Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 April 1942 — Page 4
Provisional Members Are Announce
By the Indianapolis Junior Leagu Ky
PROVISIONAL MEMBERS of the Indianapolis Junior league for the coming year have been announced by the dwganization. They will become members next {Serine after completing a course in volunteer social serv-
ice training. Cad] 0 . The provisionals afe Mesdames Edward Hardey Adriance, Thomas M. Billings, Richard Dickson, Robert Davy Eaglesfield Jr., William A. Groat Jr. James Martin Jewell, Donald B. Keller, Norman R. Kevers, Frank Powell, Carlos Reckér Jr. T. Baxter * Rogers, Louis H. Schwitzer Jr. and Abram S. Woodard. The list also includes Misses Barbara Jean Brown, Patricia Ehglesfield, Anne Eldef, Anne Fox, Sylvia Griffith, Dorothy Jean Hendrickson, Susanah Tatkington Jameson, aq Noble Johnston, Francis Kearby, ary Scott Morse, Catherine ‘Jane Sniith, Elizabeth Weiss, - Eleanor Winslow, Margaret Wohlgem and Mary Jane Hamerstddt, who will become Mrs! George Estés Bardwell in a ceremony id this afternoon the Advent Episco The betrothal of another of oh a became week-end as Mrs. Russell Johnston announced the engagement of her daughter, Ann to Noble Dean Jr. son of Mr. and Mrs. Noble Dean. No date has been set for their wedding. :
Bardwell-Hamerstadt Wedding THE DEEP COLORS of the stained glass windows of the Advent Episcopal church will be repeated in the floral decorations used for ithe wedding of Miss Mary Jane Hamerstadt and George Estes Bardwell this afternoon, The ceremony will be at 4:30 o'clock in the church with the Rev. George S. Southworth, rector, officiating. ] . ~~ Cibotium ferns, palms, single and seven-way candelabra will ' provide a background for the altar vases filled with deep crimson roses, orchid-toned stocks, iris. and yellow calla lilies. Bouquets of the same flowers will be placed about the sanctuary with bankings of palms and hydrangeas. : Pedestals of the flowers will stand at the rear of the church and , clusters of hydrangeas, wine and pale pink carnations, roses, iris
: and spring flowers will be attached to the pews. . Pedestals of the J ' same deep-toned flowers will flank: the space where the bridal party
t
1
stands. = Mrs. Russell Sanders will be the organist for the Seremoyy. Bhe bride is thefdaughter of Mr. and Mrs. William Diehl Hamerstadt and, Mr. Bardwell is the son of Mrs. R. N. R. Bardwell of Atlanta, Ga.: . Gowns to be worn by the bride's attendants are of apple green lace an ille, the lace bodices accented at the square necklines withg wi ands of the faille. The inset faille waistbands are finished Taille ‘bows at the left sides. -The gowns have slight trains rt, puffed sleeves. The attendants will wear calots of faille with maiching veils thrown back from their faces and reaching almost to their shoulders. Their arm bouquets will be of crimsonj wine red, vellow and-pale pink pelargonium carnations, ‘pink roses, iris and hydrangea blossoms. . Mrs. Paul W. Scheuring, the bride's sister, will be matron of honor. Mrs. Leonard E. Murray, Atlanta, sister of the bridegroom; Mrs. Nelson F. Howard, Winston-Salem, N. C., and Mrs. William S. Hall of Ft. Worth, Tex., yu be bridesmaids.
Brother Will Be Best Man
HE BRIDAL GOWN, of white faille, has 'a low petal neckline and flowing three-quarter length sleeves with wide cuffs. The full, long train and hemline.of the gown are finished/with a hand-rolled edge aril the waistline is accented with hand-rolled piping. A white faille calot will hold the bride's long, tiered veil of illusion and she will carry a sheaf of calla lilies, the stems Yrapped with white fly. Her ee ig give her in marriage. alph Bard ol. Birmingham, Ala., will serve as| his brother's best man and ushers will be Mr. Scheuring, William James Hamerstadt, the bride's brother; Alfred J. Stokely and John B. Stokely. - The bride’s mother has chosen a muted blugncrepe gown with which she w'll wear a black lace hat and .a corsage of purple orchids. Mrs. ‘Bardwell blue printed georgette will be worn with a blue Rat and a corsage of white orchids. : A small reception at the Woodstock club will fellow the ceremony. Pedestals of hydrangeas will be arranged as a background for the receiving line and large bowls of summer flowers and roses will be placed about the hall and the rooms. Rings of hydrangea pt will stand on the balcony. On the white net covered bridal table will be candles in antique holders, brass trays and copper vases filled with white and gold flowers. The couple will leave for a wedding trip south, the bride ‘traveling in a light-weight wool suit of beige worn with brown accessories and a brown cypripedium orchid corsage. After May 15 they will be at home at‘3510 N. Pennsylyanis, st. Attending the ceremony from/ out of town will be Mrs. Ralph Bardwell Jr.,, Birmingham; Mr. and Mrs. William B. Stokely Sr, Newport, Tenn.; Mr. Howard, Winston-Salem, and Mrs. J. C. Meyer ‘Miss Bertha L. Hamerstadé! and Miss Frances Thieme, Lafayette
Hostesses for Program at Museum
SERVING TOMORROW AFTERNOON at -John Herron Art museum on the host and hostess committee of the Art Association of Indianapolis will be Mesdames Samuel Runnels Harrell, Frederic H. Sterling, Robert Sinclair and. D. Laurance Chambers, Mr. Ernest Ropkey and Mr. E. H. Kemper McComb. Six surrealist compositions by Harold Triggs will be played on the 4 o'clock program in Assembly hall by Miss Marian Laut, pianist. One of the six “Afterludes” inspired by six surrealist paintings is based on Salvador Dali's “Persistence of Memory,” which is included in the current Dali exhibit at the museum. -| Wilbur D. Peat, museum director, will show pictures of the paintings inspiring the compositions and will comment upon them. “ “Miss Laut, a former pupil of Mr. Triggs, will talk upon the selections. : s 8 8 ; 2 8 » Among reservations for the monthly Sunday night buffet supper tomorrow at Meridian Hills Country club are those of Dr. and Mrs. C. E. Harrison, Dr..and Mrs. Harry L. Foreman, Dr. and Mrs. Wayne Carson, Dr. and Mrs. James 8. Browning, Messrs. and Mesdames H. 9. Banded, #. Norman Baxter, Wilbur L. Appel, Verne A. Trask and Donald H. Ellis. o o ” f J f J 8 Mr. and Mrs. O. B. Hamilton will entertain with an open house for their ‘daughter, Ellen, tomorrow afternoon from 3 to 6 o'clock in their home, 5350 College ave. The Hamilton family will leave next Saturday for Miami, Fla, where Miss Hamilton will be married to ‘Michael Lojger Jr, son of Michael Lofinger of Cincinnati,
R
Edwards, pastor.
three who will sing “I Love You Tolily,” “At Dawning” and “Because” are Misses Eleanore Watts, Roberta Powell and Janice Hern. At the altar there will be an ar= rangement of greenery, palms, ferns and candelabra behind a pair of large urns filled with white flowers. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence McTurnan, 5816 N. New Jersey st, and the bridegroom’s parents are Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Williamson Dunn, Bicknell. Mr. McTurnan will give his daughter in marriage. She has chosen a bridal ivory satin gown fashioned with a low shoulder yoke of mousseline de soie edged with ruffles. The dress has long sleeves, and a bouffant skirt extending into a train. A coronet of pleated illusion and clusters of orange blossoms will hold her veil of ivory illusion and she will carry an arm bouquet of orchids and calla lilies tied with white satin. Miss Joan McTurnan, maid of honor, will be in peach marquisette and lace made with short, puffed sleeves and a square neckline. Her bouquet will have a gardenia center surrounded by forget-me-nots, double white stocks and pale pink carnations. ’ Brother to Be Usher
Similar gowns in fern green and daffodil yellow will be worn by the bridesmaids, Miss Nancylou Fullenwider, Mrs. William Smits and Mrs. Jack Blackstone, - The glamellia centers, of their bouquets will be surrounded by forget - me - nots, stocks and pink carnations. All of the attendants will have pompadour hats of veiling accented with pink carnation petals and forget-me-nots. The bridegroom’s attendants will be Robert Jones, Goshen, best man, and, as ushers, Norman E. Titus and the bride's brother, Lieut. Robert McTurnan, who will come from Charleston, 8. C., where he is stationed at Stark General hospital with the medical corps. Mrs. McTurnan, the bride’s moth-
er, will wear blue lace with match-
Judith McTurnan Will Become Bride of William L. Dunn; Couple to Live in Decatur, Ili.
The Broadway Methodist church will be the scene, at 3:30 o'clock this afternoon, of the wedding of Miss Judith Ward McTurnan to William Lincoln Dunn. The marriage vows will be read by Dr. John F.
Bridal airs will be played by Mrs. John English, organist, and a trio of the bride's Phi Mu sorority sisters at Hanover college will sing. The
white carnation corsage. The bridegroom’s mother will wear a black sheer suit with bird blue trimming, black accessories and a corsage of pink camellias and carnations.
To Take Trip South
The reception following the ceremony will be held at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Clair ‘McTurnan, 5148 N. Meridian st. Miss Mary Catherine Stair, harpist, will play and assistants will be Misses Patty Lou and Jeanne Ann Pluess and Billie Lawrence and Mrs. Ed Walsh.
Leaving for a wedding trip south, the bride will wear a dressmaker suit of hyacinth blue with dark blue accessories and an orchid corsage. The couple will be at home after May 1 at 875 W. Wood st., Decatur, Ill. Mr. Dunn is a graduate of DePauw university, where he was a Phi Kappa Psi member, and received his master’s degree in business at Harvard university. The bride was graduated from Hanover. Out-of-town guests “will be Lee Mason McTurnan, Flushing, Long Island, N. Y.; Lieut. and Mrs.
James McTurnan, Red Bank, N. J.; |.
Mrs. Donald J. Grant, Boston; Miss Barbara Deeds, Detroit; Mr. and Mrs. James Allen Jones, Mrs. Harvey Conrod and Mrs. Peter Manifold, Bicknell.
Miss Mildred Hawkins and Miss Chaltha Potts, Pt. Wayne; Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Hunter and Miss Elizabeth Calpha, Gary; Miss Clarena Hunter, Muncie; Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Colvin and Mrs. Lelia Colvin, Wabash; Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Miller, Mrs. W. W. Parsons, ®isses Virgene Moore, Emma Louise Reeves, Mary Hadley and Mona Dees, Terre Haute. Mr. and Mrs. E. 1. Poston, Martinsville; Mr. and Mrs. L. O. Griffith, Nashville, Ind.; Messrs. and Mesdames A. F. Blossey, Carl Blossey, William Benson, Claude Streeter, Clyde Spraker, E. E. Robey, Lawrence Robey, Ott Schwartz and William Workman, Mrs. J. A. Kautz and Mrs, Edwin Greeson, all of Ko-
ing accessories and a gardenia and komo,
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
TH
: Ed *
Wright, was
-__ SATURDAY, APRIL 25, 1942
Rod —e
dd
1. Mr. and Mrs. Raymond C. Fox, 3924 N. Pennsylvania st. announce the engagement of their daughter, Joan, to Cadet George A. Schnieders Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. George A. Schnieders of Los’ Angeles, Cal. The wedding will be the latter part of June. Miss Fox was graduated from Ladywood school and attended Mount St. Mary's college in Los Angeles. She will be graduated from Butler university, where she is a member of Kappa Alpha Theta, in June. Cadet Schnieders was graduated from Loyola university in Los Angeles and is now stationed at an air corps training school in Enid, Okla. (Photoreflex photo.)
2. Mrs. Thornton A. Bardach was Miss Lillian Jensen, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Jensen, before her marriage April 18. (RamosPorter photo.)
3. .Mr. and Mrs. S. A. Stamper announce the engagement of their daughter, Helen, to Lewis T. Smith, son of Mr. and Mrs. L. E. Smith. The ‘wedding will be May 16 at 4:30 p. m. in the Meridian Heights Presbyterian church. (Dexheimer-Carlon photo.)
4. Mrs. Earl J. Lynn was Miss Kathryn Louise Mayer, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Harry G. Mayer, before her marriage March 14. Mr. and Mrs. Lynn are at home in the Ambassador apartments. The bride is a graduate of Lindenwood college and Butler university and is a member of Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority, (Lynn photo.)
5. Mrs. Lyle O. Taylor was Miss Dorothy Shafer, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Carl B. Shafer, before her marriage April 11. (RamosPorter photo.) -
6. A May 3 wedding will be that of Miss Anna Louise Shell, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George W. Shell, and Harold Gene Huffman, son of Mr. and Mrs. Claude Huffman of Dunkirk. (Pratt photo.)
7. Miss Mary Lee Richter, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William C. Richter, was wed to William Lee Birthright April 10. (Rameos-Porter photo.)
8. Miss Mary Catherine Wright, daughter of Mr, and Mrs. Burrell married to Dr. William Lee Wissman on April 14. (W.
; v).
In Service This
The bridegroom is the son of: Mr. lege ave. The Rev. L. E. Smith of Porter will officiate and a program of organ music will be played by Mrs. Leslie A. Helgesson. “One Alone” and “I Love You Truly” will be sung by the bride's brother, Reid Chapman. A bank of ferns and palms interspersed with candelabra will stand at the altar. The bride, entering with her father, will wear a gray shepherd check suit with deep blue velvet collar and pocket flaps. She will have deep blue accessories and a corsage of pink camellias, carnation§, sweetheart roses and forget-me-nots. Miss Janet Chapman, her sister’s maid of honor, and Miss Martha Egger, the bridegroom's sister, will wear frocks of turquoise blue sheer in street length with yellow turbans and corsages of yellow roses, iris and gerberas. : 1 Charles Grinslade will serve as his cousin’s best man and the ushers will be Robert F. Chapman, brother of the bride, and Donald Alberty, the bride's cousin. Mrs. Chapman, the bride’s mother, will wear pink camellias and pale pink gerberas with a powder blue crepe costume and dark blue hat. Mrs. iIgger will wear a brown silk jacket dress with deep beige hat and accessories and a yellow rose and gardenia corsage.
Reception to Follow
Assisting at a reception at ‘the Chapman home immediately following the ceremony will be the bride’s sister, Mrs. Donn Rudd. The couple will leave for a trip south. The
.|bride will be at home here after
May 3 when Pvt. Egger returns to New Orleans where he is stationed with the 113th observation squadron. Miss pman is a graduate of Butler univegsity and studied dietetics at the Barnes hospital in St. Louis. The bridegroom also attended Butler.
Tri Betas to Meet
Mrs. Frank Lindner will entertain members of Tri Beta sorority with
a dinner bridge in the Colonial teaoom. at 6.p. m. Monday,
| | = { y Ann Chapman Will Be Married Jo Put. John G. Egger Jr.
FEvenin pening
Miss Ann Chapman, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur R. Chapman, 5649 College ave. will become the bride of Pvt. John |G. Egger Jr. in a ceremony at 7:30 o'clock this evening in the First Presbyterian church,
and Mrs. John G. Egger, 5685 Ool-
State Music |
Clubs Observe ‘ . ‘ Junior Day Junior day was to be observed by the Indiana Federation of Musie clubs today in cities throughout the state. Instead of the annual convention and |contests, | junior clubs directed by their state coune | cillor, Mrs. Dillon Geiger of Bloome ington, were to sponsor individual programs and hear reports and plans for the coming year. . Prizes were to be offered for club | membership attendance at thése programs. Defense stamps amounte ing to 815, $10 and $5 were to be given to the clubs ranking first, second and third. Money saved by the convention’s postponement will be used to buy additional defense stamps. The senior divisicn of the fede erated music clubs also is offering a “loyalty award” to the junior club that best maintains its memberhip and achievement until next convention. Mrs. Frank Cregor, state president, will give $25 to the state in the Great Lakes district, which federates the most new Junior clubs between June, 1941, and June, 1943. This is called the Louise
Billman award and Indiana, Ohio and Michigan clubs are eligible. EE ——————————————
Program on Cancer. The regular meeting of the A. O. A. club will be held Monday at 2 p. m. in the Patrick clinic of the City hospital. The Marion county chapter of the Indiana Field Army for Cancer Control will be in charge
