Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 August 1944 — Page 12

Charlotte Frazier Will Be Honor Guest At Pre-Nuptial Party Next Wednesday

MRS. ARTHUR RAFFENSPERGER and Miss Margaret Frazier will’ entertain next Wednesday in the former's home with a miscellaneous shower for, Miss Char-

lotte ¥razier.. : we 0 The honor guest and Pfc. Lewis H. Walker will be married in a ceremony at 8:30 p. m., Aug. 13, In the Meridian Heights Presbyterian church. The shower guests will include Mrs. F. C. Frazier, the bride-to-be's mother; Mesdames I J. Frazier, Fred Burckes, Edith Borders, J. L. Borders, William Bartholomew, Robert Lewis, Curtis Wise, G. ¥. Kehn and H. W. Davis, Misses Joan and Jean DeWitt, Patty Watts and Barbara Borders, ‘ - » = » 8 Mrs. Irene D. Sage announces the engagement and approaching marriage of her ‘daughter, Virginia, and Richard E. Danielson, T. Sth Gr. U. 8. A. The wedding will be Sept. 7 in the post chapel at Camp Kohler, Cal. Mr. Danielson is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Richard C. Danielson.

Jane Ann Young to Leave for Texas MISS JANE ANN YOUNG will leave next Wednesday for Abilene, Tex. where she will become the bride of Lt. Robert J, Lynam. The

wedding will be Aug. 13. . Miss Young is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Young and

the prospective bridegroom’s parents are Mr. and Mrs. Garland B.

Lynam. Mrs. Millard V. Warner will be her sister's only attendant and Lt. W. J. Yetter will serve as best man, o = » = ” 2 A dinner Friday evening at Quaint inn will be given by Mr. and Mrs. Allen S.-Mangold in honor of Miss Mary Ann Wells and Herbert Mitchell French. The couple will be married next Wednesday in the homie of the bride-to-be's parents, Col. and Mrs. Charles Mason Wella, . The dinner guests will include Mr. and Mrs. Lucien Dunbar, Mr. . French is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Herbert L. French. +f x = = 8 a = - Cadet Robert M. Hall wiil.arrive Friday from the U. 8. Military : academy, West Paint, N. Y.. ta sgend ‘a six-day furlough -with his parents, Mr, and Mrs. James F. Hall. He will be graduated from the academy in June, ‘ oo

Fox-Osborne Ceremony Read in the East

THE WEDDING CEREMONY for Miss Frances Priscilla Osborne and Robert James Fox II of Indianapolis was read at noon today in the Church of St. Andrews-by-the-Sea in Edgartown. Mass, with the Rev. Carlton Jones officiating. The bride is the daughter “of Mr. and Mrs. Abeel D. Osborne of West Orange, N. J, and Edgartown, and Mr. Fox is the son of Capt. William V. Fox, U.S. N, and Mrs. Alice A. Fox, Cambridge, Mass. Given in marriage by her uncle, Ralph D. Osborne of West Orange, the bride wore a hoop-skirted white net frock with a long veil held by a coronet of flowers. Miss Marjory Perry, Dover, Mass., her only attendant, wore lavender net and carried yellow roses. H. Thomas Osborne, the bride's brother, was best man and the ushers were the bride's cousin, Ralph D. Osborne Jr, West Orange; ¥. Barton Chapin, Andover, Mass, and Otto Van Koppenhagen, Scarsdale, N. Y. A wedding breakfast in the home of Mrs. Arthur M. Anderson followed the ceremony. The bride, who made her debut in 1841 at a dinner dance in the Hotel St. Regis, New York, is a graduate of the Oldfield school, Glencoe, Md., and Wheelock college, Boston. Mr. Fox attended Williston academy; Easthampton, Mass, and Augusta Military academy, Ft. Deflance, Va, After a wedding trip the couple will be at home in Indianapolis.

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Convention Chairmen Are Named By American Legion Auxiliary; Sessions to Be Held Aug. 12-14

Committees for the American Legion auxiliary’s state convention, to be held in the Legion headquarters here Aug. 12 through 14, are announced by Mrs. Ralph Klare, convention chairman. Mrs. Kurt W. Schmidt, chairman of the past presidents’ parley dinner, will be assisted by Mrs. Henning Johnson, co-chairman and decorations chairman; Mrs. Elmer Krueger, program; Mrs. Samuel

Bennett, sic rs. Ruth os og hostess, an esdames . Van Photo Exhibit To Be Held at

Winkle, Dale White, Marion Wilson, Art Museum

Georgia Light and Carl Boeldt. Mrs. Fred Hasselbring and Miss Lois Beauchamp are co-chairmen of the juniors, assisted by the junior auxiliary members. Mrs. Martin Collins and Mrs. The first International Salon of Photography to be held in Indianapolis will be Aug. 27 to Sept. 24 in the John Herron Art museum. More than 150 prints have bagn submitted from foreign countries, including England, Scotland, Aus-

registration. On their committee are Mesdames Clair Brengle, Everett Baum, Ray Pitcher, Paul Middleton, Earl Finley, Mayme Moorman, Harry Mearling, Connie Taylor, Louise Gordon, Fred Riffey,

Christ Church

fread the vows tonight uniting Miss

{ candelabra will form the setting for

Agatha Ward are co-chairmen of

tralia, Peru and South Africa, and approximately 1800 are expected * from the United States. The salon will be sponsored by the Indianapolis Camera club and the museum.

Judges will include Rowena Fruth,

A. P. S. A, Connersville; Robert A. Barrows, Philadelphia, former president of the Photographic Society of Philadelphia, and C. B. Phelps

Jr., Grosse Pointe, Mich, F. P. 8S. A. |

and A. R. P. 8.

W. O. Harper and Russell Furr, Misses Helen Bolen, Mary McCarthy and Flora Douglass. Co-chairmen of information are Mrs. Donald: H. Smith and Mrs. Willard Thomas, with Mrs. H. Ellis McCammon and Mrs. C. J. Ancker as assistants. The incoming, outgoing and past

Will Be Scene Of Ceremony

The Rev. E. Ainger Powell, rector of Christ, Episcopal church, will

Virginia® M. Peterson ana Lr. £dward C. Gibson, army air forces, The ceremony will be at 7:30 o'clock in the church. An altar banking of palms, greenery and

the rite. Frederick Weber, organist, will play the wedding music. The bride's parents are Mr, and Mrs. Floyd Warmoth, 1334 N. Oakland ave, Lt. Gibson, who recently returned from service overseas, is the son of George A. Gibson, 1521 N. Wallace st.

Bride's Gown

Entering with her father, the bride will be gowned in a white iace and net dress. The lace bodice is made with a sweetheart neckline and long sleeves, while the full net skirt forms a train. A Juliet cap accented with valley lilies will hold her fingertip illusion veil and she will carry a shower bouquet of white roses. Mrs. Melvin A. Ritter, her matron of honor, will wear a blue dress with a satin basque, three-quarter length sleeves, a sweetheart neckline and a bouffant chiffon skirt. A pink Juliet cap will match her bouquet of pink roses. Reception Follows The bridesmaids, Miss Betty Jane Irwin and Miss Marjorie Patrick, will wear pink and yellow frocks {made with taffeta bodices and net skirts. Juliet caps matching their frocks and bouquets of yellow flowers will complete their costumes. Dr. Ritter will serve as best man and the ushers will be Andrew Morgan and Ray Hendricks. A reception in the home of the bride's parents will precede ° the couple's departure for a wedding trip. As her going-away costume, the bride will wear a white gabardine suit, white accessories and an orchid corsage.

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Heat Discolors “ White Hair “WHAT CAN YOU do for gray hair,” asks a reader, “that emerges from a permanent a sickly yellow?” :

That discoloration - caused by heat, to which some snowy crests

presidents of the 11th district and its units have been invited to serve i as hostesses at the past presidents’

Approximately one-fourth of the Parley dinner.

prints submitted will be selected for | } ” exhibition. |Sugar-Saving Dessert The Camera club will give a din-| Chocolate wafer pie crust filled ner Aug. 19 in the Travertine room |with fresh peaches and topped with of the Hotel Lincoln in honor of the ice cream is 8 sugar-saving, time=judges, [saving dessert for special occasions.

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At Ayres’ college depot, (left to right, front row) Miss Jody Mick,

Group to Visit Beth-El Temple

A visit to the Beth-El Zedeck temple will be made next Wednesday by a group of young employed women who are participating in the “summer club house” program of the Central Y. W. C. A, Meeting at the temple, 3307 Ruckle st. at 7:30 p. m,, the group will hear a talk by Rabbi Israel Chodos on Jewish customs and culture, : Plans for the event have been arranged by Miss June Phillips and registrations are being accepted at

adway W. To Meet Tomorr: A business meeting will be held at 10:30 a. m. tomorrow by the Broadway Methodist church Woman's Society of Christian Service. Mrs. A. R. Willams will be in charge of the session to be in the church. ‘The Rev. and Mrs. Orville L. Davis, recently returned from missionary service in India, will speak following a luncheon at 12:30 p. m. Mrs. G. B. Gannon will be in charge.

Veal Complements

Complement veal with sausage, celery, hpiced fruits, dill pickle, cheese and delicate vegetables such as peas, asparagus,

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the store's representative on its college board, and the 12 undergraduates who “give” with the lowdown on what the well-dressed campus * belle will wear—Misses Sue Winkler, Joan Mawson, Jean Moore, Patia Maxwell, Patty Heustis, Margaret Sellmer, Ann Winger, Joan Bartley,

Thoms and Patty Peterson. 8 8 = ’

/

ONCE UPON A TIM, the story ing freshman who made her first a

thought up the idea of a panel of

Sororities— Founders’ Day To Be Noted By Sorority

A founders’ day party and picnics claim attention in sorority news, Guests at a founders’ day party given tonight by the Alpha chapter of Beta Chi Theta will be members of the Beta chapter. The party, at 8 o'clock, will be in the home of Mrs. Orville” B. Hancock, 701 West dr., Woodruff Place. Assisting the hostess will be Mrs. W. C. Andrews and Mrs. Leon White.

The annual picnic of the Verae Sorores chapter, Verus Cordis, will be at 6 p. m. today in Broad Ripple park.

Plans for a picnic will be discussed at a meeting of Rho chapter, Sigma Beta, at 8 p. m. today in the home of Mrs. Hal Schultz, 5947 Birchwood ave. Mrs. Harry Karcher and Mrs. Leland Patton. are co-chairmen of the picnic which will be held Sunday in Riverside park.

Miss Leora Duvall, 1919 Albany st.,, will be the hostess at 8 p. m. tomorrow for a meeting of Beta Tota chapter, Tau ‘Phi Lambda. Miss Marie Mills will preside.

Lambda chapter, Omega Nu Tau, will meet at 8 p. m. today in the Columbia club.

Care Prolongs

Swimsuit Life

Cotton swimsuits are popular this year and they come in a ravishing variety of colors and designs. To keep them looking trig, however, requires a little extra care. It pays to give them a soap and water wash after each wearing to remove sand and smears of sun-tan lotions.

Use moderately warm suds, and rinse in several clear cool waters. If the suits cannot be washed as soon as they are brought home, be sure to hang them to dry anyhow.

with a violet undertone. i But it's always wise to make a color test on an obscure strand of hair before submerging the whole head in a blue-violet rinse. Otlierwise you may come out with an unexpected color—this time pink, s ” 8 WHEN YOU'VE tested out the strength of your color rinse and have hit upon a shade that suits you, make up your mind to watch out for the yellow hazard in the future. Next time you get a permanent, see that an oil solution— not acids—are used; a minimum amount of heat is applied; metal rods are wrapped with cellophane or some other protective shield that keeps your hair safe from metallic stains. Don’t expose your hair to the sun, Ask your beauty shop operator to breeze it dry with a hand blower; not with a heated helmet.

Steak Roast Planned ‘By Fa-Lo-Sis Club

A steak roast held tonight at the home of Mrs. Maurice Goodwin, W. 64th st, by members of the Fa-Lo-8is club will be followed by a treasure hunt.

dames Thomas Culver, Edwin Pattison and Fred Westfall,

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Assisting the hostess will be Mes- |

whether of long standing or not, {|

If they are left in a heap, mildew may set in and ruin the looks of the garment. It is almost impossible to remove mildew stains, but easy to avoid them. With proper care a swim suit should be good for several seasons. | The longer it lasts the better, for conservation is today’s- watchword.

‘Mrs. Shuler Hostess

Delta chapter, Phi Delta Pi so{rority, will meet at 8 p. m. today in |the Rho Delta clubroom. Mrs. La-

Barbara Hudelson and Sue Hartz, and

To prevent a, recurrence of such an unhappy situation, “someone

(at back, left and right) Marje

4 y® = =

TE * By LOUISE FLETCHER. - i * Times Woman's Editor RTE" *

- on

goes;.theré was a poor, unsuspectppearance upon a college campus.

wearing ‘an outfit that involved trailing veils and o femme fatale air. Srey recepuanY ‘wasn't the social success. she anticipated, — »° . --

college girls who, from their own knowledge of school clothes and customs, could dish out” some pointers for other girls about to invade the campus. The college board was born and has come to be a standard feature at Indianapolis stores in the weeks that precede the fall openings of schools. At Block's and Ayres’ this week the college boards got into action and that at Wasson’s will be on deck next week.

s ” ~ BUSY ANSWERING questions on every variety of campus fashions from dormitory “duds” to prom clothes, the girls also are modeling in style shows. At Block's this afternoon the first of two college fashion

"shows was given and will be re-

peated, at 2:30 p. mm next Wednesday on the store's second floor. 3 At Ayres’ the first parades of college wearables will be at 2:30 and 6:45 p. m. next Monday and

at 2:30 p. m, the following Thursday. The Monday and Thursday shows will be con-

tinued through the week ending Aug. 26.

” » AT BOTH STORES the members of the college boards were chosen to represent varied types of schoo ed and women's colleges in India and other sec tions of the country. The roster at Block's includes Mary Alice Butler of Knightstown, a Franklin college student; Pat Rice who attends St. Mary-of-the-Woods; Mary Jane Foerst of Purdue university and Betty McKeown and Joann and Betty Lou Ranstead of Butler university. From DePauw university is Ingleby Rapp of Seymour, while Indiana university is represented by Elinor Beecher of Knightstown and Elizabeth Ann Schmidt. Agnes Alig is a student at the University of Illinois; Gloria Atkisson is a Stephens college student and Mary Charlene Dunewold is another Purdue girl. Connie and Virginia Martin represent Ward-Belmont and Western college and Jo Ann Welch is a St. Mary's of the Lake student,

” » = AYRES BOARD includes Patia Maxwell of St. Mary's; Sue Hartz of Butler; Margaret Sellmer, Earlham college; Sue Winkler, Stephens, and Joan Bartley, DePauw. Others are Marjorie Thoms of Purdue; Patty -Heustis, University of Michigan; Jean Moore, Wheaton; Ann Winger, Western; Patty Peterson, Indiana, and Barbara Hudelson and Joan Mawson of Butler. Ayres’ own representative on the board is Miss Jody Mick, who in her undergraduate days at DePauw served on the board. Now she's a teacher but she has returned to the store for three years to lend a hand with the

jverl Shuler will be hostess.

college ‘‘boarders.”

Rev. Renner To Ofticiate. At Wedding :

‘The Lawfence Methodist. church

night, of the wedding of Miss Mil

dred ‘Burlingame to Sgt. Homer]

Eugene Margason. The Rev. B. J. Renner, pastor of the church, will officiate at an altar banked with palms interspersed with lighted tapers. Miss Burlingame is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Burlingame of Lawrence and Sgt. Margason is the son of William T, Margason,

y. Aunt Matron of Honor

A program of bridal airs before the ceremony will be played by Mrs. Clifford Perkinson, organist. Mrs. William Carson is to sing. Mr, Burlingame will give his daughter in marriage. Her gown of white marquisette is made with a romance neckline, short, puffed sleeves and a full skirt. She will carry white roses. Her aunt, Mrs. Roscoe Humphrey, Anderson, will be matron of honor, wearing a pale green dress and carrying yellow roses. Miss Sylvia Waddy and Miss Ruth Thomas, bridesmaids. will be in pink and blue and will carry. roses.

Bridegroom’s Attendants

The flower girl, Judy Bea, will wear a soft yellow frock and will carry a miniature bridal bouquet. The bridegroom's attendants will be John Newkirk, best man, and John and Herbert Louis, Cincinnati, ushers. After the ceremony a reception will be held in the Burlingame home and the couple will leave for a wedding trip. Sgt. Margason will return to Ft. Jackson, 8. C.

W. C. T. U. Group To Meet Friday

The Bay Laurel W. C. T. U. will meet at 2 p. m. Friday in the home of Mrs. Julia Angel, 225 N. Tremont ave. Mrs. Carl Schmid will preside, Devotions will be led by Mrs. John 8. Leonard and Mrs. James M. Rogers will read a selection from “The Union Signal.”

Scrub Storage Space Storage” shelves and cabinets should be scrubbed with hot suds.

will be the. scene, at 8 o'clock t0-|.

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