Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 December 1942 — Page 23

ri siab TE

Mothers’ Club

Of Z.T. A.

To Have Party

Nature Study Club Will Meet Sunday

Christmas parties head the list of activities on clubwomen’s calendars. «The ZETA TAU ALPHA MOTHERS’ club will have its monthly meeting and Christmas party Tuesday at the chapter house, 4355 Clarendon rd. Mrs. W. W. Houppert will review the book, “Home for Christmas,” by Lloyd C. Douglas, and Christmas carols will be sung. Luncheon: will be served at 12:30 P. m. and a pantry shelf shower for the house will follow. Mrs. Charles Hendrix and Mrs. William H, Williams will be hostess. The program was arranged by Mrs. John P. Robinson, president.

The IRVINGTON WILLING

‘WORKERS NEEDLE club was to

hold its annual Christmas party today in the hall, 54202 E. Washing-

ton st. Luncheon was to be served at 12:30 p. m. Mrs. Thelma Watts

is president.

‘Christmas music, stories, poems and a gift exchange will be featured at the Christmas party of the NA-

"TURE STUDY CLUB of INDIANA

at 3 p. m. Sunday at the cabins in Woollen’s gardens. The music committee is in charge of the program.

“Parsifal” will be the subject of Mrs. Charles Harris’ talk at the guest day meeting of the ,CATHARINE MERRILL club tomorrow at the Propylaeum. Hostesses will be Mesdames Wendell Rynerson, - Samuel Fletcher, Herbert Wood, Margaret Segur, Carl Walk, Donald Johnston, Miss Helena 8ipe and Miss Grace Emery. Mrs. Segur and Mrs. Johnston have charge of arrangements.

“Our Navy” will be the discussion topic at a meeting of the CASTLE CRAIG chapter of the INTERNATIONAL TRAVEL-STUDY. CLUB at 8 p. m. next Thursday. Mrs. Earl Wiseman, 5002 W. 15th st., will be the hostess, assisted by Mrs. Samuel Russell and Mrs. Elmer Emigholz.

Holiday Party

To Be Given For Auxiliary

‘The annual Christmas luncheon of the auxiliary to Indianapolis post 4, American Legion, will be held at 12:30 p. m. Tuesday at the home of

Mrs. Nathan Swaim, 3166 N. Dela-

ware st. The program will include Christmas carols by the group and mu-

sical selections by Mrs. Bertha B. Mathews.” Mrs. Charles O. Holton will tell the Christmas story, “Why the Chimes Rang.” Gifts will be exchanged and contributions will be taken for baskets for needy families of veterans. The luncheon committee is composed of Mesdames Ralph Hesler, J. L. Edmonds, J. B. Lansley, Donald Ewing, W. J. Overmire and J. P. Scott Mrs Clarence Taylor is chairman of unit activities.

Serve at Shop

Mrs. Holton, chairman of rehabil{tation, has appointed a committee to serve Sunday and Monday at the Christmas shop sponsored by the state department of the auxiliary at the U. 8. Veterans’ hospital on Cold Springs rd. Committee members are Mesdames J. T. Couchman, Everett Baum, Dale White, J. W. Par-

rett, W. T. Willien, H. L. Haag and

E. P. Brennan. The junior auxiliary will make and donate Christmas favors for trays served to bedridden patients at the ‘Veterans’ hospital on Christmas day. Mrs. Parrett and Mrs. Baum are sponsors of the group.

‘Commando Suit’

Sonny will be fighting battles galore (in the back yard, of course) if he’s given an authentic “Com‘mando” suit come Christmas morn! Mother will appreciate this gift too, because the suit is made of a pop-

lin which sheds water, stains, and|

perspiration beside keeping the little tyke warm.

(ome

Yule Program Is Arranged At Ladywood

Several Indianapolis students will take part in the Christmas program at Ladywood school at 8 p. m.

* | Sunday.

Miss Patricia Rice, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George Rice, will take the part of the Madonna in a pan-

tomime background for the cantata, “The Wondrous Story.” Members of the cast of a one-act play, “®nce Upon a Christmas,” by Alice Chadwicke, include the Misses Patsy Walker, Suzanne Coughlin, Ellen Wagner, Mary Mayer and Mary Jo Curtis of Indianapolis; Miss Marietta Lennon, Grosse Point, Mich.; Miss Virginia Noonan, Hinsdale, ml, and Miss Laura Keener, Nashville, Tenn.

Glee Club Sings

The Ladywood Glee club will sing the cantata while the ~tory of the first Christmas night is enacted. A living candelabra will be formed by featured vocalists including the Misses Helen Betz, Margaret Braun and Doris Beck of Indaihapolis; Miss Dorothy Yegge, Evanston, Ill.; Miss Ann Tenenoff, Lake Forest, Ill.; Miss Lois Clarkson, Itasca, Ill.; Miss Jean - Denemark, Riverside, Ill.; Miss Jane Sullivan, Chicago; Miss Kitty Karr, Belleville, Il; Miss Mary Elizabeth Shircliff, Vincennes, and Miss Mary Wallace, Sheridan. Miss Wallace and Miss Nancy Brady, Payne, O., will have solo parts. Miss Ann Wagner of Indianapolis will play the harp accompaniment to the program.

Pen Women to.

Meet Dec. 19

“The Significance of Christmas Symbols” will be the subject of a talk by Mrs. William H. Remy Saturday, Dec. 19, at a meeting of the Indiana branch of the American Pen Women. : Mrs. Clyde E, Titus, president, will entertain the group with a luncheon at 1 p. m. at her home, 736 Middle dr., Woodruff Place. The program also will include musical numbers by Mrs: L. A. Helgesson at the piano and Mrs. James Costin who will sing. Assisting “Mrs, Titus will be Mesdames Oliver S. Guio, Fred L. Pettijohn, H. 8.. McKee of Greensburg and Mrs. Nettie A. Downey of South Bend. Mrs. Fred G. Balz has charge of the program.

Using Leftovers

A good way to use leftover canned vegetables such as corn, peas or green beans is fo add them to a

pan of scalloped potatoes or oysters.

Early Stay late!

“Yes we have plenty of Ice Cubes on hand. . . . Pure Polar ICE Cubes. . . . They keep drinks clear,

\

we can get them from the

POLA

1902 S. EAST ST.

317 W. 16TH ST.

sparkling and full-flavored.

If we need any: more corner drug store!"

ICE AND FUEL C0.

2000 NORTHWESTERN. AVE, : si alt

RZZ TIE CE

Street-length skating skirts can go direct from the office to the rink. No detours by way of home for a “quick change” of costumes are necessary. Shown, far left, is a black velveteen trimmed in red shetland. The other outfit is of red shetland tweed with a “V” trimming of black velveteen buttons matching the flange of black velveteen at the skirt hem. A fur-framed bonnet and a felt bowler complete the , costumes. { For loafing between rounds of the rink are the wedge-heeled play shoes with the red shetland suit. Either suit costs less than $20.

oclety—

Propylaeum Day Will Be Wednesday; Talk on 'Central America’ to Bé Given

“CENTRAL AMERICA ON FOOT” will be Bob Friers’ subject when he speaks at 2:30 o’clock Wednesday afternoon for the Propylaecum day program at the Propylaeum. Mrs. E. Everett Voyles is chairman of the

entertainment committee which is presenting Mr. Friers. Her assistants for the day include Mesdames W. D. Hamerstadt, William C. Bartholomew, Clyde H. Jones, Almus G. Ruddell, Frank H. Streightoff, G. B. Taylor, Harry R. Wilson, Howard R. Meeker, Samuel E. Perkins, Harry Miesse, Benjamin D. Hitz and Joel Whitaker Jr. Others are Mesdames.LeRoy Kahler, Rollin S. Moser, Waldo B. Rossetter, Irving M. Fauvre, Gideon W. Blain, Logan Hall, St. Clair

Parry, Grier M. Shotwell, Fred W. Case, Carolyn Atherton, Samuel -

C. Carey, Irving W. Lemayx, Harry R. Angell, Weber D. Donaldson and Ralph L. Nessler. Additional hostesses will be Mesdames Roy Sahm, William H. Thompson, Arthur E. Krick, Hugh J. Baker, E. E. Cahal, Paul G. Moffett, Ralph Vonnegut, William Kuhn, Roy Edward Blossom, John L. Eaglesfield, Howard M. Griffith, James O. Ritchey, Robert P. Alexander, Edwin H. Forry, J. H. Pattison and John E. , Hollett, Miss Ella G. Marthens and Miss Imogene Shaw.

Mayflower Society Names Committees

PAUL H. BUCHANAN, governor of the Indiana Society of Mayflower Descendants, has announced the personnel of the commit-

tees which will serve during the coming year.

They include: Auditing—Ellis B. Hall, chairman, Halford W. Howland and William E. Osborn; hospitality—Mrs. Cornelius F. Posson, chairman, and Mesdames Fred Hoke, A. M. Hetherington, Walter W. Ward and Helen L. Zerfas. Membership—Mrs. Tilden F. Greer, chairman, and Earl C.

Townsend Jr., Mesdames Charles Albert Gall, S. E. Perkins and -

Sidney Scarborough: program—Mrs. H. A. O. Speers, chairman, and Mrs. Charles R. Weiss and Mrs. Gall. Publicity—Mrs. Grier M. Shotwell, chairman, Mrs. Myron R. Green and Mrs. Ward; room and property—MTrs. Perkins, chairman, and Mesdames Burton Knight, H. Farr Waggoner and William Kendall and Miss Elizabeth Chipman; Joseph Allen Minturn award— Mrs. John Williams, chairman, John Bingham and Mr. Townsend Jr.

Junior Group Is Appointed

BUDGET—MR. HALL, chairman, and Mrs. Hoke and Willis N. Coval; fellowship—Samuel O. Dungan, chairman, and Mesdames Roy Elder Adams, Richard Bryson, William A. Oberholtzer and Clyde Titus, Dr. Harry Heinrichs, Mr. Bingham, Walker Winslow and Edgar H. Evans. Legislation—Dr. Fletcher Hodges, chairman, and Mesdames Charles M. Dawson, Green, Gall and Shotwell; library—Mrs. Hoke, chairman, Dr. Hodges and Mrs. James G. Haston; nominations— Mrs. Weiss, chairman, Mrs. Sidney J. Hatfield and Mr. Howland; telephone—Mrs. Jess C. Pritchett Jr. chairman, and Mesdames Shotwell, James P. Wason, Titus and Herman Scherrer and Miss Wenonah Hatfield. Mrs. Gene Austin Carmony and Mrs. Greer are chairman and vice chairman of the juniors. Serving with them will be Mesdames Morris L. Brown, Robert J. Forthofer, Henry A. Loshe, Pritchett, Perry Ratcliff, Herman Selka, Leo M. Stadmiller, W. Mitchell Taylor, Ronald Updike and Charles H. Zalac.

Mrs. Ball Heads Urban Committee

OTHERS ON THE JUNIORS’ COMMITTEE are Misses Martha Lou Cleaver, Mary Margaret Dyar, Claribelle Hall and Hatfield, Dr. Nicholas Hatfield, William J. Cleaver, Charles Grinnell Cleaver, Samuel O. Dungan II, Norman E. Titus, Dwight E. Posson, John F. Townsend, Mr. Townsend Jr, John S. Williams and Joseph A. Wythe. The urban committee, headed by Mrs. Edmund Burke Ball of Munéie, includes Phillip H. Doty, Muncie; Mrs. Otto Ebbinghouse, Wabash; Mrs. James H. Evans, Bloomington; Miss Ruth Greenham, Lafayette; Stanley W. Hayes, Richmond; Mrs. John Meredith, Franklin; Mrs. James H. Pennington, Greenfield; Mrs. Harry Walters, West Lafayette; Mrs. Taylor, Crawfordsville; Mrs. D. Joseph Cummings, Brownstown, and Mrs. Bert Fay Ten: Winchester.

“THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES Street-Length Skirts Go From Office to Rink

Cocktail Addition

Group Names Officers

Mrs. Kenneth Barber is the newly elected president of the Ladies’ auxillary 140 to the National Association of Letter Carriers. Other new officers are Mrs. Otis I. Bokerman vice president, Mrs. Paul F. Simpson, secretary; Mrs. Leonard Smith, financial secretary; Mrs. Casper Phillips, treasurer, Mrs. John Schier, chaplain; Mrs. Charles Mills, sergeant-at-arms; Mrs. Elvin Holly, color bearer, and Mrs. William Ricketts, junior trustee. Mrs. Earl J. W. Dieck was named senior trustee to fill an unexpired term. Mrs. Schier, retiring president of the group, was to entertain the new officers at a sewing bee today at her home, 512 Markwood ave. The group was to make drapes for a day room

at Camp Atterbury which the organ-

ization is furnishing.

Young Aviator

Air-minded lads will greet warmly the “professionally” styled leather ‘helmets’ that look just like those their air heroes wear in combat.

_ | They make wonderful gifts for

Combine partially ‘rozen plain or seasoned canned tomato juice with seafoods for cocktails.

Engaged

Mr, and Mrs. Wilbur F. Clem have announced the engagement of their daughter, Jeanne, to Thomas E. Berry, U. 8. N.,, Corry

{provide five days free hospitalization for a child in the hospital. | :

wich. Place a layer of drop biscuit

yee 28

Magazine Club Guest Meeting Is Tomorrow

Mrs. Harry W. Dragoo Will Be Hostess

A Christmas guest meeting of the

p. m, tomorrow at the home of the president, Mrs. Harry W. Dragoo, 4520 N. Pennsylvania st. in Mrs. Clayton H. Ridge will review “The Day Must Dawn,” by Agnes S. Turnbull. The program will in«, clude a salute to the flag and sing-, ing of Christmas carols and patriotic songs. Glen Hoy Speckman, | a high school student, will play the, accordion, Mrs. Frank C. Walter is chaige man of the program committee and’ will be assisted by Mesdames Herbert Fatout, ‘A. L. Leatherman, Nellie Love and Frank C. Yarling.

List Hostesses

Contributions of toys and jelly will be made to the Indianapolis Day. nursery. : | Hostesses are Mesdames Delbert O. Wilmeth, Frank Raub, Russell] L. Machael and J, L. Hodges. . The club recently purchased a war bond and qualified for the “Award of Merit” certificate offered by the Marion county war savings staff showing that 95 per, cent of the members are buying, war bonds. Miss Ruth Cochrane and Mrs. P. A. Serrin: have charge of a war stamp table at each meeting,

Health— New First Aid For Fractures Of the Spine

By JANE STAFFORD Science Service Writer AMERICAN PHYSICIANS have: for long warned of thé danger of) death or life-long paralysis resdlt: ing from careless or inexpert moving of an accident victim with a! broken backbone or neck. English! physicians apparently have also been concerned over this matter. In a recent issue of the British Medical Journal, Lieut. Col. J. L. Moir, Anglessey Home Guard medical adviser and the county med-| ical and civil defense officer, reports a new method for safely moving a victim suspected of having a broken neck or backbone. He devised the method because he felt first aiders needed a simpler process than those usually taught. s ” 2 “IN ALL cases,” he says, “where there is a history of aceident or injury to the neck or backbone with pain and shock, even though there] is no paralysis of arms and/or legs, treat as follows: 5 “(1) Warn the patient not to t: /

move; (2) keep him warm; e for the doctor, and if there is any chance of getting medical assistance in a very short time, do nothing more till the doctor comes. “(4). If there is no chance of getting medical assistance within a reasonably short space of time, and (5) if you have trained assistants with blankets, triangular bandages, | and stretcher, (6) proceed as fol-| lows: “If the patient is found in any other position except on his back, with great care and all the assistance possible turn him gently on his back; (7) tie the lower limbs together by applying broad triangular bandages round thighs and knees, and a figure-of-8 bandage round both feet and ankles; (8) five broad triangular bandages are passed under the natural hollows of the body, so that they come to lie under his head, chest, hips, thighs, and calves. “(9) Two strong poles are used and the bandages are looped or tied round the poles, and the patient is slowly and gently lifted on to the stretcher by two or, if possible, three assistants on each side; (10) the stretcher, which is hard and flat, is prepared by folding the blankets as in the army method, with a small | pad or cushion made out of folded | garments placed on the stretcher behind the cervical and lumbar re-,

gions respectively.”

Plans: Dinner: For A. 0. A.

Mrs. M.'L. Saber, 3043 Ruckle ot. will entertain the Iota chapter of Alpha Omicron Alpha sorority at 6:30 p. m. Monday with a dinner and bridge party. .

Guests will be Mrs. Dean Ste- |

phenson and: Mrs, Frank Mucken-. sturm. The chapter's Christmas project. will be to serve one day at the canteen in the federal building, serving sandwiches, cookies and coffee to service men, Mrs. Joseph Parker, a member of the chapter, is donating $10 to the White Cross guild of Methodist hospital for a Tiny Tim bed which will

Mrs. Charles Boss Is president of the chapter. A

Day After Christma,

That “day after” turkey can come to the table as a baked turkey sand-

dough in the bottom of an 8-inch layer pan. On it spread a layer of! turkey hash. Add another layer of| biseuit dough. Bake in a moderate-

Beineke-Wilson Rite Is Announced The marriage of Miss Dorothy Alice W to Harold Bieneke is announced’ by her parents, Mr, and Mrs. John F. Wilson, 1229. Woodlawn, ave, e: bridegroom: is the son of Mrs. Magdalene Bieneke, Peoria, Ill, formerly of Indianapolis. The wedding ceremony was. read

of St. Patrick's Catholic church by the Rev. Fr. "Edward Barr. The

| ‘couple will be at home, after TuesMagazine club will be held at 2! day, at 4644 Bluff rd.

on Thanksgiving day in the rectory|

To Plan Party ; Plans for a Christmas dinner and party will be made this evening by members of Lambda Sigma Sigma sorority at their monthly business session, The meeting will be at 8:30 o'clock in the home of Mrs. Glenn Criswell, 2310 N. LaSalle st. ~~ '

Dim-Out Gift An alcohol heater with a flameproof casserole is a necessity for dim-out time, For a friend who entertains the patrol members after

duty is over, give one of these sets.

-

I. T.-S. C. Cha To Meet Wed ay

Mrs. DeMerville Ording, 343° Kenwood ave, will be hostess iat 7:30 p. m. next. Wednesday for a Christmas party attended by members of the Netherlands chapter the International Travel-8 club. There will be a program of Christmas’ music and a gift ex‘change, Papers on the navy, marine corps and coast guard will be read by Mesdames O. A. VanOver, Wal~ ter Fitch and Paul Collins.

And dainty little helf-aprons make "Oh-and-Ah" Christmas

presents—and cost very little, tool

Ayres’ Fun Shop, Fourth Floor

1. White organdy half-apron with dainty pink and green . appliqued rosebuds, matching bandings, 1.25.

2, Sailcloth pinafore, stanch and sturdy. Red or blue with Roman striped” binding, 2.00.

3. Lawn pinafore in delicate pastel colors; wide white frills of panty lace embroidery, 2.00.

4. Practical and pretty pina-fore-type percale apron with bib. Floral pattern; plain bindings, 89.

5. Half-apron in posy printed sheer on pastel gro Ser) plain bind

S.

AYRES & COMPANY

ly hot oven (400 degrees F.) 45 minutes. “Cut and ith

Pretty litte shippers to op her feet off the cold, cold floor; to blend beautifully

with her robes and pajamas. We sketch Your from a delightful assortment.

1. Slip-in sandal with minute heel. In gay Roman stripes or black, 2.50,

2. Backless leather scuff with a very low heel. Black, red, blue, 2.25. 8. “Pierrot” slipper in rayon crepe; nosette on instep. 2.25 :

Wine, red, blue,

. Warm-as-toast velvet-like scuffs with shearling cuff. Wine, blue, 2.50