Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 July 1946 — Page 16
gus A Ri SL Mb
A Pa
PER
a
i ; : -
Tori THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES Principals in Bridal News Wedding Trip rE wom "To: Chicago Follows Rite
| Miss Joan Gary Wed 1+ By Pvt. Overbeck Pvt. and Mrs. Earl L. Overbeck are on a wedding trip to Chicago following their marriage last night in ‘hunters’ lodgé of the. Marott hotel. The Rev. Fr, Joseph Beechelm, Our Lady of Lourdes Catholic church, officiated. Mr. and Mrs. Paul M. Gary, 62 8. Denny st, are the parents of the bride, who was Miss Joan Therese Gary. Mr, and Mrs. Edward Overbeck, 7408 E. 14th st, are| the bridegroom's parents. Bridal Gown The bride chose a gown of white
Rin Alkire:Ostlund Ceremony 1s Read ©" 7 In Home of the Bride's ‘Mother.
' / THE MARRIAGE OF MRS. PEGGY BURRELL ~ OSTLUND to Lee O. Alkire Jr. son of Mr. and Mrs. * Alkire, Chicago, is announced by her mother, Mrs} Arthur | C. Burrell. 5 ! | The ceremony was at 2:30 o'clock Saturday afternoon | “in Mrs. Burrell's home. The Rev. Harry R. Mercer, assistant pastor of the Tabernacle Presbyterian church, read ‘the vows before the immediate families. The bride's sister, Mrs. John R. VanDyne of Sedalia, Mo, was the matron of honor and George E. Vickery served as best man. ) After a reception in the Burrell home, the couple left on a wedding oa trip. They. will be at home in Chicago. 5
The bride attended Indiana ais 3 os . We, Ourselves,
{ university, where she was &a | member of Kappa Kappa Gam{ma sorority. Mr. Alkire at-
: 2 Photo Reflex photo, ’ » P. H Ho photo. The marriage of Miss Ma Before her marriage June 15 |. Alice Wible and Robert rch, Mrs,
: . ne Warsh, fed in Christ Epitope] chu WwW ecked OP A Jue #4 a ey nd Thomas will be Sunday in St. Allan Harlan was Miss Helen net fashioned with a marquiset r 423 | Delta fraternity there. Matthew's Episcopal church. Ferrell. She is the daughter of yoke with a ruffle, fitted bodice,
so fres
tight sleeves, a three-tiered skirt
rell, 1776 Brookside ave., and [nd a chapel train. Mr. Hatlan's parents are Mr. 8he wore an ivory rosebud pend-{
{ant that her mother wore at her ahd Min, I A. Harlan, 221 N. | wedding, and she carried a cascade |
| bouquet of white carnations and| roses centered with an orchid. Re fingertip veil fell from an illusion half hat - accented with fresh | flowers. . | Miss Ruth Mowry, mald of honor, CO WOLIRENS STR, 20% Mtn, Ralert MeCHl, bridesmaid, was in light blue net. Sarah K. Malady, Ful‘{ton, was her aunt's flower girl and wore a long dress of pink net.
Reception Held
She is the daughter of Mr. and Mr. and Mrs, Walter L. Fer. Mrs. A. E. Wible, 1215 N. Leland st., and he is the son of Mr. and Mrs, A. F. Thomas,
Tulsa, Okla.
{ Bruner-Dodd Rite - [ MR. AND MRS. John Herbert Bruner are at home at Earlham
college, Richmond following Seripps-Howard Staff Writer ' rope their marriage June 16 in Silver
88, WHO Ry pps gest Bay, N. Y. Mr, Bruner is the | shout both its friends and Ii lion of Mt. und Mrs. Ralph P. "| And 1 think that's the wrong an- Bruner, Indianapolis, and the | swer. We the people did it—plain bride, the former Miss Helen ” CNET, Ha ‘ wile evad | Marjorie’ Dodd, As we ‘Qaugner 3 Ts. oy the Sey we bel ana of Dr. and Mrs. 'Whsen Pe Dddd, yet patronized black markets. (Mt. Hermon, Mass. formerly of men slipping cash to|Berea, Ky. In the fall Mr.
Business r clerks at hotels and Bruner will enter Indiana unireservation cler! | versity.
nal favors; railway offices for perso The
jety wom : souple” exchanged vows en ng $5 extra for coup. society paying Ee OF vott Bos
Writer Says
By MRS. WALTER FERGUSON
" dres It: housewives sneakin bok len Jie. for 3 few A ie the bride, was best man, and ushers more pairs; restaurant and club Serving as resident physician this a as ey : summer, The Rev. Edward Treat, Re YY Agi |
managers keeping their tables sup-
plied with meat from illicit dealers; Waterbury, Vi, a former .co- |. A reception was held in the hotel used car salesmen with scares of | Worker of Dr. Dodd in Talas, . {immediately after the ceremony. slick tricks—and all of us who Turkey, officiated. The bride- N The bride will be. at home with! looked on silently while these 8room’s grandmother, Mrs. Harry [her parents, and the bridegroom things were done, We strangled B. McNeely of Indianapolis, was : ~ |will report to Seattle from where OPA. | the organist for the WRemony. i J {he expects to be sent overseas. ¢ . » x Hf ' 2 Fu 4 SA ————————————— IT'S TIME to admit our guilt [Couple's Atfendin: ; a : jeither voluntary controls nor NER was | ne Bretzman photo PP: > KF R : his brother's best man and the A June 23 ceremony in arties to ete
Miss Mary: Virginia Freeman . and Charles E. Murphy will be married Saturday in SS. Peter and Paul cathedral. Parents of
the couple are Mr. and Mrs. Warren D. Freeman, 317 E. 24th st, and Mrs, Alice F. Murphy, 5320 Lowell ave.
Jaws do any good when the majority of people ignore them. How many men and women do you know who didn't thwart OPA rules .in one way or another? How strictly | 8¢ Beirut university, Lebanon, did you abide by its orders? © |S8yria. Miss Margaret Eleanor Confusion about OPA became so Dodd was her sister's only atgreat that countless citizens who tendant. . believed in its principles thought “The bride, born in Istanbul, they could not be made to work. Turkey, where her father was a Why slam Chester Bowles or medical missionary, is a graduate Paul Porter or your congressman |Of Earlham college. Mr. Bruner for that? Those men are yanked attended Earlham befors enabout by so many opposing groups tering the army in March, 1943. it's a wonder they have any sanity He served as a radlo-gunner left. . with. the. 8th air force in EngNobody can be blamed for the land. failure of OPA except the American voter who generally wants to see everybody regulated but himself.
ushers were' the bride's brother, Robert Benedict Dodd, and her uncle, Dr. Stuart Dodd, professor
the Friedens Evangelical and Reformed church united Miss Joyce Margaret Graham and Fred McKinney Jr. Parents of the couple are Mr. and Mrs. Raleigh E. Graham, 1221 Norman ave, and Mr. and Mrs. MaKinney, 1214 Martin st.
‘Ginette Touche
| Miss Ginette Touche, Bobigny, { France, is expectéd to arrive here ‘today for her wedding Sunday to Lt. William Prescott, The bride-to-be will be honored at a linen shower, Friday night to be given by Mrs. Norman Gripe and her mother-in-law, Mrs, O. H. Gripe, in the latter's home at 5402 E. Washington st. Miss Amy Keene of the Marott hotel has’invited a group of her French-speaking friends to a tea Saturday afternoon - for Miss | Touche.
Fashions of ‘Roaring Twenties’ Reproduced for New Film Starring Gene Tierney
By BARBARA BUNDSCHU Attending both parties will be United Press Staff Correspondent | Mrs.- Emil Malinovsky, Canton, O., 3 HOLLYWOOD, July 2.— There are $18,000 worth of 1920’s clothes | sister of the prospective bridegroom, “ta. |In the wardrobe Gene Tierney wears in “The Razor's Edge"—and they|and Mrs. J. H. Prescott, Roselle, | “don't look like period costumes. Tr : i The roaring Twenties’ fashions—for years considered the most un- |
. Md J Miss Charlene Heard, Dearborn, Mich., will arrive tomorrow to spend the week-end ‘with her | parents, Mr. and Mrs. Glenn B. | Heard.
Couple on Trip
\ ~ |Breakfast Planned H To South By Garden Club
Miss Mary Louise Fleenor sand | The Green Thumb Garden club
Robert Nelson Terry were marrted Wil meet July 10 for a 10 a. m, length skirts are all there—right|you're that age). It's topped with | Lets Eat
at 8 p. m. Saturday in the Bigectirsaion. at the home of Mrs. on the - dates of the Somerset g shoulder cape of scalloped ruffles. Meta Asiven
Miss Touche and her fiance met |
Thessruffles, the fringe, the calf|——— — = | BOLIgNY.
technicolor —take
wood: Methodist church. The Rev.|Howard Aldrich, 917 N. Bolton ave. ‘Maugham novel from which the Lengthy Skirt W. E. Watkins read the ceremony. | The hostess will discuss “Horti- | picture is adapted. another . evening dress— I sHnky Mrs. Ray J. Fleenor, Fairfax rd, | and Mrs. Ray Thorne will talk on | ney likes one of the suits so well et whose sleeves were born and Mrs. John Terry, 1840 Roose- ‘Detroit Flower Show and Design | she'll wear it for real vhen the | a pure black ostrich. welt ave. {in Flower Arrangement.” | picture making is over—with ust For ‘daytime the array includes Mrs Arthur ee Fraley, matron mp | couple of inches off the skirt. |, piaek skirt almost to the ankles of honor, wore a blue dress of satin| / _ y x {with a ‘hi and net, and Miss Pauline Tha,” H Meeting Embroidered Organdy [TO 3 Diack and white sheckid|. = YoocoNUT cramioTTE bridesmaid, was in ‘pink nylon taf-| The Ben Davis Four Leaf Clover| I'S ® black woolen, single bul-| oc. with a tiny black tricornne (Far Thurs) diver) feta. {4-H club met today in the Wayne | ton jacket with as pretty a double| _complete with red cherries. The bride chose a white gown of | cownship high school. Miss Uldine| scallop lapel as a designer could] A brown and beige check suit Socongt) : point d'esprit with square neckline,| Christenberry, president, was in dream up--1926._or. 1946. | comes with a shawl collared, great- |, 2 thaps.- plain gelatin fitted sleeves and bodice and ruffled charge of the meeting. | The gowns, which may\well speed | coat in full ripple which loaks like 5 toconut milk 44 Hob enough skirt. Her shoulder-length veil fell - | the fashion regression spurred by a short step away from the duster ME 848 Wor TW WIREE 35" v: from a beaded Juliet cap, and shel Business Session ¢Broadway's “Billion Dollar Baby," |days. : liquid) : carried a white Bible. { : an embroidered apricot| They'll be in 1% eo. milk, scalded {—Phi-ochapter of Delta Chi Sigma lergandy-—long calf length—in which | your pick s-¢--confectioners” suger home, the couple left on a .trip| sorority will hold a business meet-| mother may 0 have won father | : Fow--grains-salt \ south. They will be at home with/ing at .8 p. m. today in the| (if you're young enough) or remind « tsp. almond extract or 's tsp. the bridegroom's parents. iY. W. 0. A {you of your first party dress (if . : SS —— e=====xJAid Housewives . * | _1 tp. omnge juice ‘2 pt. whipping cream A post-war idea which helps Mrs.| 1 ¢. finely shredded coconut ‘decorator and adds limitless possi-| Heat coconut, open two eyes and bilities to her present home ‘is the grain out milk. Crack coconut and | prefabricated “built-in” room accés- remove meat, peel off brown skin
. And * Parents of the couple are Mr. and culture and Flower Show Practice,” | ‘And’ pretty, gray-eyed Miss Tier- | this time—is topped with 1% lbs. coconut (yields 2 c. grated / tineclude’ After a reception at the bride's! Built-In Accessories grated orange rind steeped in Housewife to be her own interior| 1 dozen lady fingers, split sory. and shred white portions on fine
Available in linen closets, mantels gnhredder. Cover until ready for and china closets, the pieces are| qe } unfinished, ready to take paint or| goekx gelatin
stain, and require only a half dayiave to install, A variety of beautiful| gy, oar designs, each tastefully executed, | :
minutes. Add milk,
until sugar is thoroughly dissolved. |or type 'of home.
a Ta [cream until stiff. Beat gelatin mixFlower Names
ture with same beater until fAlufty,
then beat in about 1-3 of the “How Flowers Got Their Names” {whipped cream. Fold in coconut will be discussed by Mrs. Wood-{and lastly, Témaining whipped
{burn Masson at a zarden party of cream.
tribute a. bit of garden verse. sauce. Makes six to eight servings
"my,
| | ¢ INI iid, W
Ww - FRO h ST bin timp n SA L A D S /
Wi ming
~~ WEDDING GIFTS
' WW wr A beautiful and unusual collection of exquisite wedding
Appetites "perk up" at the very thought of their invigorating goodness. Prepared in ‘a bowl surrounded by finely crushed ICE, the vegetables’ stay crisp, flavorful, delicious. So easy to fix . : . so appreciated by the family. Crushed POLAR ICE is available at our branches listed in the classified phone directory.
POLA ICE AND
FUEL C0. "2000 NORTHWEST
N AVENUE 317 W. 16th St. © 1902 S. East St.
gifts—now shown on our third floor,
TMustrated
Pair of Exquisite Antique Delft Urns with Covers
Cirea 1820.
Purchased from an English collection. $135.00 pair,
| attractive in American history—have been reproduced faithfully for | while she was an employee of the ! { the motion picture by Miss Tierney's dressmaker husband, Oleg Cassini. | American medical supply depot in!line of business. Aleng
assure a style suitable to any room!eni until slightly congealed. Whip
the Forest Hills Garden club at! Pour into 8 by 8 by 2-inch pan 2 p. m. tomorfow at the home. of jor 8-inch spring mold, lined with Mrs. E.' C. Kingholz, 5815 <Car- waxed paper, then with lady fingers ‘rolton ave. Each member will con- [Chill until -set. Serve with orange
Teen Talk—
Potential Insurance. Salesmen Receive Company Charters
By BOBBIE ABOUT 20 teen-agers officially
\
J. A. state board luncheon. -
present at the luncheon to recel
John Malady, Fulton, uncle - of | official company charters, signed by |-
t Russell Earle, stata executive di-| E mer gs e d
rector, and W. A. Atkins, chairman | of the board of directors of Junior Achievement,
. ” " » { THE BOYS and girls in the com-|
Crispus Atstarted last these Junior
mercial. department at tucks high school March to organize
“A "romping good. time" is certain in this romper playsuit worn by Mary Lester, a J. |. O.'T. club member and a senior (in the a at Howe high school. Seersucker is the material that stays
, feels so cool, and the shoulder straps may be used—or not. Eyelet lace trim adds a touch of femininity. (Strauss'.)
men when they received their charters recently from Junior Achievement + for Jushos, Updecytites, companies 1. and 2. Robert Kiker and Mary Lou Clemons, hesicdis’ cl; An eteeiby Miss: Syeise Six en panies, received the charter, at the = v Doris Dean DEE, BR,
Approximately 80 conlpanies were ‘Better Stvles : ve ’ 25
’
»
SCHAEFFER became potential insurance sales-
Boe oo
During War’
| HOLLYWOOD, July 2 (U, P.).— | Wartime clothing restrictions have, | forced good taste on thousands of!
— .___ . "TUESDAY, JULY 2, 1046 Teen-Agers Revert to. ‘Romper.
To Mr. Kelly
Audrey Hughes. Engaged -
Miss Bohn to Be Wed To Mr. Wiles Sunday
Announcements of two engage-
ments and a wedding highlight today's bridal scene.
“Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Roland
Hughes, 4211 Broadway, announce the engagement of their daughter Audrey Ann, Kelley,
to Eugene Michael No date has been set for the wedding. Mr, Kelley is the son of Mr. and. Mrs. Edward M. Kelley, 3015 N, Meridian st. Miss Hughes attended Butler university, and Mr. Kelley, recently returned from two years service
in the South Pacific, is a graduate |
of the University of Notre Dame. » ~ ~
The approaching marriage of Miss Bettie Bohn and Frederick D.
Wiles has been announced by her | parents, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Bohn, |
1423 Gilbert st. The weading will be Sunday, in St. John's Evangelical and Reformed church. Mr. Wiles is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Wiles, 1114 Markwood ave, «The bride-to-be was. honored last night at .a surprise shower given
~
erly. Haxhin iti tie latter's home at 4016 S. State st.
Guests included Mrs. Bohn and Mrs. Wiles, mothers of the engaged pair; Mrs. Paul Church and Mrs. Ruth Austin, Misses Ann Havey, Helen Jatobs, Helen Jones, Virginia Wiles, Jean and Jeannette Reasner, Connie Cook, Shirley Smith, Velma Kinnick, - Barbara Jones, Mary Jane Sebastian, Virginia Stubbs and Dorothy Cramer, Miss. Dean will be Miss Bohn's maid of honor, and Miss Harbin
Achievement insurance compAnies.i American women who.Reves.had itiand. Miss Wiles will be bridesmaids
They became {ntérested fmrsurance through R. T. Avington, |district manager of the Victory Muthial Life Insurance Co. y Mr. Avington offered to sponsor an insurance group when he spoke to the classes at the school. Eight teensters decided to meet weekly qn Monday evenings and about 12 met on Tuesdays. Come fall, membership of 16 is the goal of each group. Headquarters were established at Mr. Avington's office, 312 W. Michigan st, and work began. Since March the members have been knocking themsélves out selling shares for their companies. A limit of 10 is set for each person. They're preparing for big insurance operation in- the fall and will sell policies for the Victory Mutual Co. ~—any sized policies. All commis sions will go into the J. A. companies’ bank account and each member hopes to learn every phase
|N. J., his sister-in-law. « lof the insurance business.
» » ” ELECTING officers was the first with Mary {Lou they are Mable Martin, vice
{ president; Barbara Childress, -sec-| retary, and Harold Hayes, treasurer, |
| In company 1 they are Betty Valentine, vice president; Gwendolyn Simmons, secretary, and Edna Crouch, treasurer. « With their experience as brokers these teen-agers will be qualified
to work with any insurance com-|
{pany and understand ‘its routine. { Mr. Avington will give a special {Junior Underwriters pin to the member who sells the largest number of policies.
(Doll Smiles, Sleeps
Something -new under the smallfry sun is a soft, playworthy little |doll of many moods. The lucky
before; one of the film colony's top!
flight dressmakers says. Adrian, whose glass and Plager | isalon holds. the fashion secréts of | countless actresses and soclalites, |
{said that the restricticns which
{limit the amount of fabric which | {may be used in a dress “has ac- |
| cepting line rather than an over- | enthusiastic use of material as the | {basis of fashion.” 4 And flattering, well fit line—not | {pleats or ruffes—is the important|
| wardrobe ingredient. Will It Last? |
| Whether the enforced good taste | will last; only the removal of fabric |
| plicity is here to stay. | The designer who has consistent{ly made little fabric look like much
{more despite the conservation or-|
der, will be as glad as the next man when it's lifted—but he won't {put that additional material into | gee-gaws. i It will just be one less thing to worry about.
‘Nudity IS. Corny’
!ers have improved their ‘own clothé# sense tremendously in the past decade—for psychological as well as shortage reasons. They | have enough security now to lose {their fear of being lost in a crowd, he says. But he still “doesn’t , recommend their style for wholesale imitation. They're still dressing a part for every public appearance—a little {dramatic for the average woman. Fabric shortages or no, Adrian {isn’t encouraging nakedness for any of his high paying clients. | “It’s like bringing the Folies Ber-
{little girl who has her simply pushes gere into the house,” he says. "Ex-
a button concealed behind “baby’s” {blond curls, and the doll obligingly
|cept on a very few women it looks | better on the stage. Nudity in the
smiles, cries or sleeps, as her small | drawing room is still corny.”
owner desires, Dressed
[make any child's birthday memor- | able!
‘Mirrored Chests a
| cated note
{ bathroom witha practical utility | in_ coconut milk | chest, finished on three sides with |for the front door of your home,
|they are useful.
in soft, |
snugly pink and blue flannel, she'd| Brass Door-Knocker
Back Again
They're back! Once again you can
| restrictions will tell. Offi | But Adrian has hopes that sim- 1CCS
Adrian says his filmland custom- |
& ¥ ® » . Mrs. Prancis C. Dale.Jr. was Miss Mary Marguerite Miller before -her marriage March 26. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Theodore H. Miller, 922 8, New Jersey st. Mr. Dale, formerly of the Severin
a | customed American women to ac- hotel, is the son of Mrs. Lillian P.
Callaway, Bronxville, N. Y. and his father lives in .Cold Spring, Putnam county, N. Y. The couple is at home with the bride's parents. Both bride and bridegroom are graduates of Indiana Law school and the “Indiana university school of law.
Filled By Auxiliary
{ Mrs. Ethel Smith will be installed {as president of the Broad Ripple {unit of the American Legion Women's auxiliary at the September’ meeting. {| Other newly ‘elected -officers are | Mrs. Alma Kriplen and Mrs. Lenora Daily, first and second vice presidents; Mrs. Elsie Johnson and Mrs. Mary Smith, recording and corresponding secretaries; Mrs. Agnes Inyart, treasurer, Mrs. Ruth Pur= kiss, chaplain and Mrs. Louise Evans, sergeant-at-arms. Delegates to the - 11th district council will be the -president and Mrs. Johnson, with Mrs. Marge Ashby and Mrs. Mabel Fuller as alternates. The unit will meet next Tuesday at the post home, 64th st. and College ave, for a pitch-in dinner at 0:30 p. m, and a business meeting at 8 o'clock. Miss Joan Barnard, Broad Ripple high school senior who was elected president of Girls’ ‘state, will report to the group which sponsored her. Twenty-five year pins will be presented to Mrs. Hazel | Workman and Mrs. Madge Carter
-\Bide-A-Wee Club
The Bide-A-Wee club will mee! {at the home of Miss Dora Mon-
{find lovely solid brass door-knock-|ieith, 3402 Ransdell st, at 7:45 Add a new and ultra sophisti-|ers in authentic reproductions ofp, m. tomorrow.
to your bedroom -or|colonial designs. - Available in heavy, sturdy models| py 10 Tomorro Ww
then | gleaming mirrored surfaces. Beau-|they may also be had in lighter, salt and flavoring. -8tir|tifully made, they're ds lovely as|daintier styles for use on the doors|rority, will have a picnic at 7 p. m.
of bedroom or study.
Theta chapter, Phi Delta Pi so-
{ tomorrow in Brookside park.
| 4
|
| soiagamd Wear Winthrop Pa
PAR-BUSTERS
r - buster : 4
and put every. thing you've
got into your swing. Superbly constructed in rich tan Norwegian grain ...
handsome, slipper-ea plain toe -. , . sportsman last . . . a great shoe for a great game.
10°
AA to E Sizes to 14
sy
roomy
18 E, Washington St. “Buy Shoes at a SHOE STORE”
ARR
is
9
PR als i;
