Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 16 February 1942 — Page 6
Indianapolis Junior League Finishes Puppets for Public School Showing
MRS. JEAN STARR MIKESELL, Columbia, Mo., puppetry consultant of the Association of Junior Leagues of America, is in Indianapolis today through Wednesday to “put the finishing touches” on the local league’s new
' puppet show, “Huckleberry Finn.” The show, just completed by the marionette committee of the league, will be given in the public schools in accordance with a pro- . gram begun three and a half years ago. Mrs. William Garstang 1s committee chairman. : S Mrs. Mikesell is the designer and sculptor of the heads and hands for the historical figures represented in the exhibit of the state of Missouri at the World's Fair in New York, at the San Francisco Exposition and at the state capitol in Jefferson City, Mo. Committee members who have worked on the new marionette _ production include Mrs. Henry Jameson Peirce, modeling of heads and hands; Mrs. J. I. Cummings, sets; Mrs. Thomas Henderson, properties, and Mrs. William Kothe, costume design. The cast committee is composed of Mesdames James Rose, Albert Lang, John C. Appel, Paul W. Scheuring, Frederic D. Anderson, Maxwell Coppock, Louis McClennen, Burford, Danner, Myers Whitaker and Henderson. |
Vassar Club Will Entertain Professor
HONOR GUEST at a tea given in the Propylaeum Thursday afternoon by officers and directors of the Indiana Vassar Club will be Miss Leila C. Barber, assistant professor of art at Vassar College and chairman of the emergency committee which has formulated the civilian defense program of the school. ; High school students who are interested in attending Vassar and their mothers are invited to the tea to meef club members and to talk with Mids Barber. Arrangements are being handled by the \ ‘scholarship committee of the club which annually awards a scholarship to a Vassar freshman from Indiana. Mrs. Joseph W, Walden is committee chairman. Club officers are Mrs. William H. Thompson, president; Mrs. bram S. Woodard, vice president; Mrs. Wendell C. Taylor, secrery, and Miss Harriet Holmes, treasurer. Directors are Mesdames H. Maurice Angell, Frederic D. Anderson, Louis H. Haerle, John W. Hendricks, Henry E. Ostrom, Bruce Bennett, Mortimer C. Furscott, Montgomery 8. Lewis, Williard C. Shull and Miss Barbara Hickam.
D. A. R. Committee Meets Friday
THE WHEEL AND DISTAFF COMMITTEE of the Caroline Scott Harrison Chapter, Daughters of the American Revolution, will meet ‘at 2 o'clock Friday afternoon at the home of Mrs, John L. Goldthwaite, 210 Berkley Road. ’ ds Miss Elizabeth Ohr, guest speaker, will talk on Currier and Ives prints. Mesdames Francis W. Black, Claus H. Best, Ralph C. Gery, A. W. McDonald and Kirkwood Yockey: will assist the hostess.
8 8 8 i 4 # Dr. Ricardo Alfaro, former president of Panamd# will be the speaker before the Town Hall audience Saturday, morning at 11 o'clock in the English Theater. His subject will be “The Defense of the Americas.” - » ” ” ® # # Papers read tomorrow by Mrs. Joel Whitaker and Mrs, Timothy Harrison before the Fortnightly Literary Club at its 2:30 o'clock meeting in the Propylaeum will be “Diary” and “Yesterday and
Today.” td 8 8. » # 8
«Our Lost Limners” will be Wilbur D. Peat’s subject when he talks Thursday evening before The Portfolio club meeting in the Propylaeum. The supper committee for the evening includes Mrs. william Forsyth, Mrs. Jacob P, Dunn and George Newton.
o
Volinda Lewis Is Engaged : THE ENGAGEMENT of Miss Volinda Lewis, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest I. Lewis, Washington, formerly of Indianapdlis, to Lieut. Hughes Call (J. g.), U. S. N. R., was announced by her’ parents at a tea yesterday in Washington. Lieut. Call is the son of Mr. and
Mrs, Frank R. Call of Chicago and New York. Miss Lewis attended
. Holton Arms in Washington and was graduated from Vassar College. Lieut Call was graduated from Hackley School, Harvard University and the Harvard Graduate School of business Administration. He is
stationed in Washington. :
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Mr. and Mrs. George W. Shaffer are en route to Miami, Fla, following their marriage in McKee Chapel of Tabernacle Presbyterian Church at 2:30 p. m. yesterday with Dr. Roy Ewing Vale officiating. Mrs. Shaffer, daughter of Mrs. Lena Croshier, was Mrs. Edith L.
Hamilton.
The bride wore a navy print frock with an American . beauty jacket and navy accessories for the ceremony. Her corsage was lilies of the valley. A dinmer at the Columbia Club for the imme-
diate families and Mr. and Mrs. H. M.
Lycen followed.
. While in Miami, the couple will be entertained by Mrs. Harvey | G. Shaffer and Mrs. C. Roltaire Eggelston, former residents of Indignapolis, with a dinner at the Miami Biltmore Hotel. After March
1 i
1 {' 15, Mr. and Mrs. Shaffer will be at home on Davis Road.
Clubs : | Heyl Club’s 30th
: + To Be Celebrated Tomorrow;
Arts Club Plans
versary celebration, The 30th anniversary of the
Anniversary
Colonial Tea
Among events appearing on club calendars for tomorrow is an, anni-
HEYL STUDY CLUB will be observed
at a 1 p. m. luncheon meeting tomorrow at the home of Mrs. H. D. Wolfe, 6347 Park Ave. The program for the meeting will be given by Mrs. J. A. Matthews. Officers will be elected at the March 3 meeting.
Mrs. Frank Warren, 3541 N. Meridian St., will entertain members of the CHALCEDONY CLUB at a 12:30 p. m. luncheon tomorrow. She will be assisted by Mrs. P. A. Tochtermann. Following the luncheon, cards will be played.
Talks on Alaska and the Constitution by Mrs. W. A. McCready and Mrs. Dale T. Wilson will be program features of the meeting held tomorrow by CHAPTER Q, P. E. O. SISTERHOOD, at the home of Mrs. Thomas R. Booth, 126 E. 50th St.
bott St. will be hos for the HOOSIER Mrs. J. P. Aspinall
~ son on J. Edgar Hoover.
A luncheon at Catheri ~ taurant will be held, the TUESDAY QUEST |CLUB.
Guests of the GROL . ARTS CLUB tomorrow will be entertained at a colonial tea at the s. E. A. Carson, 5466 N. a St. Mrs. Harry Mahan
Luther Poe, G. C. Pittman and
| Myrtle Stephens.
A Bible program will be presented
morrow for the EXPRESSION by Mrs. Walter E. Jenny, Mrs. ohn C. Muesing and Miss Mary B.
Whiteman. Mrs. Lawrence es ‘will give selections from the/Oraorio of St. Paul, : Hostess for the mee ill be 5. William Brower Ward, 316 nmo d, assisted by Mrs.
ln : to roll call at tomor-
meeting of the WY-MO-DAU
Mrs. Jacob: L. Jones, 730 N. Bancroft St. Mrs. Laura Craig Poland will talk on “Saskatchewan” and Mrs. Earl R. Leonberger on “Alberta.” *f
Mme. Marie He will speak on “France” at a 1 p. m. luncheon meeting held Friday by the KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA MOTHER'S CLUB in the Butler University chapter house, 821 W. Hanipton Drive. Mme. Henry is an instructor. of French at Tudor Hall School. Mrs. Ralph Varin is luncheon chairman and will be assisted by Mesdames R. W. Blake, Samuel Denton, H. B. Groene and W. J.
‘|Roth, Bridge will follow the lec-
ture.
The monthly dinnef meeting of the INDIANAPOLIS CHAPTER, ASSOCIATED STENOTYPISTS OF AMERICA, will be held at 6 p. m. Wednesday in the Whitney Grille.
New officers of the CHRISTIAN PARK WOMEN’S CLUB will. preside at a guest luncheon and business meeting at 12:30 p: m, tomorrow in the Christian Park Community House. They are Mrs. Frances Rheinhardt, president; Mrs. Herbert Hayes, treasurer; Mrs. Hershel Mc-
Cabe, secretary, and Mrs. Earl R.|
Edens, vice president.
The monthly evening meeting of the AMERICAN SOCIETY OF WOMEN ACCOUNTANTS “will be held at 7 p. m. today in the Bamboo Room of the Hotel Washington. :
Charlton N. Carter, certified pub-|
lic accountant and senior member of Carter, Bailey, - Kirklin and Walker, will discuss “Analyzing and Word Terminology of the Balance Sheet.” i Mrs. Marguerite McCoun, president of the chapter,
of the
%
will be in}
More than 100 men and women are enrolled in the Red Cross class in first-aid treatment which meets on Friday nights at the Indianapolis Athletic Club. 1. Robert Frost Daggett gets a hand bandage from Mrs. Albert Campbell ‘as Mr. Campbell (center) inspects the procedure. 2. Mrs. James T. Hurt! (left), one of the Red Cross instructors, and Mrs. Warren Winter (second from left) get a laugh out of Mrs. Winter's work. Mrs. Robert Lewis (folding bandage) shows Mrs. Harold F. Sweeney how it’s done. 3. Clarence Eagle, instructor,
Horace Moorman.
Albert Stump To Address Riley Guild
“What Can Women Do for Defensé” will be the subject of a talk by Albert Stump of the Marion County Civilian Defense Speakers Bureau, Feb. 24, before the” Riley Hospital Cheer Guild in the D. A. R. Chapter House, 824 N. Pennsyl-
vania St. The chorus of the Seventh District Federation of Clubs, directed by Mrs. Farrell Scott, will sing. Mrs. William M. Carper, hostess for the meeting, will be assisted by Mesdames Herman C. Fromer, William Kadel, E. G. McCreery, Blanche ‘B. McNew, Otto Hall, William Rogge, J. E. Shewmon, F. L. Warner and R. W. Retterer. : Members of the nominating committee including Mrs. S. G. Huntington, chairman, Mesdames O. N. Ebert, Charles E. Yarbrough, E. S. Waymire and G. E. Bomberger will submit a report. A board meeting has been called for 1 p. m. by Mrs. William O. Cheesman, president.
Talks on Health In Defense
Frank S. Stafford, ‘health edu-
_ |cator for the State Board of Health
and physical fitness director of the State Defense Council, will talk on “Health in National Defense” at a noon luncheon of the May Wright Sewall Council of Women, following a 10 a. m. quarterly meeting in Hotel Lincoln Thursday. Mrs. Henry E. Ostrom, chairman of the women’s committee of the Marion County Defense Savings Staff, will discuss “What Women Can Do in Defense” and Mrs. Marie C. Williams, past national president 6f the Spanish American War Veterans Auxiliary, will read a paper on patriotism. An American Legion representative will ex» plain the purpose and work of the Boys' State to be held here this summer.
Speaker
Mrs. Logan
A breakfast honoring the women attending the ninth annual Hoosier State Press Association convention, Friday and Saturday, will be given
applies a shoulder bandage to
lass at IL A.
Breakfast at I. A. C. Follows Stanford-Fleury Ceremony; Couple Will Live in Dallas
The Rt. Rev. Msgr. Raymond R. Noll performed the wedding ceremony at 10 o'clock this morning in the Blessed Sacrament Chapel of, SS. Peter and Paul Cathedral, uniting Miss Regina Helen Fleury and John William Stanford of Dallas, Tex. The Rev. Fr. James Hickey said
the mass.
St., and the bridegroom is the son of Mrs. J. W. Stanford, Houston, Tex. ! Arrangements of snapdragons, tulips, iris and jonquils decorated the chapel for the ceremony. Music for the service was played by Miss Helen Shepard, organist. A dressmaker suit of antique gold wool romaine with a sentimental blue blouse and brown accessories were worn by the bride. She wore a platinum bracelet given her by the bridegroom and a corsage of fuchsia orchids. Mrs. Herman E. Winkler, Lebanon, was her sister's only attendant. She wore a suit of wool romaine in sentimental blue with fuchsia hat, navy accessories and fuchsia orchids. Grattan T. Standford, New York, uncle of the bridegroom, was best man and J. Barton Griffin served as the usher. The bridegroom’s mother was gowned in Sudan blue and wore navy accessories and a corsage of violets while Mrs. Mayme O’Connell, the bride's aunt, wore chad rose with a rose-red hat, navy accessories and a corsage of iris and freesias. After a wedding breakfast at the Indianapolis Athletic Club the couple was to leave for Dallas where they will be at home. The bride is a graduate of St. Agnes Academy and the bridegroom of the University of Notre Dame. Out-of-town guests included Mrs. Grattan T. Stanford and Mr. and Mrs. Leland V. Stanford, New York; Mrs. Harry Hare, West Lafayette, and Mr. Winkler, Lebanon.
Honor Mothers Of New Pupils
Mothers of pupils new to the Tuxedo Park Kindergarten will be honored at a tea given at 1:30 p. m. Wednesday .in the kindergartén by the officers and committee chairmen of the kindergarten’s Mothers’ Club. George H. Fisher, School 54 principal, will speak on “Every Family Has Community Responsibilities.” Betty Simon will give a demonstration of the history of tap dancing. At the close of the program, the ways and :means committee will hold 'a bake sale. The committee
The bride is the daughter of Julius O. Fleury, 2439 N.
Visits
Pennsylvania
Legion News—
Defense Rally
|Goldsmith, Bellefontaine, O.; Mr.
The Bridal Scene Marriage of Mary Keating
Is Announced
Bridal news of the day includes a number - of marriage announcements. Joseph D. Keating, 2540 N. Delaware St., announces the marriage of his daughter, Mary Josephine, to Pvt. William Metcalf, ‘son of Mrs, Beatrice Metcalf of Los Angeles. The ceremony was read at 7 o'clock last Monday morning in the Blessed Sacrament Chapel of SS. Peter and Paul Cathedral. The attendants were Mr. and Mrs. Richard Keating, uncle and aunt of the bride. The bridegroom has returned to Ft. Leonard Wood, Mo., where he is stationed. ” ” ” The marriage of Mrs. Kathryn Rae Straub of Indianapolis, daughter of Raymond Ensinger, Wabash, to Leonard B. Goldsmith took place at 7:30 p. m. last night at the home of Mr. and Mrs, Lloyd A. McColgin, 5388 Carrollton Ave. ® The Rev, L. F. Suedmeyer, assistant pastor of the Zion Evangelical Church, officiated and the attendants were Miss Pauline Ames and Donald Brackney of Dayton, O. Out-of-town guests were the bride’s father; the bridegroom’s parents, Mr. and Mrs: John A.
and Mrs. John Cohee, Mrs. Nettie Patterson and Miss Josephine Connelly, Delphi, and Mrs. L. E. Glazier, Monticello. ” #* 2 Announcement has been made of the marriage of Mrs. Margaret Ober Barnes to Staff Sergt. James H. Voyles, formerly of this city and son of J. K. Voyles of Louisville. The couple will be at home in St. Augustine, Fla, where Staff Sergt. Voyles is stationed at the Selective
Is Arranged . i A Defense Dinner Rally will bc given at 6:30 p. m. Wednesday by the JOHN H. -HOLLIDAY JR. UNIT, AMERICAN LEGION AUXILIARY, and the Post. Proceeds of the dinner-program, open to the public, will go to the Red Cross. Maj. Gen. Robért H. Tyndall, director of the Marion County Civilian Defense Council, will be the principal speaker. Others will be Fire Chief Charles F. Gregory, who will talk on “Fighting Fire in an Emergency”; R. D. McDaniel and Mrs. H. H. Arnholter who will discuss “Woman's Place in the Defense Program.” Mrs. E. R. Krueger, Auxiliary president, announces the following committee in charge of dinner arrangements: Mrs. M. L. Sutton, chairman, with Mesdames George T. Wheldon, J. F. Cantwell, Ollie Da-, vis, C. E. Jefferson, Wayne Temple, G. J. Wildridge, A. G. Dannin, Paul Middleton, Harry M. Brammer, R. B. Daley, Carl Switzer, Edward
Pierre, Forest Spencer .and Leslie Hallam.
The ROBERT E. KENNINGTON UNIT 34 will hold a meeting at the Post Home, 4174 College Ave., at 8:15 p. m. Wednesday. The Americanism chairman will be in charge. The guest speaker, Ralph Klare, past commander of Haywood Barcus Post, will speak on “Americanism.” : oa * The auxiliary conducted vesper services yesterday at the Veterans Hospital. Its first Red Cross home nursing class of 25 registrants was held last week. . : ;
Garden Club Meets
A business meeting will be held at 1:30 p. m. Th by the Crooked Creek Garden Club at the home of Mrs. Wayne M. Harvey, 5330 Woodside Drive,
Celebrate Birthday Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Isley, 2449 N. Illinois St. entertained Saturdey night with a dinner cele-
brating the birthday of their daughter, Miss Opal Kessler.
in New York
James Leeper, Clyde Crafton, Glen Schuster,
David Young and Frank Walter.
Service State Headquarters. » ” 2
Mrs. Ralph E. Waltz, assisted by her mother, Mrs. Eugene R. Eldridge, will entertain tonight with a miscellaneous shower honoring Mrs. Darrell D. Kimsey who, before her marriage last month, was Miss Marjorie Elinor Combs, daughter of Mrs. Bertha Combs. Guests w Mesdames Combs, Minnie Kimsey, Ralph Lee Jr,
: Francis Ohne, Philip Summers, Cecil Rohn, Jesse Savage,
” ” ” Mr. and Mrs. Frank Lengel, 958 N. Belle Vieu Place, announces the approaching marriage of their daughter, Frances, to Carl H. Briggs, son of Mr. and Mrs. Carl F. Briggs, 615 Somerset Ave. The ceremony -will be at 7 p. m. Saturday night at the Lengel home and will be followed by a reception. The couple will be at home in the city.
Church News— Card Party To Be Given
. Among activities scheduled by church groups is a card party. The ALTAR SOCIETY of ST. PHILIP NERI CATHOLIC CHURCH will sponsor a card party at 8 p. m, tomorrow in the parish auditorium, 535 Eastern Ave. Mrs. John Butler will be chairman.
A Shrove Tuesday supper will be held at 6 p. m. tomorrow in the parish hall of St. George's Episcopal Church. Mrs. Bessie Tren will be in charge. .
- Miss Hannah Dugan, regent of the DAUGHTERS OF ISABELLA, MOTHER THEODORE CIRCLE, has announced a social meeting to be held at 8 p. m. tomorrow in the Catholic Community Center. Jimmy Eldridge will review “Catherine of Aragon.” ;
Tri-O-Dice to Lunch
Mrs. Fred Haunss, 5017 E. New|
York St., will entertain the Tri-O-Dice Club at 1 p. m. luncheon to-
Visit in Florida
Walter B. Boyd. Upon their return, the couple will be at home in Indianapolis. For traveling, the bride wore a Pink Lady red jersey frock accented with gold buttons, a black coat and accessories and a corsage Of green orchids. - For the ceremony, the altar of the church was decorated with two white pedestals holding urns of white gladioli, acacias and jonquils, seven-way candelabra and single cathedral candles standing against a background of woodwardia and cibotium ferns and palms. . Charles Hansen, organist, played the bridal music. . Gowns of the bride’s attendants were of windward green faille taffeta with bouffant skirts forming slight trains. The shepherdess bodices were laced at the front with self material. Crownless off-the-face bonnets made of the same material as their frocks were finished at the backs with bows.
Attendants Wear Green
Mrs. Gordon R. Culloden, matron of honor, carried. a bouquet of yellow tulips, jonquils, mimosa, freesias, roses and pussywillows while the bridesmaids, Mrs. Edward W. Harris Jr. of Muncie, Mrs. Paul W. Scheuring and Miss Jane Snyder, carried jonquils and mimoss. Escorted by her father, the bride wore a gown of ivory: gros de londres styled with ‘a V-neckline edged with scallops to match the hemline. | The full train also was scalloped and a row of tiny, covered buttons extended from the neckline to the hem of the bouffant skirt.
Her full-length veil of ivory illusion is an heirloom which belonged to her maternal granedmother, Mrs. Clara F. List. It was held by a scalloped * halo headdress. The bridal bouquet was of madonna lilies and pussywillows. The bridegroom’s attendants included Carter B. Tharp, brother of the bride, as best man and, as ushers, Messrs. Culloden, Harris, Ralph B. Coble, Frank Reissher and John Tyler. ¢ Mrs. Tharp, the bride's mother, chose a gown of camellia pink chiffon made with a torso length basque finished with soft shirring and a full skirt with handkerchief drapery. She wore a corsage of gerberas in coral reds and pinks. White freesias and gardenias were worn by Mrs. Boyd with a celadon green crepe ornamented with gold and pearl beads around the neckline.
At the Reception
At the Woodstock Club the bridal party received standing before a fireplace above which hung a large white bridal heart of lace and satin
|bows with a pocket of white and
yellow flowers. A garland of smilax lay across the mantel and palms and yellow jonquils also were used in- decorations. The bridal and punch tables had extremely bouffant yellow net covers and held bouquets of yellow jonquils and white: carnations. The bride was graduated from Tudor Hail School and Smith College and is a member of the Junior
Betty Tharp Becomes the Bride Of Maurice J. Boyd in Rite At Second Presbyterian Church
Mr. and Mrs. Maurice J. Boyd are on a wedding trip following thelr marriage Saturday evening. The ceremony, read in the Second Presbyterlan Church by Dr. Jean S. Milner, was at 8:30 o'clock and was fole lowed by a small reception at the Woodstock Club. Mrs. Boyd was Miss Betty Tharp, daughter of Mr, and Mrs. Harold B, Tharp, 137 E. 44th St, and Mr, Boyd is the son of Mr, and Mrs,
League, Dramatic and Players Clubs and the Junior Auxiliary to the Day Nursery. Mr. Boyd, a Butler University graduate, is a member of ‘Sigma Chi fraternity. Guests here for the ceremony in« cluded his sisters, Mrs. Herbert S. Dieckman of Evansville and Mrs, Charles D. Hoyt Jr., South Bend, and Mr. Dieckman; Messrs. and Mesdames Wilbur Pell Jr., John C, DePrez, William O, Scott, William Spiegel, William Showers and Hame« lin Welling, Shelbyville.
White Cross Chapter Will Sponsor Tea
Wednesday afternoon from 2 to 4 o'clock, University Park Chapter of the Methodist Hospital White Cross Guild will entertain with a public téa in the social rooms of University Park Christian Church, 2901 Kenwood Ave.
The program will, include Mrs, ‘A, A, Michael, who will talk on a recent visit to Alaska where her son is a missionary, and Miss Satterwhite, who will play the piano, Officers in the recei line will be Mrs, Thedis Case, president; Mesdames Henry Cooper, Marvel Dallas and Albert Egly, vice presidents; Mrs. Anna Melvin, secretary treasurer, and Mrs. E. E. Tyner, work chairman. Mrs. C. M. Cannady and Mrs, Grundy Fisher, honorary members, will pour. A silver offering wiil be donated to'the Tiny Tim bed fund of the hospital. Rebekah chapter, organized less than two months ago, now has 75 members. A report on its progress was to be made at the second regular meeting today in the Nurses’ Home, Other chapters meeting today included Plainfield, in the afternoon, and the Office Guild and the Business Guild, in the evening, Other chapter meetings include: Meridian Heights and New Jersey St., tomorrow; Mary Hanson\ Carey Research, Alpha Omicron Alpha and St. Paul Methodist, Wednesday; Mother Guild and Home Nursing, Thursday, and Riverside Park, Frie day.
W. C. T. U. Unit Will Meet Wednesday
Mrs. Joseph Hightshue will be hostess to Esther Union, Women's Christian | Temperance Union, Wednesday at 1:30 p. m. in her New Augusta: home. The program for the afternoon will include a reading “Student Protesty Bar” by Mrs. Hightshue; a talk, “What Has Liquor Done,” by Miss Mary Hightshue; special music by Miss Barbara Christensen and illustrations by Mrs, Edgar Bowers and Mrs. Otto Stokesberry. Mrs, W. W. Reedy also will speak at this
public meeting.
| The
ONE-DAY SERVICE
THOROUGH EXAMINATION:
+ Prescriptions filled with any of the following lenses . , .-
® ORTHOGON—Corrected Curve ‘Lenses: ® UNIVIS or PANOPTIK—Improved ® SOFTLITE—Light-Absorptive Lenses Broken Lenses Duplicated
DR. R. J. WELDON
"Reg. Optometrist—North Mezzanine WM. H. BLOCK C
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