Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 January 1938 — Page 9

WEDNESDAY, JAN. 12, 1938 Direct Academy Skating Party

Parties and Teas to Fete Brides-to-Be

Buffet Suppers, Luncheons and Showers Are On Calendar.

Plans for buffet suppers, bridgeteas, silver showers, linen showers,

and luncheons are occupying the |

attentions of numerous Indianapolis women this week who are to entertain for various brides-to-be. Numerous parties are to be given

PAGE 9

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

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for Miss Helen Hyde, daughter of |

Mr. and Mrs. Harlow Hyde, when

she returns from Washington where |

she has been for years, apolis Saturday.

Miss Hyde is to be married Feb.

the past

three | She is to arrive in Indian-

1 here to John Lawrence Everhart, | son of Mr. and Mrs. Villias Hub- | bard Everhart, Schenectady, N. Y. |

Miss Hyde is a graduate of Skid- |

more College, N. Y. Mr. Everhart is a graduate of Lehigh University.

Parties Planned

Saratoga Springs, |

Mr. and Mrs. Hyde have moved |

for the remainder of the from EB. Tist St. and Dean Road to 2735 N. Meridian St.

Several

winter |

parties also are to be |

given for Miss Mary Louise Shiel, | whose marriage to Robert Moyna- |

han is to take place at 10 a. m.

Feb. 5 in the SS. Peter and Paul Cathedral. |

Miss Shiel is a daughter of Mr. |

| { | { | | |

and Mrs. Walter R. Shiel, Alabama St. son of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas A. Movnahan. Miss Patricia O'Connor is to be the maid of honor. Mr. Moynahan is to be his son's best man and Walter R. Shiel Jr. and Robert E. Sweeney Jr. are to usher. Miss Peggy Chapin, 3907 N. Delaware St., is to entertain at tea Saturday afternoon in her home for Miss Shiel. Mrs. Clarence Sweeney is to be hostess at a luncheonbridge Jan. 20 in the Indianapolis Athletic Club. Mr. and Mrs. Edmund Bingham are to entertain for

1221 N.

the couple Sunday, Jan. 23. Misses |

Gertrude Hardesty and Dorothy

Dugan are to give a party for Miss |

Mr. Moynahan is a |

| It's Easy to Get Up When,

Times-Photo.

Miss Virginia Leimgruber (left) and Miss Pauline Miller are in charge of a skating party to be sponsored at the Riverside Skating Rink tonight by the sophomore class of St. John's Academy.

dames Paul E. Tischer and Lyman | G. Hunter. | Mrs. Ralph L. Colby entertained | with & luncheon yesterday in the | Columbia Club. Misses Ammerman | and Becker gave a linen shower | for the bride-to-be recently in the | Ammerman home, 4860 Park Ave. Miss Jessie G. Garten, whose en- | gagement to Meredith C. Thomas, | Chicago, has been announcéd by | her parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. P. Garten, is to be honored guest Thursday at & luncheon given by | Mrs. Oliver Clark. Guests at the luncheon in Mrs.

Shiel Saturday afternoon, Jan. 22, | in Miss Hardesty's home.

Clark's home are to include sev- | eral members of the Excelsior Club. Dinner to Be Given | They are: Mesdames J. L. Wicoff, {| Thomas Wicoff, Ray Noblitt, Henry J. Albert Smith is to entertain at

dinner for the couple Saturday night, Jan. 29. Miss O'Connor and Mrs. M. Robert Dinnin are to be hostesses at tea for the bride-to-be Sunday, Jan. 30, in Miss O'Connor's home, 1428 N. Pennsylvania St. On Jan. 31, Messrs. Scott Fogarty, Jack Slattery and Michael Fox are to give a stag party for Mr. Moynahan. Miss Rose Ann Doebber is another bride-to-be who is being feted extensively. Mrs. Ralph B.

Coble Jr. and Miss Elysee Crosier |

are to be cohostesses at a silver shower tonight in the home of Mrs. Coble's mother, Mrs. K. K. Woolling, 6930 Washington Blvd. Miss Doebber is to be married to Bert Ferrara Jan. 29 in the Tabernacle Presbyterian Church McKee Chapel. Assistant hostesses are to be Mrs, Woolling and Miss Crosier's mother, Mrs. Paul Crosier. Decorations and appointments are to be in the bridal colors, blue and gold.

Guests Announced

Guests are to be Misses Catherine Vogle, Barbara Jean Holt, Marjorie Case, Betty Wysong, Elaine Oberholtzer, Barbara Zechiel, Margaret Ramey, Ruth Dickerson, Marjorie Hennis, Sue Ammerman, Betty Sue Woolling, Jane Hennessey, Norma Conder, Jane Pfeiffer, Helen Dauner, Carlene Becker and Mes-

We Offer Our Entire Stock of Ladies’, Children’s and Men's Shoes, Slippers, Rubbers, Galoshes and Hosiery, Because We want Our Established Customers and New Patrons to Secure Real Bargains. This Is Not One of Our City’s Too Numerous Every Other Day Promotional Sales Events, but Is a Genuine Store-Wide Event Covering Every Pair of Shoes Over Our Entire Seven Floors at Reductions of From 10%

Gage, Will Rossiter, W. R. Randal, | Guy Allis, Charles Clark and P. A. Hennesse. Other guests are to be friends of Miss Garten including | Mesdames H. B. Tillman, Wildon | Driber, Florence Kelly and G. W. | Gustafson,

Mrs. Lewis Feted | A recent linen shower was given for Mrs. John L. Lewis, & recent bride, by Miss Alice Kelly, 3355 | Graceland Ave,

|ler before her marriage Dec. 31. | Guests at the party were Misses

Elsie Leo, Delora Skelly, Ruth Day, |

Mary Lindsey, Josephine Douglas, LaVerne Anderson, Catherine O'Connor, Marie Sargent, Pauline Bolling, Margaret Mitchell, Viola | Johantgen, Garnet Gentry, Eliza- | beth Kelly and Grace Campbell. | Mrs. Carl Kelly, the hostess's | mother, assisted. Two other brides-to-be who are | to be feted are Miss Margaret Do- | lores Heitman and Miss Jean | Goulding. | Miss Heitman, who is a daugh- | ter of Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Heit- | man, 2223 N. Pennsylvania St, is to be married to Dr. W. H. Walker, Miami, Fla.. Miss Goulding, who is a daughter of Mrs. Minor S. Goulding, 3420 N. Delaware St., is to be married Sun- | day, Feb. 6, in the First Presby-

| |

Nursing Society Will Celebrate 25th Anniversary

® The 25th anniversary of the | founding of the Public Health Nurs- | ing Association is to be observed at |a luncheon tomorrow in the Clay- | pool Hotel. | A skit, written by Miss Bernice | Cain, is to be presented, showing the | work of the early organization lead- | ers and the group activity. The | pioneers are to be honor guests at | the luncheon. P. H. N. A. nurses, | impersonating the leaders, are to | depict a silver tea held in the home | of a board member in 1913. Mrs. Charles F. Meyer Jr. is chairman of the nominating committee for officers to be elected at the meeting. Mrs. Theodore B. | Griffith and Mrs. John Curry are to | assist her. Mrs. Benjamin D. Hitz,

| president, is to preside at the Tunehsy

| eon.

Mrs. Lewis was Miss June Wurg- |

| Club to Elect | “The 13th Ward Democratic Women's Club is to hold an election of | officers at 8 p. m. tonight in the | home of Mrs. George R. Taylor, 205 Parkway Ave. follow.

| terian Church, | Gilkison. Miss Elsie Gilkison and Mrs. Burton Gilkison are to entertain Friday night in the home of the for- | mer for Miss Goulding.

1 |

| | | | |

Complete Optical Service

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| TYLE XE] conus

Jos. E. Kernel Optical Co.

| raction T

to 50%. Honest Sale Values Are Offered!

| butter.

Hot Cakes | Today’s Pattern

{

With Syrup ‘Ring Bell’

Qtack of Wheats Await, Says Writer.

By MRS. GAYNOR MADDOX

It's easy to get up in the morning when the griddle is hot. The | rising bell will sound like music on a frosty morning if breakfast is to | consist of a “stack of wheats” with a sweet river of syrup.

Rice Griddle Cakes

(Four to Six Servings) One and one-half cups cooked | rice, 2 eggs, 1% cups milk, 11% cups (flour, 3 teaspoons baking powder, [1% tablespoons sugar, % teaspoon | salt, a pinch of nutmeg if desired. | Beat eggs thoroughly, add to rice | | and mix with a fork, add milk and | | dry ingredients which have been | | sifted together, beat well, and drop | by small spoonfuls on a very hot | well greased griddle. Serve with | | putter and maple syrup.

Cornmeal Griddle Cakes (Four to six servings) | One and one-half cups cornmeal, | 1, cup flour, 4 teaspoons baking | powder, % teaspoon salt, 1 table- | spoon molasses, 1 egg, 1 cup milk, 1% cup water, 1 tablespoon melted

Mix all dry ingredients well together. Beat egg, add molasses, milk and water. Add all to dry | ingredients. Beat well. Lastly add melted butter. Drop by spoonfuls on hot griddle. Serve with crisp bacon and syrup. On a very cold day in the country, old-fashioned buckwheat cakes make a big hit. Buckwheat Cakes (Four to six servings) One and one-half cups boiling water, % teaspoon salt, 2 table- | spoons molasses, % yeast cake, 61 tablespoons lukewarm water, 1% _cups buckwheat flour, 6 tablespoons white flour, 3% teaspoon soda. Mix boiling water, salt and molasses. Dissolve yeast in lukewarm water and add to above mixture when it is cool. Add flour gradually and beat well. Let stand over night

this two-piece dress with

in pastel color

blouse.

skirts and suits. Do not hesitate to make dress for your own wardrobe. pattern includes complete

exactly how to proceed. Patter

14, 16, 18, 20 and 40.

quires 21; yards, skirt 3 yards.

OW-—and all through spring— | you'll enjoy the slim lines of flaring | skirt and softly fitted bodice, seen in Patttern 8130. Choose a thin wool and add brightly jeweled button or clasps to trim the The cleverly draped bodice creates a fitted basque that is wearable also as a blouse with separate

this The instructions even to charts showing you

8130 is designed for sizes Size 16 requires 3% yards of 54-inch material. In 39-inch material, blouse alone re-

To obtain a pattern and step-by-

| |

step sewing instructions inclose 15 cents in coin together with the above pattern number and your size, your name and address, and mail to Pattern Fditor, The Indianapolis

in a warm place. In morning add soda and beat well. Drop Ry spoonfulls on hot griddle. Serve with honey or syrup.

People, Not Furniture, Decide Whether House Becomes Home

By OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON

There are two kinds of houses In the world, those we like to go into and those we don't care so much about. The grand residence with every | room & beautiful symphony of color, may offer no greeting at all, for it | Jacks the spirit of good fellowship and warmth, The shabby little house on the corner may have holes in every rug, yet something cheerful and kindly pervades it. It may be the other way ’round, too, and the big house ay be the one we teel instantly at home in, because it is the people who make a home and not things, © We take it for granted that all |children love their homes, and for |the most part they do. Home means

is tremendous need today, against the pressure of outside interests, to concentrate less on things to have, and think more about things to do. This is the type of house the child loves to come to, and to stay in. Just as we oldsters react to that vague something in our friend's homes, so does the child answer to his own home. Perhaps we would have to make fewer rules if we kept our children

| mother and daddy and all the rest. |Tt is the child's castle and he never |questions its merits. But go home |with a few of the children sometime, land watch their faces.

| Things for All to Do |

Jimmy may brighten up the seclond he enters the door and go to hustling to find his mother. “I got la stamp that Daddy will be crazy about, Mom. Wait till I show you.” Billy may enter the hall, feeling |that a hand had clamped down on ‘him. He asks immediately if he can |go over to Bud's, and at Bud's he Istays until called for supper.

ers will have to suggest and plan a little in order to set the ball rolling. American homes are pretty fixed affairs. We might take a peep at some other countries that make

busy with gripping interests. Moth=- |

sports, music or social events family

affairs, instead of dividing children into one group and adults into another. This is the chief reason, I believe, why adolescents seek diversion the way they do. They are almost driven to it. Why not go on fishing trips together? Why not skate together? Why not sing, or have parties or hobbies together? The children, once conditioned to home uvnthusiasms, would rather do things with their families than with outsiders. I do put a premium on neat house= keeping, but the too-perfect house irritates me beyond words. The place is to be used and enjoyed. And once enjoyed, the children will take more personal pride in its condition. Background changes view. Better to build a good mouse trap and have the world traipsing to our door, than to build an ivy-covered wall that chills the people within and shuts Cotton Hose Assorted Colors. 1zes.

| out the visitor. 2 vis | Be All 8

Kinney Shoe Store

138 East Washington St,

|

Men's Fancy

|

It is hard to make comparisons, {for all children like to visit around, but there it is. Some look forward to going home, while others feel hap{pier away from it. Parents cannot make houses into | amusement centers, of course; that | is too much to expect, and besides it would be ruinous, but I believe there |

New Under-arm y

Cream Deodorant safely Stops Perspiration

Sears for Dependable Service!

Does not rot dresses w= does not irritate skin. No waiting to dry. Can be used after shaving. Instantly stops perspirae tion 1 to 3 days==removes odor from perspiration. A pure, white, greaseless, stainless vanishing cream.

ARRID

Dr. Wn.

OUTSTANDING STYLES IN MODERN EYEWEAR!

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PAYMENT PLAN!

DD. Elson

A social hour is to

to Robert Edward

Times, dianapolis.

Guild Plans Benefit

The White Cross Garden Guild is

214 W. Maryland St, In-

39¢ a jar at drug and dept. stores | pts

TREE PARKING

to give a benefit card party Thursday afternoon, Jan. 20, in the Ban-ner-Whitehill auditorium. Proceeds are to be used for beautification of the Methodist Hospital grounds. Mrs. Maxwell Wickersham, president, has appointed Mrs. Carl Ploch, general arrangements chairman.

NEW YORK CENTRAL

NEXT SATURDAY | ROUND TRIP==COACH FARES

J CLEVELAND . . . . $5.00

Leave 10:00 p. m. Return on any train | § until 2:25 a. m. Monday.

JDETROIT . . . «+. $5.00

Pav & visit to the Henry Ford exhibit | # at historic Greenfield Village in Dear-

born, near Detroit. | voueoo . $4.25 reach In-

Leave 10:00 p. m. Return, dianapolis not later than Monday morning following

NEW YORK CENTRAL SYSTEM

SAYS:

STRAUSS

SHIRTS, Sale Price

These are the shirts, widely famed for wear and all-around satisfaction. Made in the Troy district, by quality minded and quality handed people—COLLAR-ATTACHED SHIRTS—and NECKBAND styles—

People use these occasions to buy half dozens and dozens.

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PATTERNED

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Something like 400 shirts—nicely balanced selections of fresh, clear stripes—$ 1.65. ’

HOME - OWNED

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18-20 EAST WASHINGTON ST.

x