Indianapolis Times, Volume 39, Number 182, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 December 1927 — Page 6

PAGE 6

Three Hundred Here for District Luncheon Given by Missionary Societies COVERS were laid for three hundred at the luncheon given today at the Elks Club by the Indianapolis district of the Women’s Home Missionary Societies of the Methodist Episcopal churches for members of the Connersville, Bloomington and Seymour districts and members of the North Indiana and Northwest Indiana conferences.

Mrs. H. C. Goode, Sidney, Women’s Home Missionary Society, was the principal speaker at the luncheon and talked on home missionary work and preparations tor the golden jubilee of the society in 1930. Ferns and American flags were used for appointments in the dining room and the places were marked by napkin rings of crepe paper in the Christmas colors. The tables were lighted with red candles, and on the speakers’ table was a flat bouquet of Christmas flowers and branched candelabra with red tapers'. Bishop Frederick D. Leete of the Indianapolis area led the devotions, and a group of five young men from the De Pauw University music school played during the luncheon. A quartet from the Phyllis Wheatly Y. W. C. A. branch sang and Mrs. M. A. Farr, corresponding secretary of the Indiana M. E. conference, talked on “The Jubilee Plan.” Mrs. E. H. Elwood, corresponding secretary of the Indianapolis district, talked on “The Courtesies.” ✓ MISS LENNOX NAMES WEDDING ATTENDANTS Miss Martha Beard will be maid' of honor, Mrs. DeForest O’Dell, matron of hovor, and Miss Jeanette Grubb, bridesmaid in the wedding of Miss Katherine Lennox and Joseph Casle Mathews which will take place Jan. 4 at the Broadway M. E. Church. Richard C. Lennox, brother of the bride, will be best man and Frederick Ruskaup and Herbert E. Pedlow ushers. Holiday Dance Miss Anna Torian, who will come from Sweet Briar, and Telfair Torian, who will' come from the University of the Soyth, to spend the holidays with their parents, Dr. and Mrs. Oscar N. Torian, 1802 N. Talbott St, will entertain with a dance, Dec. 23, at the Propylaeum, for young people home from school. Christmas Bridge Miss La Vaun Morsch, 1301 Ewing St., entertained with a Christmas party Wednesday evening, assisted by her sister, Mrs. Marie Hammond. Luncheon was served after the bridge games and little Miss . *lathryn Hammoond read Christmas poems. Appointments throughout the house were in red and green. Kappa Phi Mothers Members of the Kappa Phi Mothers’ Club of Butler held a luncheon meeting Wednesday at the chapter house, 41 N. Ritter Ave. Poisettis and . holly were used in appointments. Hostesses were Mrs. Frank Squires and Mrs. Arthur Robey. Retreat Closes The young people's retreat which has been in progress at St. Philip Neri Church since Sunday, closed Wednesday with an average attendance of 700 each night. The Rev. F. G. Walker and the Rev. John Zeller, C. p. s., directed the retreat. Honors House Guest Mrs. Henry W. Buttolph, 2038 N. Meridian St., entertained with a small tea Wednesday in honor of her house guest, Mrs.^Wolcott Newberry Milwaukee, Wis. Mt. Holyoke Meeting The monthly lunohe i meeting of the Mt. Holyoke Alumnae Association will be held Saturday at the Ayres tearoom. Mixed Vegetables Anew mixed vegetable dish is made of cooking diced turnips dnd celery and serving them with butter sauce and diced parsley. Tulle Gown Tulle assumes new' importance for evening wear. A gown fashioned from narrow ribbons of tulle, running around, shades from pinky beige to plum brown.

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EVANS' PJfcKE

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Woman’s Day

BY ALLENE SUMNER * Have you ever heard anything of Mrs. Mussolini? I thought not. And yet there must be one, for quite a to-do was made not long ago about anew little Mussolini son, and every •nee in a while we see a picture of Himself, Self-Acclaimed World's Greatest, with daughter Edda or son Bruno. I only recently learned that Donna Rachele Mussolini had but two years of schooling, was met by Mussolini when she worked as a barmaid in his father’s taphouse at l’Agnello, and that today she is a gracious, cultured woman quite worthy of taking her place by Mussolini’s side. She has never been to Rome, however, since he became the world figure he is. He is quoted as saying that he “belongs to all—and he wild" belongs to all belongs to none.” It is quite evident that to Mussolini a wife is just a female who produces a child once in a while; said child becoming “his child,” *nd never referred to as ‘our child.” I continue to dislike II Duce more and more. tt tt tt C. Marriage Again “Commonplace marriage” is causing more discussion than even “moral turpitude” did once upon a time. These comments come from Rabbi Barnett R. Brickner of Cleveland: ‘True love is more than passion; it is the afterglow from the embers of the fire, that finds human expression in intellectual and spiritual companionship between two people of qpposite sex, who live together because they have a common ideal for life, and because of the desire to see that ideal realized through their children.” tt it it On Inheritance The rabbi hits our inheritance laws, too, and seems to find something to be said for the continental system of dowries. He says: “If parents were willing to help the young people at the time of life when they need their financial aid in the building up of a family, instead of leaving them an estate in a large lump sum at the parents’ death, there would be more early love marriages and less provocation for companionate marriages.” tt tt a v What of It? And yet, isn’t it all a matter of proportion? After all, if just so many years elapse between handing on of inheritances, what difference does it make if they come early or late? If sons and daughters didn’t get their own inheritances late in life they would be in no position to leave money to their children in their early lives. tt tt tt No “Perfect Woman'* Somehow these various artists and sculptors who bleat out at stated intervals that they have never found “a perfect woman” to model or paint, leave me quite cold. Maybe there are and maybe there aren't, but what difference does It make if an ahkle or neck or thigh are an eighth of an inch off some prescribed standard when we see the very satisfactory pieces of feminine pulchritude that we do everywhere?

Family Menus

BY SISTER MARY BREAKFAST—Orange juice, cereal, cream, creamed dried beef on toast, graham and raisin muffins, milk, coffee. LUNCHEON Macaroni and chicken ramikins, lettuce sandwiches, prune whip with custard sauce, milk, tea. DINNER Lamb stew, baked

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THE CONNOISSEUR - - - - -

It might be said that Van de View has had a double share Os the good old Christmas spirit which pervades the very air, An enthusiastic shopper—he is resolutely bent On taking home his gifts instead of letting them be sent.

NEW CHAIRMAN AN EXPERT

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Miss Merica Hoagland

Four years as chairman personnel research committee of the National Federation of Business and Professional Women’s Clubs, and work of the same nature in local and State clubs, added to twelve years of work as mutual service director of the Diamond Chain and Manufacturing Company, Indianapolis, is the* background with which Miss Merica Hoagland* 218 E. Fifteenth

squash, endive salad, apple tapioca pudding, milk, coffee. Macaroni, Chicken Ramikins cup broken macaroni, to 1 cup minced chicken, 1 egg, 14 teaspoon salt, 14 teaspoon paprika, 2-3 cup milk, 14 teaspoon parsley salt. Cook macaroni in boiling salted water until tender. Drain and rinse in cold wat *r. Drain. Chop with chicken in chopping bowl. Beat egg until very light with salt, pap-, rika and mflk. Add macaroni and

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

And after he lias got them there he really isn’t able To do a thing except deposit them upon the table. And the donkey for a book-end, with > exuberance of pose. He thinks,a bit ridiculous with heavenpointed toes.

St:, takes up her new duties as chairman of • industrial relations for the May Wright Sewall Indiana Council of Women. . Miss Hoagland was recently appointed to the State council post, by Mrs. W. A. Denny, Anderson, president. Miss Hoagland tn her business career is concerned with human adjustments, and is considered an authority on personnel research.

chicken and parsley salt and mix thoroughly. Turn into buttered ramikins. Place the moulds on several thicknesses of paper in a dripping pay. Surround with boiling water, cover with buttered paper and bake thirty minutes in a moderate oven. The timbales should be firm to the touch in the center when done. Unmold on a large hot platter and pour over a rich tomato sauce or cheese sauce. Use a stock jpade from the bones of the chicken for the liquid in either sauce.

■ His Christmas Spirit Suffers Changes of Mood

/ #

This holder for the pipes he had discovered with delight, And ohe modernistic duck he thought an entertaining sight, But aow he only ponders and regards it with dismay. And wonders how it could have seemed so humorous today.

Irene Olsen Sets Date for Wedding Dec . 17 Miss Irene Olsen, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Carl L. Olsen, 923 Eastern Ave., has announced Dec. 17 as the date for her marriage to Homer J. Carter, son of Mr. and Mrs. Roy Carter, 709 N. Bancroft St. The wedding will take place at 8:30 p. m. at the Trinity Evangelical Lutheran Church. Miss Elsa Vahle will be maid of honor and Miss Dolores Harden and Miss Helen Luedemann, bridesmaids. Miss Mildred Luedemar.r. will be flower girl. Mr. Carter has chosen Fred Schakel as best man and Edwin Koch, Chris Iverson, Richard Prange and Lawrence Schakel as ushers. H. A. C. Party The monthly five hundred party for members of the Hoosier Athletic Club, their wives and friends will be given this evening at the club. Mayor at Altrusa Mayor L. Ert Slack will speak at the weekly luncheon of the Altrusa Club Friday at the Columbia Club. Plant Mildew If your ferns or other plants mildew .sprinkle sulphur or a little soot on them after you have soaked them thoroughly.' If you serve cheese crackers with oyster stew, or grate a bit of cheese over it, the stew assumes a rich flavor that is pleasing.

STAIRWAY JUST INSIDE STREET^DOOR

GREAT CHRISTMAS SALE 400 NEW DRESSES (p\ at FAR less than regular .. jmwm *wkL' IJ 1 IB|B|\. 'UT rsr 8 If You Need Tyro //, j r Bring a Friend! \ j NEW BLACK SATINS Heavy fill Crepes .;. . Wools .... Georgettes . ** % \f You'd never guess that the price of these dresses was so little! New black satins, in the NEW SILHOUETTES. NEW NECKLINES, new sleeves, new trimming effects, new colors. . . . You'll want several when you see HOW UNUSUAL they are for the price. All sizes for juniors, missps and women . . . plenty of extra sizes. * _ *

DRY LEADER PROVES BIBLE IS RIGHT “A prophet is not without honor save in his own country.” Worlds of the Bible hold true for Mrs. Elizabeth Stanley, of near Liberty, Winchester County. State president/of the W. C. T. U., who admits that she has lifted her voice for temperance so many times that her efforts are no longer effective in her own county. She* says she has little contact with citizens of Liberty and the county and transacts most of her business in Richmond. She states also that law enforcement conditions in Liberty are not satisfactory because too many of the officers are “wets.”

Celebrate Anniversary Mr. and Mrs. Charles F. Hall, 6410 E. Washington St., will entertain tonight in celebration of their twenty-fifth wedding anniversary. The guests will be: •lessrs. and Mesdanr.es Wtllaim F/Mowwe Otoo Bradford - Wllford Moore Lois Waterman Louis Brandt Charles Langer Karl Roemblce Fred Rothert Leslie McLean E. L. Lohrman Charles Stewart Misses Lulu Clem Ella Clem Rebekah Parties Myrtle Rebekah Lodge No. 326 will give card parties at its hall, Addison and Washington St&, the second and third Saturdays of each month. Burnside-Williams Mr. and Mrs. Frank C. Williams, 1309 N. Arlington Ave., announce the marriage of their daughter, Gretta, to James A. Burnside, Jr., which took place Tuesday.

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And a foolish looking elephant which holds a useful brush He thinks in great perplexity is just a lot of tush. But suddenly remembering he hasn’t had his tea. He knows that after that he’ll think them fine as fine can be.

BRIGHTWOOD CHAPTER O. E. S. PLANS DANCE Brightwood chapter, Order of the Eastern Star, has completed plans for its dance and good fellowship party at the Masonic temple Saturday night. Masons, Eastern Stars and their friends are cordially invited. Mrs. Dena Welsh, worthy matron, and Mrs. Beatrice Trusler, associate matron, are on the committee of arrangements. Alujnnae Party Alpha Gamma Delta Alumnae Association will have its annual Christmas party Saturday at the home of Mrs. Thomas L. Foster, 5668 Guilford Ave.

Wet Wash S’ Thursday m* Friday Saturday a pound mjr a- - PKia ala ox Progress foSoliMM LAUNDRY 430 EAST MARKET STREET Every hind of cleaning service

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.DEC. 8, 1927

Plans Party in Honor of Bride-Elect Miss Ann Moorhead will entertain the afternoon of Dec. 17 with a party at the Columbia Club in honor of Miss Julia Brown, whose marriage to David W. Konold and Miss Jessica Brown, whose marriage to Floyd R. Mannon will take place Jan. 7. A number of other parties have been planned for the two brides-elect, the dates for which have not yet been set. Miss Mary Ann Miller, who will come from New York for the holidays and remain for the wedding, will entertain with u holiday party. Miss Agnes Larimore, Anderson, will also be hostess for a party for the brides-elect, and Miss Sara Rodecker will entertain for them. Assembly Woman’s Club The Indianapolis branch of the State Assembly Woman’s Club met with Mrs. Sumner Clancy, 4198 Carrollton Ave., Wednesday afternoon. Assistants were Mrs. Tom Dailey, Mrs. Lloyd Claycombe, Fred Dickerman and Mrs. William Bosson Jr. Mrs. Dailey and Mrs. W. C. Harrison gave a piano duet and Mrs. Edgar Perkins told a Christmas story. Mrs. C. J. Buchanan talked on “Ellis Island Kindergarten,” and Mrs. Fred Schortemeier talked on "Christmas.” The next meeting will be held Jan. 4 at the As You Like It tea room with Mrs. Charles Remy, chairman, assisted by Mrs. Alfred Hopton and Mrs. C. J. Buchanan.

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, 20 WEST WASHINGTON STREET