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The Terre Haute Star from Terre Haute, Indiana • Page 8

Location:
Terre Haute, Indiana
Issue Date:
Page:
8
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

8 THE TERRE HAUTE STAR, FRIDAY, AUGUST 19, 1960. Tri Kappa To Honor Scholarship Girls Twelve girls who hold Tri Kappa scholarships will be honor guests at a meeting of the active Gamma Gamma Chapter of Tri Kappa Sorority to be held next Wednesday evening at the country home of Mrs. Ben Schull, east of the city. Members both the Alpha and Beta associate chapters of the sorority also have been invited to attend this meeting. A potluck supper will be served at 6:30 o'clock, after which there will be a business meeting.

Assisting Mrs. Schull as hostesses will be Mrs. Morrell Beavers, chairman; Mrs. James Bopp, Mrs. James Dodson, Mrs.

John Ermisch, Mrs. Fred McCrea, Mrs. Donald Farnsworth, Mrs. Noel Douglas and Mrs. Frank Crawford.

Awarded scholarships to Indiana State Teachers College by the sorority were Misses Carol Bonness. Joan Erlene Wright. Victorson and A pre-nursing scholarship to Indiana State went to Miss Martha Thomson and a nursing scholarship to St. Anthony's Hospital School of Nurs' ing to Miss Pauline Houston. Girls already receiving scholarships, whose awards have been renewed, are Misses Judy Dukes, Peggy Purcell and Donita Reel, to Indiana State; Susan Armstrong, to Purdue University; Pat Redman, to Union Hospital School of Nursing, and Joan Brown and Susan Mueller, to St.

Anthony's Hospital School of Nursing. Scholarships of the sorority are awarded on the basis of high scholarship and financial need. Students who wish their awards renewed must maintain an index of 2.6. Weddings Miss Sharon Winters, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.

Roger A. Winters of 2235 North Eleventh Street, and Ramon T. Roman, son of Mrs. Mary Roman of Whiting, will be married at 10 o'clock tomorrow morning at the Maple- Save on your laundry Reg. Load (8-lb.) 15c Big Double-Load Washers DRY (5 min.) 5c EASY-WASH LAUNDRY 1708 South 8th St.

NOW A NEW ROOF OUT OF A CAN WITH JOHNSTON FOIL-GUARD FOR ROOF AND SIDING Insulates, damp-proofs, leak- pro renews, preserves, beautifies all types oi roofs, siding and almost any surface exposed to weather. Pigmented With Alcoa Aluminum ROSENBERGER- ffol sldn PAINT 8, WALLPAPER 503 WABASH AVE. C-2624 WE SELL JOHNSTON PAINTS DEALER BUILDING SUPPLIES 711 NORTH SSTH ST. wood Christian Church, with the Rev. Robert Woehler officiating.

Pink and white will be the wedding colors. The music will be furnished by Mrs. H. Norwood, organist, and attending the couple will be Misses Carla Jean Massa of West Terre Haute, maid of honor; Misses Clarice Warren and Darlene Winters, bridesmaids; Ronn Zuk of Whiting, best man; Don Roman, David Roman and William Reichert, all of Whiting; Dan Piefer of Hammond and Robert Merkovich of Clinton, ushers. The bride's father will give her in marriage.

No invitations have been issued but relatives and friends of the couple are invited to attend the ceremony and the reception to follow in Parlors A-l, 2 and 3 of the Terre Haute House. Miss Jean Coltharp and Miss Irene Kassabaum will assist in serving. The couple will live in an apartment at Fifth and Chestnut streets upon their return from their wedding trip to Michigan. Miss Winters teaches in Brazil and Mr. Roman is a senior at Indiana State Teachers College.

Wedding vows of Miss Mary Etta Bohley and Thomas Edward Stiffey will be heard in a ceremony at 2 o'clock tomorrow afternoon at the Centenary Methodist Church. The Rev. Vernon Bigler will conduct the ceremony. Miss Bohley is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs.

W. H. Bohley of 1037 North Eighth Street and Mr. Stiffey is the son of Mrs. Jean Stiffey of 1040 Sixth Avenue.

Miss Mary Louise Hicks will be organist and William Balduzzi, vocalist. Pink and white will be the wedding colors. The bride will be given in marriage by her father and attendants will be Miss Sarah Bohley, sister of the bride, maid of honor; little Miss Susan Strupp, niece of the bride, flower girl; Jack Snow, best man; Clyde Wolfe and Robert Bedwell, ushers. Following the ceremony, a reception will be held at the church with Mrs. Hester Morris and Mrs.

Elizabeth Strupp serving. After a wedding trip to St. Louis, Mr. Sliffey and his bride will live at 1450 Walnut Street. Miss Bohley is employed at the Local Reader's Service, and Mr.

Stiffey is employed at Indiana Gas and Chemical Company. The wedding of Miss Rosalie Ann Utenick, daughter of Mr and Mrs. Michael J. Utenick of 1938 North Twenty-fifth Street, and Donald Jean Garrard, son of Mr. and Mrs.

Gerald Garrard of Montezuma, will take place at 2 o'clbck tomorrow afternoon at the Maplewood Christian Church Officiating will be Neil Kuns and providing special music wil' be Mrs. Paul Pollock, organist Lavendar and white will be the wedding colors. The bride will be given in marriage by her father and at tendants will be Miss Norma Mer cer, maid of honor; Miss Marylee Shea and Miss Anita Taylor bridesmaids; Dennis Morgan oi Montezuma, best man; Michael Utenick, brother of the bride, and Lloyd Sherrill of Montezuma ushers. At 3 o'clock, a reception will be held at the Hungarian Hall Assisting in serving will be Mrs David Hills and Mrs. Robert Petit.

After a wedding trip, the couple will live at 1500 Woodlej Avenue. Miss Utenick is a student at MY HEARING PROBLEM VANISHED LIKE MAGIC "I hear again with nothing in either ear, thanks to Sonotone's thrilling You, too, can bear-belter with the latest Sonolone hearing aids whether you wear eyeglasses or not. Nothing worn on the body. Arrange today for a free hearing test by your local SONOTONE HEARING AID CONSULTANT. Let us show you how you can avoid embarrassment and keep your secret bidden.

Conduction SONOTONE I S. 7th St. Man-in W. Carty C-4001 Sheer Elegance THE ERSKINE Wife Pushing Fate BY HELEN WORDEN ERSKINE Dear Helen-I've always believed that hard work and.prayer mil see me through. It has up.

to now. I am 31 have a good job and have been married six years to the most wonderful man a woman ever had. I would be happy but for my ailing mother whom Ive SU C0 Skfto auit and start raising a family Mother is not demanding but things always come up that weren't figured on. My husband isn't in good health. Factories are rough places to work nowa- thehostesses at whose home at 2212 North.

Seventh Street the party was held; Mrs. Wayne Hannon mother of the bride-elect, and Miss atti Johnson, the other hostess. Indiana State Teachers College and Mr. Garrard is employed at Garrard Excavating Company. Societies Auxiliary to Fort Harrison Post No.

40, American Legion, will hear Girls' State reports at the meeting at 8 o'clock next Tuesday evening at the Post Home at 417 South Fifth Street. Mrs. Zola Robertson, president, will preside. The regular meeting of Fidelity Temple, Pythian Sisters, will be held at 7:30 o'clock this evening at the Paul Revere Hall. Mrs.

Pearl Wilkerson, most excellent chief, will preside. Cardinal Patrol of Galilee Shrine No. 7. White Shrine of Jerusalem, will hold its August drill practice this evening on the outdoor lot. New Hope Rebekah Lodge No.

847 will meet at 8 o'clock this evening at the hall. Mrs. Nancy Fields, noble grand, will preside. Members attending are to take cookies. Church Societies Senior Baptist Youth Federation of the Eighth Avenue Baptist Church will have a treasure hunt this Members are to meet at the church at 6:30 o'clock and be ready to leave at 6:45 o'clock.

They will return to the church by 9 o'clock, when refreshments will be served. Clubs Winners in the weekly games of the Wabash Duplicate Bridge Club, held yesterday morning at the Y. M. C. were Mrs.

Carl Ehrenhardt and Mrs. Ronald Bland, first, and Mrs. Ethel Flanagan and Mrs. Norman Woerner, both of Paris, second. Fair Gardens Garden'Club will have a 1 o'clock dessert meeting next Monday at the Horticulture Building at the Wabash Valley i Fair Grounds.

The program will be on "Achievements," and the floral arrangement will be by Mrs. Ferris Corey. For cancellations, members may call Mrs. Lynn Fehring, C-2432, Mrs. William Ehlers.

H-2953, or Mrs. Martin Gardner, C-5402. Parties Miss Lois Bronnert of 3030 Hulman Street entertained with a miscellaneous shower Wednesday evening at her home in honor of Miss Beverly Hawkins, who will be married on Saturday, Aug. 27, to William Brown. Dessert was served, after which a social evening was enjoyed.

The bridal colors of blue and white were carried out in the decorations. There were 14 guests. a mathematician with the Navy Department in Washington. This is their first child. Personals David Dunbar of 2507 North Elevnth Street is on a 10-day vacation trip to Los Angeles, and Lake Tahoe, Nev.

He accompanied his uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Robinson, who had been here on a visit, and will return home by plane. Mr. and Mrs.

Robert McCalla of Orlando, formerly of this city, are here for a visit with Mr. McCalla's parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. H.

McCalla of Sixth Avenue, and his brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Loyd of South Seventh Street. Miss Janet Reafsnyder. daughter of Mr.

and Mrs. Victor Reaf- snyder of 41 South Twenty- second Street, and Miss Karma Smith, daughter of Dr. Laban Smith of Edgewood Grove, will arrive in New York City by plane Sunday from Europe, where they have been on a'nine-week student tour. They will return home the first of. the week.

Both young'women have completed their sophomore year at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, and this Summer, Miss Smith was in a chil- Paris, France, Louis Roehm to Be Married in Clinton Miss Barbara Elizabeth Birck, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Birck- of R. R. 1.

Clinton. and Louis Henry Rpehm, son of Mr and Mrs. Louis Roehm of 1225 South Fourth Street, will be married at 10 o'clock tomorrow and Miss Reafsnyder was in edu- cational-recreational activities in Heidelberg. Germany, for five weeks of their stay abroad. They went to Europe by plane, landing at Amsterdam, Holland, from where they toured Belgium, Germany, France.

Spain, Italy morning at the Sacred Heart Church in Clinton. Conducting the ceremony and Nuptial Mass will be the Rev. Jerome Bennett and providing music will be William Balduzzi. organist and vocalist. Dusty rose and white will be the wedding colors.

The bride will be escorted to the altar by her father and will have as her maid of honor. Miss Judith Lindsey. Marshall Garino of Clinton will attend as best man and William Perkins of Bloomington and Patrick Birck of Clinton, brother of the bride, as ushers. Brunch will be served at the Elks' Fort Harrison Country. Club, for the immediate families and bridal party, immediately following the ceremony.

The couple will leave in the afternoon for a wedding trip, after which they will live in Denver, Colo. Miss Birck is a graduate of St. Anthony's Hospital School of days. I've either got to get a job where I can work at home or forget my plans. I have been, writing for years.

I wrote a book and several short stories. All were turned down. I've spent a lot of money buying books to help me learn how to write but no luck. If only I could get started, then I would have a little income to see me through. Try and help me.

If you don't, I have no one else. MRS. H. Dear Mrs. Some problems solve themselves if we don't push fate.

When the time comes for you to give up your job and start a family, the way will open. Meanwhile, be thankful that you are able to support your mother. As for writing, you've put the cart before the horse. Forget the money. Write for the love of writing.

Strive for perfection in this difficult but rewarding art. Take rejection slips as a challenge, not a calamity. Believe in yourself never give up. All this plus 'even a dash of talent, will start the cash register ringing. But to be a writer, you must also be a reader.

Are you? If not, get the habit. Dear Helen I'm going steady. My girl friend said if I was going steady with this boy I should have a ring. She said I wasn't going steady unless I had a ring. I don't think you have to have a ring to go steady.

Who is right? CAROL Dear A ring formalizes an engagement. Going steady is not the equivalent of being therefore no ring is neces But why go steady? Be and Mr. Roehm is a graduate of Rose Polytechnic Institute. He is employed by the Bureau of Reclamation in Denver. sary.

free. Enjoy yourself. Dear My boy friend gave me a snapshot of himself. We are both 13 and see each other once a week at church Does this mean that I should give him one of myself D. L.

Dear D. L. No. It simply means your boy friend wants to remind you that he is in the picture. No pun meant'.

Send your problem to Helen Worden Be sure to enclose a self-addressed envelope, and address her in care of this newspaper. (Released The Bell Syndicate. Inc.l The hot springs at Bath, England, were famous even before the Romans conquered the island nearly 2,000 years ago. 'ASTRO-GUIDE' BY CEEAN PRESENT For You and Yours The outlook is not as 'avorable as it has been for the ast few days, but any upsets will of minor nature. Over-indulgence should be carefully watched, as the stomach easily upset.

Trouble in marriage is donated, with parents disagreeing over matters connected with children. FUTURE A TV camera with a memory may "stcrs" images as long as an hour, Possible uses; instant photo finishes of races, transmision of documents from office to office. The Day Under Your Sign ARIES (Born March 21 to April out more about a stranger before going overboard. TAURUS (April 20 to May 20) take chances, by taking for granted that someone's con elusions are right. GEMINI (May 21 to June 21) people, so positive that they are right, can be irri tating.

CANCER (June 22 to July 21) list of "don'ts" in the Can cer chart today could fill a col umn, so be careful! LEO (July 22 to Aug. Take it easy, although you're fair ly aching to get into a new activity. VIRGO (Aug. 22 to Sept. Talk about pleasant things in stead of griping about real imagined problems.

LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. You tend to be enthusiastic abou a project, but cool down befor completing it. SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov.

21 is a day of mental stimu lation that could inspire you new attainment. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 Dec. favors in return for favors, so you won't feel a sense of obligation. CAPRICORN (Dec.

22 to 'an. you've had the temerity ask for advice, the least you an do is listen. AQUARIUS (Jan. 21 to Feb. mental excursion into the last will guide you well in the uture.

PISCES (Feb. 20 to March 20) be in a rather chastened mood and will have learned a good lesson. I960. Field Enterprises. Inc.

Treasured Mask NEW rare-Chinese mask used in a play starring the late Clarence Derwent will be jresented to The Lambs Club for ts trophy room. The Lambs gathering place for New York's theatrical world receive the mask from the Derwent estate. It was given to Derwent by Dr. H. I.

Hsung, author of "Lady Precious Stream," in which Derwent starred. BEAUTIFY WITH CAST OK WROUGHT IRON COLUMNS AND RAILINGS H. M. STABLETON ORNAMENTAL IRON 23-'3 Are. N-1638 and Switzerland.

Concluding their tour in Frankfurt, Germany, all of the young people on the tour then had five weeks of studying and working abroad. They then re-united in Frankfurt before returning home. The local girls spent some time with Mr. Reafsnyder, who has been in Frankfurt with the United States Army Engineer Corps since November. Mt.

Whitney, the highest point in California, and Death Valley, the lowest point, are only 85 miles apart. BY ALICE BROOKS Win fame for your beautiful gracefully framed by lace mesh and dainty scallops. Matched elegance! Crochet chair, buffet set, oval doily. Pat- fern 7294: charts; directions 12Vi xJ6-inch back; 6xl2'A armrest; 16x25 oval doily in No. 50.

Send Thirty-five cents (coins) for this 10 cents for each pattern for Ist-class mailing. Send to The Terre Haute Star, 311 Household Arts P. 0. Box 168, Old Chelsea Station, New York 11, N. Y.

Print plainly NAME, ADDRESS, ZONE, PATTERN NUMBER. JUST OUT! Our New 1960 Alice Brooks Needlecraft Book contains THREE FREE Patterns. Plus ideas galore for home furnishings, fashions, gifts, toys, bazaar unusual designs to crochet, knit, sew embroider, buck weave, quilt. Be first with Ine 25c now! Reunions Mason family reunion will be held Sunday at Square No. 8 in Deming Park.

A basket dinner will be served at noon. The event will be open to all relatives and friends of the family. i The annual Bailey family reunion will be held Sunday, Aug. 28, at the Farmersburg Park. There will be a basket dinner at 1 o'clock.

The reunion will be for all relatives and friends of the family. Births Mr Mrs. James Martin of 3717 Parkview Drive announce the birth of a daughter, Sally Jayne, iTuesday at Union Hospital. They also have another daughter, Ann, six years old, and three sons, Jim, four years old; John, three years old, and Kurt, a year old. Mrs.

Martin was before her marriage Miss'Janet Gruenholz, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Gruenholz of 800 Collett Avenue Mr. and Mrs. Charles W.

ley of 1917 South Center Street have received word of the birth Aug. 15 of a son to their son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Charles J. a 1 of Falls Church, Va.

The baby weighed six pounds and has been named 'Stephen Vincent. Mr. Hanley is Teacher's Pet PRINTED PATTERN BY ANNE ADAMS Bright bands define I he sailor collar, and set the skirt awhirl! Choose daughter's favorite crayon blue, or green bias spark a quiet color or demure print. Printed Pattern 4869: Children's Sizes 2, 4, 6, 8, 10. Size 6 takes 3 yards 35-inch.

fabric. Send Thirty-five cents in coins for this 10 cents for each pattern for Ist-class mailing. Send to Anne Adams, care of The Terre Haute Star, 409 Pat tern 243 West 17th St. New York 11, N. Y.

Print plainly NAME, ADDRESS with ZONE, SIZE and STYLE NUMBER. SEND NOW! Big, beautiful, COLOR-IFIC Fall and Winter Pattern Catalog has over 100 styles to career half- sizes. Only 35c. RE-UPHOLSTEK! When We're Through It's Like New TRENT SON 831 North 6th C-8680 CORRECTION! Item listed in Thursday Star as GREEN BEANS. 2 Lbs.

19c SHOULD READ: GRttN PEPPERS 2 for 5C APPLE HOUSE 2701 Wabash 1165 Lafayette Ave. Banks in Spain usually are open only from 10 A. M. to 1:30 P. M.

in just one step you're ready Liquid mist and FRIDAY Treat yourself to finer dining. At the GOODIE SHOP you'll enjoy superb homey top service! ii mi IIMIIIIIII mini 11 Featured Entrees Include: EXTRA COLOSSAL FRIED and NOODLES CASSEROLE Other entrees include: Fried Chicken, Baked Ham, Swiss Steak and Roast Sirloin of Beef. Enjoy tasty vegetables, salads and desserts, too. Serving 11 a.m. to 2 P'ffi- 4:30 p.m.

In P.m. Closed OTETEMA 666 OHIO in Terre Haute I.

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About The Terre Haute Star Archive

Pages Available:
48,869
Years Available:
1861-1973