Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 August 1952 — Page 38
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PAGE 24
Times photos by William A. Oates Jr,
TROPICAL INFLUENCE-~lnsise terrace at Edwin Tobey home, 704 W. Kessler Blvd.
Miss Jordan Says Vows In Church
WIPE ruffles of lace trimmed the yoke of the white satin and mar-
quiset gown worn by Miss Rebecca Jordan when she was wed to Richard Thornburg at 7:30 p. m. yesterday In the Broadway Methodist Church. The full skirt of the bridal gown fell into a train. With it was worn a fingertip {illusion vell fastened to a crown of seed pearls, The bride, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Russell M, Jordan 8r,, 4628 Rosslyn Ave, carried a white orchid surrounded by white Amazonica lilies. Miss Mary Ellen Highurg, maid of honor, appeared in a gold bouffant gown of net and satin with a stole. She carried bronze Fiji chrysanthemums and ivy.
GOWNS OF the same design .
in gray-green were worn by Miss Marilyn Cooley, Cincinnati; Miss Jeanne Busard and Mrs. Walter Lienert, bridesmaids. They carried yellow Fujis and wore headpleces of leaves, Flowergirls, Judy Craig, and Rebecca Jordan, wore white organdy floor-length dresses with white organdy bonnets and
carried baskets of rose petals. | The ringbearer was Stephen
Jordan. “8 ” ”
THE BRIDEGROOM, fon of |
Mr. and Mrs. Horace W. Thorn-
burg, 4935 College Ave. chose | best | Ushers were David |
his brother Willlam as man. Thomas, Thomas Harold Hancock. After the church reception the couple left for two weeks in Colorado. The bride traveled in a beige suit with cocoa brown accessories. The bride will be a senior In Indiana University this fall, Thé bridegroom attended the University of Cincinnati before enlisting in the Navy. He belongs to Sigma Chi Fraternity.
Cook and
Miss Palmer Is Married In East
Times Special
LATROBE, Pa., Aug. 30 —A couple who met in college will live on a new
campus this fall after their marriage today in Christ Evangelical and Reformed Church here.
Exchanging vows were Miss Elinor Palmer, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Francis M. Palmer, Latrobe, and Lawrence John Dunnewold II. The bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs, L. J. Dunnewold, 3735 N. Chester Bt, Indianapolis, ~ Ld ” THE DOUBLE-RING ceremony was read by the Rev. H. W. Black. Attendants were Mrs. Dorothy Brinker, matron of honor; Miss Olga Schenk, North Benton, O., Miss Ruth Weirich, Massillon, O., and Miss Dorothy Palmer, bridesmaids. The bridegroom's father was best man, flowergirl. Ushers were Addison Dunn, Indianapolis, Mark Buehrer, Napoleon, O., and Edward Palmer, ‘ ” ~ ”. A PORTRAIT gown of Chantilly lace in rose pattern with Queen Anne collar and full-length train was worn by the bride. Her fingertip illusion veil of )
net. She carried a cascade bouquet of white .roses. The matron of honor and bridesmaids wore white bouffant gowns with off-shoulder bodices of lace extending into tiny peplums, . = =n AFTER a reception in the home of the bride's parents the
couple left to spend a week: in’
Indiana. The bride traveled in a
Sandy Palmer was |
imported nylon tulle | was attached to a Shaker bon- |
navy suit. After next Sunday
residence will be 152 W. Lorain St., Oberlin, O. The bridegroom
will enter Oberlin Theological |
School. Both attended Heidel-
~ berg College, Tiffin, O, '
5
THE INDIAN APOLIS TIMES
"Tobey ‘Ranch’ On Kessler Blvd. Is A Buoy Place
By OPAL CROCKETT Times Homes Editor -
WIMPY the parakeet is proud of the place he shares
with Mr. and Mrs. Ed Tobey. Wimpy is having
trouble, however, mastering the address.
To him it's
“Kest Wessler,” but Mrs. Tobey expects his 15-minute
daily? Jessons ‘to straighten him out on the correct address, 704 W. Kessler Blvd.
Already Wimpy is chirping “Hello Mr. Tobey” and “toast time” when the Tobeys breakfast on the bright outside terrace. That room is one of the prettiest in the modern, ranch house of white brick. “Like the other rooms, Mr. Tobey designed it and did some of the work,” Mrs. Tobey said. ~ ~ » THERE'S ingenuity in the room. Mr. Tobey bought Plexaglass for drop curtains but used it as a roof, lining it with soft light wood strips. Screened in aluminum wire, the terrace is decorated in shrimp shades. The shrimp tone in the scalloped cornices and woodwork is repeated in the faille cloth lamp shades on white bases, the wroughtgiron design trimming the door screen and the plaid in the rug. The, three chaises are upholstered In green, a color appearing in the rug. Bamboo barrel back chairs add to the furnishings.
OUTER TERRACE—Mrs. Ed Tobey in her sunroom of shrimp, green and white.
Mother's Civic Club Schedules Luncheon
The Brookside Mother's Civia Club will resume activities for the season at a noon covereddish luncheon Thursday in the Brookside Community House.
cording and corresponding secretaries;— Mrs. Wandel Miller, treasurer; Mesdames Edgar Anderson, A. W. Weidekamp and Kenton Reed, assistant treas-
Classes will begin Sept. 25 and 28.
A dance for 3!3-year-olds
“will be formed this year as mid-
“We ‘live’ in our. house,” Mrs. Tobey said, and visitors are certain of it, comfortable after that first step into the front entrance hall. From Mr. Tobey's basement workshop came the black Chinese cocktail and planter. table in the living room. The Tobeys joined forces, as they do in travel and fishing expeditions. Mrs. Tobey added the gold Chinese design bordering the old mirror that tops tle table. A forest green Chinese smoking set decorates the table. The big fireplace is modern, in white and green, with a full-length mirror, On the mantle are African figurines in gold and black, » » ” OLIVE and tan leather-topped furniture is used. A sectional, broken up, forms a kidney sofa. It's nubby brown fabric. There is a wonderful slender chair, upholstered in shades of beige in stripes, at the modern light wood piano. A chartreuse shade on a big gourd-shaped lamp with frosty glass adds galety. Carpeting is greige and walls are aqua, a shade right with the many greens and the white woodwork. A modern dance group and jungle tiger plaque decorate the walls. 5 n y THE TOBEY hospitality centers on the inside terrace, an oval glassed-in room, with wrought iron tables and chairs in .antique green and Rattan pieces upholstered in tropical designs in yellow, white and brown. There's a Roman brick fireplace that goes through to the outside terrace. A huge glass bowl holds tropical plants and serves as coffee table. Driftwood lamps, beige Terrazo floors, Roman twist throw rugs and green faille cloth drapes are used, There's a pair of spun glass modern lamps with blond bases, one with chartreuse and one with vellow shade. The yellow Is picked up in the tops of the stools for the bamboo har set. The dining room, off the terrace, also is furnished in antique green wrought iron with woodwork in the same shade. ” ” ” WHETHER it's fishing, flying or laughing at Wimpy mock the wild birds on the lawn, the Tobeys and daughter Fay have fun in their house. _“My hobby is my home,” is thé proud admission of Mrs. Tobey, a former model at Block's and in Detroit. “I dressed so many times as a career girl I like nothing better than putting on shorts and shirt and decorating the house,” she said.
SUNDAY, AUG. 31, 1952
Council's Orientation Meeting Is Tuesday
TEA TALK—Mesdames Carl Sauer, George Kamphaus and C. B. La Dine.
HE Indianapolis Council of Women will give an orientation meeting and
tea at 1:30 p. m. Tuesday
in Block's Auditorium. Honored guests will be the presidents and delegates of affiliated clubs.
Mrs. Carl Sauer, president, will introduce the new officers and board members who will outline their duties and program for the year. They are Mrs. Otto Bakemefer and Mrs. Kurt Schmidt, first and second vice presidents; Mra, Harold Curtis and Mrs. George Kamphaus, recording and corresponding secretary, and Mrs. Hugo Strauss, treasurer. » ” ” MRS. R. 8. WINCHESTER will report on the Moral Rearmament Conference at Mackinac Island. New year books will be distributed by the year book chairman, Mrs. George Kamphaus, and her committee, Mrs. Willlam Holley and Mrs. Ray Falls. Mrs. C. B. LaDine, tea hostess, will be assisted by Mrs. E. M. Dill. Mrs. Sauer and Mrs. H. L.“Hasbrook will pour.
Fancy Flowerpots
Dress up flowerpots by covering them with the same aluminum foil you use in the kitchen to wrap food.
AT HOME IN INDIANA FOR 80 YEARS
Ayres’ state fair fashion show
will be presented in the Women's Building, Fair Grounds
All hours listed are Daylight Savings Time
Two shows daily: Sunday, Aug. 31, 3:00 p. m. and 7:00 p. m.
Three shows daily: Monday, Sept. 1 thru Friday, Sept. ¥ 11:30 a. m., 3:00 p. m. and 7:00 p. m.
Two shows daily: Saturday, Sept. 6, 11:30 a. m. and 3:00 p. m.
term registrations are being New officers include Mrs, Urers. withdrawn. Miss Barbara WilRobert Spargur, president; Mrs, Registrations for tap, ballet, loughby again will be dance Howard Sinclair, vice presi- junior high ballroom, rhythm teacher and Mrs. Herman dent; Mrs, Marion Christein band and dramatics will be 8ept, Xarch wil be rhythm band inand Mrs. Eugene Liston, re- 11 and 12 and Sept. 18 and 19. structor. a ae reas Hs Eat A
open today
10:00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m.
pollman model home
440 Douglas Drive,
Brownsburg, Indiana,
15 miles from Circle on Route 136.
furnished by L. S. Ayres & Co.
A new three-bedroom home filled with ideas for achieving
charm, comfort and convenience on a budget! See Early
American furniture used in a contemporary manner .
curtains with privacy "built in" .
. . dollar stretching "'Do-
it-yourself' decorating tricks among the many features,
Open House Hours:
Sunday, August 31 ..
veevsssrsrnsrasmreranreress 10:00 A. M, 10 7:00 P.M,
"Monday, September | ......iiiiiiiianiiiiiiana. 10:00 A. M, to 7:00 P. M.
Saturday, September 6 Ci bar rss esi P. M. to 8:00 P. M. Sunday, September 7 ....iivuriiidiirmininrnnnaes JOI00 A. M. fo 7:00 P. M.
Friday, September [2
Crs rrr rand
nesivesinee 400P, M. to 8:00 P. M,
Saturday, Sepfember 13 ..ceeviveessmaresiinnssrn 800-P. M. fo 8:00 P.M. Sunday, September 14 Sener ncisrnsvenafannuensess 10:00 A. M. to 7:00 P. M.
*
ave ANOITE 1872-1952
ofveArs
ved”
& (Co. vranioaay
00 29
a
o Thursday, Sept. 4 o Ayres’ will be o open Thursday evenings
CLOSED MONDA
SHOP TUESDAY Te SATURDAY
o shop this Thursday
o shop every Thursday ® from 9:00 a.m. fo 8:30 p. m.
SUNDAY
are
