Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 July 1944 — Page 5

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| Society—

Yacation Trips Claim the Limelight

In the Mids

ummer Social Scene

COMINGS AND GOINGS: Mr. and Mrs, Clarence N. Warren left today for Point Mackinac Straits, Mich., for

a visit of several weeks with

law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Robert W. Sinclair. . . . Mrs. John Roberts is the guest of Mrs. Frank Binford at Burt Lake, Mich, . . . Mrs. Lowell S. Fisher and her daughter, Harriet Margaret, are spending two weeks at the Maxinkuckee inn, Lake Maxinkuckee. Miss Betty Brazil will return tomorrow from New York after

several days there. . . . Mrs, Wilma Casey and Miss Jacqueof Anderson, are visiting in New York. , . . Miss Betty

Phi Mu Alumnae to Entertain

. A BREAKFAST GIVEN BY THE Indianapolis Phi Mu alumnae chapter at 9:30 a. m. tomorrow will honor young women who plan to enter Indiana university this fall. Miss Mona Jane Wilson is in charge of the event which will be held in the home of Mrs. Glenn

Conway.

Members of the Delta Alpha active chapter at I. U. who will attend are Misses Jean Shellburne, Rosemary Keil, Jody McGee, Adrienne Robinson, Mary Louise Woessner, Marilyn Morgan, Phyllis Hoover, Florence Money and Josie Mayfield.

Alumnae chapter members who

dames William B. Wilcox, C. E. Carbon, Stanley Hayes and Maldo

Farrington and Miss Elsie Shelley.

Barbara Renick Will Be Hostess

MISS BARBARA RENICK WILL ENTERTAIN with * the-clock” shower next Saturday for Miss Mary Ann Wells, honor guest and Herbert Mitchell French will be married at 4 p. m. Aug. 9, in the home of her parents, Col, and Mrs. Charles Mason Wells. Miss Renick will be one of the Bridesto-bes auendasts, Mr.

A Se

The s

mother of .the bride-to-be; Mrs. Lucien Dunbar, the prospective ..

bridegroom's sister; Mesdames Wells, French, Kenneth Helpon,

A. R. Williams and Robert G. Renick, Misses Eleanor Williams, Hilda Sedlak, Jacqueline Kapherr, Mary Walker, Leslie Canning and

Martha Frances Dunn.

Athenaeum Dinner Parties Planned

SEVERAL RESERVATIONS HAVE BEEN MADE for the weekly dinner tonight at the Athenaeum. They include those of Messrs. and Mesdames Walter Hess, Oral Bridgford, Clyde Raub, C. N. Reifsteck, L. L, Harshbarger, Ernest Niebrand, R. C. Burnett, Anton Scherrer

and Robert L. Mason. Other parties ‘will be those of Burpee, Mrs. Walter

Hortense Vogel, E. T. French and J. W, Berry.

. ” ” Chairmen for the dinner dance

Highland Golf and Country club will Krafft. Assisting them will be Mr. Dr. and Mrs. W. A. Kemper. Ted Campbell's orchestra will play.

fi

Mrs. Warren's brother-in-

will assist Miss Wilson are Mes-

v “roundThe

pi SE SER

to be be and

given next and Mrs. William R.

Mr, Mrs. Louis E. Randle

Broadway Methodist Church Will Be the Scene Tomorrow Of Hankins-Sturm Wedding

Miss Marian Sturm and Rodney Ballard Hankins will be married in a ceremony at 4:30 o'clock tomorrow afterncon. in the Broadwey

Methodist church.

The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert H. Sturm, 5750 Washington bivd, and Mr. Hankins’ mother fs Mrs. R. C. Hankins,

628 E. 46th st. Dr, John F. Edwards will read the vows before an altar flanked by two vases of white gladioli against a background of palms, smilax and candelabra. A program of bridal airs will be played by Miss Mary Catherine Stair, hérpist, and Mrs. Russell Sanders, organist, Miss Sturm has chosen a gown of ivory duchess satin with a romance neckline outlined with a satin frill, a fitted basque, long sleeves tapering into points over the hands, and a full skirt extending into a train. She will wear a single strand of pearls. Her tiered veil of illusion will cascade from a coronet of rose point lace. She will carry a white Bible to which will be attached a white orchid swrounded by stephanotis and a shower of white ribbon knotted with stephanotis,

Attendants Wear Pink

Mrs. William T. Walker, Anderson, and Mrs. David O. Craycraft, Noblesville, will be matrons of honor, They will wear petal pink frocks made with fitted Chantilly lace basques, romance necklines, ‘short puffed sleeves, flared peplum and bouffant net skirts. They will carry fanshaped bouquets of white gladioli florets, white roses and matching satin bows. The bridesmaids will be Miss Susanne Masters, Miss Jeanette Lichtenauer and Mrs. Robert C. Burkholder, Their dresses will be of petal pink frosted organza fashioned with fitted basques, short puffed sleeves and colonial skirts, Their fan-shabed bouquets will be of pink gladioli florets, rubrum lilies, Briarcliff and roses and pink satin bows,

Mothers’ Costumes

Robert B. McConnell, specialist 1-c, U. 8. N. R.,, will serve as best man and the ushers will be Dr. Robert F. Harris, Thomas Hall Jenkins, Carl D. Riggs and George Craycraft, Noblesville. Mrs. Sturm has chosen a twopiece parma violet crepe dress, ice pink gloves and a matching feathered hat. She will weave an orchid attached

cake, canddlabra and garlands of

sweetheart | o4

Club to Install New Officers

Officers of the Navy Mother's club 578 will be installed at a 7:30 p. m. meeting Wednesday in the Cropsey. auditorium of the central library. The new officers are Mrs. Lucille Plerce, commander; Mrs. Elma Huberti and Mrs. Esther VonWiller, first and second vice commanders; Mrs. Ruth Rusie, adjutant; Mrs. Bessie Thornburg, finance officer; Mrs, Dorothy Lewis, chaplain, and Mrs. Blanche Hubbard, judge advocate. Matrons of arms are Mrs. Louise Whitson and Mrs. Conza Williams, while Mrs. Ruby: Lipscombe and Mrs. Mary Harwell will be color bearers, Mrs. Ethel Kantz, Lafayette, state organizer, will be the speaker

and will present the club {ts charter.

Needlework Roundup To Be Oct. 31-Nov. 2

The annual garment roundup of the Indianapolis branch, Needlework Guild of America, will be held Oct. 31 through Nov. 2, the branch has announced. The date was chosen recently at an informal tea and business meeting held In the home of Mrs. R. Hartley Sherwood, 2847 N. Meridian

The week of Oct. 8 through 14

was chosen for the organization's membership drive.

Bride-to-Be

Carol Geisler, Dr. Vanatta To Be Wed

ert

First United Lutheran church will unite Miss Carol Lee Geisler and’

Dr. John C. Vanatta III, Eloise, Mich. The Rev. Olen Peters will read the vows, Miss Geisler is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs, E. P. Geisler, 520 N. Colorado ave, and Dr. Vanatta's father is John C. Vanatta II, Brookston.

Mrs. Lillie King Shaw will sing and Miss Pauline Roes, organist, will accompany her. Entering on the arm of her father, the bride will wear a white

the wrists and a full skirt that falls into a train.

Bride’s Attendants

soms and she will carry a nosegay of white roses with a shower of white ribbon. Miss Fannie May Geisler will be maid of honor and an-

Civic Theater Group to Meet

home of LeRoy Gordner.

ter, and Jack Hatfield, director. Mrs, Ronald Skyrme,

Lauter, Norman Gordner.

Smith Student Wins Vogue Contest

Times Special

annual prix de Paris contest.

second prize, ‘the magazine. In addition 10 merit awards were

‘chief of the fashion magazine. job on the editorial staff.

made.

| By War Mothers The weekly buffet supper served | {by the U, 8. A. chapter, American 3 {War Mothers, will be given tomor- | |

Her two-tiered fingertip veil will! § {be held by a tiara of orange blos-

:) 3 Garden Clubs

(will be A, A. Irwin of the Marion

will be ushers. Following "a reception at the church, the couple will leave for a|

Medicine. rom the LU. Schaal of Tau Delta and Phi, Beta Pi fraternities.

Plays which will be presented at the Civic theater during the coming season will be considered at a meeting of the theater's play-reading committee Monday night in the

The committee, headed by Harry V. Wade, includes Mrs. Kurt F. Pantzer, vice president of the thea-

Others are Mrs. John D. Welch, Miss Sara Green and Mr.

NEW YORK, July 29.—Miss Jane Hutchinson of New York, a senior at Smith college, has won first prize in’ Vogue magazine's ninth

Announcement of the winner in the nation-wide career contest for college seniors came today from § Edna Woolman Chase, - editor-in-

Miss Hutchinson won a ye Miss | Louise Stickney, also of New York, a Vassar college senior, received § a six-month job on §

Clubs—

Set Meetings In August

A flower show is a highlight of garden club activities scheduled for the coming month. The Forest Hills Garden club will hold a flower show Wednesday at the home of Mrs. Carl Gakstetler, 6208 N. Delaware st.

The speaker for the day's program

county agricultural agent's office. His topic will be “Fall and Winter| Activities in the Garden.” Members of the flower show com- | mittee are Mesdames A. D. Green, Joseph G. McFarland and F. A Ohleyer, Mesdames R. R. Scott, G. E. Schloot and’ R. G. Favre form the club's program committee. Mrs. G. E. Bomberger is the president,

A guest tea is being planned as the feature of the Golden Glow Garden club's August meeting. The tea will be held on Friday, 11th, at the home of Mrs. W. W. Drayer, 40 E. 56th st. A talk on “Bulbs for Fall Planting” will be made by a guest speaker. Mrs. Burke Nicholas, president of the Garden Club of Indiana, will’ be the speaker at the Sept. 8 meeting in the home of Mrs. Virgil KatterJohn, 1101 W. 35th st. The program theme for the meeting will be “Flower Arrangements.” The Sunshine Garden club will meet at 1:30 p. m. Wednesday in the home of Miss Otho Lacey, Beech Grove. Mrs. Fred Bishoff will give a talk, “The Bird Sanctuary,” and Mrs. W. E. Mason will speak on “Iris, Day Lilies and Their Friends.” Mrs. Charles Adams is in charge of the program and Mrs. Ralph Wikoff will preside.

Mrs. Kelly Hostess

A luncheon and project lesson will be held by the Northeastern

2. A bridge game

4. In water ballet formation

Margolis and Beverly Selig.

1. Sizzling. summer days make the pool at the Hillcrest-Country club a mecca for the fwo girls pictured here, Miss Grace Snyder (left) and Miss Audrey Hughes. provides relaxation for women members of Meridian Hills Country club following a morning round of golf. At the table (left to right) ar ¢ Mesdames Horace E. Storer, Roscoe Sincler and Scot B. Clifford and Mrs. Charles E. Harrison, chairman of women’s golf activities at the club. 3. Mrs. Nicholas Hatfield follows through on a drive at the Hillcrest course.

at the Broadmoor Country club

Misses Miriam Miller, Jacqueline Cohen, Joan Aronson, Ann Kahn, Frances Lurvey, Betty Jo Lutz, Carole

(clockwise from left foreground)

Nethercot-Scifres

Dr. Carpenter to

Arthur Hobart Nethercot Jr. The ceremony will be read at bride's father, Ben M. Scifres,

New Style Set In Pin-Up Girls

Times Special WASHINGTON, July 29.—Girls who've been worried by the hold glamour queens have taken on the men in uniform can cheer up, Six sergeants of a bomber. crew in Italy have revolted against the traditional pin-ups and have adorned their tent with the pic-. ture of a girl who works to help them fight, one who, in their own words, is “a clean-cut American girl, helping the war effort.” She is Marjorie Carling, a signalgraph tester on bank and climb gyro-pilots for bombers, manufactured - at the Electric Auto-Lite Co. in Toledo. Her selection by the six airmen dates from the day when, lying in the muck at the front, they saw her photograph in a Toledo newspaper.

Club Ends Season

The final meeting of the season for the Marzette 4-H club was held recently in the Mars Hill school.

Homemakers club Wednesday in the home of Mrs, William C. Kelly, E.| 38th st.

| The girls completed garments for an exhibit to be held Thursday in |the Ben Davis high school.

Pi Phi Group to Have Rush Tea

Will Be Read in Lebanon;

Times Special LEBANON, July 29.—Dr. Guy O. Carpenter, Indianapolis, will officiate tomorrow at the wedding of Miss Phyllis Hull Scifres to

Mr. Mrs, Arthur Hobart Nethercot, Evanston, Ill.

Ceremony

Officiate

12:30 p. m. in the home of the Nethercot is the son of Prof. and Mrs. Robert 8. John, Waukegan, Ill, aunt of the bridegroom, will play the bridal music. Miss Scifres will wear a gown of white bridal satin with a fitted basque, long sleeves extending into points over the hands, and a low scalloped shoulder yoke of Nottingham net. Her full skirt will extend into a train and she will carry a bouquet of gladioli with a white orchid center. Sister Is Bridesmaid

The bride's sister, Miss Mary Louise Scifres, her only attendant, will wear a blue gown and her flowers will be cream roses. William Bradford Nethercot, brother of the bridegroom, will serve as

best man. Mrs. Nethercot has chosen a black and white silk dress and will wear a corsage of roses. The coupie will leave for a short wedding trip to Wisconsin, after which they will be at home in Chicago.

Indianapolis Guests

The bride will be a senior this fall at Northwestern university and is a member of Alpha Omicron Pi sorority. Mr. Nethercot was graduated from Northwestern and is affiliated with Theta Xi and Phi Beta Kappa fraternities. Among the out-of-town guests will be Mr. and Mrs. James Mayfield, Mr, and Mrs. Clifford Clever, Mrs. Mary Kindig, grandmother of the bride, Miss Geraldine Kindig and Miss. Florence Guild, all of Indianapolis. Others will be Mr. and Mrs. Len Hawkins, Fowler; Mr. and Mrs. J.

Daumier Show Is Booked at Art Museum

AN EXHIBIT of 16 lithographs by Honore Victorin Daumier is scheduled for next month at the John Herron Art museum. Some of the works by the French master are in color. Included in the show will be a series of cartoons called “Professeurs et Moutards,” or “Teachers and Brats.” Examples from Daumier’s “Actualities” and “Lawyers” series also will be shown. Daumier, considered one of the few great lithographers, was born in 1808 in Marseilles and became, during the regime of Louis Philippe, a caricaturist of politics. f J 2 ” . LATER HIS STUDIES of misfortune, vice and the street life of Paris made his work a comprehensive record of his time. Valuable both as historical data and art, his lithographs are noted for their simplicity of line and avoidance of triviality. Daumier became blind in 1877 “and died two years later in a house given him by his friend and admirer, Corot. Max Liebermann, the German impressionist painter, once wrote to a friend, “Do not laugh if I say that Daumier can be compared only to Rembrandt.” Also like Rembrandt, he died poor in all but friendship and achievement,

Anniversary Noted

Mr. and Mrs. Raleigh McCoun, 3864 Winthrop ave. formerly of

Danville, will celebrate their golden wedding anniversary tonight at an informal reception in the Twentieth Danville

century room of the

Red Cross Unit Reports Work For Hospitals

Approximately 24400 surgical dressings have been made during the past two months by members of the Red Cross auxiliary at Ft. Hare rison for use in the station and Billings General hospitals. The group also has made 250 slings and surgical masks and 350 garments. Mrs. Rufus Holt is chairman of the auxiliary; Mrs. J. M. Churchill, chairman of volunteer services, and Mrs. Charles Huff, liaison officer between the auxiliary and the Ine ° dianapolis chapter. . # ” ” The start of the European invae sion touched off a rush to Red Cross blood donor centers throughout the U. S., the. local chapter reported.

{During the first seven days a total

of 123284 pints was donated in comparison to 95,875 the week pree ceding the invasion. - » »

The Soviet government has eXe pressed its willingness to co-operate in the distribution of relief supplies to American and allied prisoners in the Far East, according to the latest prisoners of war bulletin received here by the Red Cross. Russia has named a port adjacen$ to Vladivostok where relief supe plies “already in Russia may be picked up by a Japanese ship. A port also has been named where mail and supplies may be shipped in the future for Japanese ships to pick up. ” ” s The Red Cross nutrition departe ment's mobile unit which provides canning information to the publie will be located at Sears Roebuck & Co., Aug. 24 and 25, and the follow= ing week at the Vonnegut Hardware : Co. ® » ” Volunteers for work in the blood donor center are still being solicited by the Red Cross. Typists and pers sons to do filing are wanted. Miss ‘Helen Hanafee, at the Red Cross

Christian church,

headquarters, Is in charge.

C. Griffiths and Mrs. Richard Cross, Oxford; Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Lester | and Miss Mae Irene Lester, Salem; | Mrs. Robert Blake and Miss Margaret Scifres, Chicago, and Mr. and Mrs, Walter Nethercot, the brideiy grandparents, Waukegan,

Club Books Dances

Two weekly dances are being, sponsored by the O-Del club at its’ new location, 24% S. Illinois st.’ Gilly Banta’s orchestra plays for those at 8:30 p. m. on Tuesdays and Charles Diven's orchestra for | the Sunday evening dances beginning at the same hour.

Meeting Tuesday

Mrs. William Houchins will be hostess for a meeting of Phi Delta’ vo

|

Over and over again, those whom we have served express surprise that a

service so complete |

ments can be fitted

a service beautiful in memory.

|

could be so inexpensive. We always follow a family’s wishes and the require-

HISEY & TITUS CNlostualtey

951 NORTH DELAWARE

and perfect as ours

in perfectly to make =