Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 June 1942 — Page 11
MONDAY, JUNE 15, 1942
| Y Miss Martha Coleman to Be Married Saturday, June 27, to Edmund Bray
JUNE 27 HAS BEEN SET as the date for the wedding of Miss Martha Julian Coleman to Edmund C. Bray of Framingham, Mass. The ceremony will be at noon in the home of the bride-to-be’s parents, Dr. and. Mrs. Christopher B. Coleman, with the Rev. E. Burdette Backus of All Souls Unitarian church officiating. There
will be no attendants. Mr. Bray is the son of Mrs. Henry E. Bray of Framingham and the late Rev. Mr. Bray. The prospective bridegroom is a research physicist for the Naval Ordnance Laboratory in Washington. The couple's engagement was announced in April,
® = 2 = 2 ” Announcement was made this week-end by Mr. and Mrs, Charles Stedman Becker of the engagement of their daughter, Margaret Anne, to John William Schiltges, son of Mr. and Mrs. William B. Schiltges. Miss Becker was graduated with honors last week from Sweet Briar college. Mr. Schiltges attended Wabash college and was graduated from Cornell university. He is a member of Delta Tau Delta fraternity. He is training for his naval ensign’s commission on the U. S. S. Prairie State in New York.
Junanita Winfield to Be Honored
A BUFFET SUPPER and crystal shower will be given this evening in honor of Miss Juanita Winfield, who will be married to Frederick I. Doebber Saturday in the Friends church at Carthage. The hostesses, Misses Betty Hemrick, Betty Freeman and Martha Lou Sunderland, will be assisted by their mothers, Mrs. John A. Hemrick of Peru, Mrs. Roy Freeman and Mrs. H. L. Sunderland. The party will be held in the Sunderland home, 2711 N. Meridian st. Among the guests will be Mrs. Arthur W. Winfield of Carthage, mother of the bride-to-be, and Mrs. Frederick A. Doebber, the prospective bridegroom’s mother. Others will be Mesdames Thomas B. May, Grace Watkins, Robert Adam, L. Merrill Thiesing Jr. and J. Spencer Lloyd and the Misses Carolyn Doebber, Norvella Judd, Mary Adelaide Denton, Amy Krauter, Marjorie McAbee, Betty Cramer, Martha Hostetter, Mary Ann Lookabill and Miss Rosalie Humes and Miss Juanita King of Carthage. Tomorrow evening Mrs. Doebber and her daughter, Carolyn, will be hostesses at a bridal shower for Miss Winfield in their home. Their guests will be Mesdames Winfield, Lloyd, May, Thiesing, William Heess. Walter E. Hansen, Wallace O. Lee, Ada Lee, Thomas Anderson. Ellis C. Poindexter, John H. Mitchell, William D. Vogel Sr. and William D. Vogel Jr. Also at the party ‘will be Mesdames L. Merrill Thiesing Sr, 0. D. May, Jesse C. Daugherty, Lloyd, Freeman, Sunderland, Hemrick and Mrs. Bert Ferrara of Clinton and Mrs. Russell Pickett of Vevay. Others inciude the Misses Sunderland, Hemrick, Freeman and
Marjorie Rosebrock.
Civic Theater Reception Is Tonight
INDIANAPOLIS CIVIC THEATER'S new director, Jack Hatfield. and Mrs. Hatfield. will be introduced to members at the reception at 8 o'clock tonight in the theater. Hosts and hostesses for the event, which opens the annual membership drive, will be executive officers, board members, their husbands and wives. Mrs. Kurt Pantzer is president, and other officers include: Toner M. Overley, vice president; Mrs. Bertrand Hawkins, secretary, and Fred Albershardt, treasurer. Recently elected directors are Mr. Albershardt, Mesdames Hawkins, Richard Hoover, R. Kirby Whyte, Judge Herbert E. Wilson, william L. Gordon and Leroy Gordner.
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[Louis Goldmans On Trip West After Wedding
Lieut. and Mrs. Louis Goldman are on a wedding trip through the West following their marriage yesterday afternoon at 4 o'clock. Mrs. Goldman was Miss Lillian Weil, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Max Weil, and Lieut. Goldman is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Morris Goldman. The ceremony was read by Rabbi Morris M. Feuerlicht at the home of the bride's parents, 5104 Graceland ave, before an improvised altar in front of the fireplace, decorated with ferns and tall standards of mixed flowers and lighted by candlelabra. An arched canopy of greenery trimmed with Sweetheart roses also was used at the altar. Thomas Moriarity, pianist, and Paul Burton, violinist, played bridal airs and Miss Sophie Gerson sang “I Love You Truly,” “Because” and “I Love You.” Given in marriage by her father, the bride was gowned in white faille taffeta styled with long, fitted sleeves with Chantilly lace insertions. Her bouffant skirt fell into a train trimmed with matching lace. Completing her costume was a full length veil caught with stephanotis and miniature Sweetheart roses. She carried sprays of valley lilies and white orchids.
av
THE
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Atlanta, Ga. Mr. Mathieson gave her in marriage. Mr. Burkholder’s mother is Mrs. Sela Burkholder, 418 Buckingham drive. Dr. Jean S. Milner read the ceremony before a fireplace festooned with smilax and masked with a fanshaped fire screen of white gladioli, carnations and gardenias. White tapers in seven-way candelabra stood on the mantle. Miss Mary Spalding, harpist, played for the ceremony and the reception following. The bride and her attendants entered from a stairway garlanded with smilax. Brass floor candlesticks holding cathedral candles stood at the living room entrance and at the fireplace. Miss Nancy Badgley, Anderson, Mary Lou Robinson, Attica, Misses Jeanne Dieterich, Marian Sturm, Jeanette Lichtenauer and Mrs. Charles Lee were the bridesmaids. They wore blue marquisette frocks and pink pearl necklaces, gifts of the bride. They formed an aisleway for the bride's entrance by holding round bouquets of roses, delphinium, blue
Sister Is Attendant
An ingenue blue lace styled with short, puffed sleeves and a sweet-| heart neckline was worn by Miss] Ruth Weil, her sister's only attendant With it she wore a matching veil of illusion and carried a colonial bouquet of yellow Glory roses and blue delpninium. In her hair, she had matching clusters of the same flowers. Mark Goldman was his brother's best man and ushers were Matt Terensky and Harold Weil, brother of the bride.
The bride’s mother wore blue crepe trimmed with rhinestones and gray accessories and a corsage of Briarcliff roses and gystophia. Mrs. Goldman was attired in pink chiffon and lace with white accessories and a corsage of blue delphinium and Talisman roses. A reception was held in the home following the ceremony. Decorations of greenery and baskets of summer flowers were used throughout the house. Mrs, Goldman’s going-away costume was a ciel blue silk gabardine suit trimmed in matching satin. With it she wore pecan brown accessories and a corsage of white orchids. The couple will be at home after June 24 in Little Rock, Ark. The bride attended Butler and Indiana universities and Mr. Goldman was graduated from Indiana university. :
Bruce P. Robison Unit to Lunch
The Bruce P. Robison American Legion auxiliary will have a luncheon meeting at 12:30 p. m. tomorrow in the home of Mrs. Victor Dannacher, 1336 Bancroft st. Mesdames, Clem Keller, Everett Saxton and Lucy Saxton will assist. Mrs. Horace P. Kemper will be in charge of a Pan-American program. Mrs. Donald H. Smith is chairman of the Pan-American committee. The auxiliary is planning a rummage sale to be held June 23 and 24.
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lace flowers joined by shower ribbons and ropes of smilax. Mrs. Ottis Olvey, Noblesville, matron of honor, wore a petal pink marquisette in bouffant style, made with a V-neckline and three-quar-ter length sleeves. She wore a blue pearl necklace, also a gift of the bride, and carried rubrum lilies and delphinium. The bridesmaids frocks were made in similar style.
Bride Wears Satin
The bridal gown was of white satin and net fashioned with a fitted bodice, romance neckline and long, fitted sleeves puffed at the shoulders. The bouffant skirt formed ag train. With it, the bride wore a two-tiered veil held by a tiara of illusion and seed pearls. She carried gardenias and stepanotis tied with maline. The bridegroom’s attendants were his brother, Howard Burkholder, as best man and Rodney Hankins, usher. The bride's mother chose a yellow, green and white print with which
and a corsage of gardenias. Mrs. Burkholder also wore natural linen accessories and gardenias with a carnation red and white floral print. For the wedding trip, .the bride wore a blue gabardine suit with navy accessories and a corsage of white lilies. She is a graduate of Butler and a Kappa Alpha Theta member. Mr. Burkholder was graduated from Purdue university and is a member of Alpha Tau Omega fraternity.
Out-of-Town Guests
Guests here for the ceremony included Mr. and Mrs. Russell Harvey, Wabash; Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Knope and Miss Diane Knope, Rochester, N. Y.; Phillip Klotz and Thomas Walker, Bloomington; Mr. and Mrs. John Lindbach and Mrs. Bruce Pickett, Atlanta, Ga.; Dr. and Mrs. Donald Mathieson, Detroit: Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Mathieson and Mr. and Mrs. William Stock, St. Paul, Minn., and Mr. and Mrs. Judd Norris, West Lafayette. : Others were Mrs. Mabel Perry, Seattle, Wash.; Miss Barbara Phelps, Washington; Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Beckman, Perryburg, O.: Messrs. and Mesdames Carol Burkhart, Ray Burkhart, Edward Burkholder, Howard Burkholder, James Burkholder and Crawford Reid and son, Philadelphia; Harry Burkholder, Tujunga, Cal; Mr. and Mrs. Russell Burkholder, Cheltenham, Pa.; Mrs. John Gayne, Mrs. Robert Shelmerding, William Shelmerding and Miss Marion Shelmerding, Reading, Pa.; Paul Krebs, Santa Monica, Cal.; Miss Sela Krebs, New York; Mrs. William Patterson, Detroit, and Dr. O. N. Olvey, Noblesville.
W.C.T. U. Meeting
Mrs. Ebert Plymate, county director of Flower Missions, will be guest speaker at Bay Laurel W. C. T. Us meeting tomorrow at 2 p. m. in the home of Mrs, Ola Glover, 2327 W. Walnut st. Special music will be provided by Miss Bettie Price, pi-
anist, and Miss Mary Elizabeth
INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
she wore natural linen accessories!
we
PAGE 11
Mrs. Ara C. Badders, Portland, Ind., head of the Indiana American Legion Auxiliary, was on hand Saturday afternoon as the second annual Indiana Girls’ State got underway at Indiana Central college. She chatted with (left to right) Miss Patricia Scott, an enrollee; Miss Gertrude Thuemler, the director; Mrs. John W. Carmack, the general chairman, and Miss Ann Gardiner, Fi. Wayne, another enrollee.
Lois Jean Muthieson Is Married To R. E. Burkholder in Rite At Kappa Alpha Theta House
The Kappa Alpha Theta sorority house at- Butler university was the scene, at 2:30 o'clock yesterday afternoon, of the wedding of Miss Lois Jean Mathieson to Robert Edward Burkholder. Following the ceremony, the couple left for a motor trip and will be at home in Indian-
The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles S. Mathieson of
Sunnyside Guild To Entertain
Sunnyside guild will sponsor its monthly entertainment at the Marjon County Tuberculosis hospital tomorrow. The WIRE farm hands will present the program. Pete French wil be master of ceremonies, Following the program, patients at the sanatorium and husbands of guild members will be guests at a chicken dinner. Committees for the day include Mrs. Max Graves and Mrs. Carrie Hammel, entertainment, and Mrs. J, H. Larid and Mrs. G. F. Kledar, refreshments. Standing committee chairmen are Mrs. A. B. Chapman, entertainment; Mrs. Wayne O. Stone, refreshments, and Mrs. Maxwell C. Lang, motor corps.
Talks on Vines
Talks on the “Effective Use of Vines” and “Effective Use of Ground Covers” were to be given by Mrs. Hugo Fechtman and Mrs. James F. Balch following the Neophyte Garden club’s dessert luncheon today. The hostesses were to be Mesdames Edwin W. Camp, Edward P. Fillion and Everett T. Small.
Second Annual Girls’ State Opens on Indiana Central Campus
Miss Jeanne Orner (second from right) is the ed itor of The Beacon, daily mimeographed paper to be
published for the Girls’ State.
Mrs. Norrine D. White (standing) is the counsellor in charge of the pub-
lication. On the staff will be (seated, left to right) Miss Jean Palmer of Crown Point, Miss Betty Hassel» bring, the associate editor, and Miss Barbara Levin of East Chicago,
Sororities—
Mu Phi Epsilon Group to Have June Party
A party for rushees and a June frolic appear among sorority activities scheduled for this week. MU PHI EPSILON’S Kappa chapter will close its year’s activities tomorrow at a June frolic at the home of Mrs. Harold J. Hope, 366 Union st., Southport. Hostesses with Mrs. Hope will be Mrs. Charles J. Gaunt, Mrs. Walker Maguire and Miss Louise Swan. The program will be presented by Mesdames Russell J. Spivey, Gaunt, Erwin Luessow and Harry Sidrow and Miss Frances Dearborn.
Rushees of Indiana Alpha chapter, DELTA THETA CHI, will be entertained at an annual chicken dinner at 7:30 p. m. Wednesday in cifaldi’s Villa Nova. : —Tntertainment and games will follow the dinner. Mrs. William Kraas II and Mrs. Raymond De Graff are in charge of arrangements and entertainment.
TAU.
Alpha Epsilon chapter of DELTA THETA TAU will hold its weekly luncheon meeting from 11 a. m. to 2 p. m. Wednesday in the Hotel Washington's sapphire room.
A. O. A. Meeting
Psi chapter, Alpha Omicron Alpha sorority, will meet tomorrow at the home of Mrs. Charles E. Bowes at Carmel for a covered dish. lunch-
eon and business meeting.
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‘Pay for War as We Go’ Urges League
“The League of Women Voters believes that it is best for the country as a whole if the war is paid for to the fullest extent by taxation as we go,” Miss Florence Kirlin, congressional secretary of the national league, told members of the Indiana leagues board recently. She said that the league hoped to make an intensive campaign during
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the summer to inform the electorate of the necessity for the adoption of a structurally sound, flexible tax program. The state board approved the tax program of the national group at its meeting. The league supports lowered income tax exemptions as a means of broadening the tax base and collecting the tax at its source as a means of securing tax revenues promptly. It opposes a retail sales tax, except as a last resort.
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