Indianapolis Times, Volume 42, Number 183, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 December 1930 — Page 6
PAGE 6
CAREFUL PLANNING SAVES HOLIDAY TOIL FOR HOUSEWIFE
Much Work Can Be Done Day Before BY SISTER MARY NF.A Service Writer CHRISTMAS customs and festivities remain much the same year after year. In fact, most families resent any marked innovation In the festivities and consider the Christmas dinner lacking if the cook fails to provide the traditional favorites. Christmas breakfast is an important meal in homes where there are children. When the stockings hung over the foot of the bed or fireplace are quite small, breakfast may be wanted at early as 5 o'clock. Breakfast any time until 8 o’clock means a fairly hearty meal, but it should be simple and easily prepared. Fruit prepared the day before. toast made at the table and a simple, easily digested main dish are all that is necessary. Excitement retards digestion, so the children’s breakfast must be a simple meal. Plan Dinner Carefully Careful planning on the part of the housewife will simplify the preparation of her dinner so that she may enjoy her own gifts *and guests without overwork and worry. Several days before Christmas •he will stock of her staple supplies and be sure that all table appointments are ready for use. The day before Christmas usually is a very busy one for the cook. The fowl should be cleaned and stuffed and trussed, ready for the oven. The pudding sauce can be made at least in part. The salad dressing can be made one or two days before wanted and kept on ice. The celery can be crisped and wrapped in a damp towel until wanted. The lettuce can be washed and crisped and kept in *n airtight container. Consomme or bouillon should be made and clarified all ready for reheating. A cream soup can be made ready for combining. Make Plum Tudding Early Plum pudding is better if made several weeks before wanted for use and stored in a closely covered crock or tin box until Christmas day when it can be returned to its mold and steamed one hour before serving. All this planning produces a schedule that will reduce the amount or work left to be done on Christmas day to a minimum. Goose has been the popular Christmas bird lor centuries, but any sort of fowl or roast is in perfect keeping. A study of worldwide Christmas customs shows a great variety of meats from which to choose. Many housewives plan their Christmas dinner with regard to the preceding Thanksgiving feast and the following New Year's festivity; turkey for Thanksgiving, goose for Christmas and duck for New Year's. Start With Soup The woman who has no maid W'ill hesitate to serve an elaborate, many-course dinner, but if children are present it is best to start the meal with a clear soup. The hot soup steadies small nerves and Is an aid to digestion. Following are two menus that can be elaborated or simplified to meet individual needs. Keep in mind the necessity of ■erving foods that children may eat without an aftermath of discomfort. Let a dish of stewed prunes garnished with a dab of W'hipped cream and a cube of bright red jelly take the place of plum pudding for their dessert.
MENU—NO. 1 Bouillon Radishes Celery Assorted Olives Roast Goose with Prune Stuffing Giblet Gravy Martinique Potatoes Brussels Sprouts Tomato Jelly and Cream Cheese Salad Plum Pudding Sunshine Sauce Christmas Candy Black Coffee The potatoes arc cooked, seasoned and molded the day before. Christmas day they are baked twenty minutes in a moderate oven to make very hot; brown slightly. Tire salad is made the day before and on Christmas day is removed from molds and served on a bed of lettuce. With the exception of roasting the goose and making the gravy, the actual amount of cooking and time required to .prepare the dinner is slight. MENU—NO. 2 Grapefruit Cocktail Consomme Crown of Roast Pork Blushing Apples Glace Sweet Potatoes Molded Spinach Stuffed Sweet Pepper Salad Jellied Plum Pudding Fruit Cake Nuts Fruit Coffee The roast is prepared ready for rotating the day before. The blushing apples are made, sweet potatoes parboiled and the salad and pudding made ready to serve. The fruit cake has been baked for weeks. On Christmas morning the cocktail must be made and chilled. Later the pork must be roasted, the consomme reheated, the spinach cooked and the sweet potatoes finished. But there is no elaborate and paintaking fussing necessary in the preparation of the meal. PLEDGES TO GIVE CHRISTMAS PARTY Pledges of Alpha Tau chapter. Phi Pi Psi sorority, will entertain members with a Christmas dinner and bridge party Monday night at the Columbia Club. Decorations Will carry’ out the holiday iaea. Guests will include Misses Mary and Frances Russell. Mildred Nordloh, Betty Crowe, Mildred O'Reilly, Margaret Ralston and Jessie Wilson. Miss Bessie Cross, dressed as Bantu Claus, assisted by Miss Betty Parsley, will distribute gifts from a Christmas tree. Miss Thelma Alston is chairman of arrangements, assisted by Miss Margaret Smith. Hie entertainment committee includes Misses Kittle Pursley. Ruth L&nham. Harriett Clary and Martha Cro.
NEW LINEN, SILVER BRIGHTEN FESTAL BOARD
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New linen damasks, crystal and flat silver add their bit to the Christmas dinner table. A snow man centerpiece and snow- man favors have their appropriateness heightened by a gleaming reindeer designed of cloth. Unset) On anew holly patterned white cloth, glistening Santa Claus favors and a Christmas pudding with gifts in the center make a colorful trim. Candles on both are red and green.
Select the Heavy Type When You Purchase Silver Plate
BY RUTII MOORE MORRISS (Copyright. IS3O, Collier’s Weekly) If you are buying silver plate at Christmas time, and can afford it, buy it heavy. A question of wear and length of life is involved, you see. Silver plate comes in for plenty of use and no matter how faithfully you observe the rules for its care and preservation these rules are going to come in for a lot of scorn before long. It’s like your new motor car: at first you take a mother's care of it. but presently the novelty wears off—and with it the shine. Therefore, buy heavy plate. Unlike sterling, plate seldom is marked to show its weight. But you may rely upon the word of the good manufacturer or the responsible retailer. Buying sterling, you have only to look on the back or bottom for the facts. There you'll see TorM or H stamped Clearly in the metal—trade, medium or heavy—and the amount you wish to pay governs your choice. Trade is the lightest, the least expensive; and perfectly good, too, for knives, forks and the larger spoons. However, it would be well to go in for something a bit heavier in teaspoons, which, as you well know, are the hardest workers. Also, don’t go buying things by the half-dozen. The half-dozen is out of date in silver. Why? Well what sort of entertaining do you do these days? Sit around and talk aft?r lunch or dinner? No. It’s bridge.. So. instead of buying knives and
Sunshine Club Prepares Food for Distribution to Needy
Mrs. Otis Carmichael, 1133 East Thirty-fifth street, was hospitality chairman for the breakfast-musical and bridge given by the Children’s Sunshine Club of Sunnyside in the Travertine room of the Lincoln Tuesday. The tables were decorated with red roses and wreaths of holly. Members of the club brought contributions of food for needy families instead of gifts for the annual exchange. The food will be distributed before Christmas. Mrs. John Connor, president, presided. Mrs. M. D. Didway gave an organ recital during the breakfast,
Historical Soc Centennial
Lee Burns, Indianapolis, chairman of the executive committee of the Indiana Historical society, which is celebrating its centennial this week in a series of meetings, closing with the centennial dinner Saturday, has | announced the following committee j appointments: I Committee cn Nominatinn of Officers, Indiana Historical Society—Arthur W. I Brady, Anderson, chairman; Franij S. Boi gardus, Terre Haute; O. H. Greist, Indian- | anolis; Genevieve H. Scoville. Indian- ! a polls; Mrs. E. M. Blessing. Danville. Committee on "Indiana” Meeting. State- ; house. 8 F. M.. Thursday—Christopher B. | Coleman, chairman; George Buck, Ray D. ! Everson, O. H. Greist, Boyd Gurley, E. H. i Kemper McComb, Milo H. Stuart, James | A. Stuart, Roy P. Wisehart, Howard S. I Young, all of Indianapolis. I Committee on Joint Luncheon of the In-
LECTURER
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Abbe Ernest Dimnet The author of “The Art of Thinking.” Abbe Ernest Dimnet, will speak Friday night at Tudor Hall school. His subject will be the same as that of his book. The lecture is oj?en to the public.
forks and spons by the half-dozen, six being an odd number for cards, buy them in fours, eights and twelves. Never thought of that, did you? Ail our present patterns in silverware follow the lines and decorations of the original schools —particularly the hollow ware. When hollow ware i*t silver was first made, the flatware—the spoons, forks and knives—were plain affairs adorned only with the owner’s initials, crest or coat of arms. But presently this flatware took on the impressive hand-designing of the chalices and pots. Variations have crept into the early designs, but, generaly speaking, you can identify the different schools by fundamental shapes and forms and amount of decoration. For example, you may recognize your Italian Renaissance silver by its scrolls and arabesques, the dolphins and the masks, the fruit and leaf patterns. It thrives in tine midst of Spanish and Italian architecture and decoration. Generally similar is the French silver of the Louis influence—the egg and dart borders, the garlands and masks taken without shame from the Italian silversmiths, the reed and ribbon and the laurel. Yet, you’ll do well not to depend on such general identification of the French ware, because there are certain Louis XV patems of fantastic design rococo, with no characteristic moldings, but plenty of free sweeping curves, whereas classic forms characterized some of the Louis XVI school.
after which the following program was presented: Soprano solo, Mrs. John Herrman, accompanied by Miss Louise Herrman; reading, Miss Edythe McCouch; piano solo, Miss Frances Benner, and dancing, Miss Jean Karl, accompanied by Mrs. George Karl. Bridge followed the program. Assisting Mrs. Carmichael were: Mesdames August Soutter, Sam Selka, Albert Marshall, W. B. Sequartz, Richard Brann and W. C. Schaefer. The Sunshine Club will give a Christmas party for children at Sunnyside.
ety Celebrates Yith Meetings
diana Historical Society with Hereditary Patriotic Societies, Chateau Case. Claypool, 12:15 Friday—Frank B. Fowler, Sons ot tne American Revolution, general chairman; Mrs. Maurice E. Tennant, Daughters ol the American Revolution; Dr. Fletcher Hodges, Society of Mayflower Descendants; George D. Calvert, Society of Colonial Wars; Dr. John F. Clearwaters, Society of the War of 1812 in Indiana; Cornelius F. Posson. Founders and Patriots of America; Miller Hamilton, Society of Indiana Pioneers; Mrs. Frank N. Lewis, Society of Colonial Dames, all of Indianapolis. General Committee on Centennial Dinner of tht Indiana Historical Society, Claypool. 7 P. M., Saturday—Herbert Foltz, chairman; Evans Woollen Jr., J. J. Daniels. Thomas D. Sheerin. Robert A. Adams, Merrill Barkley, Mrs. Jacob P. Dunn, Or. M. M. Feucrlicht, Harry O. Garman, Mrs. Montgomery Lewis. Mrs. Guy Wainwright, Mrs. William J. McKee, all of Indianapolis; Mrs. J. R. Mr.rsh, Muncie; Mrs. John E. Frederick, Kokomo: Mrs. Tipton Blish, Seymour; Mrs. Adelbert P. Flynn, Logansport. Committee on Invitations—Mrs. Kate Milner Rabb. chairman; Mrs. Benjamin D. Hitz, Russell Sullivan, Miss Sue Howe, Mrs. Eb"n rs. Wolcott, all of Indianapolis. Committee on Descendants of the ! Founders of the Historical Socety—Katharine Merrill Graydon, chairman; Katherine Layman, Reginald H. Sullivan, all of Indiana polls. Committee on ’'Golden Book” of the Indiana Historical Society—Evans Woollen Jr., chairman; Esther U. McNitt, first vice-chairman; Nellie C. Armstrong, second vice-chairman Officers of the Indiana Historical society have been asked to assist ! Governor Harry G. Leslie and Mrs. Leslie at a reception tendered the members of the society by Governor Leslie and Mrs. Leslie at the Gov- ; emor's residence, 101 East Twentyseventh street, Thursday afternoon. The following list has been announced : Messrs, and Mesdames Lee Burns, Amos W. Butler, Charles E. Coffin, Evans Woollen, Christopher B. Coleman, all of Indianapolis; Linnaeus N. Hines, Terre Haute; Otto M. Knoblock, South Bend; Harvey Morrii. Salem; James A. Woodburn, Bloomington; also. Dr. Richard B. WetheriU, Lafayette, and Mrs. Eva Neal Beck. Franklin. Sorority to Meet Beta chapter Theta Sigma Delta sorority will hold a meeting Friday at the Y, W, C. A..
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Eloise Gibson Is Wedded to * James Mesalem Miss Eloise Gibson, daughter of William C. Gibson, became the bride of James Mesalem in a ceremony at the home of the officiating minister, the Rev. Aubrey H. Moore, at 4 Tuesday afternoon. The bride wora a gown of brown chiffon and lace, with accessories to match. She was attended by Miss Dorothy Pugh, who wore green chiffon. Earl Gibson, brother of the bride, was best man. Mr. and Mrs. Mesalem will be at home after Dec. 15 at 1220 Park avenue. The bride is a member of Phi Sigma Theta sorority. CHAPTER TO GIVE CHRISTMAS PARTY Miss LaVerne Clinehens, 423 West Forty-sixth street, will be hostesses to a Christmas party tonight for members of Alpha chapter, Zeta Rho sorority. She will be assisted by Misses Ruth Mather and Fern Rhea. Members who will attend are: Mesdames Lucille Gabbert, Nina Stewart, Paul McDuff, Kenneth Hittle. Leland Rawlings: Misses Pauline Bellinger. Billie Barton. Marjorie Beverly. Harriette Dorman, Ethel Heimer. Elizabeth Hillyer, Frieda McMechan, Francis Smith. Esther Jackson, Mary Mabey, Peggy Martin, Betty Vollmer. Leola Wood, Betty Haesigg. Isabelle Watkins, Martha Worth. Mary Van Pelt, Alta Watkins and Alice Young. PLAY STAGED FOR MISSION SOCIETIES “The Masque of Christmas,” a pageant, was presented today at a joint meeting of the Woman’s Home Missionary and Woman’s Foreign Missionary societies of the Broadway Methodist Episcopal church. Christmas carols were, directed by Mrs. J. A. Hood, with Mrs. R. E. Avels, soloist. The pageant was directed by Mrs. J. E. Andrews, with Mrs. W. F. Dean in charge of costumes and lighting. RUSH PARTY TO BE HELD SORORITY A bridge party tonight at the Cynthia Bell tearoom will be the second of a series of rush parties to be given by Phi Alpha Sigma sorority. Guests will include Mrs. Helen Brown and Misses Winifred Clark, Pauline Summers, Mary Beth Wilson and Florence Brandt. S. M. P. CLUB WILL BE PARTY TO GUESTS Mrs. William A. Tyner, 336 North Arsenal avenue, will entertain thirty members and guests of the S. M. P. Club with a Christmas party, bridge and buffet supper Thursday night. Decorations will be in Christmas colors. The table will be centered with holly and poinsettias, and lighted with red candles in silver holders. Mrs. Tyner will be assisted by Mrs. Earl Mapheny and Mrs. Samuel A. Walker. Parish to Hold Party St. Anthony’s parish will hold its annual Christmas party at the hall, 329 North Warman avenue, at 2:30 and 8:30 Thursday. The children will be entertained in the afternoon.
NOVEMBER BRIDE
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—Photo by Dexheimcr. Mrs. William C. Evans Before her marriage Thanksgiving day at the Indianapolis Athletic Club, Mrs. William C. Evans was Mrs. Pal Druly. Mr. and Mrs. Evans are at home in Richmond.
Art Exhibit Conducted in Irvington Miss Dorothy Morlan, noted Irvington artist, spoke before a gathering at the third annual exhibition of Irvington artists in Carr’s hall, 5936 East Washington street Wednesday afternoon. She commented upon the increased community interest in art of all forms, and laid the cause to the fact that artists of all kinds are seeking to express simpler feelings in their works. “The Marching Tree,” one of Miss Morlan's pictures, is among the outstanding of the exhibit, which is being sponsored by the Irvington Union of Clubs with the co-opera-tion of Dr. J. S. Carr. Among the well known Indiana artists whose works are on exhibit, are Mr. and Mrs. Clifton Wheeler. Misses Constance Forsythe and Caroline Bradley, and Frederick Polley, Robert C. Craig, Simon P. Baus and Wflliam Fosythe. The exhibit will close Sunday night.
Personals
Mr. and Mrs. Harry P. Cooper, 3462 East Fall Creek boulevard, are spending a few days at the Roosevelt in New York City. Mrs. Adolph Rosenberg, Cincinnati, will speak Monday before the Indianapolis Sisterhood. She will be the house guest of Mrs. H. Benjamin Marks, 4255 North Pennsylvania street. Norman Adam Perry Jr., who is attending the Evans Ranch school, Tucson. Ariz., will spend the Christmas holidays with his parents, Mr. ai\d Mrs. Norman A. Perry, 3853 North Meridian street.
Card Parties
Ladies’ auxiliary to the General Protestant Orphans’ home will hold its regular monthly card party at the home, 1404 South State avenue, at 8 Thursday. Euchre and bunco will be played. Mrs. Edward Wiebke i;l chairman. Social Service department, Women’s Moose Heart Legion, will give card parties at. 2:30 and 8:30 Thursday at 135 North Delaware street, for the benefit of undernourished children of the public schools. Mrs. Harry Vice and Mrs. Fred Kimman arc in charge. Garment Workers, 127, will give a card party at 2:30 Friday in Plumbers hall, 312 East Washington street, for the benefit of charity. Mrs. Rose Schaffner is chairman. PLAY TO BE GIVEN BY NO. 3 PUPILS Miss Eunice Jones, teacher of music and art at Albert Waisman school 3, will direct a Christmas play to be given by pupils of the school at 8 Thursday night, Dec. 18, at the school before the Par-ent-Teacher Association. Other numbers on the program will be given by the Mothers’ P. T. A. chorus, who will sing ‘ Cantique De Noel.” There will be a Christmas tree and gifts will be distributed by Santa Claus among the children. Monthly meeting of the ParentTeacher Association will be held at 2 Friday afternoon, Dec. 19, at the school. A short Christmas program of carols by a group of school children and a monologue by Mrs. Eugene Wiley will be on the program. The children who will sing are Mary, Clara Rose and Robert Snyder, Betty Jane Dawson, Marion Perlee and William Land. Christmas decorations will be used. BUTLER CLASS TO DANCE AT ANTLERS The sophomore class of the Butler university college of education will sponsor an informal, dance to be given at the Antlers Friday. Patronesses are Dr. and Mrs. W. L. Richardson, Dean Emma Colbert and Miss Mary Clement Turner. Party Is Arranged Butler Alumnae Club of Alpha Chi Omega will hold a Christmas party at 7:30 Thursday at the home of Miss Marcena Campbell, 415 East Fifty-second street. Mrs. Kurt Ehlers and Miss Dorothy Patterson will be hostesses with Miss Campbell. Members are asked to bring a 25cent gift for an exchange. Tea Given for Guest Mrs. W. B. Davidson, 1909 Nowland avenue, entertained Monday afternoon at tea in honor of Mrs. Gertrude Bonner, Greensburg, the guest of Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Woolery, 1526 North Olney street. Guests included the Rev. and Mrs. W. C. Ball, Mr. and Mus. R. A. Woolery, Mrs; James McNutt, Misses Ruth Ann Ball, Thetus Davidson, Nettie Lou and. Martha Jean Woolery. Zontas to Hold Fete Zonta Club held a Christmas party Tuesday night in the Lumley tearoom. Decorations were carried out in Christmas colors. An entertainment followed dinner and gifts were presented from a large Christmas tree.
THROAT Rub on Vicks; also every few hours melt a little in the mouth and let trickle slow* ly down throat. j OVER ■ttTAILUON JARS USED YEARLY
Glorifying Yourself BY ALICIA HART _
AMERICAN women have become decidedly “hand-conscious” and the result is increasing numbers of lovely hands seen even on women who must work for a living. But becoming “foot-conscious,” in the sense of desiring beauty in the feet, is a slower process. Unfortunately, the average woman only thinks of her feet when they hurt. There are many kinds of sensi-
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Just Every Day Sense
BY MRS. WALTER FERGUSON
DIVORCE is failure, not achievement. When we begin to think of it again, as such, we shall have done much to remedy our present deplorable situation. From the beginning of our existence, we dislike to fail at anything we set ourselves to do. The child who does not pass his school examinations is looked upon as careless or backward. The college boy who fails to make friends is considered as lacking in some important bit of personality. The mother who fails to obtain the proper obedience and respect from her children is pitied as an ineffectual creature. And the man who fails in business is not congratulated on the event usually. It is only about marriage that we assume the insane attitude that to fail is something to brag about. u tt WE make more whoopee over somebody who gets a divorce and a large chunk of alimony than over the person who sticks right in the game and makes a touchdown in the last quarter. We nearly always speak of “winning a divorce” as if it were some kind of a prize for a contest in which the plaintiff had displayed amazing intelligence. And of late we hear of gay parties being given to celebrate the final decree, just as in other days we celebratd weddings with joyfulnss and song. Many a man and woman have stuck to an unpleasant mate in bygone times because then to be divorced was not something to preen one’s self over. No doubt they often were very unhappy. But, after watching the empty and inane lives of some of our present divorcees, I am beginning to wonder whether those old-fash-ioned “until-death - do - us- part” advocates were such fools after all. It seems a mistake to insist that a man and a woman should live together these days when even one of is miserable in the alliance. But it is just as much a mistake surely to think that both should not be ashamed of their failure to make a go of it. Certainly we have not displayed any great intelligence by making a cheap indoor sport out of mar-
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tive feet, quite aside from suffering from ill-fitting shoes. Overheated houses where the floors are always warm can wreck foot comfort. Poor circulation can give permanently cold feet. Besides the dally scrubbing of the j feet, which already has been discussed. different kinds of foot baths are helpful and enjoyable. tt St B IF you have feet that are oversensitive, sore, and * uncomfortable most of the time, you should begin a careful regime to harden them. Sea salt bat hi are marvelous for this. Also, there are prepared soaps that can be dissolved for footsoaking. Perhaps best of all for the average tender foot is the salt and mustard seed bath. To a deep basin of water, of about 100 degrees Fahrenheit, add four tablespoonfuls of ground mustard seed and a cup of {able salt. Keep adding a little boiling water to keep the temperature up. Soak for a half hour, at least. This draws the blood from all parts of the body into the feet and legs and starts that circulation which your feet need. When finished, be sure to treat your feet to a cold shower. It may be shocking, but dip them in cold water or your pores will not close properly. After drying carefully, sit down and give each foot an alcohol rub. Massage the toes, in between the toes and the entire foot, ankle and lower leg in doing this. an tt IF you take an hour off each night for a week and give it to the care of the feet, you will be more than delighted to feel the results. Electric foot baths should not be taken except on the advice and under the direction of a physician. They have therapeutic value, but must be done just so or not at all. The use of foot powder after your feet have been bathed Ls quite as essential to good grooming as the use of talc and face powder on your face and body. Changing your stockings every day, and twice a day if you go out again evenings, is a simple precaution for foot care, too. MAENNERCHORWILL GIVE DINNER FETE Active membership of the Indianapolis Maennerchor will entertain with a Christmas dinner party at 7, night, Dec. 20. An informal musical and dance will follow the dinner. George G. Ledig is chairman of arrangements, assisted by Albert Deuse, Frank M. Cox, George Grabhorn. Wiiam Schage and Jack Messmer. Dinner Is Planned Westminster Presbyterian church will hold a bazar Friday afternoon at the church. A turkey dinner will be served from 5:30 to 7:30. Mrs. M. T. Scudder is chairman.
f'A, PERMANENT SO .50 gk J XMAS SPECIAL. Guaranteed 6 Months. 31 3 Shampoo, Trim and Set Included. miBS Sl 'I Five .Months' Resets Free If We Shampoo V ART-HOR BEAUTY SHOPPEJV^
.DEC. 10, 1930
Party Will Be Arranged by Sorority Indianapolis Alumnae Association of Zeta Tau Alpha sorority will meet at 8 Thursday night at the home of Misses Hildreth and Betty Siefert. 927 Eastern avenue, to make plans for the holiday season. The annual Christmas party for members and their friends will be held Saturday, Dec. 20; a box containing toys and clothing will be sent to the health center of the sorority in Virginia, and local needy families will be helped. Mrs, Harold Boyd is chairman c.l the committee in charge of the party, assisted by Mrs. Noel Nitterhouse. Misses Thelma Tacoma and Florence Talbott. Mrs. John Gainey will report on the bridge party held by Zeia Tau Alpha last month, proceeds to go to Butler university’s chapter house fund. Miss Lsabelle Eddy will appoint committees for the bridge tournament to begin in January and continue until June. Assisting her are Mrs. Alter E. Houk, Mrs. Walter Hendrickson. Misses Julia E, Miller and Jean Vestal. Members of Zeta Tau Alpha visiting in Indianapolis are invited to attend the meeting. Two Divisions of Department Club to Meet Mrs. Lawrence F. Orr chairman of hostesses of the American home department of the Woman's Department Club will preside at the tea which will follow the joint meeting with the drama section at 2:30 Friday at the club house. Her assistants will include; Mesdames Maurice Mendenhall. Emma A. Bristow. E. Mac Hahn. Ed. B. Hall. Roy O. Hodson, E. Kennington, Oliver P. McLeland. Joseph M. Milner. _D, F. Randolph. Charles Remy. A. E. Shirley. J. D. Smith, Charles Spahr, C. A. Tucker and W. C. Zaring and Mrs. Harry Watson of the Drama department. Mrs. Charles M. Clayton, of the drama department, is in charge of decorations. Abram Mendenhall, Chicago, will address the meeting on the subject “What Is the Matter With the. Theater?”
BAZAR-DINNER WILL BE HELD THURSDAY
The Mothers Affiance of Alpha Delta Theta sorority will hold its annual Christmas bazar and dinner Thursday at the Food Craft shop. Mrs. John A. Brossart, chairman, will be assisted by: Mesdames Will Shirtz. D. C. Barnhill. Benjamin Wysong. Ted Phillpot, J. W Esterline. F. B. Tomlinson. Charles Held, A. F. Austin and Richard Munday.
