Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 198, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 December 1933 — Page 8
PAGE 8
Tudor Hall Fete Adds to Gaiety Holiday Pleasure Seekers Face Continual Round of Festivities. BY BEATRICE BL'RGAN, Time* Woman* Pace Lditor ■yOUD think the home-for-‘.he- -*• holidays crowd would be reaJy to take the next train back to schuil. T. e way the debutantes and their swains are filling the days with dancing and dining would do most of us in. but they keep turning up at party after party, fresh and anxious for more excitement. Many of them were eager for the
Tudor Hall Alumnae dance last night at the Woodstock Club, for it meant seeing again their former classmates. The party resolved into a reunion as alumnae greeted those they hadn't seen since summer, and even some since graduations. Miss Sally Reahard, member of the committee in charge, swept into
Miss Burgan
the ballroom in a grey chiffon gown, with ruffles in the back cascading into a slight train. Vivid red velvet f ormed a soft girdle, matched in slippers. Rich brown velvet was contrasted with orange bagheera flowers across the neckline in back of the dress, worn by Miss Betty Reed, another assistant in arranging the dance The long sleeves were open at the shoulders, and the back w’as slit to th'* waist. A roll of brown velvet with net cap formed Miss Reed’s evening hat. Miss Elinor Stickney’s black crepe gown was scintillant with rhinestone trimming, edging the arm seams and decolletage w’hich was finished with lapels. Rhinestones glittered across the front of the sash. Dinner Precedes Party Fourteen guests went to the dance from the dinner party, given by Mrs. Pauline Moon Haueisen for her guest. Miss Nancy Kidd, Owen, Wis., and Miss Judith Chambers. Miss Kidd's gown was of gold crepe. Miss Mary Jane Hamerstadt, who was hostess at a dinner party, wore a white satin gown, with silver beading embroidering the cape sleeves. Her hair was arranged with a rhinestone tiara. Miss Irving Moxley entertained with a dinner pars preceding the dance. Her guests included Miss Polly Moxley, Shelbyville, Ky.; Misses Virginia and Mary DePrez, Shelbyville; Misses Eileen Booker, Janet Noyes, Ruth Lilly, Dora Sinclair and Benjamin Hardaway, Louisville, Ky.; William Pattison, Robert Smith, John Modrall, Samuel Moxley, John Bennett, Jack Appel, Charles P. Emerson Jr., Robert Rhoades. Evan Noyes and Rich- | ard Vonnegut. Recall Club Founding When members, alumnae and friends of the Corpse Club danced Tuesday night at the Woodstock Club, they were reminded of the club’s founding twenty years ago. Since Nathan Gaston, Robert Chenow'eth and Rod Herod, as high school students, were fascinated by the wierd name for a dancing club, members have come and gone. Rod Herod has wandered over Australia in his engineering work while Mr. Chenoweth has remained at home for his career. Ed Graham, who entertained his friends sketching, now amuses readers of t ' New Yorker and other humor nugazir.-s with drawings. Bob Hollingsworth was another c e of the former members, who helped salve the decoration problems for the annual Christmas dances. He daubed about then with his brushes, and now he’s responsible for many of the attractive sets for Civic theater plays. There has always been about twenty high school boys who have sworn to the ritual of the club. As soon as they finish high school they take back seats as alumni. PARTIES ARRANGED FOR BRIDE-ELECT Additional parties for Miss Mary Lynn Wevl will be held following her marriage to Waldo Barrett at 3:30 tomorrow afternoon in McKee chapel of Tabernacle Presbyterian church. Mrs Edward Paul Gallagher and Miss Edith Anne Hoopingarner will be hostesses Saturday. Jan. 6 Dates have not been set for parties to bq given by Mesdames Maurice Butler! O. D Mickel and Betty Puett.
A Day’s Menu Breakfast — Chilled tomato juice, cereal cooked with dates, cream, crisp toast, milk, coffee. Luncheon — Creamed asparagus with hard cooked eggs on toast, salad of mixed greeny, sugared strawberries. milk, tea. Dinno — Hot veal loaf with mushroom sauce, rice nests with currant jelly, beet greens with lemon, perfection salad, rhubarb whip. milk, coffee.
I A CERTIFIED > PERMANENT WAVES^gjgijik CtWpMc— \u Ivtra ( harcn* — Urine a I'rirnd J Standard st.of wave* *l.Ol |'S Hollywood s>.oo Hain. Si.Ol ' •- 'WikrSi^g^ \J Pari* VII $3.00 Waves $3.01 i —e •> - ___ Eyebrow Arch ....C ?:r S Konserelt Bide ’**’ * tPU.dU plete "”■ KVEBV EVENING
Ayres Shows What to Wear at Resorts
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The warmth of southern winter resorts has been brought to the Sunshine Shop at Ayres in the new sports costumes. Miss Virginia Judd is shown at the left, wearing the new dressmaker type of bathing suit, of Peau D’ Ange’s jersey, in blue and white. With it she wears a Mercury beach cape in plain color and beach sandals with heels.
Manners and Morals BY JANE JORDAN
Have you a question which you would litie to have answered? Write a letter to Jane Jordan and read her reply in this column. Dear Jane Jordan—This question came up in a group of elderly women the other day, and we are referring the matter to you. Can a well-educated, well-bred, well-groomed middle-aged woman, with ordinarily nice clothes, but who never has had occasion for evening clothes, attract and win for a husband a middle aged man much better fixed financially and of good social position? Or does she have to have a lot of good clothes and frequent all sorts of places? Can a middle-aged woman speak to and talk with an elderly man, and form a friendship with him and not have him think less of her for it? Are we wise to be as conservative as we are? We can’t be harum-scarum as the youth of today, but should we strike a happy medium between the two GUESS WHO. Answer—Good clothes and sbcial poise are a great aid in enabling a woman to put her best foot foremost. Perhaps she needs the clothes more for the effect upon herself than upon the group.
They give her self- confidence and an awareness of her own charm which she needs to convince her that she is worthy of notice. The less a woman has in the way of personality, the more she is dependent upon clothes for reassurance. Some of the most charming women I have
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Jane Jordan
known have been sartorial frumps. They were perfectly indifferent to outer trappings, but so rich in inner value that they held the interest of others without apparent effort. A woman of any age has more chance to meet men when she is in constant circulation than when she is on the shelf. Middle-aged people of dignity and judgment do not have to wait for the stiffly formal introduction. Many fine friendships have begun in art galleries, book shops or on shipboard between men and women who were never formally introduced. A woman who is sure of herself can start a conversation with whom she will without seeming the least bit flirtatious or offensively forward. The ability of a middle-aged woman to win a husband financially and socially above her depends entirely upon her degree of development. If she has touched life at many points, if she has kept abreast of her times, if she has stored a supply of wisdom, if she has an understanding heart and a tolerant viewpoint, she has a better chance to make a satisfactory marriage than she had in her heedless youth. Dr. C. C. Jung, Zurich psychoanalyst. writes: "The afternoon of life is just as full of meaning as the morning, only its meaning is a wholly different one. Man has two aims: The first is the aim of nature. the begetting of children and all the business of protecting the brood; to this period belong the gaining of money and social position. When this aim is satisfied, there begins another phase, namely, that of culture.” a a a Dear Jane Jordan—What is a girl going to do when she is still in love with her ex-husband who is married again? You see. he
Miss Lucinda Smith, right, is seen in a horizontal striped sport dress, showing the new Mexican colors. She is carrying a plain colored flannel coat, which fastens in double breasted style with brass buttons, an off-the-face hat in white, and brown and white ghillies.
married within a month of our divorce. I realize that I can’t have him, but that doesn’t prevent me from loving him and grieving for him. I have tried awfully hard to forget, but it has seemed to be impossible. At times I think I would like to marry again, but that thought doesn’t get me anywhere, for it takes two to make a bargain, and I don’t even have dates. IMA LONE. Answer —Adjustment after divorce isn’t easy, particularly if the heart still clings to the divorced partner. That is why the woman with a job is so lucky. She has something which makes powerful demands on her energies while she is waiting for someone else to love. Whatever else you do, do not withdraw into yourself. Force your interests onto the outside world and make as many new contacts as possible. Don’t sit at home and brood. Cultivate some interesting women friends, for they are the ones who introduce you to the men.
City Alumnae Are Hostesses for Students Indianapolis alumnae of St. Mary’s college of Notre Dame entertained students home for the holidays at a luncheon yesterday in the Charm House. Honor guests were Misses Dorothy Shiel Dugan. Elinor Kirby, Dorothy Brown, Mary Louise Keach, Isabel McNerney and Mary Louise Noonan. Out-of-town guests were Mrs. Earl H. Gruber, Frankfort; Mrs. Bernard Foley, Crawfordsville; Mrs. Frances Simison Meyer, Lafayette, and Miss Margaret Kelly, Gary, house guest of Miss Kerby. Miss Helen Carroll arranged the party and was assisted by Mesdames F. J. DelaneV. J. M. Palmore and Miss Florence Pfeiffer. Miss Frances Kotteman is president of the alumnae; Miss Martha Barry, first vicepresident; Mrs. Roxane Harting, second vice-president; Miss Mary K. Slattery, secretary, and Mrs. Earl H. Lowe, treasurer.
600 ARE INVITED TO MAROTT’S PARTY
George J. Marott has issued 600 invitations for the midwinter dinner and dance Thursday, Jan. 11, which he holds annually in honor of guests of the Marott and their friends. Dinner will be served from 6 to 9 in the Hunters lodge, crystal, gold and blue rooms, with dancing in the ballroom from 9 to 12. Music will be provided by the Indiana Vagabonds. Special parties are being arranged, and a number of out-of-town guests are expected to attend. Pocahontas Meeting Set Past Pocahontas Association will meet tonight with Mrs. Minnie O'Neal, 1121 North Capitol avenue. Christmas gifts will be exchanged.
Daily Recipe LAMB CROQUETTES 2 cups finely chopped cooked lamb 1 cup cooked rice 1 tablespoon minced parsley 1 tablespoon lemon juice 2 tablespoons flour 1 tablespoon butter 1 cup milk Salt and pepper Make a white sauce by combining butter and flour, and gradually adding milk. Mix the other ingredients thoroughly and then combine with the hot white sauce. Chill, and when cold, shape into croquettes. Roll in beaten egg. and cracker crumbs, and fry in hot deep lard.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Meridian Hills Dance Attracts Seventy Couples Seventy couples attended the junior dance, held last night at the Meridian Hills Country •Club. - Miss Jane Leasure entertained a party, consisting of Miss Mary Alice Belton, Miss Jane Oliphant, Paul Ferrington, Robert McNeely and John Clancy. In a party, given by Miss Patsy Boggs, guests were Misses Jane Renard, Thalia Eby, Alice Jane Rice, Mary Kathryn Harbison, Miriam Ellison, Ann Beck, Helen Chappell, Betty Buser and Anna Mae Jones, and Messrs. Dick Ware, Walter Nolte, James Pittard, Marshall Knox, Donald DeHaven, Joseph Mooney, Frank Jones, William Harbeson and Don Schafer. Miss Boggs wore a red peau d’ange satin gown. With a peach taffeta dress, Miss Leasure wore a ruffled capelet. Mrs. Howard S. Morse, one of the chaperons and wife of the club president, appeared in a gown of light blue lace, with cape sleeves. Mrs. Hughes Patten, another chaperon, was attractive in a royal blue crepe dress, designed with long sleeves. Edging revers in back were rhinestone buttons, matched with clips at the neckline. Mrs. Albert Wohlgemuth’s gown was of printed chiffon. Miss Mary Scott Morse wore a pink net dress over a satin slip, and Miss Clara Patten’s gold crepe gown was contrasted with a brown velvet sash and mink tails on the sleeves. Sequins trimmed the net capelet of the black crepe dress worn by 'Miss Sunshine Colby, visiting in the city during holidays at Principia college. Long flowing white chiffon sleeves distinguished the black gown of Miss Peggy Chapin, who wore green slippers matching the dress sash. Ruffles trimmed the skirt and sleeves of the yellow taffeta dress of Miss Sue Anne Eveleigh. A plaited collar and sleeves drew attention to the blue satin dress of Miss Helen Hudgins. MRS. HENDRICKSON AGAIN HEADS CLUB Mrs. Robert A. Hendrickson was re-elected president of the Indiana Bryn Mawr Club at its annual holiday luncheon yesterday in the Propylaeum Club. Mrs. Thomas R. Kackley was chosen vice-president and treasurer and Mrs. Allen Bloom, secretary. Covers were laid for twelve. Contract Dinner Set December contract bridge dinner of the Propylaeum Club will be held Friday night with Mrs. Frederick E. Matson in charge. She will be assisted by Mrs. John M. Shaw, William Allen Moore and Mrs. Louis M. Huesmann.
Personals
Mr. and Mrs. W. Hathaway Simmons, Mr. and Mrs. Frederick T. Holiday, Mr. and Mrs. Sylvester Johnson Jr., and Mr. and Mrs. W. Richardson Sinclair will spend next week-end at French Lick. Mr. and Mrs. David Rex Bowman, Lafayette, are the house guests of Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Tingle, 4263 Winthrop avenue. Miss Dorothy Screes and William, Screes, 516 South Central court, left, today for Oak Park, 111., to visit Miss Helen Hamlin and Victor Hamlin. James Kirby, son of Mr. and Mrs. Garrett Kirby. 655 North Rural street, is visiting relatives and friends in Gary. Mrs. C. D. Curry is visiting at the Roosevelt in New York with Mrs. A. B. Van Winkle, Hartford. Conn. Miss Mary Lou Metsker, 2440 North Delaware street, will leave tomorrow for New York to visit Mr. and Mrs. Ward Barrick. formerly of Indianapolis. Misses Gretchen V. Grant and Julia J. Hall, students at the Erskine school, Boston, are visiting their parents. Mr. and Mrs. Jesse R. Grant, 3339 North Meridian street, and Mrs. Helen S. Hall, 3025 North , Meridian street.
Home Dance Tonight Will Draw Sixty Miss Dorothy Du Puy to Be Guest of Honor. Holiday parties for the younger set continue to be gay, and homes and ballrooms are turned into bowers of greenery with blazes of lights. Sixty guests will attend the tea dance from 5 to 7 this evening in honor of Miss Dorothy Du Puy, •which will be given by Mr. and Mrs. Samuel B. Sutphin at their home. 1000 North Delaware street. Violets will center the tea table, and garlands of greenery will decorate the rooms. Mrs. Sutphin will be assisted by her mother, Mrs. Samuel Reid, and by Mis Du Puy’s mother, Mrs. William A. Atkins. Miss Noyes to Be Honored Mr. and Mrs. Sutphin's sons, Samuel and Dudley, home from Yale university for the holidays, will attend the affair. The Nicholas Noyes’ home in Crow’s Nest will be the scene of an informal dance tonight in honor of Mr. and Mrs. Noyes’ daughter. Miss Ethel Noyes, here from Ethel Walker school in Connecticut, and their son, Evan Noyes, home from Cornell university. Approximately 100 guests are expected to attend the dance tonight at the Meridian Hills Country Club as guests of the mothers of Principia college students. Three to Give Dance Honor guests will be Misses Marbara Steele, Marjorie Case, Jane Davis, Sunshine Colby and Earbara Lippitt, San Diego, Cal., the house guest of Miss Colby. Chaperons will be Messrs, and Mesdames Hugh J. Baker, Thaddeus R. Baker, Fred W. Case, Ralph L. Colby, C. Fred Davis, Henry Holt and Reid Steele. Miss Dorothy Metzger, John Masters and Albert Goldstein will give a dancing party tonight at the Lincoln. Dr. and Mrs. Alex Metzger, Dr. and Mrs. Robert J. Masters and Mr. and Mrs. Albert Goldstein will assist.
Sororities
Alpha chapter, Alpha Gamma sorority, will hold its Christmas party and spread tonight at the home of Miss Virginia McCready, 3917 Kenwood avenue. Beta chapter. Delta Phi Beta sorority, will entertain with a party tonight at the home of Miss Evelyn Mann, 926 Congress avenue. Misses LaVonne Stokes and Martha Jolliffe will assist the hostess. Alpha chapter. Sigma Delta Zeta sorority, will hold a dinner-dance tonight at the Royale Supper Club with Miss Lucille Hayes as chairman. Assisting will be Mrs. Patrick Lawley, Mrs. Jett T. Montgomery and Misses Margaret Strieblem and Mary Florence Sullivan.
Miss Rothbard Becomes Bride in Home Rite Only imhaediate families and a few friends attended the wedding of Miss Lillian Rothbard and Lou Leventhal, son of Mr. and Mrs. Isaac Leventhal, Terre Haute, yesterday at the home of the bride’s mother, Mrs. Bessie Rothbard, 2213 North Meridian street. The ceremony was read by the Rabbi Elias Charry of Beth-El-Zedek temple, before an improvised altar of greenery lighted with Papers. The bride wore a white crepe gown fashioned with long sleeves and a collar of rhinestones. She wore a halo hat of maline and carried a bouquet of white orchids and lilies of the valley. Mr. and Mrs. Leventhal left by motor for Miami, Fla., the bride traveling in a brown outfit. The couple will be at home after Jan. 15 at 3015 North Meridian street. Among the out-of-town guests present were Mr. and Mrs. Leventhal, Miss Helen Leventhal, Messrs. David Martin and Jack Leventhal, all of Terre Haute; Mr. and Mrs. Sidney James, Anderson, and Joseph Rothbard, student at the University of Michigan, who is spending the holidays in the city. CLASSES AT Y. W. TO OPEN TUESDAY Day and night classes will open for the winter term in the Y. W. C. A. adult education department Tuesday. Classes scheduled include book reviews by Mrs. Edward D. Fivecoate; self-expression, Mrs. Leo K. Fesler; literature, correct English and the art of conversation, Mrs. Margarita T. Diddel. Mrs. John Downing Johnson will teach parliamentary law and Mrs. Diddel practical biology. In the evening schedule are creative writing, Mrs. Fivecoate; Spanish, Mrs. Diddel; French. Mme. Yvonne Chamilovitch; business English, Miss Reeta Clark and bridge, both auction and contract, Mrs. R. Ralston Jones. New classes in self-expression will meet on Thursday for day groups and Monday for evening groups. A series of gardening talks is set for February.
MRS, QUEBBEMAN IS FETED AT PARTY,
Misses Dorothy Arnholter and Vivian Claffey entertained last night at the home of Miss Claffey, 5025 Central avenue, in honor of Mrs. Virgil Quebbeman. Mrs. Quebbeman, before her recent marriage, was Miss June Swett, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Swett. Hostesses were assisted by their mothers, Mrs. William H. Arnholter and Mrs. H. G. Claffey. Party appointments were in keeping with the holiday season. Guests included Mrs. Swett, Mrs Buford Cadle. Misses Ruth Landers, Helen Gearen, Martha Shirk Martha Metcalf, Anna ' 'arie Dungan, Betty Ford, Lucine Warfel Margaret Wald on, Lois Jackson anc Mildred Arnholter.
DINNER HEAD
lIP- J III?. -
Miss Hildreth Workman
Miss Hildreth Workman is general chairman of a benefit dinner and bridge to be held Jan. 4 by members of lota Tau Tau, legal sorority of Benjamin Harrison law school. The party wil be held at the Food Craft shop, with Miss Bonnie Miller in charge of program.
Patterns Pattern Department, Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Ind. Enclose find 15 cents for which send Pat tr A A Q tern No. 0 4 U if Size Street City State Name
DOUBLE DUTY FROCK.
One of those all-too-rare frocks that can go straight from the office to a party, and look their best in either place. The dress is black satin, and the dress-up touches are the wide, ruffle-edged collar, the crisp white handkerchief jabot, and the new full sleeves, with their deep, close-fitting cuffs. Yet there’s not a detail that would look fussy in an office atmosphere ! It’s easy to make, even with the clever cut of the blouse-front and girdle in one. The skirt is pencilslim, the correct silhouette for any occasion. Although nothing surpasses the chic of black and white, you may choose from among many “offblack” colors this season, including blackberry, burgandy, and ink blue. Size 16 requires 414 yards 39-inch material, % yard 39-inch contrasting to trim. Width about 1% yard. Send for the new winter, fashion book for other smart designs. Pattern No. 5409 is designed for sizes 14, 16, 18. 20 years, 32, 34, 36, 38, 40, 42 bust. Our new fashion book is out! Send for it—put check here □ and inclose 10 cents extra for Price for pattern, 15 cents. (Copyright. 1933. by United Features Syndicate. Inc.) LUNCHEON GIVEN FOR HOUSE GUESTS Miss Mary Lcis Meek, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Meek, 5809 Lowell avenue, entertained yesterday with a luncheon at the Columbia Club for her house guests, Misses Barbara Jones, Anderson; Jean Naber, Fairmount; Helen Schmidt, Logansport, and Norma Keller, Indianapolis. They are classmates at Stephens college, Columbia, Mo., and will return to the college Jan. 9.
“Needless to Pay More — f RISKY TO PAY LESS” . • His Created ..o.v> \ * ► SIOO REWARD! (XT ONE finding that we do not nGH QUALITY NEW SUPPLIES ill our permanent.. Beaute-Artes i are noted for Softness—Easy to i. MPOO and | SHAMPOO, RINSE, MARCEL, "AV*. Complete Complete Eflc f or vdfc 2 for $2.01 2 for $3.01 vaint .... | regular 60c value 01 Kooaevelt Bids. DEAIITC ADTCC in. * Vh. St*. Lincoln 0679 Db A Ifc“AII It 0 Lincoln 061*
‘College Corner’ Shows Sally Shop’s Stock of Bright Wear for Dull Days Lively Colors Include Aquamarine and Shades of Red; Peplum Effects and Belts Among Style Features. BY HELEN LINDSAY. DRESSES to brighten the winter days are being shown in “College Corner," anew department in the Sally Shop. The new colors are bright and lively, with aquamarine and varying shades of red for afternoon frocks. Prints are shown in all-over and bordered designs. Many of the new dresses have peplum effects, and short belts reaching from the side seams across the back, fastening with large buckles. Necklines on afternoon frocks are high in front, and in many instances slashed in back, where they are fastened with a row of tiny buttons. Shirtwaist dresses for every occasion are seen, bearing out the earlier predictions in fashion forecasts that this type of dress would be accepted not only for street wear but for afternoon and dinner dresses. One dress is shown in aquamarine with a peplum hip effect, trimmed
with narrow bands of pleating. The sleeves have a flare of the same pleating from the elbows down. The neck is caught with a filigree pin set with a stone in a harmonizing colcr. Many of the prints shown are in crepe. One of navy blue pebbled crepe has full sleeves of modernistic print, in which orange, blues and white are seen. A tie of the same print is at the neck, slipped through a spiral pin of antique gold. a a a Eleanor Blue Frock Is Attractive THE college girl who plans to attend tea dances will be enthusiastic over an Eleanor blue frock. It is made of crepe, and has sleeves of small full ruffles, edged with silver ribbon. The sleeves are made of French chiffon. The neck is V-shaped both in front and back.
In the shirtwaist dresses, there is one of black crepe, with a white crepe blouse, designed with tiny gold colored triangles. Another is shown in brown, with crepe skirt and moire blouse. The neck is high, and has a turned down collar of the same material, cut wide, and fitted abo\:t the throat. It flares over the shoulders and has a matching ascot t:e. The sleeves are long and tight. In evening wraps, velvet, lapin and bunny furs are shown. One which will intrigue the college girl is a short adjustable cape of whi e lapin, with white bunny fur trimming. The cape fastens at the neck with white satin ribbon ties. a a a a a a Lieber's Shows New Year's Cards LIEBER'S is showing a complete collection of New Year's cards and “thank you" cards for the acknowledgment of Christmas gifts. For the new year, there are interesting new perpetual calendars. These can be set according to the day of the week upon which the month begins, and may be used from one year to another. One is shown in blue metal, and is to be used as a paper clip and a calendar. Another is a combination perpetual calendar and note pad. One of the most useful is a combination of note pad. calendar and telephone index. The index 'slides beneath the note pad. and can be pushed back out of the way when not in use.
Miss Ruth Casady Wed Today in Ceremony in Church
Miss Ruth Casady became the bride of John M. Snead Jr., son of Major and Mrs. John M. Snead, Lakewood, 0., this afternoon at the Tabernacle Presbyterian church. The bride is a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. E. O. Casady. The Rev. J. Ambrose Dunkel read the ceremony in the presence of the
MRS. NAFE HEAD OF COLUMBIA PARTY
Mrs. Cleon Nafe is chairman of the monthly women's luncheon bridge party, to be held at the Columbia Club Wednesday, Jan. 3. ; Her assistants will be Mesdames H. F. Beckman, R. H. Briggs. L. R. Cartwright, B. W. Duck, R. H. Habbe, H. H. Martin, C. H. McCaskey, G. L. Ramey, Mrs. G. H. Heagy, Hagerstown, and Mrs. B. L. Harrison, Newcastle. Mrs. J. H. Laird, club hostess, is in charge of reservations, and has arranged the party.
MISS TRAUGOTT IS HONORED AT PARTY Miss Leah Traugott, who soon will wed Arthur Cassel, was honor guest last night at a kitchen shower and bridge party given by Misses Adeline Rice and Betty Asher at the home of the former, 5896 Washington boulevard. Guests with Miss Traugott included her mother. Mrs. Leo Traugott; Miss Helen Leventhal, Terre Haute; Miss Eugenia Miller, Annapolis, Md„ and Mrs. Harry Joseph and Misses Dorothy and Jean Goldsmith, Jean Traugott, Sophie Rosenthal, Bessie Ann Barskin, Helen Pinkus, Charlotte Sudranski, Wilma Goldberg, Alice Green, Hortense Weiss, Juliette Steyer, Eleanor Sussman, Ida Green, Helen Frankel, Hortense Wolf, Louise Jaeger and Anita Joseph. Officers to Be Seated Irvington chapter, O. E. S., will install its new officers tonight at the Masonic Temple.
A BIG CARLOAD SALE! TREE RIPENED I ORANGES Thin Rind . Cft I Very Sweet. (P OU I Full of Juice On Sale Bushel J|j| Friday jUggtitasket HAMILL BROS. gP 230 Virginia Ave. Hj South of Elevation
DEC. 28, 1933
Mrs. Lindsay
immediate families. Mrs. C H. Eberhard played traditional airs. The bride, unattended, wore a steel blue wool and satin outfit with krimmer trim and a corsage of gardenias and lilies of the valley. A reception for the guests was held at the church, after which Mr. and Mrs. Snead left on a motor trip. The at-home address is for Shaker Heights, Cleveland, 0., after Jan. 7. Out-of-tow T n guests included Robert Snead. Lakewood; Mr. and Mrs. Walter C. Zeiger and Emmet Zeiger, Sawyer, Mich.; Dr. and Mrs. Donald L. Helkie, South Bend; Misses Dorothy and Esther Hall, Newcastle, and Robert Clauer, Richmond. The bride attended Purdue university, where she was a member of Pi Beta Phi sorority, and Mr. Snead, a graduate of Purdue, is a member of Delta Upsilon, Sigma Delta Chi and Chi Epsilon fraternities. Miss Boggs to Be Guest Miss Patsy Boggs will be the guest of Miss Cloe Hook at a dance tomorrow night in Nobelsville. Miss Bogsg entertained a group of friends at the junior dance at Meridian Hills Country Club last night. Two to See Wedding Mrs. Carl H. Lieber and Mrs. J. William Hofmann will attend tl e wedding of Miss Meeta Lieber ard Robert Lee Hatcher in Flushing, N. Y„ Saturday.
Be it the young or the old. the tantalizing tang and the appealing ruby color makes the CRANBERRY COCKTAIL the perfect toast for all occasions. Easily and economically made: 4 cups Eatmor Cranberries, 4 cups water, 2/3 cup sugar. Cook cranberries and water until skins pop open (about 5 minutes) . . . strain through cheesecloth ... bring juice to boil . . . add sugar and boil 2 minutes. Serve cold. For future use put in sterilized bottles, well corked and sealed. For large quantity use 20 pounds cranberries, 5 gallons water, BVi pounds sugar. Other good recipes can be had at your fruit dealer or grocery store. Ask for the Eatmor Cranberry recipe cards. They are free. CHIFFON HOSE (Aof alluring charm 95c. 2 Pairs, *1.75 Ml j 69c. S pairs. *2.00 jtV\ T ’ N I S L E Y fn 44 N. Penn. St.
