Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 April 1943 — Page 11
Miss Eloise Akin Becomes Bride Of Ensign Thomas F. Kibler Today
MISS ELOISE AKIN became the bride of Ensign ~ Thomas F. Kibler, U. 8. N. R., at 10 o'clock this morning -in- the St. Joan of Arc Catholic church. The Rev. Fr. Clement Bosler performed the ceremony and the Rev, Fr, James McBarron of Terre Haiite said the mass. :
‘The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. E. Park Akin. Ensign Kibler is the son otf Mrs, W. D. Kibler. Edward Krieger was the organist for the ceremony and Miss Kay Crosby sang.
The church was decorated with white baskets of calla lilies and
gladioli and palms. At the entrance to the sanctuary were windgw boxes of white flowers, lupines, roses, stocks and snapdragons with walling ivy.
Entering with her father, the bride wore a petal white satin gown styled with a fitted podice, romance neckline outlined with seed pearl embroidery and long sleeves tapering into points over the hands. Her full-gathered skirt extended into a train and her two- _ tiered fingertip veil fell from a coronet of. seed pearls. She carried a white prayer book covered with white orchids and stephanotis.
Stephanotis was caught in the bridal illusion which fell from the .
prayer book to the hem of the skirt.
Attendant Wears Blue
. HER ONLY ATTENDANT, Miss Mary Ann Kibler, sister of the toridegroom was in a daisy blue faille taffeta gown styled with a fitted basque, three-quarter length sleeves and a gathered bouffant skirt. Her cascade bouquet was of wine carnations, pansies, finch _ roses and wedgwood iris. She wore a matching tiara of flowers in "her hair. Ensign Kibler had his cousin, Leonard Beckers of Wayne, Pa., as best man. Harold Burkart and Sgt. John R. Carr Jr. were ushers. The bride’s mother wore a gray crepe suit with violet accessories . and an orchid corsage. With her navy blue dress and matching accessories the bridegroom’s mother also wore an orchid corsage. Following a reception at the Columbia club, the couple was to leave for a wedding trip, the bride traveling in a sky blue dressmaker suit with cocoa-brown hat and dark brown accessories. Her corsage was to be white orchids. They will be at home in Miami, Fla., at the end of May. Out-of-town guests coming for the ceremony were Mr. and Mrs. Max Waxman, Cincinnati; Lt. and Mrs. Thomas C. Hasbrook, Ensign and Mrs. John J. Gavin and Lt. and Mrs. James Crockett. Ensign Kibler is a graduate of the Wharton School of Finance ab the University of Pennsylvania.
Plan Miscellaneous Shower
A MISCELLANEOUS SHOWER honoring Miss Anne Marie Baltz will be given'tomorrow by Miss Barbara Cox at her home. Miss Baltz’s marriage to Thomas J. McDonough will be May 1 in the St Joan of Arc Catholic church. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Henry J. Baltz and Mr. McDonough is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles McDonough. : The guests at the shower will be Mesdames James R. Ross Jr., Michael Britton, Lawrence McClanahan and Ruth Miedema, Misses Mary Sweeney, Mary Lou Myers, Louise Crow, Dorothy Flanagan, Eleanor Clancy, Martha Patterson and Corene Cough. A kitchen shower was given recently for Miss Baltz by Mesdames Herbert Newcomb, Britton and McClanahan and Miss Virginia Ford
at Mrs. Newcomb’s house.
2 x = » Lt. and Mrs. George William Mohr have left for Hattiesburg, Miss., where Lt. Mohr is stationed at Camp Shelby. Mrs. Mohr before her marriage Dec. 26 was Miss Joan Eileen Goldsmith. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Elmer LeGrand Goldsmith, Lt. Mohr's parents are Mr. and Mrs. D. S. Mohr, Rokomo. » » 2 » ” 8 Poetry will be the subject of Mrs. George A. Kuhn's discussion
for the Fortnightly Literary club meeting at 2 p. m. tomorrow in the Propylacum. Her theme will be.“A Poem Should Not Mean,
- But Be.”
= = = x = = Mrs. Frank McHale is spending a week in New York, where she will visit with friends and attend several plays.
Phyllis Wilcox Is Bride Of Pfc. Gerald W. Wieland In Irvington Church Rite
Pfc. and Mrs. Gerald W. Wieland are on a wedding trip en route to Fayetteville, N. C., where they will be at home Saturday. Their wedding was at 3:30 o'clock yesterday afternoon in the Irvington Methodist
church, with the Rev. Clarence A. Shake officiating. Mrs. Wieland was. Miss Phyllis Harold E. Wilcox, 36 N. Webster ave.
Wilcox, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Pfc. Wieland is the son of Mr, and
By ROSELLEN CALLAHAN Times Special Writer NEW YORK, April 26.—Put on your prettiest frock and look as feminine as you know how, if you want to make a hit with a serv‘iceman. Boys home on furlough, or with only a few hours of liberty, want the girl they date decked out in a few frills and furbelows, says Eleanor Wilson, Girls’ Service organizations, a branch of the woman’s activities of the army and navy Y. M. C. A. Uniforms and slacks are all right for war work, the boys allow, but when it comes to taking a girl out dancing, they like her to look super. They see enough uniforms every day, anyhow. ” ” 2 AND SO THE G. S. O. girls of the U. S. O. in Hempstead, L. I., have put their slacks in mothballs for the duration and wear only their prettiest and most feminine New York creations to the Saturday night dances, old-fashioned box-lunch parties, bridge tourna-
Women Voters To Get Report On Delinquency
Juvenile delinquency as affected by the war will be a prinipal topic of discussion at the council meeting of the Indiana League of Women Voters in Gary May 11 and 12. - In a letter to local chairmen, Mrs. Fred Bates Johnson, state ‘chairman of the department of government and social welfare, explained: “While we may not have wounded, shell-shocked children to provide for in America, we do have other problems that war brings to children. Working parents who. cannot give their children proper care and working children with more money in their pockets are providing us with a serious problem in child delinquency.” Data which has been collected during the last two months on juvenile delinquency will be presented to local chairmen.
Mrs. Gerald H. Wieland, 6740 E. 13th
st. He is with the U. S. parachute troops. g The church was decorated with palms, ferns, branched candelabra and spring flowers. Given in mar-
Nuptials Read
4
Kennedy-Basso
riage by her father, the bride wore a white faille gown styled with long sleeves, a rounded neck-line and a yoke outlined with seed pearls. Her
full-length veil was attached to a jeweled tiara and she carried a white Bible and white orchid. Mrs. Robert E. Golden of Broad View, Ill, the matron of honor, was in a pink net gown accented with blue. The maid of honor, Miss . Betty Jean Shierling, Union City, " wore pink mousseline de soie, while the bridesmaids, Miss Harriet Burbank and Miss Nita Vawter, were in jonquil yellow and turquoise blue mousseline de soie. All the attendants carried colonial bouquets. Mr. Wieland was his son’s. best man and the ushers were Eugene E. Miller, DeKalb, Ill.; Jack Demlow and Donald Sharp. Pfc. Wieland is stationed at Ft. Bragg, Fayetteville. The bride trav-
eled in a brown dressmaker suit
with a ‘white orchid corsage. T :
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Miss Enes Basso became the bride of Richard Powell Kennedy in a ceremony at 2:30 o'clock yesterday afternoon-in the Grace Methodist church. The Rev. Wallace C. Calvert officiated. Mr. and Mrs. Victor Basso, 511 N. Chester ave, and Mr. and Mrs. D.
D. Kennedy,. 3818 Byram ave., are parents of the bride and bridegroom. The couple will be at-home after Saturday at 906 Middle dr. Woodruff Place, Apt. 3.
Birthday Party
The Marion county chapter of American War Mothers will have a birthday party tomorrow for mem-
Study Merit System Council delegates also will con’ sider proposed plans for. study of the operation . of ‘Indiana's’ merit system. The plans will be reported by Mrs. Frank Cox, state chairman of government sand its operation. ‘Mrs. John L. H. Fuller of Indignapolis will discuss reports received from local leagues on the progress of the anti-isolationism campaign in Indiana. Mrs. Fuller is state chairman of the league's foreign policy committee and a leader in the campaign against isolationism. An economic welfare report on inflation and manpower problems will be given by Mrs. Don Datisman of Gary. Mrs. Emmet White, president of the Gary leagu€; has charge of arrangements for the council meeting and will be assisted by mem- | bers of the nine leagues in and around Lake county.
bers whose birthdays occur in Janvary, through April. The party will be at 2 p. m. in the Food Craft shop. A musical program will be!
; presented by Mrs. M. D. Didvay.
go out and still be com-
ICE AND FUEL co.
| school 41 group, directed by Mrs
Chorus Group...
To Sing Friday |
The Federation of Mothers’
choruses of the Indianapolis public schools will have its final sectional | at 8 o’clock Friday night in schoel 44 2033 Sugar Grove ave. The program will include “The Lords’ Prayer” (Malotte) and “April” (Buchanan), by the chorus .of school 35. directed and accompanied | M i by Mrs, Martha Stephens; “In the Garden of Tomorrow” and “My Own America” (Wrubel), by the
Chester Spencer and accompanied by Mrs. Ralph Mason. The school 44 chorus will present “The Lord Is My Shepherd” (Koschat) and “April Showers” (Silvers) directed and. accompanied by Mrs. Charles: Swaim. Also on the ,pro-
gram will be a piano solo by Jean,
Work, pupil of school 44,and a tap dance by Robbie Robinson, a pupil of school 41. Mrs, Robert Harman
director of the -
Saturday night dance of the G.S.0. for the U. §. 0.: All fluffed up in their prettiest New York creations, the girls and their uniformed guests dance or listen to hot jive at the Hempstead, L. L, clubhouse.
‘ments and art classes’ they hold for thie servicemen. Looking pretty and feminine, however, is only part of the serve “ice program set up by the 82,000 G. 8. O.: girls; whose friendly clubs are to be found in every secticn of this country and as far "afield as Alaska, Puerto. Rico, Hawaii, .Jamaica- and Australia. Many members work a. full day in their “business bureau,” where the men come to haye them help straighten out ‘insurance policies or write business letters. Other girls run a “room registry,” which has saved many a serviceman’s wife, mother and sweetheart from trekking weary hours to find a room in towns where hotel accommodations are hard to find. ‘And those who are handy with needle will don their nimble thimbles whenever a man -needs to have new .chevrons or loose buttons sewed on his uniform. But, be it office work or strictly social, the girls make certain they look their prettiest, most feminine selves.
Clubs— Guest Day, Book
Six Groups Here
on Brazil.
will be reviewed by Mrs. B. H. Moore for the IRVINGTON TUESDAY club meeting tomorrow with Mrs. Frank S. Chiles, 5945 Kingsley dr.
Sorensen’s “A Little Lower Than the Angels” will be reviewed by Mrs. James PF. Price for the SOCIAL STUDY club meeting tomorrow with Mrs. J. N. Cross, 2039 Guilford. ave.
‘Mrs. Clifton Hirshman will give a book review for the guest day meeting of the LATE BOOK club tomoroe at the home of Mrs. William D. Vogel, 5903 Pleasant Run pkwy. Mrs. 0. B. Perinte will be the assist. ant hostess.
A review of “The. Charles” (Arthur. B. Tourtollet) will be given by Mrs. E. Robert Andry for the IRVINGTON CHAPTER, EPSILON SIGMA -OMICRON club; meeting tomorrow at the home of Mrs. W. H. Colsher,. 5316 Lowell ave. Devotions will be led by Mrs. T. F. Fieck.
Mig. S, D. Clark will discuss “Ring Lardner” for. the HOOSIER TOURIST club meeting tomorrow at the home of Mrs. H. 8. ‘Allen.’ Other talks will be given by Mrs. J. V. Faasen ‘on “Tulip Time in. Holland” and by Mrs. R. H. Peterson on “Michigan's Outdoor Playgroun The mothers’ meeting of the ALPHA BETA LATREIAN club will he held tomorrow at the home of Mrs. Fred T. Greene, 4517 Central ave. Her assistants will be Mesdames Blanton A. Coxen, Edwin J. ‘Kendall and Murray DeArmond.
The hostess for tomorrow's meeting of CHAPTER W, P. E. O. SISTERHOOD, will pe Mrs. Eugene C. Hall, 6375 Paik ave. Mrs. William Storen will be _in shares of the program.
CHAPTER V.P.E. 0. SISTER | HOOD, ‘will meet tomorrow with
Mrs. J. M. Smith, 53 N. Audubon
aire” wil brad. by Ms: Paul “Bowman, for the ST. CLAIR ' LITERARY club meeting tomorrow with Mrs. James E. Lyle, 936 Denny
st. The: “members will respond to : Mrs. | the. roll with current events. 2
A business meeting of the ALPHA
is -president of the federation’ and| .....
Miz. Fred Ping Is program chair. man.
Au iliary to Meet
To Feature Meetings of
Six clubs meeting tomorrow will hear -book reviews. have .a guest day, a mothers’ meeting and business meetings. The INTER ALIA club meeting tomorrow with Mrs. Douglas White, 5638 N. Delaware st. will hear Preston Schoyer’s book, “The. Foreigners,” reviewed by Mrs. George W. Mercier.
“We the People” (J. B. Priestly),
dent of ‘the alliance, will present
Sgt. Hugh White of Magnolia, Ark., learns first-hand from Ida Vollmer that G. S. O. girls not only dance, but also sew on loose buttons and insignia.
Reviews
Tomorrow
Others will
Mrs. Heury L. Simons will talk
French Alliance To Hear Talk By H. R. Hope
“Henry R. Hope, chairman of the fine arts department at Indiana university, will talk on “Four Masters of French Painting” at a meeting of the Alliance Francaise Friday at 8 p. m. in the Marott hotel. Medals of proficiency in French will be presented at the meeting to high school and college students. The winners this year are Miss Mildred Kapherr, Butler university; Miss Marguerite Erdman, DePauw university; Miss Catherine Heflin, Franklin college; Miss Anna’ Kurilovitch, Indiana university; Miss Frances. Bonnie McPherson, Purdue university; Robert Ormes, Wabash college; William H. Willcox, Technical high school.
. Other Winners
Also Miss Rita Lombardi, Washington high school; Miss Alice Greene, * Shortridge high school; | Miss Marilou Hyatt, Tudor Hall school; Wesley Hare, Park school; Robert Burns, Cathedral high school; Miss Nancy Habich, St. Agnes academy; Miss Ann Wagner, Ladywood sehool, and Miss Helen Heidenreich, Sacred Heart high school. Edward E. Petri, former .presi-
the medals in behalf of the club. They are a gift of Mr. Petri, who started the award program several years ago. Mme. Marie Henry,
| Band: Concert
|On Programs
And Luncheon
New Officers Chosen By Several Groups
New officers have been elected by several Parent-Teacher association groups. A band concert and a cov-ered-dish luncheon have been scheduled for next month. A community get-together will be held at 8 p. m. Wednesday by the, FLACKVILLE P.-T. A. at the school in honor of the retiring and new officers. The new officers are Mrs. Russell Timmons, president; Mrs. Florence Phillips, vice president; Mrs. Hazel Schnitzius, secretary, and Robert Fisher, treasurer. A covered dish luncheon will be held at the school at noon Thursday for the executive board and teachers.
New officers will be installed at a meeting of the CUMBERLAND association Tuesday, May 4, at 1 p. m. in the school building. They are Mrs, John O’Donaghue, president; Mrs. Hugh Gale, vice president; Mrs. Fred Clark, secretary, and Mrs. Otto Holzhausen, treasurer. The J program will be presented by the
school children. |
A band concert by the Wayne Township high school band will be the feature of the WAYNE TOWNSHIP high school association meeting May 18. The concert will be directed by Mrs. Omar Rybolt. A one-act playlet will be presented
Junder the leadership of Mrs. Elsie
Ball. Parents of children entering school next year and parents whose children are graduating may attend. A social hour will follow.
The study club of the BEN DAVIS grade school P.-T. A. will meet at 1 p. m. Wednesday, May 5, at the home of Mrs. Parker Dunn, 1848 S. High School rd. The new officers recently elected by the association are Mrs, Parker Dunn, president; Mrs. Frank Harper, vice president; Mrs. Sara Bade, secretary, assisted by Mrs. Everett Mullinix, and Mrs. Veldon Montgomery, treasurer. The delegates to the state convention will be Mesdames Vincent Bisesi, A. M. Seeley, Arthur Southard and Frank Harper.
Mrs. William Wise, president of the GARDEN CITY P.-T. A, has announced her committee chairmen for the year. They are Mrs. Edward Vanover, budget and finance; Mrs. Oren Parrott, program; Mrs. George Bauder, membership; Mrs. Raymond Wright, publicity; Mrs. Lester Boughton, hospitality; Mrs. Hugh Weaver, social, and Mrs. E. L. Warriner, study club. Others are Mrs. Lester Terrell, publications; Mrs. Richard Bymaster, Indiana Parent Teacher; Mrs. George Karl, National Parent Teacher; Mrs. Glen Burkhardt, summer round-up; Mrs. Herschel Owens, sunshine; Mrs, J. W. MeArthur, war activity; Mrs. Dale Diefenderfer, historian, and Mrs. Clarence Connor, parliamentarian.
Jewelry Trick
| ents. and Teachers, will speak
“Mrs. William Kletzer, president of the National Congress of Par-
Wednesday morning at the 32d annual convention of the Indiana Congress of Parents and Teachers. Convention sessions will open tomorrow in the Claypool hotel.
Value of Home Will Feature Club Exhibits
Are Married
Ceremony Is Read at Joan of Arc Church
The Rev. Fr. Edwin Sahr. officiat-
ed this morning at the wedding of
Miss ‘Margaret Catherine Swindler to Cpl. James E. Kahler, Lowry field, Denver, Colo. The ceremony was in St. Joan of Arc Catholic chur¢ch at 9 o'clock. Parents of the couple are Mr. and Mrs. Frank J. Swindler, 4401 Central ave, and Mr, and Mrs. Albert H. Kahler, 5421 Washington blvd. Bridal airs were played by Edward Krieger, organist, and Miss Kay Crosby sang “Ave Maria,” “Mother Dearest” and “Panis Angelicus.” Given in marriage by her father, the bride wore a powder blue bolero suit, tobacco brown accessories and a flowered hat. She carried a prayer book to which was attached a white orchid. Breakfast Follows
Miss Jeane Rutherford Kahler, the bridegroom’s sister, was the bride’s only attendant. She wore
Recognizing the home as the,
‘greatest institution on earth for] building character, good citizenship and a true democracy, * Governor | 'Schricker has proclaimed this week “Better Homes Week.” Demonstrations, displays and exhibits on conservation and safety in the home will be held during the week by clubs, schools, business and educational agencies. Continuing through Saturday, the Marion county observance is a pdrt of the “National® Better Homes Week.” Public attention will be focused on the national organization of Better Homes in America, the
purpose of which is to help people.
help themselves in homemaking, housing, family and community life. Headquarters for the national campaign are at Purdue university. Agnes Watson Wells is state chairman, The Marion county committee is headed by Miss Louise Braxton, city supervisor of home economics education, and Mrs. Vivienne F. Carter, vocational and 4-H supervisor at Warren Central high school. Other committee members and their organizations are Miss Marjorie Wood, business office of the public library; Mrs, Walter Shearer, farm bureau; Mrs. Robert Hamilton, civilian defense; Murray Morris, merchants’ association; Mrs. Clarence Peters, P -T. A., and Mrs. Clarence Hughel, Garden Club of Indiana.’
W. D.C. Units Will Close Club Season
The American home department of the Woman's . Department club will: have its last meeting of the year Wednesday. The applied education section of
If you have the misfortune—and most every woman has—to lose one of your earrings every now and then, have the several odd pieces made into charms for a bracelet.
Sororities—
Social and Travel Talk
Programs Set
ss Three sororities will have meetings this week: Gamma chapter, EPSILON SIGMA ALPHA, will have an educational and social program at 8 o'clock tonight in the club rooms of the Rauh building. Miss Doris Allen will discuss travel. Miss Helen Winebrenner wil be in charge of the social program and Miss Mary Howard will preside.
A business meeting will be held by Beta chapter, BETA CHI THETA, at 8 p. m. Wednesday at the home of Mrs. George Kidwell, 1629 Prospect st.
Mrs. Bertha M. Staub will entertain Kappa Xi chapter, PI OMICRON national sorority, at 8 p. m. tomorrow at her home, 1248 Leonard st. Assisting her will be Mrs. Fred Ellison, Miss Dorothy Eller and Miss Maida Johnson. Mrs. Bjorn Winger and Miss Flora Drake
president, will preside.
=
* Downstairs
L. S. AYRES & CO. will be OPEN
85 p.m.
TONIGHT
Open Monday, 11:30 A. M. Until 7.00 P. M.
will be guests.
Lunchroom
#
the department will meet at 1:15 p. m. to hear Fred Murphy, supervisor of personnel and guidance at Technical high school, talk on “A Model Plan for Guidance Work Among High School Students.” Miss Elizabeth Hall, chairman of the section, will present the speaker. The entire department will meet at 2:15 p. m, for a business session including final reports. Following, Mrs. William C. Bartholomew will introduce Dr. Harry Mock, of Butler university, who will speak on “Woman’s Place in the Hoosier Home.” Mrs. Lane Robertson will present a group of songs and will
pecan brown suit with brown acces= sories and a corsage of violets and
| strength of the nation and the gardenias.
The bridegroom’s attendants were Noel Epperson as best man and { Robert Mannix, the bride's cousin and William Pratt, ushers. The bride's mother wore a blue gown with a violet hat and black accessories, while Mrs. Kahler chose a gray costume with which she wore navy accessories. Both had gare. denia corsages. A breakfast for the families and friends was served at the Columbia club. The couple was to leave for Colorado Springs, Colo., and will be at home after May 29 in Denver, Cpl. Kahler is a graduate of St. John's Military academy and attended Butler university.
I. T.-S. C. Chapter to Meet Wednesday
Mrs. David H, White will be host= ess Wednesday for members of the
tional Travel-Stydy club, at her home, 621 E. 59th st. Following a lecture on “The Hawaiian Islands” by Mrs. C. J. Ancker, Mrs. White, who is club president, and the other officers will serve luricheon, There will be a short business meeting in the afternoon, followed by bridge. The assistant hostesses will be Mesdames Charles G. Sands ers, E. G. Bumgardner, Ruth Glover, 0. P. Wulfekammer, Charles L. Bogart and Rose Marie Cruzan.
Mrs. Velesscu Hostess
The Mount Vernon chapter, In ternational Travel-Study club, will meet at 11:30 a. m. Wednesday in the Y. W. C. A. The hostess will be Mrs. Petrache Velesspu. Mrs, Claude Daugherty will speak.
Colonial Boston chapter, Interna= |
be accompanied by Mrs. Susan’ Sheed Hemingway. : After the program, tea will be’ served with Mrs. C. L. Hartmann and Mrs. Paul T. Hurt as chairmen,’ assisted by Mesdames Charles S.' Crawford, Clinton M. Hanger, S. J. Hensley, Phillip A, Keller, George O. Rafert and V. H. Rothley.
Alex Tuschinsky of the Hillsdale nurseries will discuss “Your Rose, Garden” at the last meeting of the, garden department of the W. D. C.' Friday. The business session will open at 1:30 p. m. with Mrs. Norman F, Phelps presiding. The annual committee reports will be given. A social hour will follow the program with Mrs. Henry L. Patrick and Mrs. Jerome Trunkey in charge, assisted by the Mesdames Ray B. Dorward, Roy R. Hodson, Forest B.! Kellog, Edgar V, Toms, J. B. Vandaworker and Martin Henry Wallick.
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