Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 March 1942 — Page 4
Society—
Dramatic Club's Annual Dinner And Election Will Be May 16
MAY 16 HAS BEEN SET as the date for the Draclub’s annual dinner and business meeting. The at which officers for next year will be chosen, be held at the Woodstock club. Officers who have served this year are Frank J. Hoke, president; Mrs. Charles Harvey Bradley, vice presOtto Frenzel, treasand Thomas T,
matic event,
ident; Lyman S. Ayres, secretary: urer, and Elias C. Atkins, Fisk Landers Sinclair, directors. The annual business meeting held in the Woodstock club, meeting by Players four-production schedule 1, Jan. 24 and Feb. 28 Tonight's “twin bill” will include “The Choir Rehearsal,” in which Mrs. Charles M. Wells, Mrs. Thomas S. Hood, Charles R. Weiss, Wilbur D. Peat, Robert D. Robinson and Herman Kothe are scheduled to appear. In “Sugar and Spice,” the second projuction, will be Miss Marjorie Ann Ropkey, Miss Ann Bobbs, Leonard Wild, Mrs. Maxwell Coppock and L. G. Gordner.
Ingram-Brown Wedding Is This Afternoon
A WEDDING CEREMONY LATE THIS AFTERNOON in the chapel of Christ church at Greenwich, Conn., will unite Miss Mary Barbara Brown and Lieut. William T. Ingram II, U. 8S. N, son of Vice Admiral and Mrs. Jonas H. Ingram of Indianapolis. The Rev. Albert J. M. Wilson will read the marriage vows. The bride's parents are Mr. and Mrs. Lewis H. Brown of New York and Greenwich. The bride, entering the chapel with her father, will wear a French Regency gown of bridal satin which was worn by her twin sister. Mrs. William H. Sweney Jr, at her wedding. A cap of rose point lace accented by two clusters of orange blossoms will hold her tulle il and she will carry a bouquet of freesias and white
dance of The Plavers, also will precede the
and scheduled to be a week are the final plays of their
Previous productions were given on Nov,
TAs § + TI nrecantin ionignt ine presenting
Mrs. Sweney, (the former Miss Beatrice M. Brown, will be matron of honor. Another sister, Mrs. Edward Townsend, Hastings-on-Hudson, N. Y., the former Miss Rosalind Brown, and Mrs, Lawrence C. Havs Jr. Indianapolis, the bridegroom's sister, will be bridesmaids. The three will wear frocks of sea-blue taffeta with hoop skirts, and sea-blue Juliet with short veils of brown tulle. They will carry freesias and white pansies. William A. Ingram, Los Gatos, Cal, will be his nephew's best man and ushers will be Lieut. A. R. McFarland, U. S. N., Washing. on: Mr. Townsend, David P. Reynolds of St. Louis and C. Harvey Bradley Jr., Indianapoiis, Lieut. Ingram’s cousin. A reception at the Deer park home of the bride's parents will follow the ceremon). The bride made her debut with twin sister in 1938 at a garden reception at her parents’ Greenwich home. She was graduated from Rosemary Hall, Greenwich, in 1938 and attended Sweet riar college, Virginia, during her freshman year. She will be graduated this year from Leland Stanford university, where she is a member of Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority Lieut. Ingram was graduated from Lawrenceville school in 1934 and from the U. S. Naval academy at Annapolis in 1938. After his graduation, until last December, he served cn the U, S, S, Oklahoma. He is now assigned to a new ship which was commissioned recently, = = = x 3 x April 18 has been set as the date for the wedding of Miss Anne Holmes, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Creager Holmes, to Fred Harmon Fulton, son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert N. Fulton. Invitations for the ceremony, at 8:30 p. m. in McKee chapel of Tabernacle Presbyterian church, were issued today
Prof. Hope to Give Tea Talk
MRS. ELI LILLY and Mrs. Hiram W. McKee will be hostesses for the tea-talk at John Herron Art museum at 2:30 o'clock Tuesday afternoon. Prof. Henry R. Hope, head of the Indiana university fine aris department, will give an illustrated talk on “The Cubists.” Tuesday's event will be the last of three lectures on modern French art for members of the Art Association of Indianapolis. Mrs. Albert M. Cole and Mrs. Russell Ryan will pour at the tea following the talk. Miss Florence Heywood will comment at 4 o'clock tomorrow afternoon on pictures in the current exhibit of drawings and water colors by French masters. Tomorrow will be the final day of the French exhibit and also of the exhibition of “The Horse in Art” at the museum. Serving on the art association's host committee for the afternoon will be Dr. G. H. A. Clowes, Mesdames Cole, Theodore B. Griffith, Lyman S. Ayres and Harry V. Wade.
Reservations for Meridian Hills Dinner
THE MONTHLY Sunday night buffet supper for members of Meridian Hills Country club and their families will be served at 5:30 p. m. tomorrow. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Ransburg, chairmen, have arranged a program on which Louis Tops and his trained crow and monkey will appear. Reservations have been made by Dr. and Mrs. C. E, Harrison, Messrs. and Mesdames Paul R. Summers, HA G. Barden, C. F. Arensman, Richard T. Hill, Donald H. Ellis, Horace A. Shonle, Frank Langsenkamp Jr., M. Speers MacCollum, Ransburg, Horace E. Storer, L. Roscoe Sincler, Robert C. Becherer, Paul G. Moffett, Charles H. Hagedon and Arthur O. Pittenger. On April 4, the annual Easter egg hunt is scheduled with Mrs, Edmond Hebel as chairman and the following day there will be a family dinner at the club. Other events booked for April are a dinner bridge on the 11th: a Monte Carlo party on the 18th with Mr. and Mrs. William H. Walker as chairmen; a ladies’ luncheon bridge on the 21st with Mrs. Pittenger as chairman, and the April buffet supper on ihe 85th.
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caps
her
Wright-Prinzler
Reception at Ma
and Mrs. Harry C. Prinzler and Mr. Wright. | Bridal airs, including “Inter-| mezzo,” “Concerto in B Flat Minor,” “Deep in My Heart” and “Serenade,” will be played by Miss Donna | Alles, organist. E. Selden Marsh will sing “Ich Liebe Dich” and “Be-| canse.” Dr. Roy Ewing Vale will perform the ceremony before an altar decorated with greenery and flanked by| gold baskets of white gladioli.| The family pews also will be marked | by clusters of white gladioli tied| with ribbons. |
To Wear Satin Gown
The bride will be given in marriage by her father. She will be gowned in candlelight satin fashfoned on princess lines. Her dress, | buttoned down the back, will fall] into a long train and her sleeves
will have tapering wrist points. A lace yoke on the gown will be banded by seed pearls. Her fingertip veil of illusion will} be caught with a tiara of valley | lilies and she will carry a bouquet of Easter liles. The maid of honor, Miss Martha Cook, and the bridesmaids, Miss Thelma Wright, sister of the bridegroom, and Mrs. Norman Grauel, will wear identical dresses of pink satin with bodices accented by shirring which will form the front panel. Their gowns will have short puffed sleeves and V necklines set off by triple strands of pink pearls, gifts of the bride. The three attendants also will wear shoulder length veils of pink illusion held b
pink velvek Jara: with streamers
Wedding Will Be Tomorrow in McKee Chapel;
rott to Follow
McKee chapel, Tabernacle Presbyterian church, will be the scene of the wedding of Miss Betty Mae Prinzler to Wilburn B. Wright tomorrow afternoon at 3:30 o'clock. Miss Prinzler is the daughter of Mr.
Wright is the son of Mrs. Christina
the back. They will carry bouquets of rubrum lilies.
Janet Louise Newcomer, flower girl and niece of the bride, will wear a pink taffeta frock with fullflounced skirt and a corselet bodice. Her gift from Miss Prinzler was a single strand‘of pink pearls with a rhinestone clasp. Over her arm she will have a basket of pink rose petals. Mr. Wright's attendants will be William F. Drake, best man, and Herman G. Morgan Jr. and Tilford Wright, his brother, ushers. The bride's mother will wear an aqua blue crepe frock with black accessories and Mrs. Wright will have a navy blue dress with navy accessories. Both will have orchid corsages. Assist at Reception
Mr, and Mrs. Prinzler will entertain at a reception in the Hunters’ lodge at the Marott hotel following the ceremony. Hostesses for the event will be the Misses Mary Jane Laatz, Jane Colsher and Elizabeth Cook. The couple will leave oh a short wedding trip, the bride traveling in a cihnamon brown suit with moss green accessories and a corsage of cypripedium orchids. They will be at home upon their return at 3651 N. Colorado ave, Miss Prinzler attended Butler university and is a member of Delta Gamma sorority. Out-of-town guests will include Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Wilson, Chicago; Joe Clegg, Rochester, N. Y, and the bridegroom's brother and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Herschell Wright, and children, Roberta and Jatk, of Grand Rapids, Mich.
White Cross ‘Music Guild
‘Books Election
The White Cross Music guild will elect officers at the monthly meeting Thursday in the Methodist Hospital Nurses’ home. Mrs. Eva Hitz is chairman of the nominating committee. Mrs. Harold Seaman will be hostess chairman, assisted by Mesdames Fred Weiss, Laura Magenheimer, John A. Schneider, F. M. Sims, H BE. Watson and M. L. Newsome. The West Washington Street, St. Mark's and Children Cheer chapters of the White Cross guild will meet Wednesday. Broad Ripple chapter will meet Thursday and the Clermont and Sun Rae chapters, Friday. Three chapters of the Guild have elected officers: Broadway Baptist—Mrs. Duke Stephens, president; Mrs. Ray Kean, first vice president; Mrs. Edward Kettering, second vice president: Mrs, Loren Brown, third vice president; Mrs. Marvin Field, recording secretary; Mrs. Bert Pike, corresponding secretary; Mrs. E. Hays McLain, treasurer; Mrs. Anna Kindred, assistant treasurer; Mrs. Charles Toliver, historian, and Mrs, Chester Barriger, work chairman. Perry township chapter — Mrs. James I. McKee, president; Mrs, |
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Mrs. Charles Huntington, second | vice president; Mrs. Nell Zwally, third vice presdient; Mrs. George Hershman, recording secretary; Mrs. R. K. Klefgen, corresponding secretary; Mrs. Vern Smock, treasurer, and Mrs. W, E. Patton, historian. Meridian Heights chapter—Mrs. Harry Conant, president; Mrs. James Taylor, vice president; Mrs. James Hiland, second vice president; Mrs. Henry Leonard, secreary; Mrs. Ernest Eberhardt, treasurer; Mrs. Ed Miller, work chairman, and Mrs. B. R. Mull, assistant work chairman. Perry township chapter has announced a benefit card party for April 10 in the Banner-Whitehill auditorium,
Dance Tuesday
The O-Del club will give a dance and card party at 8:30 p. m. Tuesday in the Five-O Five-O clubroom at 211 N. Delaware st. Gilly Banta's orchestra will provide music for
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| Twenty-One Choral Groups Will Participate in Annual Sunrise Carol Service
Twenty-one choral groups will participate in the 20th annual Easter Sunrise Carol service, April 5, on the steps of the soldiers and sailors’
monument.
\
Right hundred persons, including a massed choir of 500 children in white robes, will participate in the service, sponsored annually by the
Ogden junior chorale.
founded the service as a living memorial to her small son.
50,000 are expected to attend. The general arrangements committee includes 50 women from different denominations. The Odgen Chorale will be augmented by visiting adult choirs, junior choirs, choruses from different churches and outstanding musicians. The choral groups and their directors include: Bruce P. Robison Junior auxiljary to the American legion, Mesdames Ralph Lynch, Frank Collman and Fred C. Hasselbring; Burroughs Junior choir, Mrs. Jane Johnson Burroughs and Mrs. Helen Rice: Central Avenue Methodist church, Mrs. A. D. Conner and Miss Betty Mumaw; Central Christian, Miss Nellie C. Young and Mrs. Iva Walters; Fairview Presbyterian, Mesdames J. G. Watkins, Agatha Ward and W. A. Hutchings. First Baptist, Miss Mary Atwater; B Natural Music club, Mrs. Elsie Manning; Fletcher Place Methodist, Mrs. Charles T. Coy; Florence Nightingale Junior choir, Mrs. Grace Hutchings, and Miss Mar-
; ; > |garet Metzger; Forest Manor MethM. D. Cummins, first vice president; | Leiet Mrs. Burton Tyson and Miss | our risen Lord, Jesus Christ. Noth<
Gertrude Laney; Mayer chapel, Mrs. Cari Switzer; Memorial Presbyterian, Hugh Mason, Ovid Jones and Mrs. William E. Duthie; Meridian Street Methodist, Mrs. W. C. Jackson and Mrs. D. M. Millholland. Choirs to Participate
Ogden Chorale, Miss Carolyn Jones and Miss Adrienne Robinson; Roberts Park Methodist, Miss Frieda Brooks, Miss Margaret Champlin and Mrs, J. W. Haston; St. John's Evangelical, Mrs. Ernst Piepenbrok, Mrs. Walter Mann; St. Paul Methodist, Mrs. Hannah Minnick; Seventh Christian, Mrs. Hugh E. Martin and Miss Lorema Windbigler; Sutherland Presbyterian Youth, Mrs. Lora I. Lackey, Miss Lora Lackey Batchelor and Mrs. 8, T. Richards; West Side Mission Chris tian, Mrs. Osear Hill and Miss Edna Mae Denwood; West Washington Street Methodist, Mesdames Donald Smith, Harold Kersey and Herman Shumate. The program will bé in four parts: “The glory of the Baster dawn; thé glory of the cross, the A 4
It will be directed by Mrs. James M. Ogden, who
More than
glory of children's voices and the glory of the resurrection.” In addition to the chorus singing, special features will be the Christ church chimes, the Scottish Rite and the WIRE carillons, the raising of the flags, the sunrise trumpet call by William Best, the ceremony of placing the Easter lilies at the foot of the cross, the processional of the flower children and the releasing of the doves. Miss Jane Butler will sing “I Know that My Redeemer Liveth” and the “Hallelujah Chorus” will be sung by the Butler - Jordan Philharmonic choir, under the direction of Prof. Joseph Lautner. The brass ensemble from Shortridge high school, directed by Robert J. Schultz, will play for the processional and recessional.
After the recessional, the flowers|
used in the service will be taken to children at the city's hospitals. Mrs. Ogden Comments In commenting on the service, Mrs. Ogden said: “It is kept as an interdenominational community expression of love and adoration to
ing is allowed to be commercialized in any way. Money is not solicited and not even an offering is taken from the vast audience. The whole celebration, with its beauty of music, flowers, pageantry and children, is made possible by the co-operation of more than 70 organizations, including churches, schools, business firms, corporations and other agencies which generous= ly contribute their talent and materials for the service.” Loud speakers will be used for the service and park benches are moved to the circle to seat a part of the audience. The program will be broadcast over WIRE. Although each , year an Indoor service is planned for the Circle theater in case of rain, it has always been possible to earry on the service out of doors.
Mrs. Poole Hostess
The Beta chapter of Phi Omega Kappa will meet at 8 p. m. Tuesday with Mrs. Howard Poole, 2230 Ringgold ave :
ARR A pO PR lr i a ; AA i ir AWE AR abt
1. Mr. and Mrs. Carl B, Shafer, 5515 N. Pennsylvania st, ane nounce the engagement and ape proaching marriage of their daughter, Dorothy Marie, to Lieut, Lyle Oberlin Taylor of Hamilton, The wedding will be April 11 in the Tabernacle Presbyterian church, Both Miss Shafer and Lieut. Taylor attended Indiana university, where Miss Shafer was a member of Delta Delta Delta sorority and Mr.’ Taylor was a Beta Theta Pi fraternity member, Mr. Taylor also attended Dennison university and was graduated from Howe Military Academy. He is now stationed at Camp Wheeler, Ga. (Ramos-Porter photo.)
2. Mrs. R. Marvin Williams was Miss Margaret Sue Conner, daughe ter of Mr. and Mrs, Alton D, Conner, before her marriage March 7. (Ramos-Porter photo.) 3. Mr. and Mrs. Oliver 8S. Gulo, 720 East drive, Woodruff place, announce the engagement of their daughter, Hazel Lucille, to James Griffith Holland, son of Mrs. Ralph C. Holland, 2001 N, Alabama st. The wedding will be April 18 in the McKee thapel of the Tabernacle Presbyterian church. (Ramos-Porter photo.) 4. The engagement of Miss Catherine Williams, daughter of Mrs. John F. Williams, to Ede ward S. Sadowski has been an nounced. The bridegroom-to-be is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Leon Sadowski of Westfield, Mass. Mr. Sadowski is a graduate of the University of Notre Dame. The wedding will be April 11. (Dex-heimer-Carlon photo.) 5. Miss Rosemary Keller and Joseph E. Bauer will be married April 11 in St. Patrick’s Catholie church. The bride-to-be is the daughter of Mrs. Mary E. Keller. (Porter photo.) 6. Mr. and Mrs. A. S. Pierson, 612 N. Riley ave., announce the approaching marriage of their daughter, Evelyn, to Harry Smock. son of Mrs. Margaret Smock. The wedding will be May 9. (Photoreflex photo.) 7. The marriage of Miss Margaret Mary Killilea to Robert J. Grethaus will take place next month in Albuquerque, N. MM. Miss Kiililea was to leave today for Albuquerque, ‘8. Mr. and Mrs. H. D. Willeutts announce the approaching marriage of their daughter, Helen Jean, to Jack C. Blackstone, son of Mrs. Fern Blackstone. The wedding will be April 5 at 4:30 p. m. in the MecKe» chapel of the Tabernacle Presbyterian church, Miss Willeutts was graduated from Butler university and the Indiana University School of Nursing. She is a member of Pi Beta Phi soe rority. Mr. Blackstone was graduated from Indiana and is now attending the I. U. School of Medicine. He is a Sigma Chi, (Photoreflex photo.)
Beta Sigma Phi Unit Elects Officers
New officers of Beta Zeta chapter of Beta Sigma Phi sorority will be installed at a founders’ day cele bration on April 30. They are: Miss Treeseila Murphy, president; Miss Eva May Buckley, vice president; Miss Helen Magee, seéretary, and Miss Ceveda Hawkins,
treasurer,
me —————
