Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 August 1951 — Page 31

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Nuptial Rite |

SUNDAY, AUG. 19, 1951

Rev. Bergen

Future Bride Will: Read

Loren N. Montgomery will eske Miss Josephine Marie Barrett as his bride in a 3:30 o'clock .ceremony this afternoon in the Wallace Street Presbyterian Church. The Rev. John Bergen will officiate at the sin-gle-ring ceremony. Farents of the couple are Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Barrett, 1115 N. Bancroft Ave., and Mr. and Mrs.

R. W. Montgomery, 3848 BE. New York St. ’

The Irvington Methodist Church

Miss Dorothy Anna Evans’ marriage to Thomas George Pease. The 7:30: o'clock ceremony was read by the Rev, George Kimsey,| pastor Church.

was the scene Friday night ot}

of Memorial Baptist| |

The bride is the daughter of|

Mrs. Mary Hodgin Evans, 2250 Magnolia Place, and Mr. and Mrs. | Thomas Pease, 6213 E. 25th St.,| are parents of the bridegroom. |

The bride wore a white taffeta

redingote over an organdy under-| skirt. Her nylon net veil caught to a coronet of fresh ivy) and stephanotis. bouquet of white roses, ivy and

was |

She carried ai

Miss Beverly Davis will be Ss (stephanotis. a maid of honor wearing a deep 84 | The couple left on a trip north; rose marquiset gown over pale YLewellsn iota after a church reception. They!

pink taffeta.

Bridegroom's Attendants

Miss Lydia Johnson, Scottsburg, and Miss Peggy Lacey will be bridesmaids dressed in pale pink, Colleen McElhany will be flowergirl. Midshipman John Jeffries will be best man and ushers will in-| clude John T. Garnier and Joseph | C. Moore. The bride’s gown of white mar-

Miss Anton

Times State Service ANDERSON, Aug. 18—Mr, and Mrs. George K. Anton of this city announced the engagement of their daughter, Patricia, to Nicholas G. Farris Thursday night at a dinnerdance in their Forest Manor home. Miss Anton attended Miami

Leave on Cuba Vacation)

will live at 6655 E. 14th St.

The bride attended Butler Uni-|

versity and Jordan Music College. Mr. Pease is a student at Butler University.

Miss Lillian Landy, 1824 Union|

|St., and Miss Ann Calderon, 1009 {Church St, for a two-week vacation in Cuba.

left last night]

By ELISE MORROW WASHINGTON, Aug. 18— The State Department's protocol division has announced firmly that no ptans for the royal British invasion in October will -be released until Sep-

| tember, but the social hysteria

has already been accurately charted and cataloged. A curious quirk in the visit of the heiress presumptive to the British throne, Princess Elizabeth, and her husband Philip, the Duke of Edinburgh, is that the Dominion of Canada rather than Great Britain takes the lead in entertaining—in congultation of course with the mother country-—because Elizabeth will be visiting this continent. technically as the heiress to the King of Canada; Statute of Westminster, and all that. The Royal Canadian Air Force will fly Elizabeth and Philip down, and His Majesty's embassy will take second place to the Dominion’s. The President and Mrs. Truman will entertain at Blair House with a dinner party in honor of the royal couple the first night. The following evening, the official return dinner will be given by the Canadian Ambassador and

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Vows Are Said Ceeita Capers— In Irvington "Social Hyst

Mrs. Hume Wrong. On the afternoon of the second day, there will be a reception, or garden party if the weather is suitable, at-the British embassy.

LJ & » THE DREADFUL words “garden party” evoke dark memories: of one of the most calamitous occurrences in the history of Anglo-American relations—the June garden party at the embassy in 1939 in honor of King George and Queen Elizabeth. Sir Ronald Lindsay, who was ambassador then, was discreetly retired shortly after this gay event. Sir Oliver Franks, the present ambassador, and a good one, though not enthusiastically socially inclined, is probably hoping the same

blessed fortune will befall him.’

Most of the British are looking forward to this garden party, reception, or what have you, as to the black hole of Calcutta or the evacuation at Dunkirk. Dinners are different. A dinner party can easily be controlled by the limitations of seating accomodations.

n “ » EVERYONE down to the garbage man and the corner

invited to dinners. Everyone

does expect to be invited to a reception. This is not possible, and, as in the celebrated 1939 a few strategic persons whose presence might be

affair,

. politically wise if not soclally desirable, will be neglected, and the cause of U. 8. British brotherhood thereby

at Bunker Hill However, Labour is in, the dear days of Tory ascendency are temporarily dead, and the guest list may be more flexible and broadminded. All this is typical of the blood, sweat, toil and tears that goes into the construction of parties here. Referring to Washington social life as “a gay whirl,” or “fun,”

is like calling dementia prae-

cox a slight touch of jitters.

" NM = THE FIRST largé party to be given by the new Australian Ambassador and Mrs. Percy Spender will be a reception Monday at the embassy in honor of the visiting Australian minister of health, Sir Earle Page. Mrs. Spender, a small beauty,

sent rocketing back to where it was

is a delightful woman, and what is generally called an enchanting addition to the diplomatic corps. She .is the author of several first rank mystery stories, including “Murder by Moonlight,” “Death Comes in the Night,” and “The Charge’'s Murder.” She doesn't expect to have time enough here to do anything literally but absorb atmosphere. Washington society is plainly a good research center for an author of murder mysteries. You meet such interesting corpses.

Ambassador Spender was formerly Australia’s minister of external affairs. Since their arrival several months ago, Mrs. Spender has “been redecorating the embassy with new draperies, Chinese rugs, their collection of Australian art and old English silver. Australia’s lot was rather dull in Washington (under the former ambassador and Mrs. Norman Makin, a rather retiring couple), a destiny which obviously is being revised by the Spenders. n ” ” ANOTHER new contribution to the diplomatic set is the poor

PAGE 31

eria Already In High Gear Over Visit Of English Royal Couple

drunk does not expect to be

man who has the unen task of interpreting Peron, th dictator of Argentina, This hapless creature “Dr. Hipolito,

Paz, the new ambassador from; Argentina arrived this week with his wife and two children, and is in the process of settling down in the embassy on New Hampshire Ave. Vb He will doubtless do better than his predecessor, Dr: Jeronimo Remorino, who was unmarried. It is one of the con= stant and irreconcilable conflicts’ that plague foreign offices and state departments whether bachelors or married men do better at the delicate jobs of diplomacy. Our State Department pri< vately approves the married state, since bachelors, although highly desirable as extra men, are more likely to get involved in trouble, attract scandal and so forth. Bachelors, however well intentioned, are at the un< tender mercies of the ambitious women who flourish in all capital cities like noxious weeds, The married diplomat has his wife to protect him as well as to serve as official hostess.

»

University and was graduated from DePauw University. Her fiance, the son of Mr. and Mrs. George N. Farris, 59 W. 58th St., Indianapolis, attended Indiana University. He is a | member of Sigma Pi Fraternity. A November wedding is planned by the couple.

quiset is fashioned with a shirred bodice and a full skirt extending into a chapel train,

Church Reception

Her fingertip fllusion veil will shower from a satin headpiece] accented with seedpearls. She, will carry a cascade bouquet of|

| amazonica lilies, stephanotis and |G lad Can Be Sorved |

agapanthus.

After a church reception, the 1 couple will leave on a edaing| ooking Bandbox Fresh h-| trip to the Northwest. They will 21 haying guests or Juneh make their home in Champaign, 0 Why not serve a large salad Il. after next Sunday. {bowl that can be prepared an The bride attended Hanover | hour or so before serving. All the College and is a graduate of In-| fruits will look bandbox fresh. | diana University. She is a mem-| Golden canned cling peach ber of Phi’ Mu Sorority. | halves, pale green honeydew, Mr. Montgomery is a graduate melon balls, whole berries, juicy! of Purdue University and is a|Plums, pitted and stuffed with graduate student at the Univer-|cream cheese and frosted grapes sity of Illinois. He is affiliated make a colorful display. Dressing with Pi Kappa Phi Fraternity. {should be passed separately.

Logansport Club Is Scene Of Wedding Reception

imes State Service

LOGANSPORT, Aug. 18—A reception in the Logdnsport Country Club followed the wedding ceremony yesterday afternoon of Miss Patricia Ann Miller and Robert St.

John Lukemeyer.

The 2:30 o'clock double-ring rite was read here in the Calvary § Presbyterian Church. Parents of the couple are Mr. and Mrs. Glenn L., Miller of this city and Dr. and Mrs. St. John Lukemeyer, Jasper. The bride wore a blush nylon net and lace gown over satin ® styled with a fitted bodice and a bouffant skirt with a lace chapel train,

Net Frocks Frocks of shrimp net over taffeta were worn by the attendants. The bride’s sister, Miss Mary Lou Miller, was maid of honor. Miss Sue Sharp, Richmond; Miss Nancy Miller, Indianapolis Mrs. Donna Biddinger, Minneapolis, Minn.; Miss JoAnn St. Clair, Rockford, :Ill.; Miss Carol Burnell, Torrington, Conn., and Miss Margaret Bowen, Logansport, were bridesmaids. Flower- 4 | girl was Harriet Murdock, left on a wedding trip to Miami Logansport. 2 ,« |Fla., and Nassau. They will make Rod MacDonald, Indianapolis, their home in Bloomington. was his brother-in-law’s best man, The bride attended Connecticut and ushers included John Wal-! College for Women and was lace, Indianapolis; Peter Get-| graduated from Indiana Univertings, Lafayette: Willlam Price, sity where she was -a member of

Mrs. Lukemeyer

Holland, Mich.; William Earn- Kappa Kappa Gamma Sorority. hart, Marion; Donald Fiedbke, Mr. Lukemeyer is a student at Goshen, and David Stevenson,! Indiana University and is afRichmond filiated with Phi Kappa Psi Fra-

After the ceremony, the couple ternity.

Clean Nails With a Brush Fach Time You Wash Hands

By ALIGIA HART

IN THE DAYS before fingernail polish provided coverup for grimy nail tips, a nail brush was an important part of a woman’s manicure equipment. It still is, to any woman

|

RnR

YOU drop by to visit with a friend and see that she is very busy. WRONG: Say: “You go right ahead with your work, and I'll sit and talk to you.” RIGHT: Stay a few minutes and then leave. . - =” » ! WRONG: Make out your

whose beauty rituals are founded upon self-respect. There's no substitute for basic cleanliness in any good looks program. If your work, at home or on | the job, results within a few hours in dirt-caked nails, it's a | good idea to provide for yourself a nail brush to be used each time you wash your hands. | If you're a career woman, | it's a good investment to keep such a small brush in the ladies’ lounge or, if necessary, in your desk or locker. Another, in your bathrom at home, will serve as a tool for achieving spic-and-spanness in the eve- | ning. For in-between nail cleanups, you'll find it handy to carry in | your purse a file or orange | stick, as well as an emery guest list strictly on the basis board for emergency smooth- |

of “What people do I ‘owe’'?” | ings of ragged edges. | RIGHT: Realize that happy | evenings are the result of. bringing together people you are sure will enjoy each other's company—and make that | your main point when selecting your guests, # ” » ! YOU are having an informal dinner and know that at least some of your guests smoke, WRONG: Make no provision for wcigarets, matches, ash trays at the dinner table. _ RIGHT: Have cigarets, matdhes or lighters, and ash trays on the table. » ” ” YOU are ready to leave a friend's house and there are several other guests present. WEANQs Sew gandhv to your hostess, but not to the . other guests. |

ind

‘ - ho | ’ | JULY RITE—Mrs. Glen E. | Nees was Miss Mary Katherine | ¢ 4.» Walker before her marriage |

July 29 in St. Mark's Evangel | YOU are Wing a letior of | ical Luthardn Church, She is the

RIGHT: Say goodby to your hostess and the other guests as well.

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