Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 November 1949 — Page 19
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* LaWer, Snubbad by Reds at Celebration, Don't Invite Them fo Their Party
ton society.” This, of course, was the understatement of the century. : Aside from slivovitz, the party of-
Elise Morrow
partment, plus‘ an unpronounceable liqueur made, I was gruesomely assured, from maraschino cherries. There was also a variety of Yugoslav wines—all of which taste better than vo.ka, kids; some excellent pastries and cookies, a delicious stuffed cabbage called sarma, and a semimeat pie—~meat between layers of crisp pastry. One tactless and obviously ill-informed woman looked at the pie and cried, gayly, “Ah, piroshki!” A glowering Yugoslav solemnly assured her that it was no such thing—that pirosAki was, you will pardon the i a-Russian-dish,
“figures not well known in Washing-
§
Mrs: Victor P. Free .
Saectad
Rex E. Blood is to be the best
C. Kamplain Jr. ‘ Trip Follows Reception °
e bride will wear a gown. of white satin and lace, The bodice] of lace has a marquiset yoke, The gown is made with a molded bodice and hoop skirt extending
from a cfowh qf white satin and pearls and she will carry a cascade bouquet of white mums and
There will be a reception in the Indianapolis Athletic Club after the ceremony. The couple will leave for a trip south after the reception.
They will be at home in December at d . Meridian St.
The tall and pleasant Yugoslav ambassador, Sava Kosanovice, received with his sister and official hostess, a physician who is listed in the Social List of Washington as Mme. Mica Trbojevie, M, D. The current anti-Russian movement among Yugpslavs should give at least a little heart to the fierce Serbs who, “when the pre-Tito Royal Yugoslav government ran the embassy here under Ambassador Constantin Fotitch, were the backbone of the outfit. These Serbs never did accept Tito, and after they were almost forcibly removed from the embassy, they congregated in a little coffee house, or the unfortunate Washington approximation of a coffee house, and muttered dark Balkan curses into the unfortunate Washington approximation of slivovitz.
Remembers First Party in Washington
THE FIRST Washington embassy reception I ever went to was one given by Fotitch and the Royal Yugoslav crowd, one
spring, in the same embassy, and I am often dismayed to. remember how exciting that party was, and how dull and | routinized all embassy receptions seem after you have been to
more than three of them. J I can remember every detail of that first party-—the beautiful lilacs, the beautiful candles, and Jim Forrestal in one of the tweed Jackets he invariably wore if he could-be persuaded to attend
anything social, a light spring fog pouring in through the doors
which had been opened onto the garden, and Lady Halifax, the frail, silvery, almost nebulous wife of Lord Halifax, who was then the-British ambassador. gn Embassy parties are like martinis, I guess—there’s enough for anybody. It was with magnificent and ironic appropriateness that the first party held at Friendship since the death of Mrs. Evalyn Walsh McLean was a tea which was given this week as a benefit for the Washington Committee for Education on Alcoholism, sponsored by Yale University. Friendship, the mansion in which Mrs. McLean once gave the
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CLEVELAND, O., Nov. 26—Mr. and Mrs. Victor P. Frees | are on a trip to Canada following their marriage at 7:30 p. m. [DePauw University. She is a
today in the Lyndhurst Community Church here. . |
The bride was Miss Betty Adkinson, daughter of Mr, and Mrs. |
\
Glenn R. Adkinson, 8. Euclid, O. The bridegroom is the son of |
The Rev. A. W. Bloomfield officiated. Miss Barbara Caulkins, Flint: Mich, was the maid of honor and’ the bridesmaids were Mrs. Ralph E. Miller,
Indianapolis, sister of the bride-
groom, and Miss Janet Brisbin. They wore burgundy velvet gowns with matching headdresses and mitts. They carried bronze and gold ch ran themums.
Home Reception The bride's white satin gown had a lace Peter Pan collar and peplum. The full skirt was gathered on the fitted bodice. A seed pearl tiara held the fingertip silk illusion veil. Her
erty sion ana and Purdue _ Universities. most fabulous parties Washington has seen, has been reconverted
bouquet was of white bridal | flowers. Edward Potts was the best man while the ushers were Herbert Hoppe and Mike Duly. The reception was in the home of ‘the bride's parents. For her wedding trip the bride chose a blue gabardine suit with pink and blue acces: sories. After next Sunday the couple will be at home in Lakewood. S The bride is a graduate of Miami University, Oxford, O., and is a Zeta Tau Aloha Sorority member. The brif2groom, a member of the Sigma Phi Epsilon Fraternity, attended Indi-
Miss Finley is a graduate of
member of Kappa Alpha Theta Sorority. The bridegroom is also a graduate of DePauw and ig a
| member of Lambda Chi Alpha Mr. and Mrs, Victor W. Free, 2641 N. Arlington Ave; Indianapolis: | Fraternity: ee :
Hospital Guild Plans Party
Event Will Be
In Blo¢k's
Mrs, Edward Trimpe and Mrs. Louis Groh will be co-chairmen for the St. Francis Hospital Guild card party Tuesday. It will be at 1:30 p. m. in Block's Auditorium. They will be assisted by guild officers and directors. Mesdames Roy Nation, Amos
- serve on the special prizes cdmmittee headed by Mrs. I. G.
py division into several apartments. The Committee for Education on Alcoholism, which does excellent and constructive work in a city which definitely needs it, is a favorite project of Mrs. Harold Walker, a handsome Washington dowager who has moved into the central portion of Friendship. "Tt took little imagination to conjure up the ghosts of heaven knows how many Washington drunks at Mrs. Walker's tea, in
| view of the setting, and it was to be hoped that—as well as | haunting the occasion-—they wene blessing the venture it
sponsored.
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into a cathedral train. l Her fingertip illusion veil falls
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