Indianapolis Times, Volume 42, Number 190, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 December 1930 — Page 8

PAGE 8

ACCESSORIES SOLVE THE PROBLEM OF GIFTS FOR ‘HER’

Kerchiefs, Garters, or Gloves Good BY ROSETTE HARGROVE NEA Service Writer PARIS, Dec. 18.—Choosing gifts lor women this Christmas should bo the easiest and most delightful of experiences. How any one can resist the charm of the accessories which provide that undefinable touch to the ensemble is almost unbelteablc, as never before the shops offered such a tempting choice of dainty, feminine ''frivolities.” Start with the gossamer, fairylike handkerchiefs with your name written all down the center, your favorite motto in one or all four corners, or with a selection of gayly colored satin garters, no wider than Madame s little finger and finely hand-rucked. On to Aftemoci Bags ihen go on to the sophisticated, distinguished afternoon bag of antelope in the fashionable dark browns or green or just simply black, with flaring-cuffed gloves to match and finish up with a pair of the longest, softest flesh colored suede evening gloves sprinkled over with stardust, complete with bag to match. There you already have an imposing number of articles to choose from. In the minor gifts class, there are some delightful sets of beret and scarf of plaid wool or silk that would liearten any school girl, besides adding that touch of tartan which is going to be all the rage at the beginning of next year. Sets of underclothes are always accepted with joy, especially if they are anything like those that are to be seen at Worth's. Made of fleshcolored georgette and lace, the yoke part is just a mass of the finest handtucks you have ever set ey on. The lace forms the leg part. Compacts Are Gay There also arc a number of attractive compacts in green and blue enamel to match their celebrated perfumes, also suitable for the Jeune fille. A posy composed of two or three camelias in white, or white and rose or white and green would go a long way to reviving a listless party frock and placed at the back of the decollette, it would convey that the wearer knows exactly what is being worn in Paris. i For the young woman, the choice is almost bewildering. Fans have come in again, and if you can acquire that knack of handling one gracefully, the acquisition of one of the new models will make even a much worn dress look different. Dresses Are Stunning * Here again Worth has created some stunning affairs made of black, red. green and white velve*, all fashionable colors for the evening, but further than that, he has done away with all preconceived ideas as to what a fan’s shape should be. Some look like the three sides of a square, others have one stick much longer than the other. Another attractive gift is the bag and long evening gloves to match. Alexanderine, “the” chic glovemaker in Paris, shows a number of creations for the holiday season. Bags Match Gloves Flesh-colored suede gloves, plain or sprinkled with have a bag of the same leather to match. The new necklace# seen there show three and four rows of colored beads combined with strass motifs and there are some sets that include bag and gloves to match, with the necklace and bracelet of crystal and onyx the same as the bag's clasp.

Personals

Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Jewett, 410 North Meridian street, are guests at the Ambassador hotel in New York. Miss Virginia Lloyd arrives today from New York, where she is attending the New York School of Pine Arts, to spend the holidays with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank C. Olive, 5725 Washington boulevard. Miss Ruth Peterson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Peterson, 4400 North Pennsylvania street, will return from Ward-Belmont Friday fox, the holidays. Mr. and Mrs. Willis Connor. 618 East Forty-eighth street, will have Mr. and Mrs. Frank Lloyd and son Frailly Lloyd Jr., Scarsdale. N. Y., is their holiday guests. Professor Harmon Parker Bross of Kent College, 0., will spend Christmas with his mother, Mrs. Ernest Bross, Spink-AVihs. Miss Elaine Mclntosh, 3340 North Meridian street, will leave Friday to spend the holidays* in-Atlanta. Ga., with her grandmother, Mrs. B. F. Holtzendorf Springdale road, Druid Hills. William Lawrence Sexton and John T. Sexton will arrive Saturday from Notre Dame to spend vacation with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Tirotliy P. Sexton,. 1616* North Pennsylvania street, Mrs. John S. McFarland. •SpinkVrms. will sail Dec. 20 for a voyage through the Caribbean sea Mr. and Mrs. James Coppinger Cotter. Spink-Arms, have gone to St. Louis to spend the Christmas holidays. 'MRS. AMMERMAN , ENTERTAINS CLUB Mrs. K. V. Ammerman. 4830 Park avenue, was hostess at the annual Christmas party of the Minerva Club Wednesday afternoon. Candles and palm branches furnished the decorations. A paper, ‘•Famous Madonnas." was read by Mrs. George Wood, and Mrs. V. C. Wiley read a group of her original poems. Tlioso present were: MeWtames W. H. Biddlecombe, M. E. Burkhart, C. H. Becker. J. A. Cameron. E. 3. Cummins*. Emil Ebner, L. L. Hopkins, George T. Linting, N. S. Lloyd. C. F. McDaniel. George E. Maxwell. George Wood. V. C. Wiley. E. H. Zeigner, George Kltziug. Cora M. Raber and Edgar Milam. A Party Will Be Held ' Gamma chapter, Sigma Delta Sigma sorority, will hold its Christmas party at the home of Miss Mabel Skinner, 913 North La Salle street, Monday night,.

PRESENTS THAT WILL CHARM

For the formal evening toilette, pale pink suede gloves from Alexandrine are studded with strass, and a matching bag of pink suede has a flexible strass handle which is glittering and very new. The latest necklace consists of three rows of graduated crystals and strass beads, in colors to match the frock. This one is three shades of pink and rose. Lace-trimmed handkerchiefs for evening are replaced by the new “dance handkerchiefs," which are huge plain-colored georgette squares, the color of one’s gown, with the first line of a popular adnee song printed in each corner.

Club Holds Christmas Party at Home for Aged Women

Welfare Club held its annual Christmas party today at the Indianapolis Home for Aged Women. The party was arranged and given by the executive board of the club. A playlet contrasted a quilting bee, with the participants dressed in old fashioned costume, and a bridge foursome, with the players dressed in exaggerated modern costume, A quadrille, to old time music by fiddlers, also was on the program. Gifts were distributed from a Christmas tree to the residents of the home. The rooms were decorated with poinsettias and festoons

Christmas Tea Is Given for Kindergarten Society Staff

Mrs. Paul H. White, president of the Indianapolis Free Kindergarten Society, and members of the executive board entertained the staff of the organization with a Christmas tea at the Propylaeum Wednesday afternoon. ( A dramatic monologue, WTitten by Mrs. H. H. Hombrook, a member of the board of directors, was presented by Mrs. Ricca Scott Titus. Mrs. Ruth Ranier Nessle\

HELPS NEEDY

Miss Helen Hensley

Miss Helen Hensley is president of the Alpha Lambda Chi sorority which is directing its efforts this season toward helping needy families. Members will distribute baskets at Christmas time. SORORITY LEADER WILL BE HOSTESS Miss Kathleen Spear, president of the Theta Sigma Delta sorority, will entertain members Sunday afters noon at her home, 728 Cottage avenue, with a Christmas party.. She, will be assisted by her sister,* Miss Degarmo Spear. Appointments u T ill be in Christmas colors and holly -will be used in decorating. Guests will include: Miss Mildscd Van Horn, Melkle, Wilma Braustett’r, Dorothy Porter. Mary Piccione, Mildred Borst, Lucille Beasley, Catlierin* Claris, .Emily * Henclsjv Marie Losche, Gertrude McNece, Betty Mercer, Anna Mueller, Bernice , Moehlec, Helen Stringer,*Hflen and Lida barring. MI99REINITZ •WEDS • AD COLUMBIA CLUB Miss Mildred Remits, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Reinitz, 3777 North Meridian street, and Harry E. Berks were married at 11 today at the Columbia Club. The sendee was performed by Rabbi Morris M. Feuerlicht. Greenery and flowers formed an altar. The bride was unattended, and the guests were the families and a sexy intimate friends. A wedding breakfast at the club followed the service. Mr. and Mrs. Berke were "to leave today for a West Indies cruise .and will be at home at the Columbia Club after their return Jan. 8. Dance to Be Given Members of the Protected Home Circle will be entertained with a dance in the Modern Woodman's hall, 322 East New York street Friday night. Kert Wilbur is in charge of arrangements. Miss Porter Hostess The High-Bidders Bridge Club wli hold its Christmas meeting at the home of Miss Virginia Carter at 8 tonight.

of greenery and lighted by red Christmas candles. The social hour was in charge of the following committee: Mrs. E. M. Campbell, chairman; Mesdames Ray Holcomb, Hiram Pearce, W. S. Mitchell, George L. Stalker, Thomas C. Whallon, Frank Malott and James Simmons. The executive board includes: Mesdames Frank J. Haight. William Birk, John Sawyer, Harry Watson Raleigh Fisher, L. T. Creswell, George Pugh, Clifford Miller, J. G. Karstedt, Leroy Martin. Nelle Greyer, Louis Kriete and E. L. Donahue.

harpist, played a program'of music during the afternoon. The tea table was decorated with miniatuie Christmas trees, and lighted with red tapers. Christmas greens were arranged throughout the rooms. Mrs. Henry W. Bennett poured, assisted by members of the board. Mrs. Charles B. Emerson was chairman of the. committee in charge, and Mrs. John W. Kern, first vice-president, presided.

Mothers Will Be Guests at School Party Mothers of children in Butler university college of education kindergarten, will be entertained Friday morning at a Christmas party. Miss Hazel Herman is director of the kindergarten. The elementary school and kindergarten will hold a Christmas festival at 1. Each room will represent a different nation. The kindergarten children will be Americans and dressed in white aprons and caps, will sell home made cookies. Grades 1 to 3 will be Hollanders and dress in true Dutch style, even to wooden shoes. They will sell articles made by the Dutch in their country. Grades 4 to 8 will be Irish and Indians, and will sell articles typical of these races.

Card Parties

Camellia lodge 121, E. of L. F. and E. will hold a card party at 8:30 tonight. St. Patrick’s Social Club wall entertain at cards at 2 •30 and 8:15 Friday.in the hall, 940 Prospect street. , Garment Workers, local chapter, 127, will entertain at cards at 2:30 Friday at Plumbers hall, Alabama and Washington streets. Proceeds will be used for charity. Mrs. Rose Schaffner is chairman of the committee in charge. LUNCHEON GIVEN FOR SISTERHOOD Mrs. L. B. Lookabill and Mrs. Russell Lookabill, 3325 Ruckle street, entertained members of the F. P. O. E. sisterhood with a Christmas luncheon Wednesday. Guests were seated at one large and several small tables, lighted with Christmas candles and decorated with greenery. The program consisted of readings, “Christmas in the Southland,” by Mrs. A. R. Dewey, and carols by a quartet composed of Mesdames Russell and L. B. Lookabill, Cecil Stalnaker and Lawrence R. Cartwright. Party to Be Given Student section of the Matinee Musicale will be entertained at a Christmas party Friday afternoon at the home of Mrs. Frank T. Edenharter, 3345 North Illinois street. Mrs. A. C. Macy is in charge of the program. Mrs. Fred H. Knodel and Mrs. Oren A. Miller will assist the hostess. Supper Is Arranged Miss Frances Kotteraan will entertain tonight with a supper party at the Highland Golf and Country Club, honoring Miss Antoinette Langsenkamp and Robert Kirby, who will be married Jan. 3. The bride's colorSf yellow and green, will be used in decorations and appointments.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Vegetables Saved Even if Scorched BY SISTER MARY' NEA Service Writer Sometimes it seems that “tempus fugits” faster in the kitchen than any other place, and that if one takes one’s eye from the vegetables on the stove, they take it upon themselves to burn. The best of cooks occasionally makes mistakes, but her true art is shown by her ability to turn the failure into a success. Any vegetable that just has started to burn can be placed—in its cooking pan—into a larger pan of cold water. The vegetable then should be shaken out of the burned pan into a fresh pan or bowl, leaving any scorched material in the pan. If not cooked until tender, a little

Daily Menu BREAKFAST—Orange sections, cereal, waffles, syrup, milk, coffee. LUNCHEON Creamed Spanish onions with croutons, hearts of celery, cranberry sponge, vanilla wafers, milk, tea. DlNNEß—Cannelon of beef, scalloped potatoes, parsnip fritters, grape fruit and green pepper salad, toasted crackers, graham fig pudding, milk, coffee.

boiling water can be added and the cooking finished. Season and serve as usual. If things have not gone too far, most of the vegetable can be served without a taint of burn. Shake the Saucepan An excellent habit of precaution for the new cook is that of shaking the saucepan in which a vegetable is cooking. Often the smooth-cut, flat surface of a vegetable sticks and burns before the water is cooked away. Shaking prevents this without crushing the vegetable, as stirring might do. Potatoes and sliced carrots are examples of vegetables that that often scorch because of this flat surface. Too much salt often has spoiled the soup. A remedy for this is to add from half a cup to a whole cup of sliced raw potatoes to the sauce pan of soup. Let stand 10 or 15 minutes, remove potatoes and serve. The potatoes absorb the excess salt. Delicately flavored vegetables, su( h as asparagus and peas, require very little salt, particularly when dressed with butter for serving. Use sal; sparingly, for it’s easy to add salt to suit individual needs. Egg Yolk Helps If the mayonnaise separates, take another egg yolk in a fre i bowl and slowly beat in the urdled dressing, continuing as usual until all the lemon juice and oil is used. If a custard sauce curdles, beat it well with a dover beater. This same beater often will beat the lumps out of a white sauce that has been made in too big a hurry. If the sauce is very lumpy, it can be rubbed through a fine sieve and reheated, A tomato cream soup that shows an inclination to curdle can be converted int a thick tomato puree by adding butter and flour rubbed together in the proportion of 1 tablespoon butter and 1 tablespoon flour to each cup of soup. A gelatin jelly that refuses to stiffen in the required length of time can be hurried if more gelatin is softened in cold water, dissolved over hot water and added at once to the offending jelly. If jam becomes hard and sugary before it is used up, place it in a moderate oven until the sugar melts. When cool the jam is almost as good as new. Boiled frosting that insists on running when put on the cake can be made stiff by adding powdered sugar until the mixture will “stay put.”

LAVRA FAE WOOD GUEST AT BRIDGE Mrs. Eugene E. Whitehill entertained Wednesday night at her home, 4477 North Delaware street, with a bridge party in honor of Miss Laura Fae Wood, whose marriage ta Carleton J. F. Heiberger will take place Dec. 20. Guests with the bride-elect and her mother, Mrs. B. B. Wood, include: Mesdames C. G. Tyner. Lee Wood. Brown Bolte. Mark Gant, Ralph Whitehill, Merlin Bailey. GeorKe Hilgemeier Jr.. Frank Walker. J. Bradley Haight: Misses Kathleen Hottel. Martha Thomas, Virginia Greeley, Martha Sillery, Kathryn Buxton. Virginia Ott, Rosiland Wood, Marian Whitney, Margaret Gabriel and Mildred Jackson. PARTY ARRANGED BY MifS. SULLIVAN Mrs. James J. Sullivan will entertain tonight with a Christmas party at her home, 2268 Kenwood avenue. Decorations §jid favors will be in the Christmas colors. , Guests will include Mesdames Aubrey Twigg, Gilbert Smith, Roy J. Burke; Misses Sarah Penish, Marie Hahn, Helen Wilmanns and Loretta Burke. The hostess will be assisted by her mother, Mrs. Theresa Hill, GIFT EXCHANGE TO BE HELD BY CLUB Past Presidents’ club of Major Robert Anderson, W. R. C. 44, will have a Christmas luncheon and exchange of gifts Friday at the home of Mrs. Elizabeth A. Smith, 328 Bright street. Mrs. Kate Seamman and Mrs. Hattie M. Hopkins will act as hostesses. Following the luncheon a short program will be presented. Members will bring contributions of food to be given to needy families for Christmas. The home will be decorated in keeping with the holiday season.

Baby's Colds JBk Best treated without \ dosing—Just rub on OVERf? MILLION JARS USED YEARLY

Miss Pierce to Be Bride at Church The marriage of Miss Mary Louise Pierce, daughter of James Edwin Pierce, 3510 North Pennsylvania street, and Robert Irwin Boyer, will be solemnized at 4 this afternoon in the McKee chapel of the Tabernacle Presbyterian church. The service will be read by the Rev. J. Ambrose Dunkel. The chapel will be lighted by cathedral candles and the altar banked with greenery, in the center of which will be a tall basket of yellow roses. Seven branch candelabrae will stand on each side. Mrs. C. H. Eberhard, organist, will play, and Evan Walker will sing, “O Promise Me," “Love’s Old Sweet Song,” "Sweetheart of Sigma Chi,” and “Garden of Love,” the song of the bride’s sorority, Delta Delta Delta. To Wear Orchid Crepe Ushers will be Johnny B. Collins and John H. Bolte. Charles Shugert will be best man. Mrs. John H. Bolte, sister of the bride, will be her only attendent. She will wear orchid crepe with very long skirt, matching velvet jacket and turban, and orchid crepe slippers. She will carry a bouquet of yellow roses and wear a rock crystal necklace with pendant, her sister’s gift. The bride, whose father will give her in marriage, will wear ivory bridal satin, the fitted bodice having a yoke of Chantilly lace. A flared peplum at the hipline falls into long streamers in the back. The floor length skirt sweeps into a short train. She will wear a tulle veil with a shirred cap and will carry a shower bouquet of bride’s roses and lilies of the valley. She will wear a strand of pearls, the gift of the bridegroom. Reception to Be Held An informal reception will be held in the church parlors after the ceremony. The bride and bridegroom will leave immediately for a wedding trip, the bride traveling in a tailored dress of hunter’s green with matching accessories and a sealskin coat. Her corsage will be yellow roses and sweet peas. On their return they will be at home at 3510 North Pennsylvania street. Both are graduates of Butler university, Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Johnson, 520 East Thirty-sixth street, entertained Wednesday night with a bridal dinner in honor of Miss Pierce and Mr. Boyer. The dinner taljle was centered with a wedding cake on a plateau of white roses and smilax, and lighted by four cathedral candles in crystal holders. Nut cups carried out the bridal colors, orchid and yellow. Individual white boxes with gold monograms containing wedding cake were given the guests. Covers were laid for: Mr. and Mrs. Johnson. Miss Peirce. Mr. Boyer, Mr. Pierce: Messrs, and Mesdames Bolte. Collins, John Wild Jr.. F. N. Shugert; Misses Maxine Scales o I Dayton, Ruth Shugert, Luellabelle Johnson; Messrs. Walker, Shucert and David Johnson,

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Tabernacle Church School to Give Christmas Pageant

“The Great Light,” a Christinas pageant, will be presented by the Tabernacle Presbyterian church school at 8 Tuesday night. Mrs. Jean McCormick, director of chorus work at Shortridge high school, will be in charge of the music. „ ' On the program, in addition to

|WWSjaF:V

Just Every Day Sense

BY MRS. WALTER FERGUSON

Dr. william m’pherson, president of the American Chemical Society and member of the Ohio State university faculty, says that if he had his way no woman ever would get a diploma from any school unless- her course included a certain amount of home economics. Most of us will agree that Dr. McPherson is right when he insists that modern education places too much stress upon the mere learning of facts. A great deal of the effort we put forth in high schools and colleges is wasted, for the reason that we fail to apply our knowledge to practical uses. Nevertheless, it appears just as wrong to assume that a degree makes an educated man as to imagine that a course in home economics will make a good housewife out of every woman. Such rule, to be sure, might give every girl a solid foundation for the household arts, so sadly lacking in our national life. But what the American woman needs still more than that is a sort of homing instinct, which seems to have been lost from the feminine makeup in the general shuffle following the World war. We face facts and not fancies about the home. And it never will be restored to its old-time influence until men and women co-operate toward that^nd. The husband is a vastly more important factor in a happy home atmosphere than a faculty for turning off housework for the wife, necessary as that, too, may be. For upon him devolves the responsibility of keeping his wife contented in her own kitchen. When men do that—and believe me, it is possible—household economics can come out of the public schools and go back into the home, where they rightfully belong. Dance to Be Held Alpha Gamma sorority will plan for a Christmas dance to be held Dec. 26 at the home of Miss Adele Meyers, 5204 North Meridian street, at the meeting Friday night at the home of Miss Jean Converse, 1565 Park avenue. At the meeting Friday, gifts will be exchanged.

the pageant of seventeen scenes, will be Mrs. Robert Ellsworth, reader; instrumental trio composed of Mrs. Harry S. Lane, pianist: Miss Mary Lahrman. cellist, and Mrs. L. A. Pike, violinist, and Mrs. F. G. Lacey, harpist. The pageant is being arranged by James B. Martin, director of education of the church, assisted by Miss Mary B. Whiteman. The committee on arrangements is coimposed of Mesdames L. C. Tripp, chairman; W. D. Hamer, E. C. Boswell, Ray Fatout, William Maginnis and James B. Martin. Miss Katherine Litwhiler is the artist. Members of the cast, with Miss Betty WaYd taking the part of Mary, and the three wise men portrayed by William Humphreys, Charles Nourse and Lynn Breece, are: Misses Mary Louise Wheeler. Mary Louise Blauveß. Marian Lamb. Louise Mitchell. Dorothea Craft. Esther Glltner. Louise Faulkner. Helen Campbell. Charlotte Hutchinson, Betty Humphreys. Mary B. Whiteman, Marie Barton. Ruth Hutchinson. Ruth Egan. Esther Morrison, Mary H. Marooney. Louise Edwards, Laura Wright. Betty Kalleen., Mildred Black. Messrs. Verne Hutchinson. George Lehman. Donald Billings. George Whiteman. Charles CJary. Marlon Lowman. David Duthie. Ralph George. Gino Ratti, Bob Hanika, Jay Irick, Gavin Bruce and Horace Price.

Dinner Party Will Be Held by Maennerchor: Active membership of the Indianapolis Maennerchor will hold its annual Christmas dinner party Saturday night. Mrs. Alice Menninger Stempel, Pittsburgh, will be guest pianist. The program, which will open and close with the singing of “Sturmbeschworung” and “Stille Nacht,” follows: Piano Solos— * “Berceuse" Chopin “Two Etudes" Chopin Two Preludes—- “ Danseuses de Delphes.” “La Fille aux cheveux de Un." Mrs. Stempel. Tenor Solo—“Jesu Bambino" Yohn George Kadel. Contralto Solos—- “ The Holy City” Adams “The Chimes" Worrell Mrs. Mary Traub Busch. Resume of Events In the Life of the Indianapolis Maennerchor. Miss Pauline Schellsclimidt. Violin Solos—“Berceuse” Neruda “Czardas" Monti Miss Mary Wiliits Rogers. Tenor Solos—“Ach Wie Ist's Moglich Dann".... Arr. Lehman "La Donna e Mobile” (Rigolette)... .Verdi Robert G. Ledig. The committee on arrangements is headed by Fred G. Pintzke, general chairman, assisted by Albert Deluse, Frank Cox, George Grabhorn, William Schlegel, Jack Messmer and Robert G. Ledig. Pledges to Give Play Gamma Phi Alpha sorority will hold its annual Christmas party tonight at the home of Miss Marjorie Myer, 417 East Pratt street. Pledges will present a playlet, “A Christmas Caro,l.”

.DEC. 18, 1930

Mrs. Shedd t Is Hostess to Sorority Members of the Sigma Alpha lota, musical sorority, were entertained with a Christmas party at the home of Mrs. Ecjwin H. Shedd, 3939 North Delaware street, Wednesday night. Patronesses of the sorority were assistant hostesses. A color scheme of green and silver was carried out in the decorating, in addition to the appointments in keeping with Christmas. Three sketches were given by the authors, Mrs. Roy Pyle, Mrs. Louise Schellschmidt Koehne and Miss Pauline Schellschmidt, accompanied by Mrs. Simon Kiser. Miss Schelischmidt read a greeting from Mana Zucca, composer, who is an honorary member of the organization. AMICA CLUB GIVES CHRISTMAS PARTY Members of the Arnica Club were entertained with their annual Christmas party at the home of Mrs. R. E Spiegel, 725 North Riley street, Wednesday night. Mrs. Roy Egbert was in charge of the program. A trio composed of Mesdames Paul Ameter, Thurman Washburn and Frank Richards sang. Mrs. Washburn sang several solo numbers and Chirstmas carols were sung by the members. Candles and holiday colors were used in decorating. Favors of small Santas were presented to the guests. ROBERT GRAHAM IS GUEST AT DINNER Mrs. Robert S. Graham, 3-750 Fall Creek boulevard, entertained with a. .formal dinner in honor of Robert. Graham Wednesday night., A floral centerpiece and gold tapers decorated the table. Bridge followed ths dinner. Guests were Messrs, and Mesdames Ray Goodwin,' Herbert Suffrins, Gene Dehner, James Kemper; Miss Caroline Molter, London, who is the guest of Mrs. Kemper, and Scott Wade. MISS ALVEY WELL GIVE BRIDGE PARTY Miss Loretta Alvey will entertain with a bridge party tonight at her home on Bradley street.'-Christmas colors and appointments will ba used in decorating. The guests will be: Misses Eleanor Nelnieyer, Ruth Farmer. Marjorie Gividen, Alberta Wheeler. Norma Schumaker, Lodena Powell and Dorothy Scheldcgger. Party to Be Held Rho Zeta Tau sorority will hold a meeting and Christmas party at the home of Mrs. Clarence Remy, 2647 East Seventeenth street, Friday night. During the business session, plans to help a needy family at Christmas time will be discussed. Decorations will be a Christmas tree, poinsettias and candles. Gifts will be exchanged.