Indianapolis Times, Volume 43, Number 190, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 December 1931 — Page 18
PAGE 18
Theaters to Give Shows for Charity Again neighborhood theaters will Co-operate with the Indorsers of Photoplays In holding benefit “potato and apple" matinees during the next weeks for the relief of needy families in their communities. Entrance fees for all are articles <sf food, staples, potatoes, fruits, vegetables, canned goods, jellies and as an innovation this year, clothing. Articles at each theater will be divided and distributed to needy families In each neighborhood after investigations by the managers. In some districts, the food and clothlpg will be distributed by the fire department. Others who will help are the Salvation Army and the Family Welfare Society. Such matters were inaugurated fifteen years ago by the indorsers with the co-operation of two small theaters. This year twenty are assisting. Mrs. H. C. Bertrand, neighborhood theaters chairman, is in charge of arrangements. Following is the schedule of performances, as far as arranged, and the committees assisting: Saturday IRVING, 10 A. M —Mrs. J. A. Kirns, chairman; Mesdames Robert Drum, I. M Christie. * ST. CLAIR, 10 A. M.~Mrs. Thomas Dcmmerly, chairman; Mesdames G. J. Sherman, J. H. OrndorfT. A. J. Atkins. Theodore Wagner, Charles Smith. . BELMONT. 10 A. M.- -Mrs. William Oren, Chairman; Mesdames Oscar Jones, Roberl Kendall. STRATFORD, 9.30 A. M.—Mrs. T. H Fonts, chairman; Mesdames Belle Tutewller, Donna McCannon. E O. Btadium W E. Palmer, William Whitesides, Ben Eiscr.man TUXEDO. 2 P. M.—Mrs. Harry McDonald chairman; Mesdames R. R. Mills J A Sanlter. C. H. Moore. Henry H Warner. James Malloy, William L. Keough and Miss Mvrtlo Vaun. DREAM, 2 P. M— Mrs. Alice Ellison, chairman; Mesdames, Harry Nagel, D. Watson, Monday, Dec. 21 . RITZ. 2P. M Mrs. W. W. Ward, chairman; Mesdames James Sproule, Warren Harrell. C. M. Bohnstadt. William Powell. Wednesday, Dec. 23 TACOMA, 2 P. M—Mrs. E. R. Lee, chairman: Mesdames, L. A. Schmidt. Harry Spencer, Orem Greggorv. Mat HarrArml'aae. J. L Tomlin. ROOSEVELT, 2 P. M.—Mrs. Earl Conard, chairman; Mesdames, Leo Herner, Willißm Zimmerman. John Bohn, Bant Sexson, Harrv Spalding. GARFIELD, 2 P. M.—Mrs. Wm. E. King, chairman; Mesdames Ben Harris, John Walsh UPTOWN. 2 P. M.—Mrs. Lillian Jones, chairman; Mesdames Victor Winterrowri, George Brattain. W. A Hacker. Edward Niles, STRAND, 2 P. M.—Mrs, J. W. Vestal, chairman: Mesdames Roy Gray. Lillian Lemen. Thomas Griffon. James Sullivan, William Jones. Earl Doll. Harrv Ernsting and members of the XI Beta XI sorority. Saturday. Dec. 26 ZARING. 10 A. M—Mrs. J. H. Comnton, chairman: Mesdames F. B. Gavlord E L. Booth. John Cochrane. Claud Jones, Miss Relen Daily. TALBOTT. 10 A M Mrs. W. D. Long, chairman: Mesdames Oaklev White. Badger Williams, Edna Shame. Rufus O'Hara. Henry Haywood. ORIENTAL. 10 A. M.—Mrs. E. R. Kemnf. chairman; Mesdames Mabel Dobbins. Guy Braufcton. Wade Puntv. Kleo Koffman. REX. 2 P. M.—Mrs. William Forrest, chairman: Mesdames A. C. Kimberlin, Edward Trusty, W. A. Howard, Richard E. Sprague. ■DAISY. 3 P. M.—Mrs. Harrv D. Orr. chairman; Mesdames Claude Power, Ward FJ/v. Albert Brethauer. George Connolly. EMERSON. 2 P. M.—Mrs. William Fisher, chnirman: Mesdames Emerson Gilcrist.. Albert Shepard. Paul Keller. A. W. Lockhart. Tuesday. Dec. 29. FOUNTAIN SQUARE—Committee not yet named. Any one wishing to help in the project or having clothing or produce to give, can get in touch with the manager of the theater in his neighborhood. Those having automobiles who care to use them in distributing the articles may call Mrs. Bertrand, the chairman. Drill Team in Dinner Official drill team of Indiana auxiliary to the United Spanish War Veterans will hold its annual banquet and Christmas party at 5 Sunday at the Claypool. Mrs. Libbie Everett is general chairman of arrangements.
MAN N£ltf‘ ND A/OALS qx By Jan-l JokdAn yV)
DON’T lock up your troubles; Write to Jane Jordan just as you would to a friend whom you have known a long while and trust to give you sound advice. Your letter will be answered in this column within a few days. Dear Jane Jordan —I am 18 and very much In love with a young man of 21. But I don't know whether he really loves me. Two years ago, when 1 met him, he told me that he loved me and said he wished we could be married? We went together, during these two years. He now says that the first time he said he loved me he was only kidding, but that he really means it now. He has told all his boy friends that he loves me. They come back and tell me so. Do you think it is possible for any fellow to find out in two weeks that he ready loves a girl? DOT H. DEAR DOT H.—l don't know whether he loves you or not and neither will you until you see enough of him to find out. Two weeks is hardly a test of love, but after all he has known you two years. I do not believe in love at first sight. I believe in mutual attraction at first sight, but attraction is just as apt to fade as it is to deepen into love. Constant companionship is rtt* uest iesv you can put to the first little sprouts of the thing called love. If afer you have “gone steady’’ with this young man for a while, you find that your interests are similar; that your tastes are congenial; that you rather would be with each other than with anybody else on earth, it is safe to assume that you have fallen in love. You can’t learn enough about each other in two weeks to know whe .er you are suited to spend your lives with each other. But if you think you love him, I’d give him a chance to prove the truth of his declaration! tt a a Dear Jane Jordan—l have been going with a young man for six months and he savs that he loves me. I can not say why it is that I doubt him. Is there any test to which I can put him that will show whether he loves me? I'm not even sure that I’m in love myself. How can I tell? DOUBTFUL DEAR DOUBTFUL—There is, of course, no formula for love—no vaccination by which its presence can be detected. When a tuning fork is struck, the corresponding note on the piano vibrates. The same thing happens when some personalities met. Under suitable conditions, this harmony usually develops into what we call love. Love is far more than physical attraction; it is the mental and spiritual self-identification of one ego with another. Some harmony of ideas, some mental point of contact, must accompany physical attraction before it can be dignified with the name of love.
Gifts of Beauty Always Welcome and Your Choice This Year Is Wide
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You have a wide choice of glamorous things if you make up your mind to give beauty away this Christmas. (A) Anew evening purse for the girl in or out of college, is made of pearls and brilliants and is fitted with beauty gadgets. (B) New for Mother’s dressing table is a modernistic black-white brush, comb and mirror. (C) Brother, Friend Husband or Dad would feel all dressed up with one of the new evening sets of shorts and shirts, in white
BY JULIA BLANSHARD NEA Service Writer NEW YORK, Dec. 18.—Welcome is the Santa Claus who comes bringing gifts of beauty in his Christmas sack. Giving vanity gifts is a useful thing to do as well as a pleasant one. You both please the recipient and at the same time make him or her better looking, which pleases everybody. Vanity gift lists should start with excellent perfume. All women spend some money for beauty, but with limited incomes these purchases usually are such necessities as powder, lipstick, rouge, creams. A flacon of perfume of expensive scent, such as one distilled from all white flowers, or a single exquisite violet or mimosa scent are delightful. This year there are sturdy heather scent toilet waters that the most mannish man will like. And More for Men There also are packages of beauty lotions, cologne, toilet water and after-shaving powder. Men also like scented soaps, especially when they just are natural flower scents or pine-needle scents. If you give with a lavish hand, the latest things are beauty kits foi women that include everything ir the way of creams, astringents, mus-
Does your young man consider you before himself? Does that which affects you affect him? Does he like to sit and talk with you and is it hard for you to talk yourselves out? These are all “symptoms” of the emotional state called love. u an Another letter to “Young Girl!” Dear Jane Jordan—l am writing this letter to “Young Girl” and I sincerely hope it will help her to see that you are right. Just a little over six months ago, I met and fell deeply in love with a ■wonderful young man. He was also very emotional and when I was asked to surrender, did I do it? Indeed not. I told him in my sweetest way, "No, if I ever marry, my husband never will have cause to be ashamed of me.” He accepted my answer as final, but did he leave me flat? No, again! I have been married to him for almost four months. He savs. 'Tve got the sweetest little girl in the world.” Young girl, won’t you listen to one who knows? I agree with “A Reader.” He is only trying you out. He Is going to love you a lot more and have more respect for womankind, when you refuse. So please be strong. JUST A LITTLE GIRL
Card Parties
Lavelle Gossett auxiliary, Post 908, will give a card party at 8 tonight at the hall, King avenue and Walnut street. Meridian Grove, No. 28, U. A. O. D. lodge, will give a bunco and card party in Druids hall, 1317 South Meridian street, at 8 Saturday night. Booster Club, Pocahontas council, No. 350, will give a eucher party at 8:30 Saturday night at the home of Mrs. Clarence Pobst, 230 South Harris street.
MRS, W, R, TROTTER LUNCHEON HOSTESS
Mrs. William R. Trotter entertained the following guests at luncheon Wednesday at the Marott: Mesdarnes Theodore Perry, John H. Chambers, W’oodruff Randolph, R. N. Fisher. Earl Lindsay, James H. Heis, Clark D. Hicks and Charles P. Howard. The table was centered with flowers in shades of blue, purple and slams. Hold Holiday Party Gamma Phi Alpha sorority held its annual Christmas parts’ Thursday night at the home of Miss Santina Dondi, 713 Greer street. Greenery and red candles were the decorations. A program was given by the pledges, Misses Rosemary Ryce and Edna Flick. Gifts were exchanged.
silk, monogrammed in black. (D) The inveterate hostess would adore the new guest room perfume container, a sumptuous crystal affair with six separate compartments and six different perfumes to fill them. (E) Collegiates have evening silk sox monogrammed ft>r them this winter, with their initials heading the clox. (F) For all women is the new evening beauty equipment—a rouge and powder vanity and a lipstick, in black enamel, with sparkling jewels banding them,
cle oils, eye lotions, hair tonics and so forth. Fitted with cunning bottles, with decorative stoppers, they can be had in leather, wood, painted tin, modernistically designed pasteboard or other versions. And at all prices from a few dollars up to a hundred or so. Lovely Dressing Set For the woman who entertains a lot, there is a lovely dressing table set for the guestroom of six individual perfume containers all joined in one glamorous crystal bottle and six separate little bottles of perfumery to fill it, each a different odor. For the traveler there is a perfume atomizer that works like a bicycle pump and is guaranteed not to spill. Compacts and lipsticks are an excellent gift for any woman, old or young. There are expensive sets out this year, in color or black, with bands of real gems circling them that scintillate their luxuriousness. Loose powder compacts, with a big box of very fine face powder, in just the right shade, make good gifts. New ones are non-spill. Top List of Useful Gifts Bath salts and boxes of bath soap in matching scent and lovely color top the list for useful beauty gifts. One of those huge wooden bowls of imported bath soap that float about the top of the tub makes a most acceptable gift that no woman is likely to buy for herself. Excellent hair brushes, the S2O kind, will be welcomed in this year of long locks. Also any of the lovely evening gadgets for hair decoration are in order. Beauty accessories for the dressing tables of both men and women are wonderful gifts. A modernistic mirror and brush and comb in black and white for a lady’s boudoir are new and stunning. One of the electrically lighted shaving mirrors is no mean gift for any man. Give a Course in Beauty In this list of beauty gifts for a course of treatments for reducing, facial massage, hair treatment, manincuring or any other beauty treatmen should be listed as an excellent idea. Men would welcome membership into a gym where handball, swim-
PARTY CHAIRMAN
“Viss m.
Mildred Jenkins Two Girl Scout high school troops will hold a Christmas party at 7:30 tonight at the Y. W. C. A. gymnasium. Miss Mildred Jenkins of Troop 7, is general chairman. Program will include games and Christmas carols, and a grab-bag of presents. A satirical playlet, “The Night Before Christmas,” arranged by Mildred Jenkins and Helen Collins, will be presented by the junior councillor group. Refreshments in holiday colors and designs will be served. Members of the entertainment committee are Sarah Wills, Jane Crawford, Helen Eldridge, Anna Margaret Vorhees and Helen Collins. Miss Jean Adamson, local director, will chaperon the affair,
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
ming of other healthy exercise is to be had. Trips away from work rightly come under this head of health and beauty, too. There are new manicure gift boxes that enable men or women to keep their nails in excellent trim. If these are too expensive, one of the nail pencils that whiten the under part is good. They now come in cute silver or gold modernistic designs. Vanity gifts also include the loveliest of things to wear. For men, there are suits of silk underwear, a white suit monogrammed in black, for instance, that just is the thing for the man-about-town. Beauty Bogs Boon to Women For any man there are sheer evening hose clocked in white with the block ending most unexpectedly in a monogram. Bags for beauty are a boon to women. Anew evening bag of pearls and brilliants has lipstick, vanity case, eyebrow pencil and a nail file and nail pencil in it. Overnight or week-end bags all fitted for beauty never fail to please. There are even many beauty gifts for children that will make them more careful of their appearance. Manicure sets for the very young are cute and useful. De luxe sets of toothbrushes, paste, mouth rinse and toilet soap are valued by children too. So are such things as nice toilet sets for their rooms. In fact, there is beauty on the market for every one and whoever receives is likely to bless the giver. Women Medics Will Initiate Eight Pledges Initiation services will be held for pledges of Gamma chapter, Nu Sigma Phi, medical sorority, Saturday night at the Lincoln, followed by a banquet and program. Dr. Marie B. Kast will be the toastmaster. The program will include the following talks: “Women in Research,” Dr. Amy Long Chen; “Women in the Specialties,” Dr. Lillian B. Mueller; “Women in General Practice,” Dr. Martha C. Souter; “Women Internes,” Dr. Olga Hoffman; “Medicine as a Career for Women,” Dr. Nettie Powell, Marion, and “Until We Meet Again,” Dr. Frances T. Brown. Pledges to be initiated are Misses Grace Kaufman, Isabel Morgan, Irene Polyhemus, Bernice Morris, Gladys Hill, Julia Kutzmitz, Florence Fa Ivey and Lillian Scheib. BRIDGE IS HELD BY WEDNESDAY CLUB Wednesday Club held a Christmas party and luncheon bridge Wednesday at the Bamboo Inn. The table was decorated with appointments in keeping with the Yuletide, and gifts were exchanged. Covers were laid for: Mesdaraes Henrv Berger. .Max Satling<*r Bartick. Harrv Goldberg Jack Fosal Morris Olshan. Philip Bernstein and Sam Alpert. Cruise to Start Feb. 27 Columbia Club’s second cruise to the West Indies will start Feb. 27 from New York. Members, wives, families and friends will sail on the Scythia for a twenty-three-day trip that will take them through the Panama canaL Other clubs throughout the country are cooperating in this venture. * A Beautiful assorted Christmas Cards. Lined envel- # # l>b ot>es to match. Packed In J 1 /. If box. Delivered. I t/ Bring this ad and get a JL package of Xmas seals free. NAME PRINTED ABSOLUTELY FREE. THE WARD PRESS 4128 E. 10TH ST. Open Every Night Until 9:M. - ■ 9 Large Assortment CHRISTMAS GIFTS SPORTING GOODS JACOB’S OUTDOOR SHOP 15 N. Pennsylvania St.
Children to Get Gifts From Club Children at .femes Whitcomb Riley hospital will receive more than 200 gifts as their Christmas from the Business and Professional Women’s Club, which were collected Thursday night at a dinner meeting of the club at the Woman’s Department clubhouse. f Gifts will be taken to the hospital by members of the Christmas cheer committee headed by Miss Thelma Dawson and including Mrs. Margaret D. Marlowe, Misses Meryu Head, Carrie M. Johnson, Viola Kruwell, Louise McCarthy, Kitty Klyde Mitchell, Nora E. Nixon and Kathryn Zapp. The glee club, directed by Mrs. Camille B. Felig, was the feature of the program, with Miss Flora Lyons, accompanist; Miss Leona Wright, soprano, and John Brackett, baritone. The group sang Christmas carols. Arthur Beriault of the Beriault School of Expression read a Christmas story and the boys’ brass choir of Technical high school gave several numbers. The emblem committee, with Mrs. Mabel Buck, chairman, were in charge of arrangements. Members of the committee are Misses Jessie E. Bryant, Anne Feeley, Rae McKinnis and Kathleen R. Peck. Miss Wilmoth Benson sang “The Emblem Song” following dinner. HOLIDAY PARTY IS GIVEN FOR GROUP Mrs. George Spencer and sister, Miss Elizabeth Watts, entertained the Veronica Club at a luncheon and Christmas party Thursday at Mrs. Spencer’s home, 341 Winthrop avenue. Yuletide decorations and a Christmas .tree, under which gifts were placed for exchange, carried out the holiday motif. A musical program was given by pupils of St. Mary’s academy Mary Louise Stich, Dorothy Galm, Marie Pfleger, Julia Casserly and Frances Gross. HIBBEN PUPILS TO BE PARTY GUESTS Miss Helen Hibben and Miss Hazel Hibben will entertain 100 pupils of Hibben school with a Christmas party Wednesday morning at the school, 5237 Pleasant Run Parkway. The school instructors, including Mrs. Robert Insley, Miss Phyllis Nordstrom, and Miss Katherine Hurlbert will assist. Those who will assist with games and other amusements will be Misses Betty Alpha Bloom, Mary Lou Rasico, Dorothy Tuck, Yvonne Pasquelle, Martha Bash, Paula Hensey, and Phyllis Pfeifer. Yule Party Arranged Beta chapter, Theta Sigma Delta sorority, will have a Christmas party at 2 Sunday afternoon at the home j of Miss Wilma Branstetter.
OPEN EVERY NIGHT ’TIL XMAS * >-.*.|| -w' m. —a a * M Crown’s beautiful displays 8"™""™' of Christmas jewelry! You ion for Thrifty Xmas Shoppers! will be more than i> leased ants an “ELGIN” and Here It Is Tna 1. I —' ri.i. 1 1 — — 1 Ladies* Sand 7-Stone MEN’S MASSIVE 1 ifmgk diamonds diamond MgSlk 1 —Mesh Bags —Silverware LADIES DIAMONDS —Pocket Watches —Belt and Buckle Sets | Ilf —Compacts —Necklaces set in newest de- . c -Cigarette Cases -Emblem Pins —Earrings —Pendants Lhd’w’hitegold * /iLliz. -Ronson Lighters -Emblem Rings —Toilet Sets —Brooches special mdi C—— I —Pen and Pencil Sets Bill Folds tsr a as a ß cigarette.' coro-S "I Q• 75 a^d'iTcurate/ Diet# with tubular metal I Wm. m 1.1 m |1 ■ ZZZZZZ j's band. Pay 50c a Week! A Pay “5e a “ |||| Diamond SoliUiire em~ an< * enV 50c a Week! Open Every Night Until Christmas 50c Down!
Alpha Chi Omega Alumnae to Give Eighth Annual Concert
Alumnae of Beta Beta chapter of Alpha Chi Omega sorority will present its eighth annual municipal Christmas concert at noon Saturday at Christ Church. Miss Lelia Elliott will act as trumpeter. The Ogden Junior Chorale, under direction of Mrs, James M. Ogden, will sing, accompanied by Mrs. Howard Clippinger, organist. Soloists will be Mrs. Clare
Jklh ■ajjK-'iP . SjSfi&y ■'•WBgL Wm m *• v ' Y "-Y : V $$ V' % , Miss Leila Elliott.
NEWS OF SOCIETY FOLK
Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Thompson, 1321 North Meridian street, are in New York, at the Madison. Mr. and Mrs. James S. Jones, 4225 East Twenty-sixth street, have gone to Waco, Tex., for an extended visit with their daughter, Mrs. Eldon Butler, and Mr. Butler. Mr. and Mrs. T. Harvie Barnard will occupy the home of Dr. and Mrs. H. E. Barnard, Pleasant Run parkway, until the middle of January. Dr. and Mrs. Barnard and their daughter, Marian, student in Radcliffe college, have left for a cruise to the West Indies and northern parts of South America. Mr. and Mrs. William S. Colw r ell will leave Jan. 1 to make their home in Portland, Ind. Mrs. Colwell formerly was Miss Ruth Evans. Miss Peggy Morrison, student in Bradford college, Bradford, Mass., will arrive Saturday to spend Christmas with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Morrison, 3601 North Pennsylvania street. James Allen Morrison will arrive home next week from Pittsburgh for the holidays. Mr. and Mrs. Burton Hart Jackson, New York and Greenwich, Conn., will come next Thursday to spend the holidays with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Sloane Kittle, Kessler boulevard and Michigan road. Mrs. Lafayette Page, Woodstock drive, is visiting her daughter, Miss
F. Fox and Billy Shirley, sopranos. Cheston L. Heath, organist and choir director at Christ church, will give organ solos. The program follows: Trumpet Call—Miss Elliott. Processional. Orsan—"Bohemian Christmas Carol” (Tradi- . tlonali Arthur w Polster Christmas Reverie". .John Gordon Seely Cheston L. Heath. Instrumental—- " Ava Marie” Bach-Gounod Ensemble. Ruth Rainier Nessler, harpist; Misses Margaret Harrison. Lorinda Oottingham. Norma Davidson. and Ms* Frances Nicholson Ludv. violinists. Vocal Solo —"In the Carpenter's Shop” Fay Foster Billv Shirlev. Chorus—" Here A Torch. Jeannette, Isabella" Old Provincial Noel English translation. Charles Fontevn Manner. "O. The Holly" Hugh A. Macklnnon "Carol of The Russian Children" from "White Russia”.. .Arr. Harvey G. Gaul Ogden Junior Chorale. Vocal Solo —"The Virgini's Slumber Song” —Max Reger Mrs. Clare F. Fox. Chorus—" Silent Night” Frank Gruber Ogden Junior Chorale. Recessional. LAMBDA CHIS WILL GIVE FORMAL FETE Members of Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity at Butler university will hold their annual Christmas formal dance tonight at the chapter house, 4721 Sunset avenue. Music will be furnished by Herb Stoner and his orchestra. Chaperones will be Dr. and Mrs. S. E. Moncada, Dr. and Mrs. A. B. Carlisle, Professor R. G. Weber and Mrs Edna M. Christian. Members of the committee in charge of the dance are Donald Billings, Edward Wilson and Edward Manouge.
Ruth Page, a dancer, who is appearing in Montreal, Canada. She will accompany Miss Page to New York to fill engagements there in January. Joseph and Kenneth Dugan will come Saturday from Indiana university to spend the holidays with their mother, Mrs. C. Cooper Nave, 5401 Central avenue. They will have Gerald Cramer, Ft. Wayne, and Morry Hoover, Evanston, 111., as their house guests. Mr. and Mrs. Nave will entertain for them on Sunday night. Miss Laura Smith will arrive Dec. 24 from Washington to spend the holidays with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert C. Smith, 315 East Thirty-third street. Miss Smith is book review editor of Broadcasting Magazine, published in Washington. Mrs, Lynn Stone, 3540 North Meridian street, has Mr. and Mrs. Maynard C. Froemke and son Peter, Colorado Springs, Colo., as her guests. Mr. and Mrs. Froemke will spend Christmas with Mr. and Mrs. John Mclllwaith at El wood. Mr. and Mrs. Charles N. Teetor, Hagerstown, and daughter, Miss Winifred Teetor, a student at De Pauw university, will leave Sunday for a holiday cruise to Bermuda. Mrs. Ralph E. Klare was hostess at luncheon at the Marott Thursday for nine guests. During the afternoon bridge was played in the arcade clubrooms.
.DEC. 18, 1931
Park School Closes for Christmas Park School for Boys closed for the holidays today with a Christmas luncheon at the school. Guests of honor were Mrs. J. Raymond Lynn. Nicholas H. Noyes, Irving W. Lemaux, Charles B. Summers, and Dr. G. H. A. Clowes, representatives of the board of trustees and tho mothers’ and fathers’ clubs. Edward LaSchelle was in charge of the program. Athletic awards were made to members of the football team, and the Christmas number of the school paper, the Red and Black, were issued. Andre Rhoades is editor of the paper, Charles Sheldon Sommers, managing editor; and Charles Edward Test is business manager. The alumni luncheon will be held Wednesday at the school. School will reopen Jan. 4. MRS. KEMPER IS HOSTESS TO CLUB Friday Afternoon Literary Club entertained this afternoon with a Yuletide party at the home of Mrs. R. J. Kemper, 2510 Broadway. Assisting the hostess were Mr* Charles Dwyer, Mrs. Jesse Williamson and Mrs. Edgar Brown. Mrs. H. O. Rettig gave a Christmas reading, “The Christmas Angel.” by Henry Van Dyke, followed by a monologue. Mrs. Ernest Prosch and Mrs. Frank Lutz gave a Christmas radio dialogue, and a treasure hunt concluded the entertainment. Poinsettias and Yuletide greens were arranged about the home. Alumnae Hold Frolic Indianapolis Alumnae Club of Alpha Delta Pi sorority held its Christmas party Thursday at the home of Miss Dorothy Lawson, 345 Whittier place. Guests included members of the active chapter, and Mrs. Harriett Eitel Wells, house mother. Staple foods were donated for Christmas baskets. Mrs. Miller Hostess Mrs. Jack S. Miller. 1524 Vi North Olive street, was hostess to the N. B. Club Thursday afternoon. Christmas decorations were used, and gifts were distributed by Santa Claus. Bunco was played. M. Gilchrist of the Marott will spend the holidays with her daughter, Mrs. W. H. Alfring, at Scarsdale, N. Y. Mrs. Clark C. Mallery entertained at luncheon Thursday at the Marott. ' Mrs. John F. Engelke was hostess to a party of eight at luncheon at the Marott today.
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