Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 November 1940 — Page 24
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Home—Here Are
Fireplace ensembles are another gift which the family all can enjoy. Buy andirons, 19 inches high, solid cast brass, polished and lacquered for protection at about $9. A fireset for about $7 includes a shovel, poker, tongs and stand. For another $7, buy a screen, 33 inches high, in three folds, ? : £4 My Manufacturers were quick to realize that there are few homes in
Entire Family Enjoys Gifts for the . A GIFT FOR THE HOME can be shared and enjoyed by the YOU WOULD NEVER guess that a commode design cabinet is
entire family! And local stores are showing everything from the |-really made to hold mother’s sewing materials. . . . One of the choice
tinfest of kitchén gadgets to whole living room suites to solve your | wastepaper baskets on sale at Ayres’ is a combination magazine rack - - shopping problems and please the family. 5 end paper basket. You can use it as one or the other too. It comes in a paper fabric that matches colonial or walnut furniture and has a
Suggestions From Local Stores .- | A REFRIGERATOR is one of those “big items” which serves a ind family for years, but which will mean a large initial outlay. When you buy look for these features: A meat container large enough to let
a roast rest comfortably; a thermometer to tell the truth about the temperature; an automatic interior light; a humidity «control; an in-
One article that everyone in the family will “go for” is a new type reading stand to be used before the\ fireplace, as a breakfast tray or for readirg and writing. It is of lightweight metal and cgl-
lapsible. The small reading lamp are so designed that they can be adjusted to any height. You can buy it for about $3. * Speaking of lamps, one of ‘the most popular* types is that one for “the reader in bed.” It is called a _ spot beam lamp and is attached to the head of the hed with a felt-
lined clamp to keep the wood from {il
being marred. It can be adjusted
to any reading position. It throws |
the light directly on the reading matter and does not “light up” the entire room. It costs only $1. It would be nice for one of the youngsters to give “Dad.” There is another type too that looks more feminine for mother or sister. . If you are one-hdlf of a newlymarried couple and still furnishing
partner.
= fit smartly into a small dinette. Nice have leaves that extend the table top so that as many as 12 guests can
be accommodated.
that small apartment. why not buy a drop leaf extension table for your - They can do duty against the wall in your living room or
is attached at the top. The legs
thing about them is that they
any one of a number of pastel shades. The monogram or first name is painted-on. Both these wastepaper baskets sell for about $1.00. rg ‘ : Novel and practical too is a set called “Mother's Own Tool Set”: which you can get for about $4. It includes tools for everyday use around the home or the apartment—screw ' drivers, a hammer, nails, tin snips, etc. E : If you are in the money, de buy a four-piece, silver-plated coffee service. It includes the coffee, cream and sugar with the tray. It costs around $23 but will be one of those long cherished pieces inthe home. : Trimmed to fit the needs of a small family is an electric casser= ole, which holds a little over 2 quarts. It costs about $7. It is really a miniature version of the electric roaster,
Society—
°
. Club. Miss Betty Jane Mit
Maher, publicity.
The Senior Class Will Give "What
at Tudor Hall School
Every Woman Knows"
JAMES M. BARRIE'S
“What Every Woman
Knows” will be presented by the senior class of Tudor Hall School at 8:15 p. m. Saturday, Dec. 7 at the school. Miss Peggy Lockwood and Miss Mary Janet Stanley will
play the leading roles of Maggie and John Shand.
In the supporting cast will be Misses Doris Wilson, Agatha Kemer, Marilyn Mulvihill, Cynthia Test, Ann Brown, Eva Taggart, Nancy
' Wohlgemuth, Georgianna Dedaker, Mary Lou Kirk, Betty Baum-
gartel, Judith Ingersoll, Mary Belle Waldo, Sara Jean Wildman, Beth
Anderson and Carol Noel. \
The technical directors’ are Miss Suzanne
DePrez and Miss Sallie
Kemp. Miss Juanita Waugh is assistant director; Miss Claire Hilker and Miss Noel are in charge of properties; Miss Nancy Taggart and Miss Baumgartel are business managers; Miss Ingersoll is in charge of ‘costumes and Miss Alice Boozer and Miss Wildman are publjcity
chairmen.
Tea Will Honor Mary Jeanne Smith
MISS MARY JEANNE SMITH whose marriage to Robert M. Langsenkamp will be Jan. 4, will be honor guest at a tea to be given
tomorrow at the Indianapolis Athletic Louise Connor.
Club by Misses Helen and Mary
A round of December parties scheduled in her honor will begin
with a dinner given Sunday by fort for both 'Miss Smith and Mr.
urday, Dec. 7, at the Athletic Club
hostess.
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Hurd of FrankLangsenkamp. Miss Marguerite Bernatz will entertain for her Tuesday evening. " Friends of Miss Smith will be guests at a
luncheon for her Satwith Miss Mary Jo Carton as
The Misses Margo and Barbara Sheerin will give a lunch-
eon Dec. 11 in their home honoring the bride-to-be.
Mrs. Paul Matthews will entertain
Mrs. Leonard Beckerich on Dec. 22. 1 : Club on Dec. 14 will be given by Miss Katherine Crush in her honor.
Virginia Balke Entertains
for Miss Smith Dec..11 and A luncheon at the Athletic
Miss Virginia. Balke was to entertain today at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank C. Balke, with a bridesmaids’ luncheon for the attendants at her wedding to Edward Warren Wohlgemuth
this evening in the Second Presbyterian Church.
. The bridal colors of rose and blue were to be used in Miss Balke’s sisters, Mrs. Ward
Attending the luncheon were to be R. Penstermaker, Columbus, O., and
decorations,
Miss Mildred Balke; Mrs. Will -
Hays Jr., Sullivan; Miss Janet Sampson, Rochester, N. ¥., and Misses 2
Nancy and Margaret Wohlgemuth.
Mayflower Descendants Board to Meet
' Mrs. Tilden F. Greer,
governor of the Indiana Society of May-
flower Descendants, has called a luncheon meeting of the board of assistants of the society for noon Tuesday in Ayres Tearoom.
Clifton Utley Is Guest
MR. AND MRS. CLARENCE MERRELL will entertain Clifton
M. Utley
can Foreign Policy—Where under the auspices of the
Church Plans Annual Bazaar
at dinner in the Athletic Club this evening before his opene ° ing lecture at the World War Memorial. Mrs. Utley’s talk on “Ameri- : Do We Go from Here?” at 8:15 p. m. i8~ Indianapolis League of Women Voters,
Mrs. Merrell is president of the Indiana League.
ST. CATHERINE'S GUILD of the Episcopal Church of the Advent will have its annual Christmas bazaar Thursday in the Sunday
School room of the church. dent. A luncheon will be served by
Mrs. Lucius French
is the guild presiCircle A at noon in the parish
house and a turkey dinner at 6 p. m. will be sponsored by the
Mothers’ Guild.
Groups, their chairmen, and the
articles which they will sell in=-
clude, Circle A, food, Mrs. Cone Barlow; Circle B, mince meat, fruit
cake and plum pudding, Mrs.
and children’s gifts, Mrs.. Frederick D.
ts and homierhade jellies, Mrs. Malcolm Sewell; ; Sisphinn Mrs. Ruth Glover, acting chairman;
Leland Kirkpatrick; Choir Guild, home-
handkerchiefs and sachets, Circle F. potted plants, Mrs.
made candy and magazine subscriptions,
E. A. S. S. Society, dress accessories.
Younger Set to Have Parties
MEMBERS elders when it _that their éngagement ‘time as those of their parents. The Euvola Club's dance
Andy Hanson's Orchestra, no will play for the dance. other officers of the club, gast and Nancy Jefferson.
Emmet Judson; Circle C, doll clothes
Circle D, white
‘Payne; Circle E,
Mrs. William G. Young, and
of the younger set are not to be outdone by their
comes to holiday festjvities. : books will be just as crowded about Christmas
There are indications
is set for Dec. 28 at the Columbia chell, president, has announced that w filling an engagement in Chicago, Assisting her with arrangements. are the the Misses Margaret Curle, Doris Prender-
Shortridge High School members of the S. O. S. Club will enter-
tain club members hom the vacation and a slumber party Miss Frances.
e from college at a Christmas party early in at Whispering Winds on Dec. 29. Rolles has appointed committee chairmen to assist
anning the annual St. Agnes Academy alum ae dance, to Be Ran i on Dec. 30 at the Indianapolis Athletic. Club. Those
chosen are Miss Keach, reservations;
Indianapolis
Marguerite Bernatz, tickets; Miss Mary Louise Miss Marjorie Boyle, music, and Miss Mary Jo
country clubs also will give holiday parties. Hill-
Club will have a chidren’s Christmas par'y Dec. 22, gre ns the traditional New Year's Eve dance. Adult members
at Meridian Hills will dance Dec. 28.
uled New Year's Eve dances are
H. A. C. Dance
Is Tomorrow
Hoosler ‘Athletic Club officials
for the club SO os Dec. 31. An elaborate floor show also is scheduled for ‘the evening’s entertainmenf. A “Wintertime” dance tomorrow night in the Zephyr Room will fea~ ture Walter Jackson's orchestra.
Lelan hnson and Edward Rose. A ang ae "3-year membership will go to L. W. Smith, who obtained 33 "Others to receive 1-year Trimpe, Charles David Denham, David : John Cerutti, Ervin Sicking, A. "B. Montani and Chauncey L.
Bploe parties will be ned at the H. A. C. Guild meet-~ “and the Boosters’ din-
. 9. Presents ex-
Other clubs which have sched-
the Highland Golf and Country Club and the Indianapolis Country Club.
Personals
Miss Dorothy Holland, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William M. Holland, 4165 Ruckle St. is a member of the music committee for the annual
charity ball ta be held at St. Mary’s College, Notre Dame, tonight.
Mr. and Mrs, John F. Clark, 217 N. Mount St., are visiting in New York, the guests of Mr. and Mrs. J. B Saver, former Indianapolis resients.’ ‘
George R. Folds, Lafayette Road, will spend next week visiting in Lake Forest, Ill, returning for the Traders Point Hunt Ball at the Woodstock Club Dec. 7. . Mr. Folds recently returned from Europe where he was affiliated with ambulance corps in Finland and France.
- Mr. and Mrs. S. E. Arvin and their children, Sherrill Jr., Mary Elizabeth, Don and Jim, will leave tomor=row for a six weeks’ vacation in rida. Before going to Miami they spend afew days in New Or-
{Guests of - Mr. and Mrs. Charles
i from $2 to $15.
8 o 8
| Numerous Parties Planned for St. Joan of Arc Annual Dance
The Women’s: Club of the St. Joan of Are Catholic Church is giving its gnnual dance tonight in the main ballroom of the Columbia Club. Members of the club have planned special parties with families and friends. > Mr. and Mrs. Arthur L. Sundling will have at their table Messrs. and Mesdames Francis William Ryan, Hezron Thomas, Edwin G. White, John A. Welch and Joseph A. Morley of Ft. Wayne. Guests of Mr. and Mrs. John A. Royse will be Mr. and Mrs. Daily M. Hudler of Noblesville and Messrs, and Mesdames E. T. Borchert, Chester Ehrich, Max Graves, William Hunter, Julius Keller, Francis Konstanzer, Malcolm Lucas and Albert J. Vondersaar.
entertain Messrs, and Mesdames John M. Berry, James L. Hyatt, William E. Kennedy and H. R. Mahaffey. With Mr. and Mrs. James E. Curtis will be Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Faust, Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Wagner and Dr. and Mrs. Robert J. Meyers. Mr. and Mis. C. T. McDonald and Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Corey will attend together. A party arranged by Mr. and Mrs. B. X. Gremillion will include Messrs. and Mesdames F. S. Crowder, E. J. Dowd, G. Don Sullivan and J. E.
Messrs. and Mesdames Fred Butler, L. L. Lykins and Herman Metzel and Dr, and Mrs: Earl A. Woods.
McCoy are to be Messrs. and Mesdames M. L. Hayes, Thomas Lenahan and John M. Collins. .Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Kessing’s guest list will include Messrs. and Mesdames William J. Mooney, William J. Coughlin, Fred L. Mahaffey and W. L. Snodgrass’ table will be Hughes, Neal Dow, William L. O’Connell, John Naughton and E. A.
Messrs. and Mesdames Charles DeGraw, Edgar Hauser, Thomas Massoth and Carl N. Reifsteck. With Mr. and Mrs. Roy Lyons will be Messrs. and Mesdames Joseph J. Speaks, George Rice, James P. Scott, Michael J. Carr and W. E. Oakes and Dr. and Mrs. W. Theodore Miller. Mr. and Mrs. Glenn O’Connor will entertain Messrs. and Mesdames T. A. Morris, John H. Baldwin, E.
group attending as the guests of
partition in the center, topped by a handle just like a magazine rack. ... For a bedroom buy a metal wastepaper basket pa
Also in the .electric line are two-toned door chimes which sell for around. $5#and- electric toasters costing anywhere
Assist With Christmas Dance
Members of the St. Joan of Are Women’s Club assisting with arrangements for the organization's fifth annual dance tonight at the Columbia Club include (left to right, lower row) Mrs. A. I. Sundling and Mrs. Francis H. Blackwell; (left to right, middle row) Mrs. J. Edward Faust and Mrs. D. R. Brosndn, and (left to right, upper row) Mrs. Leo S. Murray and Miss Marie O'Hern.
H. Blackwell, |
Mr. and Mrs. John: A. Lawler will ||
Worner. Mr. and Mrs. V. R. Rupp have invited a group made up of|E
Clarence Sweeney. At Mr, and Mrs. | &
Messrs. and .Mesdames Joseph R.|#
Kelley. The party of Mr. and Mrs. | E E. J. Elliott will be made up of
M. Curry and William J, Hanley. A | JH
inted in
=
have made numerous “secondary radios” for dens, bedrooms, kitch-
the chief “program dissenter” in your household. They run from -about $10 to $30. Mother may have mentioned a kitchen clock as one of fhose needed pieces in the kitchen. You can get one at Ayres’ for about $3. It is shaped like a teapot in white, ivory, green or red. It’s self-starting, too. A personalized mattress is one of the newest ideas brought forth for the Christmas s¢ason. Sponsored by the Spring Air Mattress people, here’s the way the peisonalized’ mattress idea works.
" Select the type of mattress you
want to give some member of the family. A gift label Is atattached to the mattress inscribed with your name and the name of lucky person who is receiving it.
with a duplicate satin label to be tucked in the Christmas stocking.
| Conservatory
Open House Is Sunday
. The annual open house! of the
: Arthur Jordan Conservafory of i {Music will be held from 4 to 6 {o'clock -Sunday afternoon in the
Benjamin H. Harrison Home, 1230 N. Delaware St. Guests will include
‘| faculty members, graduates, stu-
i | dents and friends of the school.
Thoburn Brocker, Miss Virginia Swaim and Jack Cassidy. Others having reservations include Messrs. and Mesdames F. W. Auckly, George Clark, G. J. Bramwood, Frank McAvoy, R. J. Schmitt and Frank Lobraico and Frank Neville.
It’s a Gift
fo
Mr. and Mrs. Leo S. Murray will include Messrs. and Mesdames J. P. Daly, O. W. Jenkins, William J. Ash, H. E, Pope, A. T. Poston and Paul Quill and Miss Mary Gilmore. ~ Mr. and Mrs. B. E, Brennan will have at their table Messrs. and
leans,
It she's’ between 15 and 19, beautiful lingerie is sure to make her: happy Christmas morning.
crepe with white embroidered
.| ner.
. Miss Ada Bicking, director of the conservatory, will head the receiving line, including members of the board of trustees and their wives: Messrs. and Mesdames John W. Atherton, Bernard R. Batty, Fermor S. Cannon, H. Foster Clippinger, Emsley W. Johnson and Thomas H. Kaylor and Hilton U. Brown. Others to receive will be Dr. and Mrs. D. S. Robinson and Mr. and Mrs. Gerald V. Carrier. . Special guests will be Fabien Sevitzky, director of the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra, and Mrs. Sevitzky. Others will be new members of the orchestra who are also on the conservatory faculty, Miss
Renato Pacini, Theodore Schettler and Herman Beilfuss and additional new members of the conservatory faculty, Alfred Mirovitch, Mrs. Ruth Pallor, Miss Eileen Poston and Frank Martino, Assisting Mrs, Batty in the dining room will be Mesdames Johnson, Cannon . and Clippinger, who will
| pour tea. Charles Hedley, chairman
of the voice faculty, and Mrs. Hedley, Joseph Lautner, head of the opera department, and Mrs. Lautner of the faculty also will assist at
the reception. ; 1] Club
Mothers” Party Monday
Mothers’ clubs of local fraternity and sorority chapters have planned Christmas meetings for next week. The ALPHA CHI OMEGA MOTHERS’ CLUB at Butler University will have a Christmas party
Monday at the chapter house, 725 W. Hampton Drive. An exchange of Christmas gifts will follow the 12:30 p. m. covered-dish luncheon, to be planned by mothers of pledges. Mrs. Albert C. Hirschman, program chairman, will read a Christ mas story and: will accompany Mrs. Frank J. Billeter, vocalist.
The’ DELTA TAU DELTA MOTHERS’ CLUB of Butler University will meet at the chapter house, 423 W. 46th St., for luncheon Tuesday and will give the December treat to fraternity members. A Christmas program will include songs by Mrs. Frank J. Billeter, accompanied by Mrs. Albert C. Hirschman, and readings by Mrs. J. Clifton Hirschman. : Assisting hostesses to Mrs. Mark Covert, president, will be Mesdames A. W. Buschman, Edward Liljeblad, Ford Wood, R. M. Thornburg, E. C. Smeltzer, Harry Willet and T. E. DeWitt.
Mrs. T. William Engle will entertain the ALPHA SIGMA ALPHA MOTHERS’ CLUB Wednesday at
‘11 o'clock in her home, 184 Middle
Drive, Woodruff Place. A review of “Sister of the Angels” (Elizabeth Goudge) will be given by Mrs. E. M. Burge. :
S. A. I Dinner Is Friday
A dinner at the Propylaeum Tuesday will honor the 29th Founders’ Day of Zeta Chapter, Sigma Alpha Iota, national professional music Sorority. Miss Rosalind Phillips will preside at thie pyogram following'the 6:15 o'clock dinner. Guests at the speakers’ table, in
‘|addition to Miss Phillips, will be
Mrs. Robert White Blake, alumnae president; Mrs, Arthur Taylor, patroness president; Miss Ada Bicking, director of the Arthur Jordan Conservatory of Music; Mrs. Harold Larsh, Zeta province presideht; Mrs. Lois Sciacchitano, vice president; Mesdames Rufh Devin, Arthur Monninger and J. Russell Paxton, the Misses Juanita Copple, Mary Louise Houk and Lillian Starost. Pledge services will follow the dinMiss Mary Zook and Miss Helen Starost have planned a pro-
ist; Mrs. William A. Devin, soprano,
ryn McCain, violinist, Mrs. Sciacchitano, cellist, and Mrs. Paxton, pianist. Miss Helen {Starost and Mrs. Monninger will be accompanists.
Egger are in charge of decorations and Miss Maxine Shrader of reser-
vations. Table |ostesdes will be Mesdames or,
This smart pajama set, in soft [Roy
blue
BE. P. Brennan, OC. R.|
‘The
edging, includes a Wraparound |M
which all the family like tc listen to the same program. So they
ens, playrooms, etc. Buy one for
Lynne Wainwright, Clyde Miller,
gram by Miss Lillian Starost, violin- || and a trio composed of Miss Kath-|
Miss Helen Flaig and Miss Martha |
There is also a Christmas folder
To Be Guests at
Church. | Members of the bridal party and the families will be guests. Byron Beasley will come from the University of Michigan, George Diener Jr. from Louisville, Ky., and Cadet George J. Mayer II from Culver Military Academy to act as ushers at the wedding. : : Mrs. Robert Busard and her sons, Tom and Max, will come from Muskegon. Max also is to be an usher as are Charles Bailey and William Hart of Indianapolis, and Don MacDonald, Muskegon, brother of the bride. Philip Thompson, the bridegroom’s brother, is to be best man. Other guests will be Miss Mary Lou Over, maid of. honor, and Miss Mary Margaret Mayer, cousin of the bride and junior bridesmaid. Mr. and Mrs. Walter R. Mayer, uncle and aunt of the bride, also will attend the dinner.
” ” #
Miss Martha Jane Miller and Ralph L. Cleveland Jr., whose marriage will be Dec. 7 in McKee Chapel of Tabernacle Presbyterian Church, will be honor guests at a dinner given tomorrow evening by Miss Betty Henry and William King at Miss Henry’s home, 4417 Guilford Ave. Guests with the betrothed couple will be Misses Leona Hartfelter,
Shirley Deering, Evelyn Pyle and Virginia Grabbe, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Wey, Eugene Johnson, John Winkle, Dudley and William Jordan and Dr. Willard McDonald. : a % »
Honor guest at a linen shower to’ be given Tuesday by Miss Hilda Brink will be Miss Mary Ellen Ward who is to be married to Dr. Hugh Wren, Detroit, Dec. 7 at Covington, Ind. Guests will be members of Beta Chapter, Rho Delta Sorority. -
Betty J. MacDonald and Fiance
dicator to eliminate the guesswork vegetable trays. Every home should have a fire extinguisher. A novel one is a pistol grip kind, You merely aim at the
| fire, pull the trigger and the fire is
shot out. : Not so novel but “extras” which
add to the comfort of the home
are pillows. The designs, sizes and prices are varied enough fo suit any taste and any pocketbcok. For those who do entertaining, buy a set of six crystal highball
. glasses with horses’ heads etched in ' the glass at Mayer's for $4. . . . The Dat-O-Clock would be a wel-
come gift for a desk at home as well as in the office. It has the clock at the top with the day of the week and date below,
about defrosting and glass topped
It is a 30-hour movement. It costs.$5. Nice .
for the desk in the library would be a letter opener with a magnifying
lens handle.
It comes at $3.50. The leather case is .saddle-stitched
.and you may buy it in brown, pigskin or red, blue or green leather,
To help keep the house tidy, buy
a silent ‘butler. These decorative
ash collectors keep your hands unspoiled. They come in fine quality silver plate with chased crests and solid walnut handles at $4 and $5
at Mayer's.
Your baby’s shoes can be preserved in bronze for classic
book-ends at around $10 with the shoes in solid bronze.
Dinner Tonight;
Martha Jane Miller Feted
A bridal dinner appears in today’s pre-nuptial news. Mrs. C. P. MacDonald of Muskegon, Mich., will entertain tonight at the Indianapolis Athletic Club with a bridal dinner for her daughter, Betty Jean, and Richard David Thompson, son of Mrs. R. W. Thompson, whose marriage will be at 4:30 p. m.
Rabbi Doppelt To Speak Here
Rabhi Frederick A. Doppelt of Ft. Wayne will be guest speaker at the Temple Sisterhood meeting Monday, Dec. 9, at 2:15 p. m. in the Temple, 10th and Delaware Sts. He will discuss “The Psychological Aspect of the German Mind.” z A native of Austria, Rabbi Doppelt received his ‘education at Karlsbad and. later in the United States after his family moved to Chicago in 1919. Since leaving the Hebrew Union College in Cinecinnati, he has served as rabbi in Saginaw, Mich,; Elmira, N. Y., and at the Achduth Vesholom Synagog in Ft. Wayne since September. He is a student of Jewish thought and is now completing a book on Chasi~ dic lore. The program at the Temple also will include songs by Mrs. Robert Orbison, soprano, accompanied by Mrs. P. M. Rybolt.. Mrs. Harold I. Platt will preside.
New Tints for Shades
If you are considering new window shades this winter, there are three attractive new colors in cloth shades that will give your rooms a warm, translucent light—peachskin,
‘|leghorn and parchment,
To Use Ground Herbs
When using ground herbs to flavor soups and stews, tie them into a small cheesecloth bag. Remove from the kettle when sufficient flavor has been absorbed from the herbs.
"LOOK! 800 Fashion Successes!
Hospital Guild .
To Give Party For Children
The monthly meeting of the St, : Vincent Hospital Guild will be held from 10 a. m. to 4 p. m. Monday in the nurses’ honfe with Mrs. C. 8. Drake as officer of the day assisted by Mrs. Kevin Brosnan and Mrs, William K. McGowan. . Mrs. Harvey Belton will be lunche : eon hostess. Her assistants will be Mesdames Bernard J. Larkin, Henry F. Nolting, Timothy P. Sexton, Maurice V. Kahler, Walter Briening, Ralph Lochry and O. W. Sicks.
The annual Christmas party for underprivileged children will be give en Monday, Dec. 23. Mrs, J. Here bert Hartman and Mrs. C. N. Reif« steck are co-chairmen of the committee which has been working since
10c¢t. 1 making gifts and decorations
for the party.
Potter School Guild to Meet
- The Theodore Potter Fresh Air School Guild will meet at the school, 1600 E. 10th St, at 10:30 ° a. m. next Friday. ;
Mrs. Fred Baase recently” was _
elected guild president. Other offi- -
cers are Mrs. Clifford Paschall, vice - president; Mrs. F. L. Tucker, sec= retary, and Mrs. Paul Russe, {reas urer. 3 Committees appointed by Mrs. Baase. include Mrs. Otto Augostat, ’ chairman, Mesdames Frank Wil= liams, J. PF, Malloy, Paul Steinhilber, and Clyde Baker, membership; Mrs, ' Paschall and Mrs. William Johnston, ways and means; Mrs. J. C., Kelly, chairman; Mrs. W. Steinman and Mrs. J. A. Meister, hopitality; Mrs. Elmer Meyerrose and , Mrs. Fred Hickman, telephone, and Mrs, Ira M. Holmes and Mrs. Clyde Montgomery, publicity.
A AERA SES. -
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for JUNIORS MISSES ‘WOMEN
te E TRARY WW.
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