that it has an open, flowing feeling side, with big rooms and rooms that flow together with big openings between. It uses higher ceilings and employs big windows that our ancestors would not dared to have used on account of poor heat. Then, because it is more spacious inside, it permits more comfortablé furniture, and especially bigger scale seating. It likewise invites more comfortable fur niture groupings.
Familiar Accessories
But in many ways it resembles the early colonial. It uses homey, comfortable materials that have been in our vernacular for genera tions—ealico, rag rugs, roughhewn beams, tongue and groove boarding, chintz and lovely stonework. It uses familiar accessories such as copper and pewter and painted tin. It calls for the display of quaint old china and glass. It glorifies the fireplace—making it occupy whole walls, putting one in every room.
Plans Murals for
Service Club
Students and faculty of the John Herron Art School are “doing their
of the projects of the advanced classes for the school's new term will be the designing and execution of murals for the game rooms at the Service Men's Club. Posters already have been made by students for the Red Cross drive for blood donors and plans are being made to provide posters in connection with other defense activities. The school’s night classes are open also to defense workers who wish to “relax” from mechanical work by doing creative work. The school’s second semester, for both day and night classes, will begin Feb. 3. A special arrangement of classes makes it possible for students entering at mid-year to begin work on any of the regular courses at that time, Donald Mattison, the director, has announced.
Fox-Spencer Rite Tonight
Junior Group In Irvington
Will Dance
The Junior Assembly of the Irvington Union of Clubs will have a New Year's eve formal dance in the Irvington Masonic Temple this eve ning. Dancing from 9 to 12 p. m. will be to the music of Albert Weiscopf’s orchestra. Mrs, Virgil A. Sly is president of the Irvington Union of Clubs and Mrs. Carl H. Hull is general chairman of the dance. Parents who will act as sponsors at the dance will be Messrs. and Mesdames Harold W. Muts, William S. Arbuckle, William T. Rose, Max J. Reese and Dr. and Mrs. Henry B. Morrow. On the'floor committee are the Misses Dorothy Kellogg, Jane Gos« som, Ann Todd, Marion Mutz, and Jack Huston, Robert Ragsdale, Richard Ferguson and Frank Stewart.
Rinne-Runyan Ceremony Read In East
Mr. and Mrs. Samuel E. Runyan, | 2626 N. Alabama St, announce the| marriage of their daughter, Martha Jo, to Pvt. Austin D. Rinne, son of Mr. and Mrs. Hermann H. Rinne, 3046 Park Ave. The ceremony took place last Monday at the home of the bride groom's brother, Carl H. Rinne, and Mrs. Rinne, Cedar Grove, N. J. The bride attended Butler Uni-
will bit” in home defense activities. One [versity and is a member of Kappa
Alpha Theta Sorority. The bride« groom attended Indiana University
and is a member of Phi Kappa Psi|
Fraternity. The couple will be at home at the Air Warning Center, Ft. Dix, N. J, where Pvt. Rinne is stationed.
May E. Howe To Be Wed
A double ring ceremony will unite Miss May Elizabeth Howe and Francis Edward Gibbs in the Berean Missionary Baptist Church tonight at 0:30 o'clock. Porter will officiate at the service.
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nessed in the fireplace to the right, complete with oven and antiques,
in the most modern sense of the word, yet it is primarily Connecticut Colonial in its materials, textures This dining room has a great window which lets in ail outdoors bu¢ chimes in well with the farmhouse furniture, Colonial inspiration is wits furniture is pine, all hangings sre conventional chints, all carpeting is rag-rug or string.
Meridian Hills [Reception Will Follow Marriage Of Phyllis Jean Juday To Glenn E. Smith Jr.
The Rev. Ernst Piepenbrok will solemnize the marriage vows for
Open House
Is Tomorrow
An annual open house for mems bers and friends will be held from 3 to 5 p. m. tomorrow at the Meridian Hills Country Club. A patriotic scheme will be carried out in decorations, the table being ar ranged with red roses and white candles tied with flag blue. In the receiving line will be the club officers and their wives—Paul ~~. Summers, president; Arthur E. Krick, vice president, and Marshall G. Knox, treasurer, with Mesdames Summers, Kirck and Knox. Assisting will be directors of the club: Henry Holt, Dr. Harry L. Foreman, Arthur O. Pittenger, Chauncey H. Eno II, Walter L. Brant, Fred W. Case and A. A. Zinn and Mesdames Foreman, Pittenger, Eno, Brant, Case and Zinn.
If You Have a Few Antique Pieces—
If you have two or three fine antique pieces for your living room, you oan use them as a basis to make it really exquisite and still stay within a modest budget. For instance, have the wall paneled in ivory, the furniture upholstered in a plain ivory colored cotton material with one or two pieces done in bright turkey red. White organdy curtains, very full and sheer, would make charming windows. Selec: a plain or textured rug in a neutral shade.
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Mr. and Mrs. Richard John Howe, |* 816 Grand Ave, are the parents of | the bride, and Mr. and Mrs. Harry| Gibbs, 1652 Gimber St, are the|!
bridegroom's parents.
Mr. Howe will give his daughter|
in marriage. She will wear a royal blue transparent velvet street<length dress with a matching turban. Her bouquet will be of white roses. The sister of the bride,
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Miss Phyllis Jean Juday and Glenn
E, Smith Jr, tonight at 7:30 o'clock,
The double ring ceremony will be performed in St. John's Evangelical
and Reformed Church. Morrison, organist.
Bridal airs will be played by Mrs. Amy Cleary
The bride is the daughter of Mrs. Carrie Juday and Harry Juday,
The bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs, Glenn E, Smith.
The bride will be accompanied to the altar by her father. She will wear a high necked, short sleeved
Smith will be at home at 1129 Laurel St. Mrs. Charles Noble, Cleveland, an aunt of the bride’s, and Mrs, Douge=
gown, with a full white net skirt|las Foxworthy of Carmel, Ky. will
and a white bodice embroidered with gold. Her bridal veil will fall
to her shoulders and she will carry a French bouquet of white carnations, sweet peas and roses. The bride's sister, Miss Berna Juday, will be her maid of honor. She will wear a rose dress with a velveteen bodice, full faille skirt, sweetheart neckline and short sleeves, Her French bouquet will include yellow roses and yellow carnations. James Noble will be Mr, Smith's best man, The ushers will be the bride’s brother, Harry Juday Jr. Donald Wallis and Charles Edmonds. A blue silk dress with black accessories has been chosen by the bride's mother for the service. The bridegroom's mother will be in black and both she and Mrs. Juday will wear corsages of yellow roses. A reception at the home of the biide’s mother, 1326 Linden St., will follow the ceremony. Mr. and Mrs.
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be among the wedding guests.
To Have Birthday
Party Tomorrow
A New Year's day birthday party will be given tomorrow by Mrs. F, J. Schmidt, 4709 Guilford Ave. in
honor of the third .. 3 birthday of her ii daughter, Mary Rosalie, Mrs. Schmidt will be assisted by her sister, Miss Adelle Bettice. Guests at the party will be Jimmy and Joan ge White, Freddy, £ Betsy and Jay pigs Schmidt Bachl, Steve Rohr, Raymond and Dicky Howard, Billy Oholorogg and Rita, Frances and Joan Osterman,
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