Indianapolis Times, Volume 43, Number 282, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 April 1932 — Page 6

PAGE 6

Dumplings Make Soup Nutritious # * _ BY SISTER MART NKA Strrlee Writer Old world housekeepers have many recipes and ways of doing things pertaining to cooking that who strive for efficiency and economy well might copy. Soup to them does not mean half a cupful of delicately seasoned, carefully strained and clarified broth as it does to us. Soup as they serve it forms the most substantial part of the family meal, and is a hearty, nourishing dish. The dumplings or “quenelles” the Trench and English put into their soups have great food value and are very different from our own kind of soup gamishings. They are really forcemeat mixtures poached in hot soup and are made large or small according to the mission of the dish. Ham Ball Delicious •‘Quenelles’’ made as tiny as a marble could be served in a cup of consomme for dinner, luncheon or "high tea.” Ham balls are particularly delicious served in chicken or veal stock. Liver balls made quite good sized and poached in beef stock would be ideal for the children's luncheon, needing little more than shredded lettuce or cabbage and a simple fruit dessert to complete the meal. Noodle balls are popular and very easy to make. Little balls of forcemeat are wrapped in a square of noodle dough and simmered fifteen 01 twenty minutes in boiling stock. m * u LIVER BALLS One-half pound veal liver, 2 eggs, 1 cup dried bread crumbs, 1 tablespoon flour, Vi teaspoon salt, V*. teaspoon nutmeg, 14 teaspon pepper, few gratings lemon rind. Parboil liver in boiling water. Put through fine knife of food chopper. Add bread crumbs, flour and seasonings. Mix well and add eggs well beaten. If not moist enough to hold together, add a little milk. Drop from tip of spoon into boiling stock. Cover and simmer for twenty minutes. Vigorous boiling when the balls are first put in might break them. Serve, in plates with soup. The stock should be well seasoned and strained through cheese cloth. If cooled and with fat removed the dish is more attractive. When wanted, it must he brought to the boiling point before the quenelles can be added. n CHICKEN QUENELLES One-half cup white meat of chicken, 1 egg white, 4 tablespoons cream, U teaspoon salt, V% teaspoon pepper, few gratings of nutmeg. Pound meat with egg white until smooth. Add cream, salt, pepper and nutmeg. Chill on ice for several hours. Shape between 2 teaspoons and poach in salted water. Keep water simmering but not actively boiling.

Women’s Club to Entertain for Candidates Marion county candidates will be entertained by the Third Ward Women’s Democratic Club at 8 Monday night, April 11, at the home of Mrs. John Donnelly, 1854 North Pennsylvania street. Mrs. Thomas A. Canoll is chairman of the committee on arrangements, assisted by Mesdames Mary Knippenburg, John Cain and Badger Williamson. Guests will be received by Mrs. John W. Kern, Mrs. John Donnolly and Miss Julia Landers. At serving time the table will be laid with a gold cloth, centered with a plateau of spring flowers. The room will be lighted with ivory tapers in crystal holders. Spring flowers will be used throughout the house. Assisting in the dining room will be Mesdames Williamson, Knippenburg, Carl Wood, George E. Connolly, Timothy Sexton, Joseph HoffMan, A. A. Krueger, Miss Agnes Coleman and Miss Rosemary Fogarty. Baked Grapefruit Baked grapefruit makes a nice, new dish for most families. Use halves of raw grapefruit, core them, fill the place where the core was with sugar and bake slowly for a half hour. Baked oranges are good, too.

Daily Recipe baked eggs and RICE 1 cup uncooked rice 1 quart canned tomatoes 11-2 teaspoons salt 2 onions 1-U cup melted butter or other fat 1-4. cup flour 7 eggs 2 cups bread crumbs Cook the rice in a large quantity of lightly salted boiling water for about twenty minutes, or until tender; wash in water, drain and let steam and swell over hot water. Prepare a sauce by cooking the tomatoes and seasonings for ten minutes, strain and thicken with the blended fat and flour. Make a layer of the rice in a large shallow greased baking dish, drop the raw eggs carefully on the rice, pour on the sauce and sprinkle over the top the grated cheese mixed with the bread crumbs. Bake in a slow oven (about 375 degrees F.) until the eggs are set. Serve in the baking dish. -

STAINLESS Same formula .. same price, la \ original form, too, if you prefer \l6/ ’colds V*CKS OVErW MILLION JARS USED YEARLY

—WHATI’S IN FASHION?—

Skirt-Blouse Outfits Win Cheers Directed by AMOS PARRISH

NEW YORK, April 4.—Here’* a fashion designed to make you stand up and cheer—the costume of separate skirt and separate blouse. It's goin~ to all kinds of events and filing all kinds of costume needs. If you have to "think practical” —and who doesn't these days?— you’ll find in this costume the advantages of a one-piece dress, a two-piece dress, a jacket dress and a suit. It’s smartest when the skirt has one of those “hug-the-ribs-tight” tops, built well up above the waistline. Because then it takes on the look of a one-piece dress with contrasting top. (If rather, a onepiece dress with many contrasting tops—as many as you have blouses.) Made Two-Piece Dress It can be built up in the manner of the skirt In the illustration (and notice the smart touch of the wrapped sash that matches the blouse) or—even more practical—a skirt that fastens at the normal waistline, but with a wide, detachable belt that builds it up high. If you want to wear an overblouse, you simply drop off the belt. And then, you see, your skirt and Mouse becomes a two-piece dress. These costumes usually are worn with separate jackets. The jacket may match the skirt (as in a jacket dress) or contrast with it. (Have you noticed how many suits have two skirts—one that matches the jacket and one that contrasts with it?) It’s Versatile Outfit Lightweight or sheer wools, heavily crinkled silk-and-wool mixtures, flannels—they’re fashionable materials for the skirt. And for blouses, silk or cotton plaids, candy stripes and polka dots in tailored styles make some of the best for general use. Or to make a dressier costume, sheer crepes, lovely prints and eyelet batistes in soft dressmaker types are fine. While to turn it into a sportier outfit, nothing goes better than a sweater top of light wool or lisle or linen thread. (CoDVritsht. 1932. Amos Parrish) Next—New raincoats steal styles from street coats. Frolic Planned by Shortridge P.-T. A. Group Committees for the frolic to be given April 23 by the Shortridge high school Parent-Teacher Association in the Manufacturers building at the state fairground, have been appointed by the general chairman, Mrs. Harold W. Neeves. Ticket sales will be in charge of Mrs. Eugene Wilder, assistant general chairman, and Mrs. Arthur Harvey, assisted by Mrs. Fred G.. Marshall and Mrs. Frank B. Gaylord. Other committees follow: Card prizes. Mrs. Cone Barlow and Mrs. Merrill J. Brown, chairmen, assisted by Mesdames H. L. Dickerson, Ellis Hall, Fred Jacobs. Frank C. Myers. Thomas Cassell, Bert Beasley. J. pierce Landers. Harold Larsh and Earl Bhafer; equipment, Mesdames E. C. Belzer, chalramn; J. Paul Johnson, E. J. Bayer, Jack Shideler. Alferd W. Buschmann, Fred Case and E. 8. Pearce. Arrangements for the dance are in charge of: Mrs. Carl B. Shafer, assisted by Mesdames Harry W. Dragoo, David Pike. G. B. Taylor, John B. Compton and Willard Osier; refreshments, Mrs. F. L. Byrne, chairman; assisted by Mesdames Emory Cowley and C. R. Ramage, and publicity, Mrs. Dragoo. assisted by Mrs. Shafer and Mrs. Isidore Feibleman.’

Card Parties

Patrol of the White Shrine will give a benefit card party Thursday night at Castle hall, 230 East Ohio street. Reservations may be made with the president, Mrs. Retta M. Halsey. St. Catharines’ Altar Society will hold the first of a series of card parties at 8:30 Tuesday night in the school hall on Tabor street. Euchre and pinochle will be played. Oakhlll kindergarten will hold a euchre party at 8 Tuesday night at the building. Caroline street and Roosevelt avenue. Division 5, L. A. A. O. H., will give a card, bunco and lotto party at 8 Tuesday night at Hamilton avenue hall, Hamilton avenue and East Washington street. St. Mary’s social club will hold a card party at the school hall. 315 North New Jersey street, Thursday afternoon. Silent Workers Calendar Club will give a bunco and card party at 8 Tuesday at the Bond bakery/ 326 West Vermont street. DINNER-BRIDGE TO BE MAROTT EVENT Marott hotel’s dinner-bridge party Wednesday night will be in conjunction with the observation of bridge month, being celebrated in Indianapolis this month. Dinner will be served in the crystal room from 5:30 to 8:30, followed by bridge in the ball room, at 8. Tables will be arranged for both auction and contract, and prizes will be awarded to both men and women winners. Today is the last day for reservations, which may be made through the manager's office at the hotel. Name Your Gem! London jewelers have dug up ancient lore which states that particular gems are lucky for women with certain Christian names. Paulines and Paulas should wear pearls, blue sapphires are for Susans, garnets for Gertrudes, crystals for Constances, amber for Annas, emeralds for Elizabeths, and beryl for Berthas. Blue Is Favorite Blue is not only a favorite color this spring here in America. Paris likes it, too. Patou is one of its sponsors and he features three shades—a dark navy, a medium shade and a pale tint. This coutouri# r is even using dark blue for evenmg dresses.

\ I ! "M, J I I * ... ' ! % / •?.. '•:• • !?■£:. •. !i. f : . v < '■ 5%.* ."' N • . -.'j; S. >• * s •• 3? v*:-; '* A . ••• y ' 1 iil• t■' : v .-' S6 > : S: • I m,

Patterns. PATTERN ORDER BLANK Pattern Department, Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Ind. Enclosed find 15 cents for which send Pat- o Q tern No. D O Size Street City State Name

MODEL WITH CROSS-OVER BODICE Now the master model was In a well-covered pattern in printed crepe silk in navy and white, with vivid red accents in buttons and belt buckle. Its fluid lines gives slenderness and youthfulness to the figure. The bracelet length sleeves is especially nice for town. Style No. 368 is designed for sizes 14, 16, 18, 20 years, 36, 38 and 40 inches bust. Size 16 requires 3H yards of 39inch material. In plain flat or crinkle crepe, this moded is equally lovely. Order our new Fashion Magazine, to show you the way in design, colors, etc. Price of book 10 cents. Price of pattern 15 cents in stamps or coin (coin is preferred). Wrap coin carefully. Sorority to Meet Alpha chapter. Phi Tau Delta sorority, will meet at 8 Friday night at the home f Mrs. Eugene D. Wililox, 322 EaswTwenty-fourth street.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

New Chapter of Chi Sigma Is Installed Installation ceremonies for Psi chapter of Chi Sigma sorority were held Sunday at the Columbia club. Miss Mary Voyles, Little Rock. Ark., national president, conducted the installation. Omicron chapter of Indianapolis sponsored the initiation, with Miss Mildred Saffell assisting Miss Voyles. . Miss Naomi Mikesell is president of the new chapter. Members received the sorority pin. The services were followed by a dinner in the Harrison room. Decorations were in the sorority colors, black and gold. Mrs. Paul Kramer, province treasurer, was in charge of the arrangements, assisted by Mrs. Paul J. Perrin, firs. Donald Murphy, and Miss Louise Murphy of the Omicron chapter. Members of the new chapter with Miss Mikesell are: Mr3. Kathryn Walsh, vice-president; Miss Helen Korby, secretary; Miss Cornelia Packer, treasurer; Miss Thelma Starkey, sergeant-at-arms: and Mesdames Elizabeth B. Walsh, Inez De Poy, Theora Allentharp; Misses Mabel Gearhart, Irene Parrish, and Amelia Folster.

Personals

Samuel R. Harrell, 3221 North Pennsylvania street, is in Chicago at the Edge water Beach for a few days. Mrs. Robert W. Long has returned to her apartment in the Marott after a winter vacation in Miami, Fla. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas M. Kaufman, West Fifty-sixth street, are vacationing in southern California. They are staying at the Huntington hotel in Pasadena. Mr. and Mrs. A. J. De Graett, 4426 Cornelius avenue, are spending a few days at the Windermere in Chicago. Richard Lieber, 3119 North Meridian street, is a guest at the Windermere in Chicago. Dr. and Mrs. Carl B. Sputh, 5735 Central avenue, have returned from lowa City, where Dr. Sputh visited the clinics at lowa university. Miss Betty Likely, a student in the Cincinnati Conservatory of Music, is spending the spring vacation with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Fred A. Likely, 3145 Washington street. Miss Elizabeth Oglesby is at home from Franklin college to spend the spring vacation with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Tyler Oglesby, 5823 Lowell avenue. Household Tools You may not be a carpenter, but now is the time to survey your kitchen tool-chest to make sure that you have on hand all the hammers, screw-drivers, nails, nuts, bolts, etc., for those odds-and-ends of work that present themselves in the spring. Mothers Club to Meet Phi Delta Theta Mothers Club will meet Wednesday at the chapter house, 705 Hampton drive, for the April meeting. Hostesses will be Mesdames William Schumacher, Ann Schumacher, Grace Johnson, A. A. Anderson and Bess Coon. Mrs. Mabel Gardner will preside. Dr. Kast Hostess Members of the board of the Nature Study Club of Indiana will meet at 6 Tuesday at the home of Dr. Marie B. Kast, 615 North De Quincy street. A buffet supper will be served. Dctla Sigmas to Meet Theta chapter. Delta Sigma Kappa sorority, will mee at 8:30 tonight at the home of Miss Claire Romine, 1710 Talbott street. Society Will Meet Major Robert Anderson W. R. C„ 44, will meet at 1:30 Tuesday at Ft. Friendly, 512 North Illinois street.

500 Persons Will Attend Skate Party More than five hundred reservations have been made for the annual Alpha Latreian skating carnival to be held tonight at the Riverside rink, according to Mrs. Culver Godfrey, ticket chairman. Proceeds will go to the children's nutrition camp at Bridgeport, which is supported in part by the Latreian clubs. Prizes for the various games have been donated by friends of the club. Besides skating other entertainment to be provided will include four fortune tellers and a silhouette cutter. Mrs. Robert Bastian is chairman of the entertainment committee. A refreshment booth, equippod with candy, tobacco and soft drinks, will be in charge of Mrs. Francis Sommer. Mrs. Charles L. Walker is general chairman for the carnival. Additional patrons and patronesses, announced by Mrs. Hugh Carpenter, chairman, include: Mr. and Mrs. Fred Hoke, Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Perkins, Mr. and Mr*. P. C. Reilly. Mr. and Mrs. Milo H. Stuart. Mr. and Mrs. Edgar B. Taggart. Dr. and Mrs. J. W. Picketts. Mrs. Charles P. Lesh and Dr. Edgar Kiser.

MANNERS .♦’MORALS

YOUNG girls are invited to bring their problems to Jane Jordan, who will help them to understand the situations they face. Maid or matron, write your letter nowl Dear Jane Jordan—l Am a young girl 18 years old. In this day and age. it seems that if a „irl is to be popular she must pet. drink, and smoke. I do all three, although I don’t particularly like anv of them. The real reason I am writing to you is that I am confusea in mv own mind as to what’s right and wrong. After all. is there any real harm in petting parties, drinking, and smoking. unless carried to the extreme? They don't seem to hurt me, or haven't yet. THINKER. Dear Thinker—Petting parties are not a mortal sin. They’re just an unsatisfactory substitute for a normal sex life. They’re a very bad preparation for future married life, because they lead a girl to expect an oversupply of petting from her husband. He is inclined to drop elaborate preliminaries after marriage, whereas she still places an over-emphasis on petting. She does not understand why her husband has lost his desire to spend hours in fondling her. He does not understand that he has trained her to associate habitual petting with love, and that she is confused when he fails to keep it up. A normal amount of physical demonstration of affection has its place in every union, but no marriage is a perpetual petting party. Many a girl forces herself to drink because she wants to be a good sport. She sees in it a way to popularity. Drinking is bad. because ic furnishes an excuse for doing things for which the drinker refuses to accept the full responsibility. A girl lacks the courage to let herself go when she is cold sober, but if she can say to herself, “I was tight at the time,” she feels that it excuses her conduct, in a measure. Anything which lessens the individual’s responsibility for his own conduct is bound to be bad. Smoking scarcely comes in the same category with petting and drinking, because it has less effect on the individual’s attitude toward life. It is not necessary for all contact between girls and boys to be amorous. Healthy friendships, teamwork in sports and school, shared interests and lively conversation, with some affection, is the best possible approach to co-operation in marriage later on. If other girls have questions on this subject that are not answered here, let them write! nun Dear Jane Jordan—l am a girl of 17 and go with a boy 20. I am truly in love with him and he seems to be in love with me. I never ask him to do anything but what he does it. We now have been going together nine months, but he hasn’t had work all the time. He is not lazy and will work when he can get a job. Would you quit him? Several are in favor of this, includihg my parents. I need to get work somewhere, because I can’t get along at home Very well. I am a junior in high school and want to quit, but father won’t let me. I can't dress like lots of other girls and vou know how I feel. Shall I go ahead as I am. or go to a larger town and get work? , „ MESCAL. Dear Mescal —It seems unfair to me to turn a good boy down because he has no job when it is no fault of his. You are so young that you well can afford to wait for him if you think he is worth it. lam the last one to disparage the value of money, but I co think a woman makes a mistake to judge a man solely by his money-making capacities, particularly in this time of economic depression. If you have a chance to go through high school, yod’d better do so, even if it means two more years of sacrificing the things that are dear to every girl’s heart. You can t go out into the world and earn a decent wage with no equipment. Today, more than ever, you have to have some ability to sell. Your high school education is an investment which you can not afford to refuse. It will yield you dividends, by and by. Get your teachers to help you decide on some form of work and study toward that end. MISS CURRYER WILL ENTERTAIN PI PHIS Miss Ethel Curryer, 3348 Guilford avenue, will entertain the Indiana Gamma alumnae of Pi Beta Phi at a bridge party at her home Monday night, April 11. Reservations must be made by Thursday with Mrs. Robert C. Schetter. Members of the committee on arrangements are Mrs. Betty Puett, chairman: Mrs. Cranston Mugg, Miss Ruth Omelvena and Miss Annabess Snodgrass. Omega Phis to Meet Beta chapter, Omega Phi Tau sorority, will meet at 8 tonight at the Spink-Arms.

SW* tat tretahMMs —3837 E. 10th 3t. V’-'i ■ •- —■——

DONNIE DRIDEI •’"The SCOTTISH, OUTFIT? BELOW AQt a gay solution to a spring wedoivo& The bride wears a gown of white staroheo CHIFFON WHICH HAS SUBTLE STRIPES WQYEN IN THE MATERIAL TO FORM A PLAID. THE FLOUNCE ON Twfc Skirt is pleated in a kiltie effect The headdress is a scotch cap ZXlvO r " LAVENDER E ANDVE F LLOW IpLAIDWIT l pLAIDWITH O ACAP ' OF LAUNDER AND MUFF OF PURPLE HEATHER .

Children’s Theater to Present ‘Aladdin, His Wonderful Lamp’

Children’s theater will present its most spectacular production, “Aladdin and His Wonderful Lamp,” at the Civic theater at 2:30 Saturday, April 16, and again on April 23, under the direction of Arthur J. Beriault, assisted 'by Miss Rosamund Van Camp. Costumes are in charge of Mrs. Francis Dunn, assisted by Mrs. Carl Vonnegut and production is in Mrs. Selka and Pittsburgh Man Wed in Church Marriage of Mrs. Charlotte Selka and Guy H. Furst, Pittsburgh, took place Sunday afternoon in the Tabernacle Presbyterian church. Dr. John G. Benson officiated. Mrs. Furst is a member of the Woman’s Department Club and the Children’s Sunshine Club of Sunnyside. She recently returned from a stay of several months in California, and other southern states. Mrs. Eleanor F. Carothers, Mill Hall, Fa., sister of Mr. Furst, was a guest at the wedding. She is the house guest of Mrs. Furst’s daughter, Mrs. Ralph E. Duncan, 4901 Carrollton avenue.

PLANNING SKATE

mil v

Miss Margaret Menefee April committee of the Little Flower church is sponsoring a skating party Monday night, April 11, at Riverside rink. Miss Margaret Menefee is a member of the arrangements committee.

Wedding Announced Mr. and Mrs. Fred H. Bowen, 515 East Twenty-fifth street, announce the marriage of their daughter, Miss Helen Euskirk, to Nelson Heinrichs, which took place Jan. 30. Mr. and Mrs. Heinrichs have been on an extended wedding trip, and returned Saturday to Indianapolis. They will make their home here. Call Lodge Session Indiana ledge No. 2, Cosmos Sisters, will celebrate its twentyninth anniversary Wednesday at the new hall. 210 East Ohio street. Luncheon will be served from 11:30 to 1 and a card party will follow. Mrs. John Heinlein is chairman, assisted by Mrs. Algust Fraul and Mrs. Albert Meise.

charge of Miss Genevieve Pickerell, assisted by Miss Eunice Dissette, Miss Helen Fleischer and Miss Helen Shepherd. Incidental music has been arranged by Miss Helen Sheerin. The role of Scheherazade, the story teller, will be taken by Miss Ann Zimmerman and of Aladdin by Earl Williams. The cast includes: Aladdin's mother. Louise Rastcnberg; Princess Badrulbadur, Jane Sky; the Wazier, Beriault; a fruitseller, Alfred Meunier; a silk merchant, Egan Lacy; a ba£er merchant. Francis Meunier; slave of the lamp. Egan Lacy; slave of the ring, Francis Meunier; beggar boy and girl, Bobo and Barbara Andrews; slave girls, Jane Noble and Barbara Andrews; wicked wizard, Robert Oberreich. and ladies-in-waiting to the Princess, Ruth Baker and Antoinette Filiatreau. Miss Elinor Stiekney will present a feature dance, and Bobbie Jean Johnson and Ruth Lewis, pupils of Myrna Celete of Stockman studios, also will dance. The play is in six scenes built around Bagdad. Scenery has been designed at the Civic theater under the direction cf George Lehman Jr. Song ’n’ Dance Fashion Show Sells Gowns By United Prt LONDON, April 4.—The “song-and-dance” fashion show is helping London couturiers sell more gowns. Instead of promenading with a regal air before the rich women buyers in magnificent salons, the mannequins are likely, at a given signal to break into a snappy tapdance. “The idea is to show women how their dresses will look on the dance floor or stage,” said one of the originators of the idea. Each girl dances, or performs, according to the frock she displays. A slim blond in delicate white tulle Ls swept around the room to the strains of an old-fashioned waltz, or a bride in white satin, with a full retinue of bridesmaids, is paraded to a wedding march. For a grand finale, all the mannequins join in a song and dance chorus, which invariably brings a burst of applause from the critical buyers.

mm 4 T7 r OTEX prices are down! WoJX. men who value safe, modern *it|l sanitary protection w ill welcome \ -t jam J; this news. For Kotex assures that mm fll complete peace of mind so essen* temxtm m^^^ tial to comfort ... all by machinery. Women who Ask yourself—ask doctors and use Kotex know' it’s shaped to fitnurses—why 24,000,000 Kotex pads Comfortable and safe w'hen worn* were used in American hospitals on either side Stays soft. alone last year. The answer is obvi- absorbent. Disposable. ois. Kotex is safe.. clean! Ask for Kotex, at any drug, dry Be certain of highest standards goods or department store. When of purity Kotex is made in spotless buying it wrapped, make sure you factories. Cut, folded and packed get genuine Kotex. 4 — * Genuine Napkins now cost le

APRIL 4, 1932

Mrs. Fifer j Is Head of Hostesses Mrs. Orien W. Fifer will be chairman of hostesses for the Mary Washington tea to be given by the personal service committee of Central Y. W. C. A. from 2:30 to 4:30 Friday afternoon, in the social hall | of Central building. Program features arranged by Miss Willa Walker include a bicentennial colloquy. “My Son George.” given by Mrs. L. H. Millikan and Mrs. Joe Rand Beckett: a minuet by Joan and Mark Freihage, junior pupils of the Y. W. C. A. dancing class: vocal solo by Mrs. Wilbur E. l Grose, and a program of violin music by Weir Stuart. A silver offering will be taken for the benefit of the Y. W. C. A. work in Mexico City, which is the special object of interest of the Indianapolis world fellowship committee. Appointments being planned by Mrs. Georgia McClain will be in patroitic colors. Old-fashioned flowers will be used on the tea tables. Mrs. Fifer's assisting hostesses, who will be in colonial costumes, include: Mrsdamts Will H. Ada.ms, A. W. Bowen, Ernest N. Evans. Norman Green, Curtis Hodges. William E. Over, Lennie T. Goens, J. P. Robinson. W. W. "Wiant, A. H. Hinkle. W. S. Lockhart. W. P. Morton, William Rothenburger. John L. Wallace, M. E. Costin. Grant K. Lewis, S. W. Roes. John Koch. John E. Seybert, Georgia Mr- ’ ; Clain, Brandt C. Downey, Frank Wood, Fred Hoke, L. D. Owens and Misses Marguerite Dice. Grance Spencer, Florence Lanham, and Blanche L. Maine. All friends of the association arc invited. Art Exhibition Is Followed by Dinner Parties, Among those who entertained at : dinner parties Sunday night Rt the j Spink Arms following William Forsyth’s tea and art exhibit in the art salon, was Dr. Urbana Spink. ! whose guests included Mr. and Mrs. Forsyth, Dr. ana Mrs. Walter S. Athearn, Mr. and Mrs. James Nelson, Mr. and Mrs. Isaac Born, Mr. and Mrs. Ovid Butler Jameson, ward Williams, Miss Ethel Mac j Moore, Miss Margaret Pierson. Frank McLaughlin of Mexico, Cap- H tain William B. Leich and Brodei hurst Elsey. Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Cuniff hart . as their guests. Mr. and Mrs. Wil- ’ ' liam Ball of Muncie, Mr. and Mr;. ; Charles W. Jewett, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Donnel. Other hosts were Miss Marie Todd I and Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Buckley. 1 who entertained Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Foltz, Mrs. William B. Hayward. Miss Mary McGee, Miss Clari--Ibei Moore. Miss Anna Hasselman, j Dr. Chailes McNaull, Grafton Johnson, Luther L. Dickinson. William Allen Moore and Edward Gibson. lOTA TAU TAUfTO I HOLD INITIATION' Initiation services will be held by lota Tau Tau, national legal sorority, Saturday night at the Columbia Club, for Mrs. Esther Antin. Toledo, 0., attorney. She will become an honorary member. Miss Joanna Hirman, dean of th/ : active chapter, will have charge of | the services. Mrs. Antin is a former I judge of the Toledo municipal I court.

A Day’s Menu Breakfast — Grape juice, cereal, cream, eggs poached in milk on graham toast, milk, coffee. Luncheon — Macaroni croquettes, celery and apple salad, rye bread, apricot dainty, oatmeal cookies, milk, tea. Dinner — Filet of flounder in tomato sauce, potatoes in parsley butter, beet greens, salad of cottage cheese and apricots in green pepper rings, maple cup cakes, milk, coffee.

FREE-FREE HAIR BOBBING BRING THIS COUPON Tuesday morning 9:30 to 10:30 a. id. we will 808 vour HAIR absolutely FREE, under the exper supervision of Mr. irl. CENTRAL BEAUTY COLLEGE 2nd Floor Odd Fellow Bldg. Lincoln 013’!