Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 April 1943 — Page 11

— 4 * ne i

“Attendants Are Announced for ; ously Amon Rite Sunday

3 7 MISS WILMA AMBUHL ule for her wedding to Ensign Stanley Roderick Trusty which’ will be at 3:30 p. m. Sunday in the Central Chris-. ° tian church. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest

His mother is Mrs. Esta Trusty. Bt Mrs. Gene Lacy will be her sister's matron of honor and the ._, bridesmaid will be Miss Jacqueline Jefferies. Ensign Trusty will

Carl Ambuhl.

*. have his brother, Clay Trusty, as . Buffalo, and another brother, A bridal dinner will be given for

at 6:30 o'clock Saturday evening in the Propylaeum following the

rehearsal. ‘The guests will be the

Trusty, Clay Trusty, W. K. Trusty, Guy Inman, Pauline Vogel, Anna Ambuhl and Pauline Kiefer, Miss Edith Ambuhl, Mr. and Mrs. Allen .Graham of Bloomington, and Sgt. Lacy of Alexandria, Va.

Westlake-Lange Rite Set

MISS FRANCES LANGE left this week-end with her mother, Mrs. Dewey K. Lange, for St. Louis where she will be married to Mid-

shipman William Lyeth Westlake, be at 3:30 p. m. in the Danforth church. >

Mr. Westlake is the son of Mr. and Mrs. of Clarks Green, Pa. He will receive his commission as ensign Friday. Mr. and Mrs. Lange of Indianapolis are the bride-to-be’s

parents.

Miss Lange’s attendants will be Mrs. Robert L. Westlake Jr., matron of honor, and Anna Louise and Barbara Jean Lange, junior

bridesmaids. Mr. Westlake Jr. will

Lange of Barbeton, O., cousin of the bride-to-be, will usher. . A reception will follow the ceremony at the home of Miss Lange’s aunt, Miss Dena Lange, in St. Louis. The assistants will be Miss Nancy Wilder of Indianapolis and Miss Ann Lee Glenn of St. Louis.

i ‘Honor Miss Eloise Akin

~ “ A'LUNCHEON AND CHINA SHOWER were given recently in honor of Miss Eloise Akin, whose marriage to Ensign Thomas

Franklin Kibler will be April 26. and Mrs. E. Park Akin. He is the

The guests were Misses Betty Bell, Mary Frances Dugan, Alice Earl, . Oneta Faris, Shirley Mae Hicks, Gertrude Johnson, Peggy Kendall, Lois Lynn Lowe, Mary McEvilly, Dorothy Memmer, Ruth

O'Mahoney, Harriet Roger, Mary Jo

A" dames Wesley Gainey, J. P. Ornelas and A. G. Smith,

Annual Spring Frolic

ADDITIONAL MEMBERS of, the Lambs club who will participate in the Viennese waltz exhibition for the club’s annual spring frolic are Mr. and Mrs. Robert Ingham and Mrs. Robert Ferriday Jr.

Others taking part in the dance

¥. Pantzer, A. K. Scheidenhelm and L. R. Thomas, Mrs. Richard Hoover, George Fotheringham and Mr. Ferriday. The frolic will be Saturday night at the Columbia club. Mr. and Mrs. Fotheringham

are the chairmen.

W. K. Trusty of Muncie, will usher.

has announced the attend-

best man and Guy Inman of the couple by the bride’s parents attendants and Mesdames Esta

Saturday. Their wedding will chapel, Pilgrims Congregational

Robert L. Westlake _

be the best man and Bernard

She is the daughter of Mr, son of Mrs. W.’D. Kibler.

Ross and Helen Stoshtich, Mes-

are Messrs. and Mesdames Kurt

JANE JORDAN

DEAR JANE JORDAN—I have a problem that is causing a great deal of conflict among my girl friends. We give a party every few weeks for the U. S. O.. We dance, but like other entertainment also. The service men want to play “kissing games.” Now, I feel that we are too old for that. Almost all of us are 18, Half of the girls agree with me, but the other half agree with the - service men. We want the boys to have a good time, but it seems that they all think they must play “kissing games” in order to enjoy themselves. I am sure that if we girls could agree upon it one way or the other we could have a much better time. ., We are having a party soon, so 3 Please answer this letter soon. : WONDERING.

Answer—1 certainly agree with you that girls of your age are much too old to spend your evenings like grade-school children in playing kissing games. However much you may like the service men and want to show them a pleasant time, you aren't called upon to kiss any of them unless you want to. The men, too, are much too old to win their kisses, if any, by such an easy device. If they want to kiss, let them win the girls’ affection in a more dignified manner. After all, what are they, mice or

men? »

» ” DEAR JANE JORDAN—I am a /boy going on 17 years old and &

Sororities— Mrs. Winger Is Scheduled For Review

Two sorority groups have scheduled business meetings for tomorrow. * : Mrs. Bjirn Winger will give a +! book review tomorrow evening for and Kappa chapters, ALPHA DELTA OMEGA. Following the short business meetings will be held by the chapters.

Mu chapter, ALPHA OMICRON ALPHA, will meet at 1 p. m. tomorrow in the Warren hotel. Mrs. william P. Weimar will be hostess.

The PHI MU Alumnae association recently elected Mrs. C. E. Carbon president. The other new officers are Mrs. William H. Zaiser Jr., vice president; Mrs. F. S. Kurdys and|. Miss Elsié Shelley, recording sud corresponding secretaries; Mrs. Eugene Garrison, treasurer, and Miss ol Jane Wilson, Panhellenic representative. Mrs. Carbon was ‘chosen as delegate to the sorority’s conference and leadership school for collegiate and alumnae chapter representatives. ~The conference is sponsored by the national office ‘and is to be held at the Meding club in’ Chicago, July 16 and 19. Miss Adelaide Gastineau Loo alternate-delégate.

‘Helen Haas, 3602 E.

ee st., will be hostess toSveningefor a:socia) meeting

morrow of PHI TAU.

clock meeting of the Alpha ADS o , DELTA THETA|

~ | scholastic journalism honorary or-

junior in high school. I have asked a girl to go steady with me. "I work off and on during my leisure hours. Am I nervy in asking her to go steady when I am not able to take her everywhere she might want to go? Before I asked her to go steady I got around quite a bit and went with many girls. Everyone says I am too fickle to go steady. I would like to show them that they are wrong. I would like to know if I am too young to go steady and if not, what are the rules for going

steady? WORRIED.

Answer—Are you sure you want to convince other people that you are not too fickle to go steady, or is it yourself whom you wish to convince? In my opinion it is foolish for a boy of 16 to tie himself down to one girl. At 16 it is quite normal for a young man to be changeable, or fickle as you call it. His task is to get acquainted with girls, to learn something about them, compare one with the other. You seem to feel that there is something wrong about your inability to stick to one girl at 16. Actually I don’t think you want to settle down. to one girl but would like to see if you can sell her the idea. Try it out, if you want to, but don’t feel that you are unstable if you fail to stick the first time. JANE JORDAN.

Put your problems in a letter to Jane Jordss, who will answer your guestions

this eolumn daily. Mothers’ Club Meets Tomorrow The “monthly meeting of the Mothers’ club of the Roberts kinder-

garten will be at 1:30 p. m. tomorrow. A representative from Ayres’ will show a display of table arrangements. Mrs. George Hane will be hostess assisted by Mesdames Herbert Wamsley, Leota Rose and Lioyd Meyers.

Miss Reimer

Wins Award

Miss Mildred Reimer, senior journalism - major at Butler, has received a $500 fellowship from the

scholastic honorary organization. She is the first Butler student to receive the award. Approximately 50 Phi Kappa Phi chapters in the country submit recommendations each spring and fall for the award and winners are chosen on the basis of personality, scholarship and apparent ability to succeed in graduate work. Miss Reimer, who has a 2.87 grade average and will receive her bachelor of science degree in:June, will study for her master’s degree in journalism at Northwestern university in Evanston, Ill She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Reimer, 1133 S. Ken-

‘Butler Collegian, campus news‘paper, last semester and now is an assistant in the university publicity ‘office,

Sigma Phi, national honorary journalism fraternity for women, and Kappa Tau Alpha, national

ganization. She also is secretary of

national chapter of Phi Kappa Phi, |

wood ave. She was editor of the|

Miss Reimer is president of Theta

approaching “marriage of ° their daughter, Enes Frances, to Richard Powell Kénnedy, son of Mr. and Mrs. D. D, Kennedy. The wedding will be Sunday afternoon at - 12:30 o'clock in the Grace | Methodist

Clubs—

Local Organizations Plan Book Reviews, Discussions For Activities of the Week

Two clubs meeting this week will hear guest speakers. Others have

planned Easter programs.

Mrs. Walter Jenney will give the Easter story. for the EXPRESSION : club .meeting tomorrow with Mrs. William Patterson, 3059 N. Illinois st. The hostess will be assisted by Mrs. will include a piano duet by Mrs. Arthur Macy and Mrs. Charles Teeters

Scottish Rite Women Plan

Musicale

A spring musicale will feature the luncheon meeting of the ladies of the Scottish Rite in the Scottish Rite cathedral tomorrow. . Mrs. George L. Clark is chairman of the program committee and the musicale will be under the direction of Mrs. T. Milton Rybolt. The program will open with selections by Miss Jeannette Orloff, violinist; Miss Mary Spalding, harpist, and Mrs. Marjorie Bernat, cellist. The Madrigal singers of Technical high school, under the direction of Russell Paxton, will feature the second part of the program. . Event Ends Series Also assisting in arrangements are Mesdames W. Henry Roberts, John G. Benson, Deane M. Stephenson, Leslie D. Clancy and Guy L. Roberts, members of the decorating committee; Mesdames Fermor 8. Cannon, Paul A. Hancock, Chester A. McPheeters, Rybolt, Birney D. Spradling and Hiram E. Stonecipher, other members of the program committee; Mrs. John H. Jefferson and Mrs. Roberts, cochairmen for luncheon meetings. Tomorrow's meeting will be the last until fall.

tol Beauties’ Hints—

Mix Work, Fun For Balanced Day and Health =

Marjorie Crews: She relaxes.

\ — By ALICIA HART Times Special Writer THERE IS SO much to be done these ‘days, and so little time in which to do it, that many women are giving up small pleasures. a few good times i do a better job is really commemorable, but don’t overdo it,” warns Marjorie Anne Crews, a medical student who averages a 16-hour day of study. “You must take time to relax, keep wellgroomed and have fun.” ” 2.» AND MARJORIE practices what she preaches. If she has to work late at night, she comes

the Butler gig lo 0

" The last discussion lunchéon this

‘|ment will have its ‘annual lunch-

Laurence Hayes. The program also

and a solo by Miss Mary Louise Clodfelder.

The theme of the TUESDAY QUEST club meeting tomorrow will be “The Virtue of Patience.” Mrs. N. E. Hehner and Mrs. 8S. G. Huntington will be the speakers. Readings will be given by Mrs. E. S. Waymire. Mrs. Vernon C. Bower, 5950 Guilford ave., will be the hostess assisted by Mrs. S. L. Moffett and Mrs. Russell Ward.

CHAPTER Q, P. E. O. SISTERHOOD, will have W. Rowland Allen of L.'S. Ayres & Co. as its guest speaker tomorrow.. Mrs. W. A. McCready, 3917 Kenwood ave., will be the hostess.

Tomorrow's meeting of the GROLIER FINE ARTS club will feature solos by Mrs. Luther Poe and Mrs. A. L. Duncan and a talk on “Trees of South America” by Mrs. Ray Fountain. The hostess will be Mrs. J. H. Craig, 3469 N. Capitol ave, assisted by Mrs. Carrie Daniel.

“Only One Storm” (Granville Hicks) will be reviewed by Mrs. Franklin McCray for the HEYL STUDY club meeting tomorrow with Mrs. Howard T. Griffith,

Mrs. Jules G. Zinter and Mrs. Laura Werst will discuss “The Niagara River” and “The Hudson River” tomorrow for the WY-MO-DAU club meeting with Miss Zeline

maid of honor.

Miss Grimes

Wed Tonight Ceremony to Be By Candlelight

In a candlelight ceremony at 8 o'clock this evening Miss Martha Joan Grimes will become the bride of Charles E. Edmonds, U. 8S. N. R. The service will be read by the Rev. Wales E. Smith in the Olive Branch Christian church,

Miss Grimes is the daughter of

Mr. and Mrs. Glyndon M. Grimes,

2765 Barth ave. Mr. Edmonds’ parents are Mr. and Mrs. Merle M. Edmonds, 1305 E. Edwards ave. Entering with her father, the bride will wear a candlelight satin gown styled with a scalloped yoke of chantilly lace, a fitted bodice and long sleeves tapering into points over the hands. Her full skirt will extend into a train and her twotiered veil of English {illusion will be attached to a Juliet cap of matching lace. She will carry a white bouquet of orchids, sweet

: | peas, roses and baby’s breath.

Miss Betty Poppaw will be the Her orchid gown | will be styled with a fitted bodice of taffeta, a gathered skirt, a matching yoke of chiffon and three-quar-ter length sleeves. The bridesmaids, Mrs. George A.

“Sydney Harbour” by John D.

Art gallery of New South Wales.

Moore is one of the paintings in

the current “Art of Australia” exhibit at John Herron Art museum. . The exhibit is the last in a series of shows covering “Art of Our Allies.” The picture was painted in 1936 and is lent by the National

Burck and Miss Toni Latham, will wear gowns similar to that of the maid of honor. The flower girl will be Yvonne Edmonds, sister of the bridegroom. Her candlelight satin gown will have a fitted bodice, puffed sleeves and a gathered floor-length skirt. She will wear a Juliet cap of lace

with a shoulder-length veil and will

carry a small colonial bouquet of

white roses and sweet peas. Mr. Edmonds will be his son’s best man and the ushers will be James Grimes, brother of the bride, and Mr. Burck. After the reception the couple will leave for Pensacola, Fla., where the bridegroom is stationed. The bride will travel in a beige gabardine suit with brown accessories and an orchid corsage.

| Sanrise Rite In Irvington

The interdenominational Easter

sunrise service will be at 7 o'clock

Easter morning on the north steps of the Irvington Methodist church.

Miss Charlotte Moore is general

chairman of the program commit«

® | tee. Assisting her will be Mrs. Paul

Mozingo, organist and choir direc- = tor-of the Methodist church; Beldon C. Leonard, the Rev. Clarence A. Shake, Dr. John B. Ferguson and Dr. E. Robert Andry. The subcommittees include Mrs. John M. Gainey, formation; Miss Betty Lou Schafer, chairman, Mrs Marie Parker and Miss Lola Cone ner, publicity. On the robe committee are Mesdames W. B, Finfrock, Fred N. Reeder, W. H. Burgess, A. C. Van« Arendonk, William C. Gordon, Sews' ard and Hope Spillman, Misses ClLristine Bruckman, Lois Price, Fannie Bennet and Betty Newtomer. The chorus will include the members of the intermediate, junior and senior departments and the choirs of all three churches. There also will be a chorus of children from the primary departments. Miss Moore is instructor of a speaking choir which will give the scripture.

or

ot

suit.

Brisley, 2207 Fernway st. The assistant hostess will be Mrs. Jacob, L. Jones.

The CHALCEDONY club will meet tomorrow with Mrs. Edward Enners, 3161 College ave. for a 1 o'clock luncheon followed by a busi-| ness meeting and cards. Mrs. T. A. | Tochterman will be in charge of the luncheon.

Mrs. Rosamond Lewis, 1108 N. Beville ave. will have the business meeting and Easter party of the LUCKY-FIVE club at her home this evening. °

Miss Evangeline Ensley will be the guest speaker at 7:30 p. m. Wednesday for the STORY-A-MONTH club meeting in the Rauh'

.| Memorial library. Her subject will

be “Mysteries in General and Edwin Drood in Particular.” R. I'raser will preside. Mrs. Garri-

will present a report.

The GARFIELD GARDEN ‘club will meet at 1:30 p. m. tomorrow in the auditorium of the Prospect branch library, 1125 Spruce st. Arthur Hoffman, faculty member at Technical high school, will discuss “Gardening and Soil.” The public may attend.

Welfare Group To End Season

season for the community welfare department, Woman’s Department club, will be at 12:30 p. m. Wednesday in the club house. 4

Dr. Charles Myers, superintendent of the City hospital, and Miss Elizabeth Wivel, superintendent of nurses, have been asked to speak by Mrs. A. J. Hueber, ‘program chairman. . Mrs. C. A. McPheeters will present the musical program.

side at the business session. The City hospital. group, a unit of the social service and civic cooperative’ committees, will be hostess for the meeting. The group also has arranged sewing days at the homes of members. The next one will be tomorrow at the home of Mrs. John F. Engelke, 2818 N. Talbott st. { The blind guild of the depart-

eon next Monday: Mrs. John R.

Mrs. Roscoe ||

son Winders, membership chairman,|

Mrs. George W. Maxwell will pre- =

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