Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 August 1945 — Page 20
"PAGE 20
Army Nurse
Au. J.-A. Reith,
Exchange Vow N
i Rice-Dickie Vows IE
To Be Read Saturday
Highlighting the bridal notes are the announcements of two recent weddings and an approaching marriage. Mr. Leasburg, N marriage of
R. N. Whitlow of have announced the their daughter, Lt | Elizabeth N, Whitlow, army nurse corps, and Lt. James A. Reith. Lt Reith is the son of Mrs. Edith H ' Reith, 722 N. Riley ave. The wedding took place Aug. 2 in the 64th General hospital's| chapel in Leghorn, Italy. After the ceremony, there was a reception in the Officers’ club. Lt. Norma Gulso, army corps, was the bride's only dant. and the best man was Lt, vin Mark.
and Mrs C
irse atten~ Mel-
5 engagement to Howard Rice is announced by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Gray Dickie of Horton, Ala, Mr. Rice is the son of Mrs. Goldia Milbourne, 1820 Shepard st. The couple will be married Saturday.
ry ” uth Dickies
Miss R
» 8 » The Bradley Methodist church| in Greenfield was the scene Sun-| day afternoon for the marriage of | Miss Helen Lou Marvell and Robert | Davis. Mr. and Mrs. Orvalle Marvell Greenfield are the bride's parents, and the bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Davis, Beech Grove. | The bride's attendants included | Miss Harriett Marvell, maid of honor: Miss Forrest Strieb, Hartford City, bridesmaid aro) | Marvell, junior bridesmaid, and Patty Marvell, flower girl John Thompson as man and the ushers Rushes and J. W. McIntosh ollowing a reception in dr home, the left a trip, They will 1108 College ave
Thomas Conley, Miss Barnhizer Are Married
A double-ring ceremony this morning in St. John's Catholic church united Miss Evelyn Barnhizer and Thomas C. Conley, carpenter’'s mate 3-c, U. S. N. R. The Rev. Fr. Richard Grogan officiated at 10 o'clock. After the ceremony, a breakfast] was given by the bride's parents, | Mr. and Mrs. Dallas Barnhizer, in| their home in Cicero. Mr. Conley is| the son of Mrs. Frank Conley of Arcadia. : A white gown was worn by the bride. The| dress was made with a.sheer shoul- | der yoke outlined with lace applique, bishop sleeves, fitted basqué and gathered skirt forming a train. A Juliet cap accented with orange blossoms "held her tiered fingertip] veil of illusion. | Mrs. Charles Scherer, served as| matron of honor, and the bride's! sisters, Misses Rosemary and Norma Lou Barnhizer, were bridesmai ds. | The flower girl was Kathleen Kaye| Barnhizer, They are all of Cicero. | The attendants’ frocks were fash-| ioned alike in net with Uirse-quer | ter-length sleeves, fitted basques! and gathered skirts, The maid of| honor | |
ol of | |
fics NVI1SS
best | Chet
n the
were
the for home at
couple
be
at
chose pink and the brides-| mids were in yellow and blue. . Ben D. Berg, A. A. F., Nobles- | was the best man. The ush-| ers were Joseph Anderson, Ander- | son, and Addison Nordyke After a wedding trip, the couple | will be at home at 1332 Park ave. |
ville,
| | | | {
Orange-Sugar Sprinkle © piping-hot, golden! brown slices of French toast with! orange-sugar. Before frying the toast, making the topping by add-| ing 1 teaspoon grated orange rind! to '2 cup sugar, This sugar mixture melts to give each slice of toast a delicate, crusty, aromatic topping
Marriages Ave Announced
1. Mr. and Mrs, Arch S. Waller, Washington, Ind., announce the marriage of their daughter, Margaret Anne, to 8S. Sgt. John O, Edwards, son of Mr. and Mrs. Richard J, Edwards, Mason City, lowa, The wedding was Aug. 11 in Washington,
2. Miss and T. Sg
Doris. Jean Shannon t. Christian F. Schlensker were married June 10 in Friedens Evangelical and Reformed church. Parents of the couple are Mrs. Allie Shannon and Mr. and Mrs. Henry Schlensker.
Ostheimer and Lt. A.A F. ter of Mr. and Mrs. Louis 3. A ceremony Saturday in the St. Philip Neri Catholic church
united Miss Mary Eleanore photos.)
Jack B. Fagan, The bride is the daughE. Ostheimer and Lt. Fagan is the son of Mrs. Mary Fagan. (P. H. Ho
i starched marquisette]
; gardens.
MISS CAROLYN ANN UNGER has Sunday, Sept. 2, as the date for her marriage to Norman Katz, The wedding will be at 8 m. in the Beth-El-Zedeck
8 p. temple. The bride-to-be is the daughter of Mr, and Mrs, Aaron Unger, and Mrs
and Mr. Katz is the son of Mr. Ben Katz of Columbus, ( Miss Unger’s maid of honor will be Mrs. Herschel Cohen. The bridesmaids will be Miss Sylvia Secttor and Miss Betty Hasselbring. The prospective bridegroom has named Sgt. Leonard Dworkin, Camp Romulus, Mich., as his best man. Serving as ushers will be Harold Katz, Columbus, and Frank Unger.
Jane Cox to Be Bride .
SEPTEMBER 1 HAS BEEN CHOSEN by Miss as the date for her marriage to Pfc. Kurt Vonnegut The cerenony will take place at 4:30 p. m. on the terrace at the home of the bride-to-be’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Harvey Cox. The Rev. Herbeyt Huffman, pastor of the Rirst Friends church, will officiate. Miss Cox. will have Mrs. James C. Adams, the prospective bride groom's sister, and Mrs. Paul Fletcher as her only attendants. Dr. Bernard Vonnegut will be his brother's best man. Pfc. Vonnegut is the son of Kurt Vonnegut of Williams Creek. os ” s = ou Ld Mr. and Mrs. Carl B. Harper will entertain with a bridal dinner next Thursday for their daughter, Miss Jean Evelyn Ruschaupt, and her fiance, Edward F. New II. The dinner will be in the Marott hotel. he honor guests will be married Aug in the Roberts Park Methodist church: The Harpers’ other guests wili“include Mr New, the prospective bridegroom’s parents: Dr. and Mrs. Sumner L. Martin, Lt.-and Mrs. P. R. Haggerty, Messrs. and Mesdames H. C. Ruschaupt, Charles Haworth, William Landis and Wendell Yeager, Richard Clay, Charles F. Ruschaupt, Misses Maxine Arnold, Dorothy Pearson and Martha Coffin.
Sorority Arranges Rush Party THE COLLEGIATE AND ALUMNAE members of Indiana university’s chapter of Zeta Tau Alpha sorority will entertain prospective I. U. students with a picnic on Sunday.. The event will be from 2 until 5 p. m. at the home of Miss Irene Carson: Qut-of-town chapter members who will attend are Misses Jule McKnight, lly Vorgang and Dorothy Davis, all of Jeffersonville; Miss Katherine Fox, Bloomington; Miss Barbara Creighton, Warsaw; Miss Marylove Wiley, Jonesboro, ang Miss Carol Anderson, Logansport, Miss Jo Krauch is chaifman of the event and her tants are Mesdames Herbert Pedlow, Corbin Patrick and Wayne E, Bicknell, Misses Virginia Rush, Rosemary Letsinger and Rose Ellen and Janet Gray.
set
Jane Marie Cox
Ir Jr
31
and Mrs. Edward F.
assis
» » J ” A number of Indianapolis girls will return Tuesday from Camp Byrn Afon in Rhinelander, Wis.. where they have vacationed the past two months. They are Miss Ann Mahaffey, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Mahaffey; Misses Portia and Constance Hurd, nieces of Mrs. Robert McMurray; Miss Kristin Miller, the Allan 'C. Millers’ daughter; Miss Judy Bowen; daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bowen; Mrs. George Green's daughter, Miss Jean Warrender; Miss Jane Nicholson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs, C. L. Nicholson, and Miss Mary Carolyn Swartz, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Swartz.
n rd
Nature Club to Meet |i
. accordionist, The annual “corn ropst” of the
‘Free Women From Male Tyranny’
German Wives Are Dominated By MRS. WALTER FERGUSON
|
{Didn't the men have implicit faith, too, and haven't men always domi
Seripps-Howard Staff Writer BOTH HERE and in England. | writers are using good paper to in[form us that German women as a | whole had implicit faith in Hitler, . What's so strange about that?
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
| Wed July 8
Inated the thinking of their women? |
| planted
| seems
| their orders from men — and that | men | tyrants.
{ child is probably | Germany {holds ! does as father says—not as mother
| |
| of the family. The person who can't {stand up to a bossy husband will
- | dictator.
|
|
| at | tyranny.
Take Salt For Energy
2.3 | | |
|
| |
| salt tablets with water.
One of the worst traits of that] unhappy race is the arrogance of the average male. It has been trans- | to many American com- | munities by immigrants, We have | often seen it flourishing here. German men were reared to boss women and many do it with vigor and delight. Feminine meekness under this bossing is perhaps one reason why a whole nation has been so easily mastered bv tyrantz, Old Germany a& well as the Third! Reich ordered women to confine! their activities to the church, the! nursery and the kitchen, o ” ” NO DOUBT German women will instill in their children hatred for their country’s conquerors. Was it] ever otherwise? - But with all the things we have to worry about, it futile to fret over their attitudes. If we wish to change Germans, we must start with boys. The history of that arrogant country proves that women take their standards and prefer to get theirs from influence over her powerful in elsewhere, Man The family
A mother's less than the whiplash,
{ wishes. The first step in the liberation of Europe may mean freeing women from the tyranny of male members
never have the courage to defy a
It seems reasonable to think that Germany's bad record may be due to the submissive attitudes of its women during past generations Vanity is inherent in male nature. Men who feed largely upon flattery home, develop instincts for]
WHEN YOU perspire freely and | feel fatigued, drowsy or dizzy, the |
| trouble may be due to a salt defi-|
ciency in your system. Home canners who are apt to be) working ail day now in hot kitchens, | | or people whose jobs keep them out | of doors under pelting sun, are apt | to lose salt faster than it is replaced | { by normal food intake. » = » HOW TO make up the loss? Take According to medical experiments |
| conducted over the last few years,
it has been proven that workers
i
who take a 10-grain salt tablet four
|
{ter than those who drag {the
to eight times a day feel more alert |
and can stand up to their jobs betthrough
day suffering from .a salt
! deficiency.
Phyllis Ann Rohyans '{s Honor Guest
| the honor g
accompanied by Jack Spratley,!
|
Miss Phyllis Ann Rohyans Was uest recently at a misgiven by Miss 930 N. Ritter attended the
cellaneous shower Gertrude Mahone} ave. Pifteen guests party
Miss of Mr
5703 E.|
Rohyans, daughter and Mrs. C. M. Rohyans, Washington st, will be married | Saturday evening to Sgt. Donald]
Cooper, U. 8. M. C |
Study m
Nature 6:30 p
club will be held at
Sunday in Woollens
There will be group sing-
DIAMOND
Solitaires
Every
bride-
prospective
oll-On
H. P. WASSON & 00.
Plowman photo. St. Peter’s Lutheran church was the scene, July 8, of the wedding of Miss Geneva Adams to Cpl, Clarence W Braun. She is the
|
N. Somerset ave. |
‘Mace, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. |
Se
Combs-Mace Ceremony Read
Sgt. and Mrs. Dayton Combs are jon a wedding trip following their marriage last night. The ceremony | [took™ place in the home of the | {bridegroom's brother and sister- in- | law, Mr. and MS. Ervin Combs, 638 |
The bride was Miss Helen Marie |
[John Mace of Pittsboro. Sgt. Combs |
|
lo ‘clock.
|
{will'be stationed. cently from 27 months’
daughter af Mr. und Mrs. James |
Adams and the bridegroom's parents are Mr. and Mrs, Henry | Braun of Evanston, Ind.
Miss Geisler Hostess Miss Florence Geisler, Dearborn st, will morrow Beta chapter,
2267 N.| department. be hostess to-|Tuesday, a class will meet at Ayres’ for members of the Beta on Tuesdays and Fridays. Pi Omicron sorority.| Inez Hunt will be the instructor.
A buffet supper will precede a bunco |
party.
Queen Make rayon flannel torso dress with button and bow side-interest. Sizes 12 to 20, - Aqua, gold,
melon. 10.95
» * Vio 3 Wi
lis the son of Mr. and Mrs. Elbert | Combs, 757 N. Belle Vieu pl. |
Chaplain . Albert C. Rorapaugh read the double-ring service at 8:30 The couple's attendants | were Miss Lois Sherfield and Ervin | | Combs. the Combs home. Sgt. and Mrs. Combs will be at home in St. Joseph, Mo., where he He returned reduty in
|
A reception was held in|
South America.
Red Cross Group Will Open Classes
Two classes will be opened this month by the Red Cross nutrition Beginning at 10 a. m, Mrs.
A night class will open Wednes-
day at the Citizens’ Gas & Coke
Bride |
Before her marriage May 4 to Robert Lee Kendall, radioman 2.¢, U. 8. N. R, Mrs. Kendall was Miss May Louise Branstetter, daughter of Mr, and Mrs, L. S. Branstetter, Spokane, Wash. The ceremony was in Spokane, The bridegroom is the son of Mr, and Mrs. Frank Kendall of apolis,
utility,
Miss Ruth Hynes instructing.
istrations will be taken by phone at you
the nutrition department.
»
THURSDAY, AUG. 23; 1943
Beauties’ Hints—
‘Good Hearing
Is. Discussed
By ALICIA HART NEA Staff Writer LET'S TALK about good hears |ing. After 40, ears, like eyes, begin [to dim. Sometimes much younger | women, described as “bundles of | nerves,” are susceptible te condi= tions which bring about impaire ment of hearing | Thanks to scientific there is no need today to suffer lan auditory Randicap, which too loften ‘becomes a personality -hande jcap and causes a sensitive person
advances,
to deny herself normal social | pleasures and human relationships, ou on " SCIENCE'S’ SOLUTION to the problem a mechanical hearing ald, One of these {s a conduction type of instrument with a receiver that can be concealed by a tress of hair. Newest. improvement in this is a tone-control device, which shuts
18
Indian- |
Classes will be held onigyt the boom of background sounds, Wednesday and Friday nights with thus
making it possible for the
Reg- hearing aid to be adjusted so that
can distinguish sounds both
{near and far,
tld
Martha Manning orig-
groom hopes to give his bride the finest ring within
inal. Gabardine. coat dress buttoned down” front with bright sile ver. Sizes 38 to 44, Brown, rust, teal,
black. : 8.93
Synthetic Aren't They Stunning
his power and his pocket- . book. We suggest that he
consult a Registered Jeweler
Girdles! And Both Priced at
Such a Frugal Fee!
8.95 ana 10.95
Sketched are two dresses that deserve rave notices.
to insure himself of fine dia- Panty Girdles! mond values in an effective
and
regardless of size or price.
appropriate setting—
solitaires from $37.50.
Diamond priced
Fall figuring should R
include these * two
Deferred Payments Easily But remember,
Arranged Yours for
girdles.
this is just a hint of what we have in store! See for yourself tomorrow.
smooth, easy con-
JEWELRY. DEPARTMENT troll, Soup fitting We're ready for you... and fall, with racks of gabardines, crepes, wool
garments in small, medium and large sizes,
; ae Floor Practical panty and rayons. Each and every one tailored to perfection ; and enhanced
with miagic-making detail. Sizes 12 to 20, 38 to 44 and 18% to 24%.
WasSONS PIN MONEY DRESS SHOP, THIRD hunk
Girdles for dresses, suits!
styles for all season sportswear.
‘WASSON'S CORSETS, THIRD FLOOR : a
West
