Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 April 1948 — Page 3

i zk)

i EH

§ :

5 g g f

; ;

2% 2 dit

aR’

~382 2 ee : £

; out, he said in June,

8 what th bout missing pieces; t some of those re. aking gasoline. The ment's negotiating So. are patent

‘had an ax Id certains

the witnesses said he e Russians

| : __. THE

Two Rites

Solemnized In Church

Two marriage services were

Tt

an

INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

pe >=

MRS. THOMAS S. McCRAEF

Higwiive: | Rn a

AND SANDRA

Mosbaugh- White Vows

Followed by

Reception

In the Highland Club

see what's in thom

Butler University’s Sweeney Chapel was the scene, at 2 p. ma’ today, of ‘Miss Jo Ann White's marriage to Harry A.-Mosbaugh, .. The Rev. Lewis McAdow of the University Park Christian Church

read this morning in the St. Catherine of Sienna Catholic

k orse Sho

or Sidé Mezzanine nes Charity Horse

OUR shows, check nate the show for

es esssasteten eves desis stern

severest

seats, $1.20; Side tax. Make Checks rse Show and Mall

v, No. 838 Lemcke

Church. Miss Gertrude L. Wichmann and Paul H. Armbruster were married at 9:30 o'clock. The Rev. Fr. Julius Armbruster, brother of the bridegroom, of-

* ficiated.

A peach chiffon frock was worn by the maid of honor, Miss Mary A. Wichmann, and the bridesmaids, Miss Jean Wichmann and Mrs. Francis Toner, wore green chiffon. Mr: Toner was the best man and Joseph Armbruster and Victor Sahm were ushers. The bride, sister of A. J. Wichmann, 1310 Comer. Ave. wore a candlelight gown with a lace bodice and full satin skirt. Her fingestip illusion veil fell from a tiara of orange blossoms and she carried white orchids on a prayerbook. : After a breakfast in. the Homestead and a reception in the home of the bride’s brother, the couple left for a motor trip north. They will be at home after May 1 at 1418 E. Tabor St. Mr. Armbruster is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Julius Armbruster, 2130 Napoleon St. The bride attended Butler University.

Breakfast Follows Miller-Kocher Rite

- Charles L. Miller took Miss Florence C. Kocher as his bride in a 10:30 o'clock ceremony. The Rev. Fr. Joseph McCrisahen read the vows. Mr. and Mrs. Frederic Kocher, 1305 Comer Ave. are the ,bride’s parents and Mr. Miller is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Louis L. Miller, 131 E. Palmer St. The matron of honor was Mrs, L. N. Kremer. Bridesmaids were Misses Betty Jane and Jo Ann Miller. The attendants wore pastel colored marquiset dresses. Vernon J. Miller was the best man add George F. Kocher and Roland G. Daeger were ushers.

A white frosted organdy gown fashioned witha molded bodice and full skirt was worn by the bride.” A tiara of orange blossoms held her fingertip veil. She. carried white roses. There was a breakfast at Cifaldi’s and a reception in the home of the bride’s parents after the ceremony. The couple will be at home after May 1 at 935 High St.

Fr. Sweeney Officiates

The Rev. Fr. Cornelius Sweeney read the vows uniting Miss Alice Jane Hart and Roscoe R: Chauncey at 10 a. m. today in the Blessed Sacrament Chapel of 88, Peter and Paul Cathedral,. The bride, daughter of Mr. and Mrs, William J. Hart, 1240 Broadway, wore a pink ballerina suit with a matching bonnet and brown accessories. She carried a white orchid on a white Prayerbook. > Mrs. J. O. Hillock Jr. was the ymatron of honor. She wore a beige gabardine suit and brown accessories and carried pink camellias. William J, Hart Jr. Was the best man while John T. Lanahan and David Chauncey were ushers, There was a breakfast and reception in La Rue’s Restaurant after the ceremony. Mr. Chauncey is the son of Mr. and

Mrs. Alvin L. Chauncey, 1429 Spann Ave,

Program Tomorrow The Wayne American Legio

n Auxillary will have charge of the program tomorrow morning in the Indiana Boys’ School, Plainfield. The Senior Chorus of the Lynhurst Baptist Church Will sing, directed by Mrs. Paul Mason,

rie

Miss Shanahan, Robert Bone Exchange Vows

A double-ring ceremony united Miss Irene Shanahan and Robert M. Bone at 9 o'clock this jhmorning .in St. Patrick's al Church. The Rev. Fr. Ernest Strahl read the vows. The bride is the daughter of Mrs. Nora Shanahan, 1440 Hoyt Ave. Mr. Bone is the son of Casper Bone, 3121 Boulevard Place. Pastel marquiset frocks were worn by the bride's attendants, Mrs. Raymond Esselborn, Miss Jean Elliott and Miss Noreen Hall. Donald L. Patrick was the best man and John Benjamin ‘and Charles Webster were ushers. Seed pearl embroidery accented the bride’s candlelight satin gown. Her two-tiered illusion veil, edged in lace, cascaded from a tiara of pearls and she carried calla lilies. There was a breakfast in the Homestead and a reception in the home of the bride’s mother after the ceremony. The couple will make their home with the bridegroom's father after a wedding trip south.

Concert Tomorrow Will Be in Church

The Chorale Section of the Matinee Musicale will give its annual spring concert at 8 p.m. tomorrow in the Meridian: Heights Presbyterian Church. Charles Hedley directs the group. Mrs, Mary Barton and Miss Mary Spalding will be soloists. The section will close its season with a luncheon Tuesday noon in the Marott Hotel. The re-elected officers will be installed. They are: Mrs. Lloyd McColgin, chairman; Mrs. Mark H. Mothersill, vice chairman; Mrs. Fred Lehr and Mrs. Edwin Pattison, recording secretary and assistant; Mrs. Frank Billeter, corresponding secretary, and Mrs. Wayne McGlade and Mrs. Walter E. Wolf, treasurer and assistant. Mesdames W. E. McClellan, V. R. Teter and W, E. Van-

a

SOM LYN

VE

Couple Takes

3) . . Chicago Trip Vows uniting Miss Joann Mary Sauer and Truman Ray Knight were read at 10:30 a. m. | today in the Sacred Heart Catholic Church. The Rev. Fr. Alvin Schlubeck officiated. : Mrs. Irene E. Sauer, 627 E. Minnesota St, is the bride's mother, The bridegroom’s parents are Mr. and Mrs. Loran E. Knight, 1712 Montcalm St. Mrs. James A. Whitney was the matron of honor and Miss Elizabeth C. Sauer and Miss Betty L. Jellison were bridesmaids. They wore blue, pink and yellow taffeta frocks. Bennie L. Knight served as the best nan and Charles E. Heckman and Milton T. Hoover were ushers. A gown of white slipper satin trimmed with seed pearls was worn by the bride. A net bonnet held her fingertip illusion veil and she carried white roses. A trip to Chicago followed a breakfast and reception in the Forty and Eight Club.

Sli

Smith Club Plans

Annual Dance Members of the Smith College Club will bring flowers from their own gardens for decorations at the club's annual Spring Dance May 8 in the Woodstock Club. Proceeds will be donated to the Smith College 75th Anniversary Fund. Co-chairmen for. the event are Mrs. William Spiegel, Shelbyville, and Mra. John Collett. Mrs. Morris L. Brown is in charge of invitations, Mrs. James Carroll heads the patroness committee and Mrs, James Skinner is planning the decorations, Mrs. Ward Fenstermaker is chairman of finance for the dance, and publicity is being handled by Mrs. Leslie Lee and Mrs. Edward W. Harris.

Dance Tomorrow

A “Gay Nineties” dance will be held at 8 p. m. tomorrow by the 329 Club. The party. which includes a buffet supper at 6 p. m.,, is to be in the YWCA. Miss Betty Wilson is the gengral chairman. The Wilwill play.

DAR Chapter Unit Has Tea, Meeting

BEHRMAN KATHY AND KURT

Photos by John Spicklemire, Times Staff Photographer, By MARGUERITE SMITH, Times Garden Columnist ~ . OFTEN “FASHIONS FOR THE GARDEN" apparently are dreamed up in New York skyscrapers and California swimming pools. How else account

for those picturesque floppy straw hats whose wide brims never met Indiana's stiff April breezes? “I look at the garden outfits in fashion magadines and I think they're so pretty but so impossible , , . for any real gardening,” says Mrs: F. E, Schroeder of Southport. “Most of us run ouf to do a little weeding in between household chores,” says Mrs. O. M. Enyart, 75 N. Hawthorne Lane, speaking for all busy homemakers. “We've got to wear clothes that will double for both.” As for the men, their “new look” in gardening duds is likely to be an “old look.” It's a little hard to tell whether they just cherish their worn garden clothes (as W. W. Cothran, 7050 N. Pennsylvania 8t., does), or whether that's their “new look” after mother and the girls have been outfitted. Anyway, this is what sometimes happens to them: One Saturday a well-known businessman of our town was polishing the fine lawn and shrubbery which set off his attractive suburban home. A salesman drove up and stopped. “Can you teli me,” asked the salesman, “is the man of the house at home? , , , Oh, aren't YOU the yardman?” : » » » ” » . BUT ALL OF YOU experienced dirt gardeners are practical persons. And your working togs have to be as practical as a crop report. You want—and wear—garden clothes that are comfortable, durable, washable. Some of you favor slacks, often in denim. You usually buy them a size or two large, so they're roomy. “Flannel slacks are warm for cool spring days, or work 33 the shade,” reports Mrs. Edgar Behrman, 5215 Woodside ve, “For hot summer days, I like cotton gabardine—cooler than denim,” Mrs. J. I. Gelly, 15638 N. Dearborn St., says. ‘Bright seersucker print blouses wash easily: need no ironing.” The young fry like Anne Donagh, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. John Donagh, 529 E..57th 8t., go in for pedal pushers or shorts. “But only the hipless should wear them,” some of you sigh. Sometimes you like full-skirted sunback dresses, the better to

‘enjoy the warm sun.

As for hats, quite often you don’t wear them. You like the. sun too much and don’t care if you do get brown as whatever berry is brown. But some of you burn and blister if you're hatless. Mrs. Gélly, for one, likes her wired-brim cotton hat, “cooler than straw; washes in the tub; needs no ironing.” It also has a wide chin strap to hold it on in the wind.

n 2 » ” # . YOU ALWAYS WEAR sturdy flat-heeled shoes—moccasin or loafer type preferred. “They don't make deep heel marks in the border.” Composition soles you find good for those dewy summer mornings when you have to run out right after breakfast to see if the first rosebud has opened yet, Gloves? A good many of you “almost never wear gloves.” You like the feel of the good earth in your hands; you want to handle your small seedlings with sensitive fingers. Or if you have a plain weeding job to do, you often settle for “Just furnace gloves—the canvas ones.” For pruning, though, you want protection, like the all-leather army gloves Mrs. E. J. Dieckman, 5424 Guilford Ave., finds perfect for coping with rose thorns. A canvas-inside, rubber-outside kind “that the dirt Just slides off of,” is a favorite of Mrs. Schroeder. Then, of course, there’s an occasional affernoon when you don’t have real dirt garden chores to do.- That's when you and your young daughter, like Mrs. Thomas 8S. McCrae and 9-year-old Sandra, 3909 N. Delaware St., dress up in full peasant skirts and cotfon blouses, adding your attractions to the flowers in the border. (And even then you can't resist pulling a stray weed or two out of the rose bed.)

Mrs. Pile Hostess To Research Club

Mrs. H. T. VanLandinghiaz, 4720 N. Capitol Ave. entertained for the tea given yesterday by the Wheel and Distaff Committee. of Caroline Scott Harrison DAR Chapter. Mesdames Emsley W. Johnson Jr., Thomas G. Harvey, Herbert R. Hill, Howard P. Travis and Kirkwood Yockey assisted. Mrs. John H. Jefferson presided at a business meeting, and: Mrs. Stephen J. Klos spoke on “Pre-Revolutionary Silver.”

Mrs. Roy J. Pile is hostess chairman for the Woman's Research Club guest tea at 2 p. m. Monday in the DAR Chapter House. Mrs. Ruth Tevis Spencer will speak. Other hostesses will be Mesdames Charles C. -Josey, Her. bert R. Hill, William H. Cooper, G. A. Ratti, C. A. Pfleiderer, L. G. Carlin, A. P, Thomas, T. D. Campbell, F. E. Bibbons and Charles W. Gis

officiated. !

The bride, who is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Stephen G. White of Noblesville, wore a candlelight satin gown accented

with a marquiset yoke and trimmed in lace. Her fingertip illusion veil cascaded from a. bonnet of illusion and she carried a white orchid on a white prayerbook. Miss Peggy Haggan, Noblesville, the maid of honor, wore a pink taffeta frock. Miss Jean Ann McMahan and Miss Florence Casey, bridesmaids, wore nile green taffeta. The best man was James Church and the ushers were Stephen White, Noblesville, Eugene Colville, Joseph Wickham and Bill O'Kane,

Couple to Be at Home In Noblesville

A reception in the Highland Golf and Country Club followed the marrigge./VAtteri a: short trip to Chicago, the gouple will be at home in No e. A member of Al Chi Omega Sorority, the bride attended Stephens College and Butler University. Mr. Mosbaugh, son of Mr, and Mrs. Edgar A. Mosbaugh, Noblesville, is attending Butler, He is a member of Sigma Nu Fraternity.

Dr. Browning Will Read Nuptial Vows

A candlelight ceremony uniting Miss Martha Jane Fear and Edward Allen Foisey will be read at 2:30 p. m, tomorrow inthe North Methodist Church. Dr. Dallas L. Browning will read the vows,

The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lee E. Fear, 6151 Norwaldo Ave. She will wear a white satin gown made with a molded bodice accented With lace. The full skirt extends into a cathedral train. Her two-tiered illusion weil will fall from a satin headband. 8he will carry a bouquet of white roses surrounding an orchid center, Mrs. Glenn Farrow, matron of honor, will wear a pink taffeta frock, and the bridesmaids, Mrs. Raymond R. Brush and Mrs, Max Maple, will wear green taffeta. Carroll Forrest is to be the best man and Harold and William Folisey will be ushers, A reception in the church will follow the ceremony. After a trip to the Smoky Mountains, the couple will be at home at 5730 E. Washington St. Miss Fear attended Butler University and is a member of Delta Delta Delta Sorority. Mr. Foisey is the son of Mr. and Mrs, Frank L. Foisey, 3336 N. Wallace Ave.

CIHN Officers Are Elected

Mrs, Frank J. Schmidt was elected president of the CIHN Club at a recent meeting in the home of Mrs. Philip M. Terry,

1366 N. Kealing Ave. Other offi-

cers are Mrs. Merrill J. Woods, vice president; Mrs. Ralph H. Kensler and Mrs. Chester O. Martin, recording and corresponding secretaries; Mrs. Terry, treasurer, and Mrs, William M. Wilson, director.

Mrs. Ridge Speaker

Mrs. Martin Roschelle, 44 Woodside Ave. will entertain the Betsy Ross Chapter, ITSC, at 6:30 p. m. Monday. Clayton Ridge will be the speaker.

Goucher Club Meet The Indianapolis A Club will hold its spring ing at 1 p. m. next Sa in home of Miss

YAY

the

“§

E. T. Rees Jr. 4

Will Marry Miss Presley

CAMDEN, Ark. Apr, 17 =

Miss Mary Etta Presley and Edward Thomas Rees Jr. will be married at 4 p. m. tomorrow in the First Methodist Church here. The Rev. W, N, Hart will officiate.

The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Clement B. Pres ley, Camden, and the bride. m is the son of Mr. and fs, Rees, 1103 N, Butler Ave, Indianapolis. 4 . Mrs. L. H, BR son, &. Louis, will be tH€ matron of honor and Miss' DeLoyd Goynes, Camden, and Mrs. Amn Bowden, Dallas, Tex. will be the bridesmaids. Nancy Edwards, Camden, is to be the flower girl. The ate tendants will wear ivory and gold brocaded taffeta frocks, The best man is to he Mr. Clawson and Bill Edwards and R. H. Patterson, both of Came den; will be ushers. Miss Presley will wear a white brocaded taffeta gown with an {illusion overskirt. Her fingertip {illusion vell is ate tached to a tiara of seed pearls and she will carry a white satin muff topped with orchids. After a reception in the Cams« den Country Club, the couple will take a trip east. They will be at home after South Bend: ’

Miss Bradford Is Bride

Miss Roselynn Bradford bee came the bride of William F, Wolfe in a 9 a. m. ceremony read today in St. Anthony's Catholic Church. The Rev. Fr, M., J. Gorman officiated. The maid of honor, Miss Mary Curd, wore a nile green taffeta frock, and the brides maids, Mrs. R. L. Brooks and Mrs. Raymond Wolfe, wore blue and yellow marquiset dresses.

Raymond Wolfe was the best

man and the ushers were James ..

Wolfe, Robert Leppert, Dale Green and Mr, Brooks. Thomas Ray Wolfe was the ringbearer, The bride, daughter of Mr, and Mrs. Ernest Bradford, 22 8. Mount St, wore a frosted

white organdy gown fashioned

with a fitted bodice and ruffled skirt. A band of flowers held her fingertip illusion veil and she carried a white orchid on a prayerbook, After a reception in the home , of the bride’s parents, the cou-

ple left for a short wedding -

trip. They will be at home after Apr. 25 at 221; 8. Mount St.

Mr, Wolfe is the son. and Mrs. Raymond « R.

Lambs Club Names Leads for Frolic

Mrs, William L. Schroeder, Mrs, Ford H. Kaufman, Frank " Parrish, C. Norman Green and George Fotheringham will play the leads in the Lambs Club Spring Frolic on May 1. There will be a dinner-dance

Mr, olfe,

May 1 in

BR ee

th