Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 June 1942 — Page 5

SATURDAY, JUNE 20, 1942

Bridal News Includes Announceme

Dr. Milner Will Oftticiate At Ceremony

Downey-Blasingham Service Is Tonight

A setting of lyrata, woodwardia and cibotium ferns Will provide the background for the wedding of} Miss Priscilla Ann Blasingham to Bowman Downey at 8 o'clock this

evening in the Second Presbyterian, | church. Miss Blasingham is the! 3 daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harry]

Ellsworth Blasingham and the bridegroom is the Brandt C. Downey. On top of the chancel rails will) be boxes of pink caladiums. Bowls of peach gladioli, caladium leaves and shell pink peonies also will be used in the chancel as will sevenway candelabra. Flanking the aisle will be tall pedestals of palms, and caladium plants. Dr. Jean S. Milner, who will read | the rite, will be assisted by Dr.| Orien W. Fifer. Dr. Charles Han-| sen, organist, will play Schubert's “Ave Maria,” “Traume” (Wagner), excerpts from Tschaikowsky's “Con-/ certo in B Flat Minor” and the] Delta Shelter” song. To Enter With Father Entering on father, the bride will wear tradi-j tional ivory satin fashioned on princess lines. The long shoulder yoke of mousseline de soie will be ac- | cented by a fichu collar Of rose| point lace, taken from the wedding

Her full length veil will fall from a tiara of rose point lace and she will carry a bridal bouquet of gardenias, | white roses, stephanotis and baby]

r-in-law of the bride, will be| on of honor and Miss Emily] 3lasingham, the bride’s sister, will| erve as bridesmaid. Both will wear | frocks of marquisette and lace—MTs. | lasingham in blue and Miss Blas-| ingham in pink. Their flowers will] be delphinium and pink rambler] TOSes

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The bride's brother, Harry R.| ingham, will be Mr. Downey's] an and ushers will be Henry| auvre of Rochester, N. Y., John | peer of Mt. Sterling, Ky., andj ‘arter Tharp, Donald B. White and | John Curry, all of Indianapolis. i An antique rose lace gown with | g accessories will be won| by the bride’s mother and a blue | lace frock, also with matching ac-| cessories, has been chosen by Mrs.! Downey | Setting for Reception } reception at the Blasingham| home in Brendonwood will follow] the wedding. he bridal party will] receive guests on ar enclosed porch hung with rambler roses. Bouquets] of garden flowers and bowls of sum-| mer flowers will be used throughout the house. A plant stand will be indirectly lighted. The bridal table will be covered with a white silk net bouffant cloth and the wedding cake will be on a plateau of gardenias, orange blossoms, maiden- | hair ferns and other white flowers. The bride is a graduate of the Oberlin Conservatory of Music and Mr. Downey was graduated from Wabash cqllege and took two years of post graduate work at the University of Southern California. He a member of Delta Tau Delta fraternity. The couple will be at home in Indianapolis. Among the out-of-town guests at the wedding will be Dr. and Mrs. | . F. Kirtz, Mrs. Arthur Baker, Miss | ue Blasingham and Earl Riddell, | all of Logansport; Mrs. Jan Wetzel | and Mrs. W. B. Read, Bloomington, 11.; Mrs. Mary H. Speer, Mt. Stery.: Mrs. Cora Duffy and AlWebb, Chicago; Mrs. Henry) auvre, Rochester, N. Y.; Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Millikan, Waveland; Mr. and Mrs. Y. S. Boling and Mrs. Emily M. Groh, Terre Haute. Wil3 zg, Ft. Wayne; Miss Virginia Boling, Great Lakes, Ill.; Mrs. Robert Baldwin, Evanston, Ill.: Mr. and Mrs, William B. Guthrie, Turkey Run; Mr. and Mrs. Arch Olds and Mrs. Anna Detchon, Crawfords- | Mr. and Mrs. William | Piel, Danville, Ind. | |

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Reception Will Follow Rite

The Rev. P. B. Turner of San] Diego, Cal, will read the marriage| rite for Miss Etha LaVerne Struck-

man and Richard G. Blackwell at 5/st., Apt. 9, after a short wedding |

o'clock tomorrow afternoon in the) North Side Church of God. The, bride is the daughter of Mr. and! Mrs. Carl Struckman, and the| bridegroom's parents are Mr. and George Blackwell. Mrs. EH Williams, organist, will Mrs. Sam Newman will Miss Struckman will be given in marriage bv her

MTS.

gown will have a bodice with short! puffed sleeves, a sweetheart neckline and a peplum at the waistline from which a short train will fall Fastened to her crown of orange blossoms will be a veil of illusion,

fingertip length. She will carry pink was fashioned with a sweetheart groom were h

roses with gardeniss. Blige and pink frocks of embroidred chiffon, styled after the bridal own, will be worn by the attendThe bride's sister and matron of honor, Mrs. Glen R. Hall will be in blue. The bridesmaid, in pink, will be the bride's sister-in-law, Mrs. | Roy Struckman. Roth will carry| bouquets of Talisman roses. Judith | the flower girl, will] have a formal blue costume and cairTy a white basket of rose petals over her arm. The ring bearer will be Carroll Leroy Struckman. Mr.! Blackwell's attendants will be his brother, Charles Blackwell, best man, and Rov Struckman, Cecil! Fletcher and Mr. Hall ushers. i Members of the immediate families will be entertained at a reception in the home of the bride's parents. Following a wedding trip, the couple will be at home at the Belair apartments.

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son of Mrs. |

1. Mr. and Mrs. R. F. Hancock of New Castle have the arm of her| announced the approaching marriage of their daughter, Harriet, to James W. Piepenbrok, son of the Rev. and Mrs. E. A, Piepenbrok. The wedding

will be June 28. (Voorhis photo.)

Margaret Ruth Bride of Harold

Miss Margaret Ruth Schisla, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Melvin J. h. She also will wear a strand] Schisla, 4823 College ave., became the bride of Harold H. Reilly, son of f pearls, a gift of the bridegroom.| Mr. and Mrs. James P. Reilly, 610 N. Oxford st, ina 9 o'clock ceremony Irs. Harry Richard Blasingham, | this morning in St. Joan of Arc Catholic church. The Rev. Fr. C. M.

John Olson II To Wed Juanita Koch

At 8:30 o'clock this evening, a double ring ceremony will unite Miss Juanita Ruth Koch and John H. Olson IT in marriage. The rite will be read by the Rev. Wales E. Smith in the Olive Branch Christian church. The bride's parents are Mr. and Mrs. Elmer F. Koch and the bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. John H. Olson. Preceding the ceremony, Mrs. Ralph Stephens, organist, will play bridal airs &nd Mrs. Smith, wife of the pastor, will sing. The altar will be banked with palms interspersed with candelabra. Mr. Koch will give his daughter in marriage. She will wear an ivory satin gown made with a fivepointed neckline and long pointed

train over an underskirt of tulle. Her full length tulle veil will be caught with ruching, held by orange blossoms at the top of the head, and she will carry a heart-shaped bouquet of white rosebuds and baby breath surrounded with a frill of tulle, The Attendants

The attendants will be gowned in pink and blue. Miss Pauline Anderson, maid of honor, will wear pink with a fitted bodice and full skirt of satin. A deep shoulder yoke of tulle will be edged with satin and her shoulder length veil, also of tulle, will be fastened to a satin crown. Her bouquet will be pink rose buds and delphinium. The bridesmaids, Miss Katherine Koch, cousin of the bride; Miss Edythe Leachman and Miss Betty Lou Phillips, will wear blue frocks styled after the maid of honor’s gown. They will carry similar bouquets of white roses and delphinium. Mr. Olson's best man will be James Guilliaume and ushers will be Phillip Parsons, Gene Baker and Howard Scott. Mrs. Koch has selected a rose lace dress to be worm with white acces-

sories and a corsage of ra roses for the ceremony. The 's

mother will wear mist blue silk jer-!

sey with white accessories. Her corsage will be pink roses. Tthiere will be a reception at the home of the bride's parents, 2260 S. Pennsylvania st., immediately following the ceremony. The coup:e will be at home at 2063 N. Meridian

trip.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES nts for

PAGE §

the engagement

2. Mr. and Mrs. William Wood White announce

of their daughter, Winifred Eileen,

to Cadet James Edward Garwood Jr. son of Mr. and Mrs. James E. Garwood of Michigan City.

(Dex-

heimer-Carlon photo.)

Schisla Becomes Reilly

Bosler officiated. i

A wedding breakfast at Cifaldi’s followed the ceremony and a reception will be held late this afternoon and evening at the home of the bride’s parents. Decorating the altar at which the couple exchanged vows was an ar-| rangement of white gladioli, delphinium, larkspur, ferns and palms. The bride, escorted by her father, wore a gown of white net with lace] inserts forming the shoulder line! and sweetheart neckline. The long, fitted sleeves were finished with wrist points. The fitted bodice topped a full skirt with lace inserts extending info a full length train. The bridal bouquet was of white roses with valley lilies knotted in the ribbon streamers and the bride wore a fingertip length illusion j veil attached to a tiara of pearlized orange blossoms. Her attendants were Miss Gertrude Staab, maid of honor, and

Miss Betty Pittman. Their dresses | were of marquisette, made in bouf{fant style with fitted, shirred | basques, short, puffed sleeves and

| {

ing the past year, will sing. They

Couple Will Be At Home in Vallejo, Cal.

A wedding trip to California will] follow the marriage tomorrow of Miss Lois Simpson and Ensign Gilman Tredwell, U. S. N. R. They will fly to a Lake county resort in northern California after a reception at the home of the bride's parents, Mr. and Mrs. William J.| Simpson, 102 S. Fifth ave, Beech Grove.

The bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. K. I. Tredwell, Waldon! Breezes, Concord, Mass. The singlering ceremony, at 4 p. m. in the Beech Grove Methodist church, will be read by the Rev. Amos Bastin before an altar decorated with palms and ferns.

A group of bridal airs will be played by Miss Mary Lois Zook, organist. A trio of girls from the glee club of Beech Grove high school, where the bride taught dur-

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are Misses Doris Mann, Barbara Bailey and Virginia Bastin. Their songs will be “Always” and “Yours Is My Heart Alone.” The bride's attendants will be Miss Velta Lockman, maid of honor; Mrs. Jack Holmes, matron of honor;

iromance necklines. Aprons over the {full skirts tied at the back with

| sleeves. The bodice will be fastened | march bows. {with small satin buttons to the) | waistline where the skirt will open E 1 2 | redingote style to form a full length | and Miss Pitmish Wore Midonns

Miss Staab was in antique rose

The two wore shoulder length matching their dresses and {held by tiaras of pastel flowers. | They also wore matching net mitts and carried colonial bouquets in pastel tones. Joseph P. Keane was best man and the ushers were Robert Head and Gerald Reilly, the bridegroom’s brother. Mrs. Schisla, the bride's mother, | wore black lace with black acces- | sories. Mrs. Reilly was in navy crepe | worn with navy and white accessories. Both wore Talisman rose corsages.

{ blue. { veils

Arrange Open House At St. Elizabeth’s

An open house, sponsored by the Mother Theodore circle, Daughters of Isabella, will be held at St. Elizabeth's home from 2 to 6 o'clock tomorrow afternoon. Serving on refreshment committees for the event are Mesdames W. F. McMillen, W. F. Kett, Mary Comerford and the Misses Martha Hickey, Frances Scherer, Mary Agnes Keller, Ernestine Fuss, Rose Craney, Catherine Fletcher, Elsie

{Carter, Ann and Helen Hurley, Ger{trude McHugh and Prudence Nelan.

Society to Meet

The Queen Margherita society will meet at 2 p. m. tomorrow in

the Hotel Lincoln. Hostesses will be Miss Mary Iozzo, Mrs. Nick Taco(belli and Mrs. Louis Gentille.

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Michaelis-Kiernan Service Is

oe we Followed by a Breakfast

A wedding breakfast at Catierine’s restaurant followed the wed-

Angelicus.” greenery. The bride, escorted to the altar by her father, Thomas Kiernan, wore a white mousseline ‘de soie gown over white slipper satin. It

neckline, long sleeves tapering into wrist points and a bouffant skirt falling into a train. A fluted coronet of illusion held her fingertip veil in place. Her bouquet was white roses and gardenias. Gowns of lilac, aqua, yellow and pink were worn by the attendants. They were made of mousseline de soie with sweetheart mnecklines, fitted bodices, bouffant skirts and had torso waistlines accented with ruffles. Completing their costumes were matching shoulder length veils and pearls, gifts from the bride. The matron of honor, Mrs. E. J. Ryan, sister of the bride, was in lilac and carried Claudius Pernet roses. Another sister, Miss Peggy Kiernan, wore aqua and carted Johanna Hill roses and Miss Betty Jo Michaelis, sister of the bridegroom, was in yellow and had Talisman roses.

father before a ding of Miss Kathryn Kiernan to Robert Michaelis at 9 o'clock this background of greenery interspersed morning in St. Anthony's Catholic church. Th with candelabra and baskets of Rev. Fr. Michael J. Gorman, Bridal selections summer flowers. Her white chiffon; Hungerford. They included “On This Day,” Church decorations were baskets of white flowers and

e mass was read hy the were sung by Miss Mary “Ave Maria” and “Panis

{carried a colonial bouquet of pastel spring flowers and wore a poke bonnet with a pink net dress over {Pink taffeta. Attending the brideis brother Edward Michaelis, best man, and William | Kiernan, brother of the bride, and {Philip Yount, ushers. Another brother of the bride, Robert Kiernan, served at the mass.

Mrs. Kiernan, mother of the bride, chose a navy sheer print for the ceremony and Mrs. Oscar Michaelis, the bridegroom's mother, was attired in a powder blue frock. Both had white accessories and corsages of white roses. This afternoon from 2 to 5 o'clock Mr. and Mrs. Kiernan will entertain with a reception in their home, 537 N. Tibbs ave. Assisting with the reception will be the Misses Grace Kattau, Mary Ann Meers and Loretta Michaelis. The couple will leave on a wedding trip north with the bride traveling in a gray and white printed linen suit with navy and white accessories. When they

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return \ will be Rose Marie Haney, flower ir {Tome ‘at 46 SEasaiNion ave, 4

{Miss Betty Briscoe, Westfield, Ill, | Miss Lois Voelkel, Evansville, Miss ‘Beth Partenheimer, Huntingburg, and Mrs. Lawrence Weghorst, bridesmaids. Miss Lockman will be in daffodil yellow taffeta with a basque waist, sweetheart neckline and bouffant skirt. Her face veil of yellow will be topped by a knot of blue delphinium matching that of her bouquet. Mrs. Holmes, in a similar gown of forget-me-not blue taffeta and a yellow face veil, will carry garlands of yellow gladioli blossoms. |The bridesmaids’ frocks, fashioned like those of the other attendants, are of pale delphinium blue taffeta and the four will wear blue face veils with yellow “top knots” and will carry yellow gladioli-

To Wear Gift

Entering on the arm of her father, the bride will wear a white marquisette gown fashioned on Empire| lines with full bishop sleeves and a row of covered buttons extending from neckline to waistline. The bodice has a diamond-shaped motif extending to the hipline and the skirt sweeps into a full-length train. Her fingertip length veil of illusion will be attached to a pearlized orange blossom tiara and she will carry a small “random” type bouquet of white gladioli and larkspur blossoms. She will wear the bridegroom's gift, a double strand of pearls. Ensign W. A. Koch, U. S. N. R.,| Annapolis, Md., will be best man and the ushers will be H. Townsend Cooper, F. L. Elliott and Robert B. Carter, all of Evansville; Anthony S. Ippolito, Chicago, and Ensign George G. Spehn, U. S. N. R., Notre Dame, Ind. For the ceremony the bride's mother has chosen a two-piece silk costume of pale pink with an embroidered bodice. Navy accessories and a corsage of pink roses and larkspur will complete her costume.

Reception Assistants

Assistants at the reception will be Mesdames G. G. Blakeman, Anna Conner, Roy Cambridge and Walter Kendall. Smilax and blue delphinium will wreath the wedding cake and vases of delphinium will be used in decorations. As her going-away costume, the bride will wear a dusty pink silk costume suit with shirred bodice and skirt, navy aecessories and a maroon earnation corsage. The couple will be at home at 131 Byron st., Vallejo, Cal. Ensign Tredwell is stationed at the Mare Island Navy yard. Miss Simpson is a Purdue university graduate and a member of Alpha Chi Omega and Kappa Delta Pi, educational honorary sorority. Ensign Tredwell, also a Purdue

graduate, is a member of Theta Chi fraternity and Skull and Crescent, honorary society.

To Hold Open House

Mrs. George Herschell, 5402 Burgess ave. assisted by her mother, Mrs. Orla Corwin, will hold open

honor of her great aunt, NTs.

house from 1 to 6 p. m. tomorrow in|

Claudia Gaulscha, who i 75 years|

ages

3. A weddi June Walters

(Ramos-Porter photo.)

Sewing Made Easy’ No. Cutting, Marking the Pattern

ng next Saturday will be that of Miss to William Caleb Wright, son of Mr. and Mrs. George Caleb Wright. The bride-to-be is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ellis P. Walters.

gust.

3:

(This article is the third of six on home dressmaking) IN LESSON NO. 2 we have explained just how to adjust a pattern so that it accurately represents the measurements of the figure for which you are sewing. Put these pieces carefully by while you prepare

your material for cutting. If you do not have a table large enough, use the floor. Don’t try to use a bed, for instance and then wonder why mistakes keep happening. This is a job which re« quires concentration, too, so try to allow yourself at least an hour of time undisturbed. Make sure the fabric is smooth; press if necessary. Straighten the ends. Fold the fabric lengthwise of the material, matching the two sides exactly. Now lay the pattern pieces on as shown in the diagram which will appear on the pattern instruction sheet. Arrange all the pieces and make sure that you have sufficient material. Now pin the tissue pieces to the material firmly. The diagram will show you just how the pieces are to be placed—on the straight of the material or on the bias which pieces to cut on the fold, which pieces to cut from a single layer of the material and which pieces may be cut twice (sleeves, for instance). Follow the diagram carefully.

Cut Carefully Now with a good pair of sharp shears, cut carefully along the edges of the pattern, using long, even strokes. Do not lift fabric up from the table when cutting. Instead place one hand on material opposite shears and keep the shears on the table. See sketch A, then lift the piece and go back over the edges cutting the notches, making short, shallow cuts for these.

Do not remove the tissue pieces from the fabric until each piece has been marked for stitching and is about to be basted. Before basting there are a few necessary preliminaries. You will find the tissue pieces punched with various perforations. These indicate darts, pocket placements, pleats and buttonhole placements. Each should be marked. either with tailor’s chalk or with tailor’s tacks. Again, the instruction chart will give you full directions for making tailor’s tacks which are put in very quickly with a needle and colored thread. Run a basting thread down the center front and back pieces. This is an important guide to the major pieces of the garment. Leave the tissue pinned to each piece until you are ready to baste it. Do’s and Don'ts Allow for seams. Im making adjastments in your pattern, remember that the pattern makes 3¢-ineh allowance on all pieces for seams. Plan the finish of the hemline before you lay out the pattern. Dresses of average materials require no more than a two-inch hem, although more may be desirable in some materials and for dresses for growing girls. Measure skirt pieces exactly to your requirements, then add 2% inches or more for hem. Put the pieces of the pattern which you are not planning to use well out of your way—adon’t leave them about to confuse you. Avoid plaids, stripes or prints which must be matched in seaming in the materials you choose for your first patterns. Study the picture of the pattern and note all versions. Then buy material for the version you prefer. Equip your sewing machine with

‘{Neel of Indianapolis, will be her

Betty M. Starr To Be Wed in Champaign

Times Special

CHAMPAIGN, Iil., June 20—A wedding ceremony at 3:30 o'clock] tomorrow afternoon in the First Methodist church here will unite Miss Betty Marie Starr and Cyril E. McClellan, son of Prof. and Mrs.! Charles E. McClellan of Logan, Utah. The bride is the daughter) of Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Camp-| bell of Champaign, formerly of In-| dianapolis where they will return July 1 to make their home. The bride's sister, Mrs. Ralph matron of honor and Mrs. Jane Johnson Burroughs, also of Indianapolis, will sing preceding the ceremony. The ceremony will be read by Dr. H. Clifford Northcott at an aitar banked with palms interspersed with regal lilies and delphinium and flanked by seven-way candelabra. Mrs. Neel and the bridesmaids, Miss Ina Houser, Indianapolis, and Mrs. Samuel Dillavou of this city, will wear chiffon frocks styled with short, puffed sleeves, romance necklines and scroll applique at the waistlines. They will have mateching shoulder length veils of illusion caught with pink carnation and fern tiaras. Mrs. Neel will be in heavenly blue and will carry pink Virginia carnations and blue delphinium. Identical bouquets will be carried by the {bridesmaids with their petal pink | frocks. Given in marriage by her father, the bride will be gowned in frost white slipper satin. The dress has a sweetheart neckline and leg-o’-mutton sleeves fitted from elbow to wrist. The skirt falls into a long train from a wide, fitted waistband. A coronet with a seed pearl motif will hold her fingertip length veil of white illusion and she will carry a bouquet of regal lilies with satin streamers knotted with sprays of small flowers. James Tyson, Fast Lansing, Mich. will serve as his brother-in-law’s best man and the ushers will be Messrs. Neel and Dillavou. Following a reception at the church, the couple will leave for a wedding trip west. They will be at home later in Catonsville, Md.

Wed Recently

Eileen White Is

Engaged to Cadet Garwood

Grace Huffman and Fiance to Be Honored

Announcements of two ape proaching . marriages and several showers are featured in the bridal scene today.

The engagement of Miss Winie fred Eileen White to Cadet James Edward Garwood Jr. ef Corpus Christi, Tex, is announced by the

- | bride-to-be’s parents, Mr. and Mrs,

William Wood White. The prospece tive bridegroom is the son of Mr,

P and Mrs. James Edward Garwood

4. The engagement of Miss Margaret Van Meter to Frederick C. Melcher, son of Mrs. N. P. Melcher, has been announced by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Van Meter. The wedding will be in Au(W. Hurley Ashby photo.)

Trefz-Moore Wedding Is

Tomorrow

In a double-ring ceremony at 3:30 o'clock tomorrow afternoon, Miss Lois Moore will become the bride of Raymond E. Trefz Jr. Dr. U. S. Clutton will réad the service in the Tuxedo Park Baptist church. Decorating the church will be greenery, baskets of spring flowers and two seven-branch candelabra. A program of bridal music will be played by Mrs. Ralph Cradick, organist, and Mrs. James R. Graham will sing “I Love You Truly,” “Because” and “Sweetest Story Ever Told.” The matron of honor, Mrs. Harlan Ruede, will wear a white organdy gown trimmed in green. The dress will have a fitted bodice with long full sleeves and a bouffant skirt with a deep set ruffle. She will carry a French basket of garden flowers. Mr. Trefz’s brother, Eugene Trefz, will be best man and Mr. Ruede, Howard Reed, Fred Roeder and John Trefz, uncle of the bridegroom, will be ushers. The bride, entering on the arm of her uncle, Frank E. Murphy of Vincennes, will wear white starched chiffon with a sweetheart neckline and long puffed sleeves. The skirt of the gown with lace inserts will fall into a train. Her veil, fingertip length, will be fastened to a pearl cap outlined with orange blossoms and she will carry a prayer book with a gardenia and streamers of rosebuds. Mrs. Emma E. Moore, mother of the bride, and Mrs. Raymond E. Trefz, mother of the bridegroom, will be attired in navy and rose print frocks with navy and white accessories. Both will have corsages of gardenias and roses. Reception to Follow Following the ceremony, there will be a reception given by Mrs. Moore in her home, 44 S. Denny st. Assisting the hostess will be Mesdames Ernest Pitts, John Patrick, Vernon Parish, Clayton Lowery and the Misses Agnes and Helen Graham. The couple will take a wedding trip to Cincinnati. Miss Moore's going-away costume will be a brown linen suit with brown accessories. Her corsage will be orchids. After June 28 the bride and bridegroom will be at home in Greenfield. Among the out-of-town guests at the wedding will be Mr. and Mrs. Fred Keilholz and family, Urbana, IL; Mr. and Mrs. G. O. Keilholz and family, Lafayette: Mr. and Mrs, Walter Nolte, Louisville, Ky.; Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Pitts Jr. and daughter, Judith Linn, and Mr. and Mrs. Harry W. Linaburry, Zionsville, and Mrs. Blanche Patrick and Miss Sylvia Patrick, Seymour.

Barton-Ingram Rite Is This Evening

The bride’s uncle, the Rev. Albert McLaughlin, Bloomington, tonight will perform the double ring wedding ceremony uniting Miss Marietta Ingram and Donald Lee Barton. The 8:30 o'clock service will be at the home of the bride’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. William G. Ingram, 1370 W. Pruitt st. An improvised altar of palms, ferns, greenery and seven-branch candelabra will form the setting for the rite. Mrs. Donald Cope, the bride's cousin, will play. Given in marriage by her father, the bride will wear a street length frock of white marquisette with long, full sleeves fitted at the wrists. She will have a matching hat and a corsage of red roses and baby breath. Miss Betty Barton, sister of the bridegroom, will be her only attendant. She will wear powder blue with white accessories and red roses. William Ingram Jr, the bride's brother, will be best man. After a reception at the Ingram home, the couple is to leave for a

Sr. of Michigan City. The wedding will take place in July. Both Miss White and Cadet Gare wood are graduates of Butler uni versity, where she was a member of Delta Delta Delta sorority and he was affiliated with Lambda Chi Ale pha fraternity. Miss White also ate tended Stephens college, Columbia, Mo. 2 ” ” Mr. and Mrs. David Hocker will entertain with a buffet dinner and miscellaneous shower for Miss Grace Huffman and Robert Carl Schlegel tomorrow evening in their home, 9857 Kingsley drive. Guests at the party will be Messrs, and Mesdames M. D. Curtis, Robert Lauth, Edward Little, the Misses Jane Huffman, Mary Jane Schmitt, and Judy Badger and John Huff man IIT and George Campbell of South Bend. = =

Miss Rosemary Rocap was to ene tertain this afternoon with a silver shower for Mrs. Wilfred Habing who was Miss Mary Catherine Slattery before her marriage April 8.© Miss Eileen Rocap, the hostess’ sister. and their mother, Mrs. James E Rocap, were to assist. Guests at the party in the Rocar home, 5427 Washington blvd. wer. to include mothers of the couple Mrs. Clara Slattery and Mrs. Joh: G. Habing. Others attending were to be Mes - dames Henry Langsenkamp, Robe: E. Kirby, John T. Rocap, J. F. E. ward Jr., Sylvester Ahlering, Robe: Langsenkamp and John Sexto: Misses Lillian Langsenkamp, Ma: Frances Boyle, Sara Jordan ar Mary Louise Keach. = = o

Miss Martha Bach and J. Charl - Pike will be married at 3:30 o'cloc next Saturday afternoon in t] First Presbyterian church. Ti bride-to-be is the daughter of Mi Pearl Bach, 1451 Central ave. ar Mr. Pike is the son of Virgil Pil. of Plainfield.

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Miss Mary Louise Robbins, wl ° will be married to Paul Melson Ju 9, recently was honored with a su prise shower given by Zeta Rho s rority in the home -of Mrs. Pa McDuff, 5301 E. 9th st. The brid to-be was given a set of crystal 1 the sorority and miscellaneous gif from each guest. Among the guests were Mesdam: Alexander McDonald, Stewa: Hynes, Ted Michaels, Herbert Sti vel, Sherman Wilson, Ocal Muter: paugh, Robert J. Robbins, Carl Mc Kim, C. E. Secrest and Marie Dya:

W. M. Fruits, Elnora Craig To Be Married

Miss Elnora Mae Craig will united in marriage to William Fruits at 2:30 o'clock tomorr afternoon in the Eighth Christi church, The bride is the daugh of Mr. and Mrs. Glendore Craig a Mr. Fruits is the son of Mrs. El. Estes of Greenfield. Bridal selections will be played ' Mrs. Oliver Boles, organist, and M Martha Medealf will sing “None I the Lonely Heart” and “At Dav ing.” The Rev. E. E. Russell will offici before an altar decorated w greenery and candelabra. WN Craig, given in marriage by i father, will wear a princess st white faille taffeta gown with a Ic yoke, leg-o’-mutton sleeves and long, full train. Her fingertip v of illusion will be caught by a s¢ pearl tiara and she will carry bric roses in a shower bouquet. Pastel gowns of chiffon, fashion¢ after the bride’s gown, will be wor: by the attendants. Mrs. Phil; Urbanica, matron of honor, will t in blue. Pink, turquoise and yeilo: frocks will be worn by the brides maids, Miss Peggy Craig, cousin of the bride; Miss Evelyn Jean Mitchel, and Miss Evelyn Fruits, sister of the bridegroom. They will carr bouquets of spring flowers and wea. flowers in their hair.

Sister to Be Attendant The brides sister and junior bridesmaid, Dixieana Crajg, will have a formal pink taffeta dress and will carry a colonial bouquet. The flower girl, Joan Carol Lemon, also will wear pink taffeta. Over her arm she will have a basket of roses. The best man will be Willie Burke and ushers will be Don Spicer, Joseph Zupan and Haden Rohm.