Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 December 1940 — Page 4

"PAGE 1.

Assist Wi

This trio of Notre Dame University seniors are assisting with plans for the Christmas dance of the Indianapolis Notre Dame Club Thursday night at the Indianapolis Athletic Club. Shown in one of the. cooms of Sorin Hall on the Notre Dame campus are Bill Carson, George O'Connor and Dick Everroad.

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Parties Arranged to Attend Notre Dame Club’s Dance Thursday Night at I. A. C.

Several parties have been planned to attend the Christmas formal dance which® the Indianapolis Notre Dame Club. will give Thursday night at the Indianapolis Athletic Club.

Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Umphrey

home before the dance, honoring Miss Mary Jeanne Smith, daughter of Mrs. J. Albert Smith, and Robert M. Langsenkamp, son of Mr. and

Mrs. Henry Langsenkamp, who will be married Jan. 4. Guests with the betrothed couple will include Mr. and Mrs. Robert ‘Kirby and Mr. and Mrs. J. Albert Smith Jr. August Bondi, president of the local alumni club, and Mrs. Bondi will be hosts at a party including Messrs. ‘and Mesdames William Schnorr, Oscar Polster, William Scoglund, Miss Bernadette Scoglund, Eugene Farrell and Elbert Mahoney. Included in another group will be Richard O’Connor, the dance general chairman; the Misses Helen Koesters, Doris Tacke, Mary Ellen Kennedy, Theodosia Baltz, Mary Ellen Sweeney, Mary Jo Carton, Louise Smith and William Kennedy Jr., Joseph Gillespie, Robert Fitzgerald, John Courtney, George O'Connor and Thomas Gillespie Jr.

Mr. and Mrs. John F: Carr will entertain with an informal party at home before the dance. Guests will be Miss Mary Ann Hagerty, James Boehning, Mr. and Mrs. John N Segerson, Mr. and Mrs. Norbert E Smith, Miss Peggy Carr and John Boyle, Miss Aletha Hayden and Robert Erskine, Miss Marian Loughery _ and Michael J. Carr and Miss Mary - Katherine Theis and Richard R. Everroad. Sponsors for the dance, who will make up a party, include Messrs. and Mesdames Thomas Gillespie, Donald Potter, Ray S. Everroad, William Hurrle, Francis Konstanzer and John McKay. At one table will be Miss Margery Hall and Frank Habig, Miss Peggy Sweeney and Edward Loughery, Miss Betty Knowles and John Krieg and Miss Jerry Ramsey and Richard Templeton. At another table will be Miss Louise O'Hara and Giles Kelley, Miss Jean Devine and John Gavin, Miss Patricia Stark and James Rocap, Miss Mary Ann Kibler and Bernard Fox and Mr. and Mrs. E. Fred Theis Jr. " At midnight the students: and —_ alumni will wire their greetings to \John McNamara, chairman of Speeial arrangements for the dance, who is vacationing in Florida.

First Lady Aids Paralysis Drive

Times Special ~~ WASHINGTON, Dec. 24—Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt will give the First Party in the chain of Home Parties for the benefit of the 1941 “Fight Infantile Paralysis” campaign at the White House on Jan. 14, it was announced today.

The First Lady will give the first}

party as a part of her annual

‘women’s meeting in connection with the “Fight Infantile Paralysis” drive, which is-attended by women workers from all the states. Special table d-corations with their motif of “Helping Hands for the Helpless,” which have been designed by Lester Gaba, New York designer, for use at all the Home Parties, will be used by Mrs. Roosevelt. | ’ “The new plan seems to offer an excellent opportunity to women who are unable to leave their homes for any length of time to participate in this drive,” Mrs. Roosevelt wrote Keith - Morgan, National Chairman of the Committee for the Celebration of the President’s Birthday. “It is my hope that thousands of these parties will increase substantially the funds which will be available next year for fighting infantile paralysis.” After Mrs. Roosevelt's party on Jan. 14, a number of First Parties by the First Ladies of the various states have been planned, to be followed by women’s club parties, Parent-Teacher Association, parties "Girl Scout, Camp Fire Girls, Ladies Aid Societies’ and other group parties. Hundreds of small teas, luncheons, bridges and children’s parties are scheduled for the two weeks before January 30, when the annual celebrations of the President’s Birthday will be held climaxing the campaign. : Mrs. Roosevelt's party will be a tea following the meeting of the women’s group in the Diplomatic Reception Room of the White * House, part of which will be broadcast on a national hook-up. The table, set’ up in the State Dining Room, will follow Mr. Gaba's design with a blue crepe paper cloth, with red and white striped side skirt, red and white crepe paper roses: arranged in a cone shape, red and white candles, and gold paper splace-cards in the shape of Helping Hands for the Helpless. Instructions for making all -the decorations are

service at his home in Woodruff

Colorado Ave., wear .a burgundy velvet gown with

gardenias and white roses.

matching off-the-face hat, made with a shoulder length veil, and a

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will give a cocktail party at their

Ruth L. Welch Becomes Bride

A wedding breakfast at the Hotel Antlers. was. to follow the noon wedding ceremony today uniting Miss Ruth Louise Welch and William Norton Shepherd of Chicago. Bishop H. H. Fout was to read the

Place, which was to be decorated with Christmas greenery. Mrs. John F.. Welch, 1125 N. was to give her daughter in marriage. She was to black accessories and a corsage of

The bride’s gown was to be of slate blue. and was to be worn with a

corsage of camellias and bouvardia. Her sister, Miss Mildred Burns, was to be her only attendant and was to wear a blue velvet dress with black accessories and a corsage of gardenias and roses. Following the ‘breakfast, Mr. and Mrs. Shepherd were to leave by

they will spend the winter. The bride will travel in a beige wool dress: and a mink coat, worn with brown accessories.

Bessie Gipson To Be Wed

At a wedding ceremony in St. John’s - Evangelical and Reformed Church at 8:30 o'clock tonight, Mrs. Bessie Mae Gipson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Schilling, will become the bride of Waldo Lyons. Mr. Lyons is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Garland Lyons, 855 S. Noble St. The Rev. Ernst Piepenbrok will read the service! before an “altar lighted with candles and surrounded with Christmas greenery. Before the ceremony, Miss Amy Morrison, organist, will play Christmas carols and during the service, “I Love You Truly.” Mrs. Maurice Duke, to be her sister’s only attendant, will wear a blue gown with a matching jacket and yellow roses in her hair. Her bouquet of yellow roses will be tied with a silver ribbon. Best man at bse ceremony will be Harry Gipson T. The bride will wéar a floor length white silk jersey gown, made with a square neckline and short puffed sleeves. Her headdress will be a snood held across the forehead with red roses. The bridal bouquet will be of red roses, tied with a wide red satin ribbon. . . Following the ceremony, a reception will be held at the home of the bride’s parents, 2114 Ringgold Ave. After Jan. 1, Mr. and Mrs. Lyons will be at home at 1441 Shelby St. Out of town guests at the wedding will be Mr. and Mrs. R. J. Miller of yton, O.,, and Mr. and Mrs. Oakley Brown of Mooresville.

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Mrs. Porter Gives Party

Mrs. Charles Porter, North Salem, was to entertain today at the Hecathorne Tearoom .with a luncheon honoring Miss Margaret Jane Hirschman and Mrs. Robert Ellsworth, Rochester, N. Y. Miss Hirschman, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Albert C. Hirschman, will be married Jan. 1 to William St. John Woolley, Richmond, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harry H. Woolley, Richmond. Mrs. Ellsworth is spending the Christmas holidays with her mother, Mrs. Ada. Crawford. Mrs. Crawford and Mrs. Hirschman were to be among the guests at today’s party. Mr. and Mrs. Hirschman and Miss Hirschman will go to Richmond tomorrow to spend Christmas Day with the Woolleys.

Christena-Schilling Service Performed

Mrs. Louise Pursell Schilling and Kenneth V. Christena, son of Mr. and Mrs. William C. Christena, were married last night. e ceremony was performed by the Rev. C. A. McPheeters at the North Methodist Church. A small reception at the home of the bridegroom’s parents followed. Mr; and Mrs. Christena are to be

motor for Miami Beach, Fla., where|

Craig-Delgado Rite Tonight Miss Evelyn Claire Delgado will become the bride of Milton Earl Craig, son of Mr. and Mrs. M. E. Craig, ina ceremony to be read at 7:30 p. m. tonight in the Fairview Presbyterian Church. Miss Delgado is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Everard G. Delgado, 5101 Kenwood Ave. : The Rev. Virgil D. Ragan will read - the service before an altar decorated with palms, ferns and candelabra. Mrs. Frank T. Edenharter, organist, will play a program of - bridal airs, including “Ave Maria” and “I Love You Truly.” Mr. Delgado will give his daughter in marriage. The bridal gown will be of ivory satin, fashioned on princess lines with long sleeves and a lace yoke. The bride's fingertip veil will fall from a halo of seed pearls. She will carry a shower bouquet of white roses. The matron of honor, Mrs. Timothy Torian, Dayton, QO. and the bridesmaid, Miss Mary Baker, will have dresses ststed on princess lines of turquoise” blue satin. The gowns will have sweetheart necklines and puff sleeves. bouquets of Talisman roses. Sandra Burget, the flower girl, will have a blue taffet dress copied on the same lines as the two attendants. Her bouquet will be a miniature replica of the matron of honor and bridesmaid’s. Paul Burget will be the ring bearer. Mr. Torian will be Mr. Craig's best man. Ushers will be the bride-groom-to-be’s two brothers, Harold and Charles, and his brother-in-law, Ray Synder. A reception at the Indianapolis Athletic Club will follow the ceremony. The couple will leave on a short wedding trip and will be at home on their return at 4401 College Ave. ; Miss Delgado attended Indiana University and was graduated from Butler University. She is a member of Chi Omega Sorority. Mr. Craig attended Butler and is attending the Indiana Law School.

Entertain Children At Day Nursery

Alpha Chapter of Omega Nu Tau

dergarten group of the Indianapolis Day Nursery this afternoon with a Christmas party at which the children will receive toys, candy and oranges. / The philanthropic committee for the coming year, Mrs. Dorothy Seifert, chairman, assisted by Mrs. Edward J. Erler, Mrs. Violet Burkhead and Miss Helen Sinclair, was to be in charge. One of the sorority’s philanthropic projects is the maintenance of the hospital room at the nursery.

ao Caldwell To ertain Club The Zetathea Club will meet at the home of Mrs. A. C. Caldwell, 312 Wallace St., Thursday, for the annual Christmas party. The program will include a paper on “Robert Louis Stevenson,” by Mrs. E. T. Wall.

‘Hostesses wil! be officers of the club: , Mrs. J. W. Knipp, president; Mrs. Charles A. Samnis, vice president; Mrs. Mary Lumley, recording secretary; Mrs. H. D. Merrifield,

— THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Lyman B. Whitaker. From DePauw University for the holidays and Betty recently re-

They will cvarry|

Sorority was to entertain the kin-|

Society—

Misses Alice Boozer -and Cynthia Test Entertain Friends at Woodstock

IF SHORTRIDGE OR TUDOR HALL teachers or Eastern college professors assigned any study projects to be completed during Christmas vacation, such assignments are likely to go unheeded by Indianapolis young women. For their pupils have substituted luncheons for classes and parties for the scholastic midnight oil burning. : | - Among the luncheons is one given today at the Woodstock Country Club by Miss Alice Boozer and Miss Cynthia Test. . Their

guests were to include the Misses Virginia ‘Evans, Virginia Brown,

Ann Sayles, Eleanor Appel, Barbara Ball, Barbara Hill, Eva Taggart, Peggy and Nancy Lockwood, Nancy Wohlgemuth, Georgiana Dedaker, Carol Noel, Beth Anderson; Marilyn Mulvihill, Joan Haywood, Martha Lois Adams, Mary Johnson, Phyllis Behringer, Dickson Frenzel, Selena Alig, Anne Amelia Marmon, Ethel Janet White, Letitia Sinclair and Martha Rupel, :

Townsend Eaglesfield's Guests Listed

MISS TOWNSEND EAGLESFIELD has made arrangements for a Thursday luncheon at Woodstock in honor of several friends in Indianapolis for the holidays. They are Miss Adams, who is on vacation from St. Catherine’s School in Richmond, Va.; Miss Sayles, who attends the Ogentz School, and Miss Frenzel, who is

‘a student at Westover School.

Other guests of Miss: Eaglesfield will be the Misses Johnson, Behringer, Brown, Taggart, Sallie Eaglesfield, Ava Saunders Davis, Mary Elizabeth Fletcher, Heberton Weiss, Sue Canny, Virginia Ogle and Jane Haueisen. |

Misses Whitaker to Give Tea

THE MISSES Marilyn and Betty Whitaker will entertain a

group of their friends at a tea Sunday afternoon at the home of Marilyn is home

turned from New York where she has been living.

Helen Clever to Have Open House .

A CHRISTMAS OPEN HOUSE will be held tomorrow by Miss Helen Clever at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Clever. Guests may call from 3 to 6 o’clock. There are no invitations. Assisting Miss Clever at the tea table will be Miss Gretty Lou Sielken and Miss Charlene Heard. . [=

Scribblers Club to Lunch Friday

THE SCRIBBLERS CLUB at Shortridge is planning a luncheon in Block’s Tearoom Friday for graduate members. Among the guests will be the Misses Ann Browning, Norma Hyman, Barbara Jones, Barbara Masters, Elsie Ann Locke and Marjorie Geupel, who are 1940 graduates. Recent initiates in charge of the luncheon are the Misses Jane Williams, Susan Countryman, Jane Shook, Patricia Bishop, Kay Nolan and Jean Hixon. The Misses Georgeanna Madden, Betty Jane Mitchell, Helen Cusack, Maryanne Zinn and Carolyn Jones are active members of the club.

Out-of-Town Guests to Attend Show

OUT-OF-TOWN PERSONS will be in the audience for the University of Pennsylvania Mask and Wig Club's show, “High As a Kite” to be presented Friday night at the Murat Theater. A ball and supper at.the Indianapolis Athletic Cluh will conclude the evening’s entertainment. Looe Mr. and Mrs. George W. Jaqua and their daughter, Marjorie, will come from their home in Winchester to attend the show and dance. Robert Buck, a Penn student, will come from his home in Chicago to see the show. Howard S. Hatfield of Sioux City, Ia. will have a party as will Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Kemp, Frankfort; Walter Davis, Richmond; Charles M. Jackson, Kokomo; Albert Schumaker Jr., Columbus, Ind.; J. K. White, Noblesville; Mr. and Mrs. Lothair Teetor and Mr. and Mrs. George Keagy, Hagerstown; Gene Guttman, Noblesville, and James Wingate, Muncie. ‘

Irving M. Fauvres to Entertain . William P. Shade II, manager of the show in 1938 when the club last appeared here, will come from his home: in Decatur, Ill, with a party. One of the box parties will include Mrs. Conrad Ruckelshaus, who is chairman of the luncheon the alumni will give for the cast Friday noon at the Indianapolis Athletic Club. Others with Mrs. Ruckelshaus will be Mr. -Ruckelshaus, Mr. and Mrs. Lyman S. Ayres and Mr. and Mrs. David P. Williams. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Greathouse will attend in a box with Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Ruckelshaus and Mr. and Mrs. Joseph E. Cain. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Binford will atteRd with Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Behringer and Mr. and Mrs. Arthur T. Cox. With Mr. and Mrs. Irving M. Fauvre will be Mr. and Mrs. William H. Wemmer and Mr. and Mrs. David L. Stone Jr. . Among the college students to attend will be Miss Susanne Clark, DePauw University, who will attend with a classmate, Robert Kimbrough, Loganspert, also a DePauw student. In the box party of Samuel R. Harrell, a university trustee, and Mrs. Harrell will be Messrs. and Mesdames Harry V. Wade, Booth T. Jameson and Russell W. McDermott; J. Ferguson Mohr, Mask and Wig club president, and others connected with the show. : Among others arranging for groups to attend the show are Messrs. and Mesdames Albert J. Beveridge Jr., Benjamin D. Hitz, Thomas D. Sheerin, Wilson- Motherhead, Volney M. Brown, H. Rogers Mallory, Malcolm Moore, J. Russell Townsend Jr., Maurice T. Harrell, George E. Home, Royer K. Brown, Frank Harlem, A. S. Mendenhall, J. L. Hyatt, J. Ottis Adams, George Appel, Richard Kiger, Raymond Gregg, Roy Kohl, John B. Lookabill, Scot Clifford, John Eaglesfield, Dudley Gallahue, C. S. Wheeler, A. J. Wohlgemuth, H. A. O. Speers, Theodore B. Griffith, William E. Mick and Ben Rau. Other hosts will be Russell Langsenkamp; Robert Stafford, Frank B. Shields, Dr. Carleton B:. McCulloch, Otto Janus Jr., David Baker, Kenneth Woolling Jr., George Woolling, William Hall Jr., Arthur J. Borinstein, George Kuhn Jr., George Smith Jr., W. Bruce Johnston, John E. Messick Jr. and John S. Ross, who appeared in the Mask and Wig club show in 1938. One of the parties to be given before the play will be that of Miss Sallie Baglesfield, whose dinner guest will be the Misses iHeberton Weiss, Ethel Janet White and Anne Amelia Marmon, Charles Bookwalter, John Miller, William Fisher and Scott Moxley.

Give Tea Mr. and Mrs. Carl Berdel entertained recently with a Christmas tea for the volunteer roll call Red Cross workers in Perry Twp. Mrs. Charles A. Huff, the Marion County Red Cross chairman, and Miss Clara Williams were honor guests. Mrs. Robert Wilson, co-chairman of the work in Perry Twp., assisted the hostess. .

Story Club to Meet

The Story-a-Month Club will hold its regular meeting Thursday at 8 p. m. in the World War Memorial. Mrs. Paul Masteller, president,

corresponding secretary; Mrs. Caldwell, treasurer, and Mrs. E.[C. Matthews, historian. \

By MRS. GAYNOR MADDOX Times Special Writer

NEW YORK, Dec. 24.—At holiday time this year, more than ever,

‘round the flowing punch bowl with a defiant atfitude toward the apostles of gloom. So Lawton Mackall, one of America’s outstanding encouragers of better living and laughing, author of the Restaurateur’s Handbook and member of the Board of Higher Education of New York. “It’s Christmas and it will soon be New Year's,” he says. “We need Mr. Kris Kringle more thon ever. Let’s be bountiful in our good will and toast the future of America.” Well, what kind of eggnog shall we have for our patriotic toast— and generally holiday hospitality? Young Pedro Domecq, dashing visitor toe America and a lover of good parties,. suggests this recipe from his illustrious family grape vines: : One large bottle Spanish brandy, 1 jigger Jamaica rum, 1 quart hot milk, 1 dozen fresh eggs, 1 pint

Beat eggs with sugar

‘ given ‘in a booklet now being distributed by the Committee, »

at- home at 3330 N. Meridian St. after Jan. 1. !

sugar syrup. syrup and a little hay ilk; add remaining

has announced that visitors are wel-

come.

Americans-so-inclined may gather

milk. Add brandy and rum. Pour into punch bowl. Arrange punch

cups on tray around bowl. Put a lump of sugar in each cup; sprinkle sugar with orange peel and additional brandy. Ignite. When flame dies, ladle eggnog into cups. In Spain, they often add grapes which have been preserved in anisette, so if you want the authentic flavor of this festive bowl, add a dash of anisette.

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JEANNE OWEN, who plans all the tastings for the Wine and Food Society, says she thinks a one-liquor]

eggnog 1s best for waking up the

Camp Illahee Rite Observed Tonight

Last summer at Camp Illahee, Brevard, N. C., nine Indianapolis girls received candles on the last day of camp, to be lighted on Christmas Eve while other Camp Illahee girls over the country also were lighting their candles. These girls will meet tonight at the home of the Misses Jane and Margaret Curle' for tue candle-

lighting ceremony. Their guests will be the Misses Janet Sorenson, Margaret Noble, Barbara Evans, Elizabeth Thompson, Betsy Goodwin,

Christmas merry for children at

eer “TUTSDAY, TEC Contribute Jelly to Indianapolis

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Day Nursery

The Ko Wa Ki group of Camp Fire Girls of the Wallace Street Presbyterian Church is helping to make

e Indianapolis Day Nursery by presenting enw a collection of jelly,

Frieda Aldrich To Be Wed

The Rev. E, E. Aldrich of the Roberts Park Methodist Church will read the marriage service tonight at 8:30 o'clock uniting his niece, Miss Frieda Aldrich, and Robert T. Win-

chester of Louisville. The bride is the daughter of James B. Aldrich of near Indianapolis and Mr. Winchester is the son of Claude T. Winchester, Franklin. : Christmas greenery and yellow and white chrysanthemums will decorate the home of Mr. and Mrs. J.C. McColgin, 511 E, 22d St., uncle and aunt of the bride, for the ceremony. The living room will be lighted with two seven-branch candelabra. Bridal music will be played by Miss Rena’ Carver of Martinsville and Mr. and Mrs. L. A. McColgin. Miss Aldrich will wear a light blue wool street-length dress with a strand of pearls and black accessories. Her corsage will be of gardenias. There will be no attendants. At a reception following the ceremony, Mrs. Marjorie McColgin, Miss Ruth McCoglin and Miss Betty Aldrich will assist in serving. ? Mr. and Mrs, Winchester wil leave on a short wedding trip and will be at home in Indianapolis after the first of the year.

Phi Kappa Phi Lasts Pledges

Miss Faye Cantrall, secretary of Phi Kappa Phi, national scholastic honorary, has announced that 14 Butler University seniors have been elected to the honorary organization for the first semester of the 1940-41 school year. Seniors from Indianapolis listed on the Phi Kappa Phi roll are the Misses Mary Bell, Jeanette Thomas Carey, Danna Jean Lansley, Jean Irene Lentz, Rose Marie Myers, Jane Louise Riggs, Doris Jean Rushton, Tula Smyrnis, Thomas Charles O’Nan and George Boyd Wilson. Out of town students elected to the honor society are Miss Helen Ruth Caster, Greentown; John Burdette Charles, Orland; Miss Margaret Jean Reed, Logansport, and Miss Helen Wiener, Perth Amboy, N. J. » 2 8

Butler University has five coeds that are spending their Christmas holiday vacation happy /in the knowledge that as young dietetic majors in the home economics department they are thoroughly capable of preparing quantities of food for large numbers of people, serving banquets and merchandising food for the cafeteria customer. The Misses Betty Poppenseaker, Dorothy Marone and Joan Silberman, Indianapolis; Jean Reed, Logansport, and Frances Collins, Winamae, received actual practice in these fundamentals of dietetics in a Quantity Cookery class under the direction of Miss Sina Faye Fowler of the Butler home economics department faculty. ; The laboratory part of the course was completed last Friday preceding the start of the Christmas vacation period. One of the requirements of the course which is required of all coeds expecting to be dietitians consist of preparing food in quantities to feed from 50-100 people. e Campus Club, university cafeteria, v.as used as a laboratory during the fall term with the five young dietitians working for three class hours per day for a seven week period. 4

Entertains Pupils The Parent-Teacher Association of School 38 served a turkey dinner recently for the pupils. DeWitt S. Morgan, superintendent of schools,

Myra Jean and Mary Jane Briggs.

A

ancient Christmas spirit. This is her favorite recipe and recently, at

a tasting, it took first prize for popularity with gourmets. Yes, including Lawton Mackall. One dozen fresh eggs, 1 quart rich milk, 1 bottle medium rum, 1 quart cream. Separate yolks from whites, Beat yolks until fluffy and light. Place in bowl and place that bowl in a larger bowl filled with cracked ice. Add granulated sugar to taste. When eggs are very cold, stir in the milk, beating as you do. Then slowly add the bottle of rum. Stir

in unbedten heavy cream. Beat egg whites pg and fold into bowl. Serve|

was a guest.

These Eggnog Reciios Will Add to Holiday Hospitality «

with freshly grated nutmeg. Be sure this is served very cold.

LOOKING for a holiday punch? Try this West - Indian for ten friends. Five oranges, 3 lemons, 1 small bottle maraschino cherries, 1 wine glass apricot brandy, 1 small can unsweetened pineapple juice, 3% cup sugar, 1 bottle Cuban rum, 1 quart sparkling water. Squeeze 4 oranges and 2 lemons. Add juice from cherries; add wine glass of apricot brandy; add bottle of rum; add pineapple juice. Sweeten to taste. Prepare all this one hour before using. Cut up 1 orange, 1 lemon and cherries and steep them in the mixture, which should get very cold. Just before serving, pour the mixture over a large cake of ice in punch bowl. Add cold sparkling water at the very last moment. One last sit-by-the-fire-and-talk-of-old times thought: hot buttered rum. Serve in china or can mug, DIN mig Sb holies water. Float Or

Pewter | stands and clothes

What to do?

retary of the Treasury. “Folding money” is something no one objects to receiving. Tucked into one of the clever little rash folders offered by the stationery shops, it ranks right up at the top of favorite gifts. Drop into Stewart's and look at the assortment of money folders and envelopes they have at 5 cents. If the giftee lives ai a distance, it is still not too late to send cash gifts. The -telegraph companies stand ready to send rnoney orders along with a wired holiday greeting.

And there are always flowers. Ahything from a gay little boutonniere to a sheaf of expensive, longstemmed roses or a potted plant. Arriving as late as Christmas morning they do not bear the stjgma of “last minute” consideration by the sender. They, too, may be ordered by wire for those whip live at a distance. : : ; Gift certificates are @nother lastminute life saver. Buy them in any denomination at your favorite store. These are an admirable solution of the gift problem for those “difficult to please” individuals because they permit the receiver tp do his—or her—own choosing of gifts. Have. you ever been caught emptyhanded by someone wlio arrived at the last minute bearing a gift for you? One canny soul in town pre-

by stocking up with several cartons of .cigarets swathed in bright Christmas wrappings. When the unexpected giver arrives, he, or she, receives a gift just as if it had “been planned that way.” The same thing might be done with candy,- which is “ace high” in

the gift field. © randmother in town counts that Christmas poor indeed that does not bring her an

assortment old-fashioned, hard stick candy along with her other gifts. From stick candy the choice ranges on up to. the luxurious, multi- pound boxes ¢f expensive chocolates and bon bons. Novelty

Block's, for instance, has a satincovered box made in the shape of a Christmas tree. There also are boxes with Santa Clauses descending chimneys and boxes which may be used, when empty, to hold toilet articles. «i 2 8 = FOR A MAN, nothing could be more acceptable than one of the

miniature Dobbs hats in a little

& Co. packs a gift certificate. The prices are $5 and up. | Or how about a card entitling the

meats? Ayres’ will simplify the lastminute gift difficulty with these cards, including some for the famous Ayres’ “beauty baths,” priced according to the numker of treatments. { a Does your “last minute” list include a party-goer who would like to brush up on the latest dance steps? Then why not give a course of dance lessons? Black’s Dance Studio will arrange either class or private instruction for the recipient. Other “last minute” ideas inciude phonograph records. Single records or complete albums—ior “swing” fans or “serious” music lovers. And books, too, fit into the “last minute” category. i : And there’s food. Fruit cakes or whopping big tins of assorted cookies or hampers of fruit or tasty and unusual staples, including jams, jel= lies, relishes and even cheeses. Stocks of toilet articles, too, never leted for the last minute r. Perfumes g&nd kits of beauty aids for women; shaving bowls and lotions and tales, for men. All just as acceptable as if they had been purchased last August. For the last minute shopper himself, we can think of nothing better than a hot foot bath and some massage cream for the¢ pedal .extremities. .

seem

To Lengthen Blanket If you have a hlankef that is too short to tuck in well at the bottom, make a deep fold of some strong cotton material—sateeri would be suitable—at the bottom of each end of a double blanket. Use the cotton folds to tuck in at the bottom, leaving the warm blanket to spread over the bed.

A S—

Guestroom Clothes Closet

Your house guest will appreciate a well-appointed clothes closet in the guest room. Tha thoughtful hostess provides ample well-shaped clothes hangers, a shoe rack, hat is a ’

pares for just such an emergency|-

packages add eye-appesl to the gift. |

Dobbs hat box with whith L. Strauss |,

holder to a series of beauty treat-|

Phyltis Deltou (left) and Barbara Steel are shown off ering a jar to Kenneth. Gift Certificates and Flowers, Candy and Money Are Answers For Last Minute Shoppers

YES, YOU READ the “shop early” admonitions, and your intentions ¢ were of the best—but here Christmas Eve has “snuck” up on you an® there still remains a string of names to be crossed off your shopping listy

Well, one of.the most acceptable of gifts is an engraving of an exe President on a crisp oblong of paper signed by the

Dinners Will Be ,

At Propylaecum |

Several family dinners will be served ‘tomorrow at the Propylae eum. Among them is one at which

ess. Her guests will include Mayor

Reginald H. Sullivan, Dr. Thomas L. Sullivan, Miss Deborah Moore,

Mrs. John Hollett Jr. and Mr. and Mrs. Charles O. Britton. After dine ner, the party will go to the aparte

ties about a Christmas tree. Miss Gertrude Taggart has made reservations for a large family party. Others who have made reservations include the Fannie Belle Maxwell, Cerene Ohr,’ Grace L. Brown and the Mesdames Edson T. Wood, LeRoy Kahler, R.

Bibler and E. H. Kemper McComb.

Pattegn

AE. dO RR \ 4

PATTERN 8633

If you want to make your schools girl daughter very happy—and ine cidentally save yourself some time and money—send for this pattern

The housecoat that you see in the

small picture and the school frock the little leaner-against-the-fence has on, are cut and detailed identic= © ally alike, except that the housecoat is cut long, way down to her toes. Both button down the front so that: they're easy to put on and to iron, % A tailored little pattern like this (8633) is of course very easy to make—anybody can do it! : For the frocks you make like this, choose . challis, . gingham, jersey or percale. For the housecoat flannel, seersucker, corduroy or chintz, and

{my! How she’ll love it!

Pattern No. 8633 is designed: sizes 6, 8, 10, 12 and 14 years. 8 requires, for frock, 23 yards 36-inch material without nap; housecoat, 3% yards, 1% yards of trimming. Detailed sew chart ine cluded. mil «A For a PATTERN of this ate tractive model send 15¢ IN COIN, YOUR NAME, ADRRESS, STYLE, NUMBER and SIZE to The Indians apolis Times, 214 W. Maryland St. Have you seen the new Fall and Winter Fashion Book? Better send for it right away. You can plan your whole wardrobe from morning frocks to formal ones. You can sew your own, with these sime ple, carefully planned patterns Have more clothes—more individual

*

too. The b be C

United States Seca *

Miss Mary L. Sullivan will be host= 4

®

Mrs. John Hollett Sr, Mr. and #

ment of Miss Sullivan for festivie 4

Misses *

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(8633) and make it up both ways. #

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