Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 June 1942 — Page 17
THURSDAY, JUNE 18, 1942
Society—
Local Residents Prepare to Open Summer Homes at Northern Resorts
THE APPROACH OF SUMMER'S OFFICIAL OPENING finds society “on the move.” Many Indianapolis residents are ready for their annual treks to sum-
mer homes. Mr. and Mrs. C. Ford Carman and their daughters, Frances and Phoebe, were to leave today for Berkeley Springs, W. Va, where they will make their home. They have maintained a summer residence there in the past Another daughter, Julia Jane, who was graduated this month from Tudor Hall school, already is in Berkeley Springs. Frances, a DePauw university graduate, plans to begin post-graduate stud) this month at Radcliffe college and Phoebe, who has completed her junior year at Western college, Oxford, O., will spend the summer at Cedar Point, O Mr. and Mrs. Walter I. Longsworth and their children, Nicholas, Mary and Susan, have returned from a week-end trip to Indian Lake, O.... Mrs J. H Warvel and her daughters, Helen and Joanne, are at their summer home at Indian lake, Dowagiae, Mich. . . . Mn and Mrs. Benjamin D. Hitz and their children, Evaline and Benjamin, are spending a month at Lake Leland, Mich. #8
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David Moxley, son of G. Barret Moxley, has entered Yale university following his graduation last week-end from Phillips academy at Andover, Mass _ Mrs. James B. Nelson will leave Tuesday or Wednesday for her summer home at Bay View, Mich. She will be joined later by Mr. Nelson and their daughter, Mrs. Julia Jean Rudd Miss Joan Caughran, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. B. Howard Caughran, returned this week from Wellesley college after completing her freshman year. She was in Hyannis port, Mass, last week-end attending a house party given by Miss Jean Edwards of Milton, Mass, for a group of her Wellesley classmates. Dr. and Mrs. Guy H. Shadinger and their daughter, Mary Jane, will not leave this year for their summer home, “West Wind,” Manitoulin island, Ontario, Canada, until the first week of August. . . « Mrs. Donald N. Test plans to leave next week for the Tests’ summer home at Burt lake, Mich. Her daughter, Cynthia, will join her later and Mr. Test will be at the lake early in July.
To Entertain for Peggy Winslow
HONOR GUEST at a luncheon and miscellaneous shower given tomorrow by Mrs. Alfred Wells Noling at her home will be Miss Pegey Winslow, whose marriage to Joseph Lyman Fisher of Juneau, Alaska, will be June 27 in the Meridian Street Methodist church. Guests with the bride-to-be will include her mother and grandMrs. Maxwell Coppock and Mrs. Henry H. Hornbrook, and the Misses Barbara Winslow, Catherine Cunningham, Clair Morris, Milner. Dorothy Ann Fisher, Carolyn Culp and Nancy
mother
Susannah MeCown Miss McCown was to entertain at luncheon today in the Woodstock club for the bride-to-be. Flowers and appointments were to in the bridal colors of Dresden tones
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GEORGE WEBSTER MAHONEY will entertain this evening at his home with an informal cocktail party for Miss Barbara Hadley, followed by a dinner at Meridian Hills Country club. The honor guest will be married Saturday to Lieut. Ralph MeDonnell Reahard, of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph M. Reahard Those attending with the honor guest will include her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Harlan J. Hadley, Mrs. John Carey Appel and her house guest, Miss Eleanor Adelaide Mencke of Westfield, N. J., Mr. Mahoney's house guest, Miss Joan Gray Muzzy of Bloomfield Hills, Mich, Miss Kathryn Hadley, sister of the bride-to-be, and George White Mahoney. Misses Kathryn Hadley, Mencke and Muzzy will be the bride's attendants for the ceremony, which will be read at 8:30 p. m. in the Advent Episcopal church by the Rev. George 8S. Southworth, rector of the church. ‘
In New York
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son
by Helen Worden
NEW YORK, June 18.—It rains even at Mrs. Astor's parties! A summer cloudburst broke up the luncheon that John Jacob Astor's redheaded wife gave this week on the terrace of River club for the delegates to the first national conference of Bundles for Britain. Fortunately most
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olis
orrow
Miss Jean Barr Affleck, daughter of Mr. and Mrs William Edwin Affleck of Waco, Tex, will be married to Ensign Donald Allen Gray, son of Mr. and Mrs. Mark R. Gray, tomorrow in Alexandria, Va. Miss Affleck was graduated from Texas A. and M. and Ensign Gray, from Purdue. He is stationed at the navy yard in Washington.
The Bridal Scene— Jane Huffman Will Entertain For Her Sister Tomorrow; Cleota Tapp to Be Married
Announcements of two approaching marriages and a shower are featured in today’s bridal news. Miss Jane Huffman will entertain with a personal shower tomorrow evening for her sister, Miss Grace Wasson Huffman, who will be married
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
The hostess will be assisted by her mother, Mrs. John D. Huffman Jr. Among the guests will be Mrs. William F. Schlegel, mother of the prospective bridegroom, and Mrs. M. D. Curtis, Miss Mary Jane Schmitt and Mrs. Robert Lauth, who will be attendants in the wedding. Others attending the party will be Mesdames Edward Bennett Jr, Carl Townsend, Edward Little, J. Vernon Cox, Frank Briener, Verne Markley, Kenneth Sparks, Wallace O. Lee, Frank Buckley, George Kohlstaedt and the Misses Marilyn McElwee, Judy Diddel, Fredy Adler, Lavina Steinke, Rosemary and Catherine McCarthy, Marjorie Mueller, Mary Jane Metzger, Dorothy Rose Elliot, Betty Wickard, Florence Wolff, Marie Morgan, Jean Miller, Vivian Peterson, Dorothy Koller, Virginia Davis and Billie Jean Underwood of Noblesville, 8 o 8
Miss Cleota Tapp, daughter of Mrs, Bert Tapp, will become the bride of Charles Allen Purdy, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Stuart Purdy of Chicago, at 8 o'clock tomorrow evening in Central Christian church. The bride-to-be attended Franklin college and Indiana university and was graduated from Butler university. Mr. Purdy attended Purdue university extension. £8 & 4 Mrs. P. A. Roach, 631 Colorado ave, announces the engagement and approaching marriage of her daughter, Agnes Jeanette, to Technical Sergt. John F. Murphy of Ft. Benjamin Harrison. The ceremony will be read July 25 at 8 a. m. in Little Flower Catholic church. Sergt. Murphy is the son of Mrs. J. A. Murphy, 5320 Lowell ave,
G. R. Williams, Miss Harrison
To Be Married
Times Special SHERIDAN, Wyo, June 18.-—Mr. and Mrs. William Henry Harrison, formerly of Indianapolis, have announced the engagement of their daughter, Maribeth, to Gordon Robert Williams of Indianapolis, son of Mr. and Mrs. Evan T. Williams, 308 N. Walcott st., Indianapolis. The announcement was made recently at a dinner given by the Harrisons at their I. X. L. ranch here. The ceremony will be at 7:30 p. m,, July 1, at the Harrison home. The bride-to-be is the great granddaughter of Benjamin Harrison, former president of the United States. She attended Indiana university and was a member of Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority. Mr. Williams also attended Indiana university and is a member of Sigma Pi fraternity.
Bride-to-Be
Altenheim Auxiliary To Play Cards
The Ladies auxiliary to the Altenheim will hold its last monthly! jcard party of the current season
of the guests had finished their potato salad, sliced chicken, raspberry ice, French cookies and coffee before the downpour began. Regardless of what it accomplished, the convention was cer-| His teeth went down with his ship. tainly one of the swankiest that| pg: before he left Newport News, New York has seen since the war. Headquarters were at the Pierre, | Bundles for Britain supplied him The Viscountess Halifax was one of | With clothes and teeth. the honor guests at a banquet given| “Another delegate told of an for the delegates on the roof garden| amusing experience in her office,” of the hotel. White-haired Mrs. An-/\fys Bingham went on. “A worker drew Carnegie threw open the Qoors) o.oo one morning, hung up her of her Fifth ave. home and received : the group at tea. new winter coat on a hook, and started packing up bundles. At the 8 {end of the day she discovered that REPRESENTING INDIANA at) her coat was missing. It had been the conference was Miss Elsie IL| packed up in a load of clothing and Sweeney, president of the Columbus| shipped off to England.” chapter. She wore a becoming ig piece suit of air force blue with a| d bright yellow sweater and a navy R d EC WwW 11 straw hat. C ross 1 “Out in Columbus were packing . . tea to raise money for the Bundles,” Have Exhibits Miss Sweeney told me. “In the past year we've made thousands of en ZX balls and packages and sold them! t Program to the Columbia club in IndianapWe import the tea from Ne Exhibits depicting volunteer acYork and repack it decorated with i; British and American labels.” Ie Iie 5" the 1oeS] ENT Cifots chithe Y aa pet oir ¥ ie p RF ‘ ay afternoon durin AT MRS. ASTOR'S LUNCHEON hie patriotic program ie I tried to figure out why clubwomen| by the organization. run to navy blue and white. The Uniformed volunteers in charge majority of the guests wore Navy¥ia¢ pooths and exhibits will explain and white print dresses and large- |i getail the work and operation brimmed sailors trimmed with aj.¢ the different Red Cross groups profusion of white flowers and rib-| he plood donor center will be bon. A pleasing exception to the ,enresented by the mobile unit rule was Mrs. Robert Worth Bing-| tap with a plasma kit, according ham, widow of the former ambas- |i, aries Marjorie Cowan. chairman sador to Britain and president of ot exhibits. Other activities repreBundles for Britain. She had on al ented will be the production debeh a Hore Ee partment, surgical dressings, hostess and white accessories. Her white| core un, aay Seen Inet hair was done in a becoming shorts. + aid and home ne A bob. Mrs. Walter Lippmann of Washing“I've closed my house in Louisville,| ton, national director of the volunKy, for the duration,” Mrs. Bing-|teer nurses’ aid corps, will be prin-| ham told me, “and taken an apart-|cipal speaker at the celebration. | ment at 5 Beekham place. The More than 2000 Red Cross workers conference has been a very inspir-/ will be honored. ing experience with delegates from over a hundred different cities. They've told of their various methods for raising money. One of the most amusing was the account of a junior branch out on Long Island composed entirely of boys. They decided to make money for the group by selling lemonade on the golf links. At the end of the first] , : ’ morning they had earned only $10. Be ae event will be Then one lad raided his father's! precdames Charles ine Sellar That afternoon lemon-| pantser and Mary Hedges. Ses-| ade sales shot up so that at the end ; of ed i of the day they had made $35 more.” SS SHI VG Jpuuncn oh Stmhatr =» ” = IN DESCRIBING the work of the organization, Mrs. Bingham| A public card party will be sponspoke of a group of sailors whojsored by the Liederkranz Ladies’ landed in Newport News after being|society at 8:15 p. m. Saturday in shipwrecked for five days. One of the Liederkranz hall, 1421 E. Washthe men said the worst part of the|ington st. Mrs. Alfred Pich is in experience was having nothing but/charge of arrangements for the & hard biscuit to nibble for five days.' party. 2:
Sponsors Card Party =
at 2 p. m. tomorrow at the home,
Kistner, J. G.
Miss Evelyn Louise Skillman, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank H. Skillman, will be married to Corp. Richard J. Niedenthal, son of Mrs. Barbara Niedenthal, Sunday at 4 p. m. in the First Baptist church.
to Robert Carl Schlegel June 28 in Tabernacle Presbyterian church,
Psi Iota Xi To Convene
At Purdue
Included in today’s sorority notes are announcements of conventions and results of elections.
DELTA chapter of PSI IOTA XI recently re-elected its president, Mrs. Robert M, Stith. Newly elected officers are Mrs. Charles B. Wylie, vice president; Mrs. N. B. Tichenor and Mrs. Sam M. Chase, corresponding and recording secretaries; Mrs, Byron Brenton, treasurer, and Mrs. Dwight Brill, conductress. Mesdames Stith, Tichenor and Garland Retherford will be dele gates to the national convention of the sorority, which will be held at the Purdue university Memorial Union building next Thursday and Friday. Mrs. Retherford is the Ine dianapolis symphony chairman. Beta Tau chapter of Frankfort will be hostess at the convention. It will open with registration Thursday morning followed by a luncheeon. Also on the agenda for Thursday are a business session and a formal dinner, during which Beta Tau chapter will present a musical program, Business sessions and a luncheon will conclude convention activities Friday. This year the local chapter has made donations to the American Red cross, Cancer Control fund and the Indianapolis Symphony maintenance fund and has purchased a war bond. The chapter also is sending a girl to Happy Trails camp this summer. Members have been meeting one day each week to sew for the Red Cross.
Two Indianapolis chapters of ZETA BETA CHI sorority are represented by delegates at the ore ganization’s national convention being held in the Coronado hotel in St. Louis, Mo,, today through Sunday. Miss Evelyn King is the delegate for Alpha chapter and Miss Rose West is representing Beta chapter. The former is serving her second year as president of Alpha chapter. Other Indianapolis girls attending the convention are the Misses Esther M. Schmitt, Lucille Larrimore, Lenore Collins, Dixie Greene, Helen Walker, Gertrude Kremer, Lauretta Greiner, Esther Siefker, Mary Alice Benjamin, Marguerite Sommer, Betty Ludwick, Ann Robinson, Eleanor Pyle and Mesdames Vivien Hill, Georgia Hanshew, Dorothy Dukes and Anna Fay Taylor. Alpha chapter will be in charge of a model initiation service Sunday morning. Zeta Beta Chi is a national business and professional women's sorority.
Members of EPSILON chapter, EPSILON SIGMA ALPHA, will meet at 7 o'clock this evening at their studio in the Rauh building. Miss Maryland Bay, educational director, will be in charge of the program. At a recent meeting officers were installed. They include Miss Mary Shepherd, president; Miss Rosalie Worrell, vice president; Miss Mabel Wharton and Miss Lillie Rule, recording and corresponding secretaries, and Miss Anna Harkema, treasurer.
Shower Honors
Laura Tousey
Miss Betty Ensworth, Ambassador apartments, will entertain tomorrow night with a linen shower in honor of Miss Laura Frances Tousey, who will be married June 28 to Herbert M. French. Guests at the party will be Mesdames Albert Tousey, Herbert IL. French, Lucian Dunbar, Mary Brown, A. R. Tousey, Paul Griffin, Lois Baker. Earl Rivers, Harry Waiton, B. J. Becker and Cora BEnsworth and the Misses Vera Meredith, Norma Day, Mary Jane Wolford, Martha ' Underwood, Marie Kaufman, Margaret Johnston, Cathryne Cookerley, Irene Tarczue-
PAGENT
Clubs— Nature Study
Club to Picnic Sunday
Several luncheons and suppers and a tea are claiming the atten tion of clubwomen this week. The NATURE STUDY club of Ine
diana will hold a pienie supper at Woollen's Gardens Sunday. In the afternoon there will be a hike through the woods. Supper will be served at the fireplace by the creek. Following, Miss Wilma Rose will show pictures taken on her recent trip to Mexico.
Members of the BELLATRIX club gave a tea in honor of new pledges at the home of the club president, Miss Gloria Virt, last night, Pledges who attended were the Misses Bet ty Watson, Maxine Diets, Gloria Smith, Marcia Ettinger, Doris Riesner, Marie Tyner, Mary Kay Hueber, Betty Jackson, Jackie and Elaine Rebholz, Bea Myers, June Kelly and Patty Betcher.
A noon luncheon will be held by the JANET ADA club at the home of Mrs. Harry Byrkett today. There also will be a business session.
Mrs. Robert Elmore will enter tain the VICTORY club with a cove ered dish supper at 6:30 o'clock this evening in her home, 205 N. Temple ave.
Tomorrow the LAWRENOR TOWNSHIP club of REPUBLICAN WOMEN will meet with Mrs, Mil dred Reynolds at her home in Oakelandon. A covered dish luncheon will be served at noon and a business session will follow.
Arbor Vitae Club
Picnics Today
The Arbor Vitae club was holding an all day picnic today for meme bers and their families at the Silver Hills home of Mrs. Mark Bottema.
All cut with care to fit shorts as well as dresses. ironing required!
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Paul Draper and Larry Adler Booked for Town Hall Series; Other Programs Announced
Paul Draper, the well known dancer, and Larry Adler, the harmonica virtuoso, are among the artists and lecturers who will appear here next
season on the Town Hall series,
Brochures mailed this week list 10 of the 12 programs to be presented on Saturday mornings at the English theater, Among the lecturers will be Edward Weeks, editor of the Atlantic
Monthly; Walter Duranty, foreign correspondent and author of “I Write as I Please”; Jay Allen, jour nalist and author of “My ‘Trouble With Hitler,” and Hallett Abend, Far Bast correspondent of the New York Times. Ann Brown, the Negro soprano who ig playing in the revival of Giershwin's “Porgy and Bess” in New York, will sing here. Jaques Fray and Mario Braggiotti, the well known two-piano team, also are booked for the series. Other programs will include talks by His Imperial Highness, Otto of Austria; Krishnalal Shridharani, native of India where he is known as a poet, dramatist and author, and Mme, Suzanne Silvercruys, soulptor, playwright and author. There are two lectures yet to be announced. One will be that of H. R. Knickerbocker if he returns from Australia in time to appear on the series. .
Harvey W. Cassadys
To Note Anniversary
To celebrate their 256th wedding anniversary, Mr. and Mrs. Harvey W. Cassady will entertain with an open house for their relatives and friends Sunday in their home, 1650 Barth ave. There are no invitations.
Broad Ripple Legion To Elect Officers
Election of officers will be held at the regular meeting of Broad Ripple unit 3812, American Legion auxiliary, at 1:30 p. m. tomorrow in the post home, 64th st. and College ave. Mrs. Hale Wilson, president
L. 8. AYRES & CO, Indianapolis— Please send me the following panties:
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Legion Group
Plans Luncheon
Madden-Nottingham auxiliary to the American Legion will hold its monthly covered dish luncheon at 1 p. m. Tuesday in the summer home of Mrs. M. O. Fields in Ravenswood. Mrs. Fields is the newly elected 12th district president of the American Legion auxiliary. She will be assisted by Mrs. H, A. Simon and Mrs, Harry Lorber at the luncheon.
Luncheon Tuesday
The Ladies’ auxiliary to the Frae ternal Order of Police 86 will have a noon luncheon and card party
Bible Class. Will Observe Father's Day
In recognition of Father's day, the Men's Bible class of the First Baptist church will hold a “remems brance day” and a special memorial program Sunday. Tne program, to be presented by Elijah E. McClintic, D. B. McElroy and BE. T. Woodward at the 9:30 a. m, class sessions, will hdnor men who have served in the past as officers and leaders of the Men's Bible class and Men's Brotherhood of the church. Charles Lawler, speaker for the event, will talk on “The Task Come mitted to the Disciples of Jesus.” Special music will be provided by Earle Howe Jones, J. J. Albion and Waldo Littrell. Allen C. Miller will preside. Among the honored guests at the meeting will be Judge Charles F. Remy and Jesse M. Moore. All former members of the class are invited to join in the celebration,
Tasty Dish With meat, try serving: Peeled bananas, brushed with lemon juice, rolled in sugar and fried in butter
Tuesday at the Food Craft shop. Mrs. Roy McAuley is chairman,
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