Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 July 1951 — Page 32

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Miss Shelle Ellen Levin

Times State Service

EAST CHICAGO, July 28—Mr. and Mrs. Meyer Levin, of this city, announce Nov. 3 as the wedding date for their daughter, Shelle Ellen, and Myron H. Weinstein, son of Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Weinstein, 480

Washington Blvd., Indianapolis.

The private ceremony will be in the future bride's

home.

Miss Levin, a graduate of Indiana University,

is a member of Sigma Delta Tat Sorority. Her fiance, who was graduated from the Indiana University School of Business, is affiliated with Pi Lambda Phi Fraternity Mr. and Mrs. Levin will entertain Sept. 8 in their home in honor of the engaged couple,

Anna Schon Is Wed in Church Rite

Miss Anna Gail Schon exchanged wedding vows with Michael H. McConahay yesterday at the altar

' of the Little Flower Catholic

Church. The Rev. Fr. Francis Dooley officiated at the double-ring ceremony. A candlelight satin gown with a sheer yoke embroidered with a seed pearl motif was chosen by the bride for her 10 a. m. wedding.

Mauve, Pink Frocks

The two-tiered fingertip veil of English silk illusion was caught to a half-hat of matching illusion accented with seed pearls. She carried a cascade arrangement of white roses, stephanotis and ivy centered with an orchid. Miss Mary Ann Wilhelm, maid of honor, wore a mauve marquiset gown over taffeta. Bridesmaids dressed in matching pink marquiset gowns were Miss Cecelia Gaspar and Miss Mary Lou Gallagher. Mr. McConahay chose William Holmes as best man and Maurice Feeney and Richard Sippell as ushers. After a breakfast and afternoon reception in the Marott Hotel, the couple left on a motor trip to Tippecanoe, They will make their home in Anderson. The bride, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. F. C. Schon, 5843 Shimer Ave, is a graduate of St. Vincent's Hospital School of Nursing: Mr. McConahay, a student at Ball State Teachers College, is the son of Bernard MecConahay, 3101 Winthrop Ave.

Tilden King Takes Bride

Miss Edna Louise Thompson wore a lace and net gown for her 7:30 o'clock wedding Friday to Tilden A. King. Dr. Howard Stone officiated at the double-ring rite in the Irvington Presbyterian Church. Fashioned of white Chantilly lace and imported English net, the bride's dress had a fitted bodice of lace appliqued to a sheer yoke. An overskirt of matching lace highlighted the hooped bouffant skirt of net over satin. Her fingertip veil of silk fllusion was attached to a flared lace halo accented with seed pearls, She carried a white Bible with a purple orchid.

Matron of Honor Mrs. Allen Roberts was the bride's only attendant. Her frock of pale maize net and lace over taffeta was styled with an off-shoulder effect of Chantilly lace. She carried a colonial bouquet. Carl Schultheis was best man and ushers included James Jacobs, Joseph Gouty, Finley Isler and Donovan King. After: the ceremony, a reception ‘was ‘held in the Indianapolis Athletic Club. The couple will make their home at 2423 BE. 58th St, N. Drive. The bride, daughter of

Mrs. Edna L. Thompson of the 38th St address and

Shen-Courtney photo.

TO. BE WED—Thomas M. Hughes announces the approaching marriage, Aug. 25, of his daughter, Helen Eileen, to Glenn L. O'Connor Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. O'Connor, 4440 Carrollton Ave. Miss Hughes is a graduate ‘of Little Company of Mary Hospital, Chicago.

§ 3 a Sa) SEWN

Miner-Baker photo,

VOWS READ — Pleasant Run Evangelical and Reformed Church was the scene last Sunday of Miss Mary Lou Stumpf's marriage to John W. Ellis Jr. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs.

"Earl H. Stumpf, 252 E. South-

ern Ave., and Mr. Ellis is the son of Mr. Ellis, 17 Iris Ave.

Miss Thomson Wed

Mr. and Mrs. Alexander Thomson, 525 W, Kessler

Blvd., annotince the marriages’

last Tuesday, of their daugh-

ter, Judith, to Bruce Failey .

Sherman, New York, son of

. Mrs. John R. Fioretta, New

York, and Donald M. Sherman, Syracuse, N. Y, The

couple will live in New York.

~

' tive is ever pure. The

Capital Capers—

‘Tweed and Transportation’ --

Brighten Days in D.C.

By ELISE MORROW WASHINGTON, July 28—A slight taint of pleasantly coarse commercialism

brightened the soggy summer social week

as several leading diplomats lent their august presence in behalf of British tweed and French transportation.

This is one of the most amusing aspects of ‘life in Washington, where no mo-

Portuguese h a v e wine-tasting parties, the French are al- . ways pushing Dior or Schiaparelli or vin tage champagne. We have been offered everything but an embassy demonstration of the virtues of Egyptian hasheesh as opposed to the Saudi-Arablan betel nut.

The French Ambassador and Mme. Bonnet were the leading performers at the champagne christening of the new offices of a French airline. The airline’s luxury services bear about as much relationship to ordinary travel as these headquarters to a bus station, and the opening party was appropriately opulent. There was no difference between this housewarming and the average embassy reception, except that the receiving line included businessmen—the airline executives—as well as His Excellency the Ambassador and Mme. Bonnet.

and gowns,

Elise Morrow

Are Free.”

« + Shen-Courtney photo. JUNE BRIDE—Mrs. C. Lloyd Kroger is the former Miss Mary Elizabeth Wheaton, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Earnest S.

Wheaton, 5696 W Blvd. The couple was married June 17 in the Broadwa yok ie

urora,

Spectators

ton ist Church. The bridegroom's parents aréithe Rev. and Mrs. David Kroger, A puss

There were two bars and two buffets, set up in the blue-walled main offices, and in an adjacent projection room. The latter was swathed with wine-colored velvet draperies and reminiscent of other national enterprises. Endless rivers of French champagne flowed from the bars, American hams, turkeys, fish and salads, were served from the buffets,

The guest list was certainly no different from that of an embassy party, and included such pillars of the gay international set as Sen. Homer Capehart of Indiant; the dean of the diplomatic corps, Wilhelm Munthe de Morgenstierne of Norway; Baron and Baroness Constantine de Stackelberg; the Dominican Ambassador and Senora de Thomen; the new Australian Ambassador and Mrs. Spender, and Gen. and Mrs. Anthony McAuliffe.

and French pastries, with

dee

THE BRITISH WOOLENS were offered somewhat less magnificently—by a local department store, not His Majesty's embassy— at a luncheon in the Maytlower Hotel Lounge. The models pirouetted in $250-and-up suits to the tune of an air-drill repairing steps in the lobby and the string ensemble playing “The Best Things in Life

at this musical comedy included Mme, Baig, the wife of the Pakistan Ambassador, wearing a lovely sari; the First Secretary of the British Embassy and Mrs. J. R. W. Wilby; several other British Embasky wives; Mrs. Claude Pepper, wife of the former Senator from Florida; the Mayflower’s built-in royalty, Princess Tawhida Halim, now Mrs. Frank Rediker, with her husband; and Mrs. Francis Matthews, wife of the retired Navy Secretary and new Ambassador to Ireland,

AUG. RITE—Miss Patricia Louise Miller and George T. Wood Jr. have chosen Aug. 26 as the date for their marriage in Woodruff United Presbyterian Church. Parents of the couple are Mr. and Mrs. Paul |. Miller, 5175 Primrose Ave., and Mr. and Mrs. Wood Sr., Gary. The bride-to-be, a student at Ball State Teachers College, is a member of Alpha Chi Omega Sorority. Mr. Wood, who is affiliated with Phi Delta Pi Fraternity, is a graduate of the same school.

> & » ‘3

The Sacred Heart Catholic

Ghurch was the scene yesterday of the marriage of Miss Co¥nne Schafer and Leonard Brand, 2530 N. Talbot Ave. The . bride’s uncle, the Rev. Fr. Leo J. Schafer, read the double-ring rite at 9 a. m.

Parents of the couple are Mr. and Mrs. H, J. Schafer, 6214 Nimitz Drive, and Mr.

Oates photo.

BRIDE—Vows uniting Miss Dora Grainger and Philip E. Berk were read July 20 in the Indianapolis Hebrew Congregation Temple. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Earl F. Green, 1426 S. Moreland Ave. Mr. Berk is the son of Mrs. Ellias R. Berkowitz, Seville Apts.

MARRIED—Cpl. and Mrs. Harry 'W. Roembke Jr. are living

in Tampa, Fla., followi “is the da

¥

3;

ing their marriage, July 14, in Assumption Catholic Church. The bride, the Fora, ”

Miss Mary Lou Staab,

ughter of Leonard A. Staab, 1002 Blaine Ave. Cpl. ~ «Roembke is the son of Mr. Roembke Sr. $025 Blaine Are. ol

. SUNDAY, JULY 29, 1951

Ee Bride's Uncle Officiates at Nuptial Rite

Mrs. Leonard Brand

and Mrs. Joseph Brand, Albuquerque, N. M., formerly of Indianapolis. Pastel gowns of organdy were worn by Miss Betty Fagan, maid of honor, and Miss Dorothy Bowles, Mrs. Harold Lohman and Mrs. John Ray, bridesmaids. Alfred Lux was best man and Richard Elliot, Dan Carpenter and Joseph Brand were ushers.

Burton-Turner

Shen-Courtney photo

Mrs. Richard Burton

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P. H. Ho photo.

The bride chose a nylon tulle gown fashioned with a fitted empire waistline and ruffled skirt falling into a slight train. Immediately following the ceremony, a breakfast and reception were held in the Spink-Arims Hotel. For their wedding trip, the couple motored to North Carolina and the Smoky Mountains.

Vows Read

Times State Service

PLAINFIELD, July 28 —Before an altar banked with palms and white gla=dioli, the Rev. Phay Plummer read wedding vows last night for Miss Elnora Turner and Richard Burton.

Parents of the couple are Mr. and Mrs. Charles O.

Turner, Plainfield, and Mr.

and Mrs. racy Mooresville, The bride chose a white imported organdy gown for the 8:30 o'clock ceremony in the Plainfield Baptist Church. Styled with a fitted bodice, the dress had a bouffant skirt edged with embroidery. The fingertip veil of illusion was caught to an organdy bonnet accented with seed pearls.

Burton,

Trip to Chicago

Mrs. Margaret Alexander, Plainfield, was her sister's matron of honor. Bridesmaids were Mrs. Katherine Ford, Bloomington; Miss Jo Ann

Runick, Whiting, and Miss Violet Yanakeff, Indianapolis. Anthus Pygman, Moores ville, was best man and ushers included Richard Thompson, Mooresville; Donald Doestch, South Bend, and John Stokesberry, Indianapolis. The couple left for Chicago on a wedding trip after a church reception.

BRIDE AND BRIDE-TO-BE—Mr. and Mrs. Clifton Schmalz,

Patricksburg, announce that their daughter, Carol + will be married next Sunday to Charles nee ie " Mr. and“Mrs. William O. Schoppenhorst, 637 Middle Drive. Woodruff Place. The ceremony will be in the Bloomington First

Methodist Church. (Block photo.

Mr. and Mrs. William T. Shof-

ner are living in Laurel, Md., following their marriage July 8 in

the Fairland Methodist Church. Parents of the bri

e, who was

Miss Imogene Bush (right), are Mr. and Mrs, Er in land, and Mr. and Mrs. Henry Shofner, Shelbyville sts she brid: photo), £0 we

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groom's parents. [Chaffee

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' SUNDA Chair fi Group Camp Committe announced } Camp Fire sociation. on the Camp The Leader will meet at Miss Margar chairman, a complete city tivities for t! the 1951-52 s Committee Leaders Ass include Mrs, gram; Mrs, mas Camp party; Mrs. § mas Blue party; Mrs. 1952 Birthda Mrs. Will rummage sa honors; Mrs Bird Magic 1 James C. P mittee. The horse 3 pm. Aug Guests are w tions can he

for the ple campers.

Trip Follo: Cerel

Vows ul Bosiak and SON Were Ii

vesterday

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