Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 171, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 November 1933 — Page 8

PAGE 8

Party to Be Centered in Beer Garden Thanksgiving Eve Will Be Celebrated By Columbia Club. BY BEATRICE BL'RGAN Tim** Woman* Paf* Editor WERE Gambrinus. mythical Flemish king, to look on the Columbia Club at its German beer garden party Thanksgiving eve, he’d be tempted to step down from his cask and raise his tankard of beer to drink to the health of the guests. Gambrinus, figuratively represented astride a cask, would rejoice that he has been accredited these many

years with invention of beer. In order that members may feel the genial spirit of the typical German beer party, the entertainment committee has arranged for transformation of the third floor corridor into a beer garden. Members playing bridge in the women’s dining room will pause in the eer gar-

Miss Rurgan

den before they go on to the main dining room for dancing to the music of Ed Resener and his Columbians. Bar Maids Will Serve All the usual trappings of a dignified club will be removed for the festive scene of a garden. At intervals among the fir trees in the background will be lamps on posts, casting dim shadows over the rustic tables. Red, blue and green lights will add to the theme of gayety. Six German bar maids will serve guests seated at the old hickory tables. They will swish their full red skirts, banded in blue as they hurry about serving beer and pretzels. Their costumes will be completed by black laced bodices and white caps. On the north side of the corridor, an old mahogany bar will be installed. and a bartender will dispense foaming drinks. •Little Band' on Program Songs of the days when beer garden* were centers of friendly conviviality will be played by ‘‘The Little German Band,” of Lebanon. The musicians will be dressed in appropriate costumes. The gay tunes will invite guests to join in the chorus. The band will play at intervals from 8 until the close of the evening’s entertainment. Dancing will begin at 10 in the main dining room, where tables will be laid with red and white checked cloths. Until “auf wiedersehen” at I. the Columbians will play. HOLY CROSS SETS ANNUAL FESTIVAL November Circle, Holy Cross church, will sponsor a Thanksgiving social at 8 tomorrow night with D. J. Sullivan in charge. Door prizes will be given. Assisting with the arrangements will be Earl Matheny, John Quinn, Joseph Kress, John Grathaus, Dan O'Brien, Joseph Shoenig, Joseph Swallow, Fred Billerman, Bernard Reilly, Leo Shanninger, James Custard. William Snyder, Edward McGovern, Charles Jones, T A. Prosch. William Betz. Robert Shipman, Charles Hanrahan, James Reilly. William Foley and John Shanahan. Others will be Mesdames John Shanahan. Michael Quinn, Hugh Ryan, J. H. O'Donnell Jr., Bernard Reilly, Millard Swain, Joseph Shoenig, Theodore Prosch, D. P. Sullivan, Robert Shipman, Joseph Shannon, Agnes Rankin. William Snyder, Lena Pich, Hugh O'Gara, William Peake. Anna Simon, M. Scollard, John O'Connor and T. A. Prosch. BRIDGE FETE GIVEN FOR BRIDE-ELECT Miss Helen Batchelor, 2621 Broadway, was hostess Saturday afteroon at a bridge party, honoring Miss Mary Insley who will be married Wednesday to Harry F. Mayer, in Schenectady. N. Y. Guests were the bride-elect’s mother. Mrs. Robert Insley; her sister. Miss Gertrude Insley. and Misses Catherine Jose, Martha McMaster. Ruth Buehler and Mary Louise Wheeler; Mrs. Francis H. Insley and Miss Louise Adney of Lebanon. The hostess was assisted bv her mother. Mrs. George Batchelor. Installation Set Mrs. Harold Robinson will review “Anthony Adverse” following annual installation services of Delta chapter, Beta Sigma Phi sorority, at 7 tonight in the Claypool. New officers are: Misses Dorothy Oakes, president: Mary Cole, ’vice-presi-dent: Isabell Russell, treasurer: Betty Coffmg. recording secretary, and Helen Marley, corresponding secretary.

Daily Recipe HAM PUFFS 1 1-2 cups diced cold cooked ham 1 1-2 cups thin white sauce 1 cup button mushrooms 2 tablespoons butter 2 tablespoons pimento, minced Salt and pepper Ripe olives, sliced Cream puffs Brown the mushrooms in melted butter. Add the diced ham, mushrooms, pimento and salt and pepper to the white sauce. Heat thoroughly in the top of the double boiler. Fill and decorate with slices of the ripe olives and strips of pimento. Glazed cold meats are a bit different and out of the ordinary, and you will like them.

Chicago Will Be Host to Second Hobby Show

I love to gather rare antiques Old quilts and quaint hooKed rues But somehow I can’t get a spark From lettered shaving mugs. A pewter plate will bring a thrill I crave a candle mold But hair wreaths lurking under glass Just simply leave me cold. a a a BY MRS. C. O. ROBINSON Times Hobby Editor THE second annual hobby show will open at the Hotel Sherman, Chicago, on Saturday morning and continue until Dec. 7. H. C. Lightner, publisher of Hobbies, a magazine for collectors, who was responsible for last year's successful exhibition, again will be the director. Collectors from all over the world met Mr. Lightner this summer at his hobby shop on the Venetian Bridge at A Century of Progress Exposition, and many midwesterners inquired as to the possibility of a hobby show this year. Knowing that the public interest in collecting has increased since the last show because of the doubled subscription list of Hobbies, and the immediate response to the announcement of the coming show, Mr. Lightner feels, as he expresses it, that “This year’s show' will be a knockout.” As the entire exhibition hall space was engaged promptly, the adjoining mezzanine floor was added and a juvenile department arranged also. Many of the exhibitors who helped to make the show a success last year have taken booths again—some coming from as far as New England with antique glass and china. Numerous hobbies not previously represented are included also. The Ship Modelers’ Club of Chicago will

Patterns Pattern Department, Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Ind. Enclose find 15 cents for which send Pat r q n 9 tern No. ° ° Size Street City State Name .-

| |jjj ' ' ' I >C< i u> - -Si'62

TOWN FROCK Bigger and better buttons are the smartest trimming touch for the tailored frock, and they're used in all sorts of ingenious ways ; this season. Here they outline the crisp diagonal lines of the blouse and the pert patch pockets, help the pointed back yoke to simulate a deep but-toned-down collar, and close the wide belt. Add such clever details as the neckline which hugs the base of the throat, the wide-shoulder accent and the inverted pleats, and you have four good reasons for making this your favorite town frock. One of the new hairy woolens or wool mixtures would be a smart and practical fabric choice in tortoise shell brown, olive green, midnight blue or wild blackberry. This model requires very little material, and is easy-to-make. Size 16 requires 2 1 2 yards 54-inch fabric. Width about 1\ yards. For other smart fall costumes, see the new fair fashion book—now ready. Pattern No. 5362 is designed for sizes 12. 14. 16. 18. 20 years. 30, 32, 34. 36. 38, 40. 42 bust. Our new fashion book is out! Send for it—put check here □ and enclose 10 cents extra for book. Price for pattern 15 cents. (Copyright. 1933. by United Features Syndicate. Ir.c.i

Have a Hobby

Inaugurate a showing of members’ best handiwork, August Rassweiler's exhibit of precious stones and cameos will be a treat for women. The Jelinck butterfly booth will add color. The 300 members of the Coverlet Guild of Chicago will bring their choice quilts and antique coverlets. Colonel/' Ralph Kimble, eminent stamp authority, will represent the magazine. Stamps. A collection of rare books also will be an innovation this year and the Craft Guild, catering to Boy Scouts and other young Americans, will have a showing of all kinds of handicraft. Hobbies magazine is cooperating in this work with a page or two each month to be edited by Scouts. Eagle Scouts are invited to send contributions telling of their work in Indian lore.

ana A NUMBER of social activities will be added as a feature of the show this year, meeting where collectors can exchange ideas and make pleasant personal contacts. Saturday, Dec. 2, will be devoted to numismatics. The Chicago Boys’ Coin Club will be host to other youngsters interested in starting coin collections and instructive talks will be given by adult experts. On Sunday, Dec. 3, the Chicago branch of the Early American Glass Club will entertain all glass collectors with a special showing of rare specimen glass. The third day, Dec. 4, L. E. Dicks and Mrs. Eleanor Gridley, authorities on Lincoln relics, will assist collectors who wish information concering Lincoln documents and reminiscence The first meeting of the Nation - al Council of Leisure Time Research will be held on Dec. 5, in connection with the show 7 . The extra leisure occasioned by the NR A has aided this movement. The Hotel Sherman is an appropriate setting for a hobby show, as Ernest Byfield, the owner, is an ardent collector. His penthouse on top of the hotel is furnished entirely in rare antiques. The Duncan Phyfe tables, mellow pine paneling and pictorial wallpaper particularly would delight any antique enthusiast. To show 7 the contrast between the world’s fair of the gay nineties and the modernistic one today. Mr. Byfield this summer conceived amusing decorations for two suites of rooms in the hotel. The one here shown is paper with mural photographs of pictures taken from Mr. Byfield's collection of old copies of the Police Gazette. The other room is painted in modernistic designs conveying the same general ideas. The announcement of a second hobby show 7 in Chicago is gratifying news to the ever-growing list of mid-western collectors. To those who gain their recreation and relaxation from gathering coins, stamps, Indian relics and other specialties, as well as those who recognize the beauty, charm and sterling worth of pioneer craftsmanship, the exhibition will offer a wealth of interesting material. IRVINGTON CLUB TO GIVE BRIDGE EVENT Irvington Friendship Circle wall sponsor a contract duplicate bridge tournament Tuesday at the home of Mrs. M. O. Jones, 312 Layman avenue. Play will begin at 1:15 under the direction of the budget committee, which is sponsoring the tournament. The committee is composed of Mrs. Jones, Mesdames Harry Wangelin. A. B. Shultz, F. E. Dukes and P. E. Crosier. The finance committee assisting has as members Mesdames A. W. Schmadeke, J. E. Loudon. Mrs. Shultz and Mrs. Jones. Funds will be used for the Circle philanthropic projects, which include support of James Whitcomb Riley Hospital for Children, Irvington Union of Clubs. Red Cross, Community Fund and needy students. Mrs. P. T. MacDonald is president. Miss Brown to Talk Miss Marie Karle is chairman of the philanthropic meeting which Alpha Epsilon chapter. Delta Theta Tau sorority, will hold at 8 tonight at her home. Miss Gertrude E. Brown will discuss the Brightvood Self-Help unit. Other members of the committee are Mrs. Florence Dyar, Miss Hilda Pictor and Mrs. Dorothy Frigge. Mothers of members and guests will be entertained.

A Day’s Menu Breakfast — Chilled honeydew melon with lemon sections, cereal. cream, creamed finnan haddie, cornmeal muffins, milk, coffee. rcheon — Baked scallops, stuffed eggplant, toasted muffins, grape conserve, milk. tea. ner — Planked hamburg steak with stuffed tomatoes, turnips in lemon butter, prune and apple pie, milk, coffee.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Review Will ; Relate Life of Composer | Story of Von Weber’s Opera Also Will Be Told. Miss Lucille Stewart will review the life of Carl Maria Von Weber and relate the story of “Der Freischutz." romantic opera, at the first meeting of the opera study section of the Indianapolis matinee musicale at 3 Friday in the D. A. R. chapter house. Mrs. Ralph S. Chappell arranged the program. Mrs. J. A. Matthews will present the overture, and numbers selected from the opera will be given by Mrs. Jane Johnson Burroughs, accompanied by Miss Maxine Moore; Mrs. Selma Zahl Scearcy, accompanied by Miss Louise Swan; Miss Grace Greene, accompanied i by Mrs. Frank T. Edenharter; Mrs. ! James H. Lowry, accompanied by Mrs. Robert O. Bonner; Mrs. Louis Traugott, accompanied by Mrs. S. L. Kiser, and Mrs. Frank Hunter, accompanied by Mrs. Edenharter. The chorus will be composed of Misses Mary Ellen Ewbank, Maxine Moore. Mary Margaret Ruddell. ' Janet Power, Eileen Stockton and j ; Mesdames Jack Gulling, Harold j Arnholdter and Marion Green. : Mrs. Burroughs will accompany this | group. Mrs. Thomas P. Woodson j will give the entr’acte. ST. AGNES JUNIORS TO HONOR SENIORS Junior class of St. Agnes academy will give a dinner in honor of seniors tomorrow night at the Indianapolis Athletic Club. Miss Lorayne Lampke, president of the junior class, is chairman, and Miss Louise Argus will be toastmaster. Seated at the speakers table will be Miss Lampke, Misses Genevieve Hile, Rose Marie Dean and Patrici* j Shine, officers of the junior class: Misses Mary Catherine Bowman, Dorothy Toolin, Rosemary Delaney, Mary Jane Schmitt, officers of the senior class, and Miss Argus, Misses Louise Hanley, Mary Louise Drew and Margaret Gavin, chairman of committees.

Club Meetings

TUESDAY Regular quarterly federation meeting of the International Travel and Study Clubs, Inc., will be held at 7:45 at the Lincoln. Marion county chapter, American War Mothers, will hold a luncheon at 12:30 at the Columbia Club with Mrs. M. E. Costin in charge. Inter Alia Club will meet with Mrs. Marguerite Hanson, 2451 Park ! avenue. Mrs. Hanson will talk on “An Afternoon in South America.” Mrs. Thomas A. Sefton, 4621 Rookwood avenue, will entertain members of the Social Study Cluo. Meridian Heights Inter-se Club will meet with Mrs. F. M. Lytle, 5014 Kenwood avenue, hostess. Mrs. E. C. Rubush and Mrs. H. E. Yockey will present the program. Irvington Tuesday Club will meet with Mrs. E. S. Conner, 5318 Julian avenue. Thanksgiving luncheon will be held by the Amicitia Club at the home of Mrs. John Larison, 5117 East Washington street. Miss Ruth Anne Kersting will be in charge of the program. Pottery will be discussed by Mrs. F. P. Van Der Veer at the meeting eif the Tokalon Club with Mrs. Lawson O’Malley, hostess. Mesdames C. W. Rolle, J. E. Andrews and J. O. Cottingham will present the program at the meeting of the Hoosier Tourist Club with Mrs. C. E. Ferrell, 4145 Park avenue, hostess. Mrs. F. McCabe will review “Sheltered Life,” by Ellen Glasgow', at the meeting of the Anagnous group, Epsilon Sigma Omicron. Mrs. Thomas E. Hanika will entertain members and guests of the Artemas Club at her home, 3340 North New Jersey street, at 2, assisted by Mrs. Charles Judy and Mrs. Frank Freers. The club plans to make up Christmas boxes for the children at the Indianapolis day nursery. FRIDAY Meeting of Tri Psi sorority Mothers’ Club of Delta Delta Delta sorority of Butler university, scheduled today, has been postponed until Dec. 15 when a Christmas party will be held at the chapter house. Mrs. T. G. Wesenberg will talk on “Not in Entire Forgetfulness” at the meeting of the Indianapolis Woman's Club. Miss Anne Fraser will talk on Galsworthy. . Mrs. O. L. Black and Mrs. S. L. Potter will be hostess for the meeting of the Irvington Fortnightly Club. SATURDAY. “Are Women People?” will be the subject of the Magazine Club meeting with Mesdames William E. Balch, J. J. Martin, Edward J. Wolfarth and Clem Johnson and Miss Frances Mahan hostesses. Miss Keach Active Miss Mary Louise Keach, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Leroy J. Keach, 4311 Broadway, was a member of I j the committee for the sophomore j cotillion, annual formal dance of j the St. Mary college of Notre ! Dame. Friday night. Miss Keach also appeared on a musical program presented last week. Engagement Announced j Miss Genevieve Bartlemay, 2134 North Delaware street, announced j Thanksgiving day as the date for her marriage to Paul M Greenwalt, Indianapolis, at a dinner last week. Guests were Misses Pat Moran. Nedra Jones. Mildred Kaf- j fenberg, Lorena Federle, Mes- ! dames Russell Schwartz. Neil Young, j Richard Steel and Lay cock. Officers Installed Officers were installed yesterdav by Delta Rho chapter, Phi Pi Psi sorority, at Two Brooks near Carmel. They are Miss Thelma Gray, j president; Mrs. Glen Munshower, vice-president; Miss Marian LandI meier, recording secretary; Mrs. j j Cecil Bird, corresponding secretary; j ; Miss Dorothy Heil, treasurer, and! Mrs. Edward Grebe, financial secretary.

A rra nges Exh i bition

*• ■■■■

3lrs. Sylvester Johnson Jr.

Manners and Morals

If you are puzzled about what you ought or ought not to do, write to Jane Jordan for advice. She will answer your questions in this column. Dear Jane Jordan—l am a man of 26. Three years ago I went to room with a fine family, a man, woman and daughter, age 17. The daughter and I were always cutting up like brother and sister. I took her riding, but never to shows nor dances, for I was going steady and so was she. I got married and left. In three months I separated from my wife and came back. She was to be

married in a couple of months, but I started taking her to shows and dances. After I was there three months she told her steady not to come back for she was going with me. She took it for granted that I meant to do right by her. She told me chat she was sincerely in love with me and

■fate* >,

Jane Jordan

had been all along, but didn’t think it would do any good. I made her give in. She did for she was sure I loved her, although I never told her, but I showed her in every possible way. After two months, I decided I was still in love with my wife and went back to her. I really think a lot of that kid, for she was really in love with me, and I am worried. I called up the other day and her mother said she couldn’t get her to eat, and that she cried herself to sleep. The doctor said she would have a breakdown if she didn’t quit acting that way. Should I go see her? W. K. Answer —You are not a bad young man, but an extremely ignorant one. If you had been more highly developed, you would have known that no sensitive young girl can accept the embrace of a man who does not stir her deeply. Sexuality has no more significance to you than brushing your teeth. It is something to be enjoyed for the pleasure and stimulus of the moment, regardless of the feeling of your partner. It has no profound emotional meaning. The girl’s sexuality is more intimately tied up with her feelings. It is regrettable that she had her first experience with a boy of your type, for when she recovers from her crushing disillusionment, she is apt to be hard and take the attitude that the physical side of love means nothing one way or the other. This attitude is far more destructive to a woman's values than a man’s. She simply isn’t constituted to take a love affair or leave it. When she tries to adopt this masculine attitude, she loses touch with the deeper side of her own nature. It is easy for her to slide from experience to experience until she is completely bored and blase, done with life before she has had a chance to enjoy it. I do not know how you can right the wrong you have so carelessly done. It is too bad to ignore her completely in her grief. Possibly if you could talk it out with her once, it might be something of a comfort, and would help to prevent her from going completely to pieces. One of the fundamental differences between men and women is that women are comforted by talking things out, whereas men prefer to walk out on a painful situr-tion. The fact that you are worried enough to write for advice redeems you a little. Otherwise, I should think of you as a shallow, selfish cad, without capacity for feeling any deeper than an itch. tt-■ n u Dear Jane Jordan—l met a girl last summer and the mere I see her the more I go for her. But the worst of it is she is married and has a little girl about 2. Her husband says he can't get a job, so he lays around the house and sleeps. They have broken up a couple of times, but he gets a job and she goes back to him. He has lost his last job. and she is puzzled as to whether to stick with him or not. She works in a downtown store and keeps the house going. She doesn't gain anything living with him. feeding him. does she? I won't date h°r while she is living with her husband, but when she

WANTED—OLD GOLD JEWELRY Broken or anT condition—watches, chains, rings, bridges, teeth. to Y s2B.oo oz Cash paid immediately. Bring to Standard Gold Smelting Cos. 423 Lemcke Bldg.. 4Qi Floor Corner Pennsylvania & Market Sts. Entrance. 106 East Market St.

Photo by W. Hurley Ashby, F. R P. S

BY JANE JORDAN

lives with her parents, I do. Please give your viewpoint of this, 808.

Answer—ls the girl’s husband is utterly worthless, she would be justified in leaving him. But if he is a victim of the economic times, it would be unfair for her to desert him just because she is unwilling to face a crisis with him. The man may be profoundly discouraged, and more in need from encouragement from his wife than he ever will be again. I have no way of knowing what the facts are.

Personals

Mr. and Mrs. Clarence McCoy, Evansville, are visiting Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Allen, 3601 Graceland avenue. Mrs. McCoy, before her marriage last week, was Miss Evelyn Schmitt. Miss Mary Luten and Babe Pierce attended the Chicago-Dartmouth football game in Chicago Saturday. Miss Margaret McLaughlin, who has been visiting Miss Betty Mushlitz, has returned to her home in Cedar Lake. Miss Sheila Brown will spend the Thanksgiving holidays in St. Louis. She will attend activities of Principia college. Miss Wilhelmina Luten, Chicago, will spend Thanksgiving with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Dan B. Luten. Mr. and Mrs. Eli Lilly, 5807 Sunset lane, are visiting at the WaldorfAstoria in New York. Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Coughlin are visiting in New York. Mr. and Mrs. T. Raymond Stone King, 2926 Kenwood avenue, and Palmer P. Seal of Odon and Indianapolis, will motor to Cincinnati for Thanksgiving holidays. They will visit Mrs. Stone King's mother, Mrs. H. J. Miller, and her sister, Mrs. Joseph L. Moloney. Belzer to Speak Miss Helen Coffey, 3815 North Pennsylvania street, will be hostess at 2:30 tomorrow for a meeting of Alpha Latreian. E. C. Belzer will describe “The Romance of Communication. Assistant hostesses will be Mrs. William Albershardt and Mrs. Robert Horn. Mrs. Pearl Hostess Five hundred section, Hoosier Athletic club, will meet at 2 tomorrow with Mrs. William H. Pearl as hostess. A Christmas party will be planned.

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‘Mr. Robert,’ Ayres Beauty Advisor, Served Women Who Attended Coronation Worked Throughout Night Preceding Crowning of Edward VII; Advocates Enhancing Natural Lines. BY HELEN LINDSAY THE night preceding the coronation of King Edward VII as ruler of Great Britain, "Mr. Robert,” advisor fit the beauty salon at L. S. Ayres, working until morning dressing the hair of women of the court. His work at that time meant styles suitable for tiaras of such precious stones that they really were “the ransom of kings.” Today he gives pefsonal direction to the hair dressing, make-up. and all of the arts cf beauty for Indianapolis women, and finds it just as interesting. He knows just the way each individual hair should be placed in a coiffure to give the greatest charm to the face; he can examine features

Mrs. Sylvester Johnson Jr. is chairman of the second downtown exhibition of paintings by Indiana artists, which will be sponsored by the Junior League of Indianapolis Dec. \ to 16 in the eighth door galleries of L. S. Ayres & Cos.

and prescribe just the correct curve for the eyebrows, the texture of powder which should be used, and the shade of rouge, lipstick and eye shadow. Not only is ho able to make this selection for his patrons, but he is able to explain to them why such a selection is wise, and how they should use it. “The greatest charm lies in natural beauty,” he reiterates, as he suggests natural hair lines, not too vivid rouge, and a disregard for extreme styles. Much of his advice is the result of patient study and observation. “Place the rouge here,” he advises a customer, touching the cheek close to the temple. “Did you ever notice a healthy child's color? That is where you will find it; therefore, it is the natural way to use rouge.” tt tt tt Left School to Take Up Calling “’Sif'R. ROBERT" was the last son of a physician. Like i-Vl his brothers, he was sent to school with plans

to study medicine or one of the other professions. Near his home lived a family whose children were awkward, gawky, youngsters. Suddenly one of the boys disappeared. When "Mr. Robert” was a 14-year-old boy, in school, he met a well-dressed man on the street, and recognized him as the ungainly youth who had run away. Upon questioning him, the boy learned that the young man was now a hair-dresser in a famous Parisian beauty salon. “I couldn’t sleep that night, for thinking of what changes had been made in that awkward boy,” he said. "The result was that I ran away from school, and took up an apprenticeship in a beauty shop.” From France, “Mr. Robert” went to Germany. Later he went to London, where he did work for members of the various families of nobility. ana a a a Places Much Stress on Color IN all of his work, he has been anxious to emphasize the importance of color. “I like to work with color in any way,” he explains, as he stirs portions of tinted powders together to make a mixture for an individual customer. “Each skin is different, and it takes care to select the blend which suits it. When I have finished making the individual blend of powder for a customer, I inclose a small sample of it in an envelope. “This is fastened to a card, bearing the name of the customer, and giving the proportions of different shades of powders I have used in the blending. Then when she comes in for anew supply, the attendant can fill her order, just as a prescription clerk in a pharmacy can refill a prescription for medicine.”

Young Women’s Club Sponsors Holiday Party Young Women's Democratic Club of Indiana Inc., will entertain with a Christmas party Monday night, Dec. 4. at Brookside community house. Entertainment will include holiday games, a Chrismtas tree and grab bag. Each member will dress a doll for a needy child, and the club w 7 ill clothe several children during the holiday season. Mrs. Jeannette Watson is chairman, and will be assisted by the following committees: Reservation. Misses Rose Mary Finney, Virginia Thorbalm. Eleanor Hussey and Mrs. Josephine Hatfield. Decoration. Misses Rose Mary Lawlor. Fern Swanson, Margaret Farr, 'Messrs. Juanita Wickliff and Bertha Myers. Refreshment, Misses Ruby Hendleman. Mary Kelly, Mary Brown, Alice Carton, Mrs. Leona McDole, Mrs. Anna Belle Chowning and Mrs. Sarah Rabin and Mrs. Mary Hurley. Games. Misses Frances Siefert. Rose Mary Brenen, Betty Geldmeier. Amy Herman Margaret Dillon and Mary Hussey. Entertainment. Misses Mable Smith. Sarah Shallott, Mary Louise Walpole and Helen Smith. Publicity, Miss Wilma Lee Taflinger.

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I ML/

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Dinner to Be Held

Ways and means committee of the Altrusa Club will sponsor a dinner and bridge party at Foodcraft shop tonight. Miss Ruth Milligan is chairman.

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