Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 299, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 April 1933 — Page 6
PAGE 6
Art Patrons to Sponsor Exhibition Paintings in Hoosier Salon Will Be Shown at Spink-Arms. BY BEATRICE BURGAN, Timrs Womsn'i Pate Editor FOR nine years attention has been directed to Incflana by exhibitions of its artists at the Hoosier Salon at Marshall Field's in Chicago. A showing of sixty paintings from the February exhibit will be presented to local art followers at the Spink-Arms, beginning Sunday. Inter-st shown in the announcement recalls the unexpected prestige resulting from the first salon. A
group of Chicago women, represen ting the Daughters of Indiana wished to devise a project to vie with the success of the Sons’ social activities. Their venture was deprecated, but their fervor was not abandoned. The show was held and Chicago was shocked at the quantity and
Miss Burgan
quality of Hoosier artists. More than sixty paintings will be displayed at the local exhibit, including pictures by all the better known painters. “Mystery” Paintings Listed Interest has been piqued by the artist who mysteriously signs his paintings "Spenner.” The story is going the rounds that he formerly engaged in the prosaic business of selling automobiles. The depression, blamed for so many descents in the social scale, miraculously sent the “salesman failure" to New York with his scanty savings. Fate is supposed to have delivered him propitiously to the studios of Wayman Adams. His pictures complete the story. Art patrons are fascinated by his work and curious as to his identity. Local patrons of the association will be among the many art lovers to view pictures. Dr. and Mrs. Scott Athearn, Mr. and Mrs. Frederic M. Ayres, Mr. and Mrs. J. Walace Barnes, Mrs. Albert J. Beveridge, Mrs. H. B. Burnet and Mr. and Mrs. Hilton U. Brown are among the followers. McNutts Honor Guests Pictures of Simon Baus, William Forsyth. Mary Chilton Gray, Frederick Policy and Charles Sneed Williams will attract attention because of their local connections. Governor and Mrs. Paul V. McNutt will be honor guests at a reception to be held Sunday when the patrons will be honored. Mrs. Robert A. Elliott, Mr. and Mrs. Frank M. Fauvre, Mrs. W. P. Hall, Mr. and Mrs. Herman Lieber, Miss Mabel Hunt, Mrs. R. O McAlexander, Mr. and Mrs. Paul T. Payne, Mr. and Mrs. Frank B. Shields, Mrs. John T. Wheeler, Miss Lucille E. Morehouse and Mrs. Marjorie Walker will be among these guests.
CHURCH CLUB TQ GIVE RINK PARTY Jocoseria Club of All Souls Unitarian church will give a skating party Monday night at Riverside rink, with Robert Finfrock in charge of arrangements. Other members of the committee in charge are Misses Flora Lieber, Ruth Lindenborg. Alice Baker, Arman Ashpian, Mary Frances Doeppers, Virginia Jobes, Edith Silver, Hortense St. Lorenze, Messrs. Warwick Wicks. William Schweickhardt. Fred Scott. John Butler, Darrell Snyder, John Teegarden and Mr. and Mrs. John Herman. Miss Lieber is sponsor for the club.
DINNER TO BE GIVEN FOR HELEN WEYL
Miss Helen Weyl will be honored tonight at a dinner and bridge party to be given at the Marott by Mrs. Norman Jenkins. The marriage of Miss Weyl. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Carl H. Weyl. to Edward Paul Gallagher will take place Thursday at the Highland Golf and Country Club. Guests with Miss Weyl will be Mrs. Weyl and Mesdames Robert L. Stevenson of Craw fordsville, William Forsythe. Henry Barker. George H. Lilly : Misses Mary Lynn Weyl, Eleanor Moran. Marian Barnette. Edythe McCoy. Elizabeth Martin. Bertha Jane Mueller. Florence Bell. Juanita Miller, Virginia Lloyd and Peggy Jenkins and Dortha Price of Richmond. Entertains Twelve Mrs. J. Edward Keller entertained twelve guests Monday with her annual English luncheon bridge at the Marott. Mrs. H G. Hennessey sang, accompanied by Mrs. John Roberts Craig.
Daily Recipe LAMB CURRY WITH RICE Cut meat from the forequarter of lamb in ohe-inch pieces. There should be three cupfuls. Put it into kettle, cover with cold water and bring quickly to the boiling point. Drain in a colander and pour over it one quart of water. Return meat to kettle, cover with one quart boiling water; add three onions cut in slices, one-half teaspoon peppercorns and a sprig each of thyme and parsley. Simmer until the meat is tender: remove meat, strain liquid and thicken with onefourth cup each of butter and flour cooked together. To the flour add one-half teaspoon curry powder, one-half teaspoon salt and one-eighth teaspoon pepper. Add the meat to the gravy. Reheat and serve with a border of steamed rice.
Natty Attire for Spring
Knitted white (% Detachable cap after H white kerchief Schiaparelli collar _ j i (/ y
Manners and Morals BY JANE JORDAN
Do you need advice about a love affair? Write vour problem to Jane Jordan and read .vour answer in this column. Dear Jane Jordan I have been going with a girl for two years. I am 24 and she is 21. There is no doubt that we really love each other. Lately she has hinted at the idea that I should buy her clothes, and really I am at a loss to know what to think. Os course, I
have a good job and she is more or less in need of the clothes. I care for her and really wouldn’t mind doing it. but something makes me wonder. I like to see her well clothed, because she is pretty and wears her ihings well. I was raised in
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Jane Jordan
a “stiff-necked” home and I am afraid I have absorbed quite a bit of the teaching. I want her to have what she wants, but I wonder if I would oe wise in giving her money. CAUTIOUS. Answer The young lady Is lacking in good taste by suggesting that you help buy her clothes, but I should hesitate to condemn her as a gold digger until I knew why she feels that she is entitled to them. If by “intimate terms” you mean .that you are claimTng the benefits of marriage without assuming any of its responsibilities, her remark indicates that she thinks you are getting off too easily, and perhaps you are. It is difficult for a woman to'regard her lover apart from the role of provider. If she is on intimate j terms with him, she can not help expecting more than the pleasure ;of the moment. While she shrinks from the word “kept” with considerable horror, she is not adverse | to receiving substantial aid under | the label of “gifts.” I agree with you that when a | lover gives his lady money that 1 something is lost from their relationship. It smacks too much of favors bought and paid for. He isn't quite sure how much of the lady's love is inspired by his convenient donations. On the other hand, the first impulse of the man genuinely in love with a woman is to provide for her. If he is better fixed financially than she is. it is his pleasure to relieve her of burdens and give her things that she can't afford to buy for herself If he does not show the desire to ease her position and share his worldy goods with her. she is apt to conclude that he does not love her. Many times she is right about it. for selfishness is not a noncommitant of love, and caution hardly is a symptom. Most people feel that marriageis the best solution for a situation such as yours. It enables a man to do the things he would like to for the woman he loves, without casting a reflection on her character. mam Dear Jane Jordan—Here is a letter for Lonesome John. Whether you are broke or flush means a lot to apy girl, but her vital con-
cern is the spirit in which the young man takes his financial defeat. If he lies down on the job and makes no effort to get ahead, no real girl ever would put up with such shiftlessness. But if the gentleman makes use of every opportunity and does all in his power to win out, the girls will do all they can to help by economizing. I suspect your matrimonial tryout of being a flop just because you couldn’t give as well as take, and vicp versa. Furthermore, you are a few years too young even to think about marriage. Your list is not adequate. All you ask for in a wife is physical and social perfection. What! No moral character? SALLY SUE. Answer—Sally Sue makes an excellent point in her letter. It isn’t defeat, but the individual's attitude toward defeat, that gives the key to his character. If a man retires to the passive side of life in misfortune, he will receive little sympathy. If he stays on the aggressive side, even when the odds are against him, his chances for cooperation from women are much greater. Sally Sue’s letter is by far the best of a large group received by Lonesome John. I can not print •them all, but if Lonesome*John is interested enough to send his name and address, I will forward the whole bunch for him to read. And here is another boy in the same predicament. • mum Dear Jane Jordan —I am 19 years old. I am a good, clean, semi-educated person. My one ambition is to be kind and loving to some sweet woman. My mother died fourteen months ago, and ! since then it has been lonesome. Couldn't you recommend someone to whom I could show my thank- | ful ability? It hurts me more than anything | else in the world to say hello on the street to these kind-faced mothers, knowing I'm on my way j to a home that seems absolutely empty. HOPEFUL. Answer—l do not know the girls who write to me. All I can do for ! you is to send you the letters of ; sympathy you receive, if any. MISS RUDBECK IS PARTY CHAIRMAN Miss Margaret‘Rudbeck is chairman of hostesses for the mixed bridge party to be given by the Woman's Athletic Club Wednesday night at the Hoosicr Athletic Club. Miss Rudbeck will oe assisted by j the following: Misses Merzie i George. Mary Hardesty. Helen Leppert. Gertrude Corydon, Margaret i Weatherhead, Mary E. McCarty, ! Mrs. Charles .Deitch and Mrs. C. I Dolly Gray. Rlw Delta to Meet Rho Delta sorority will meet Thursday night at the home of Miss Dorotha Dotson, 405 North Bosart. WpSL PERMANENTS I'he Beautiful \n-Tone W \\ no. Complete with Beaute Artes Salon 601 ROO.sF.VKLI BLDG.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Salad With Meat Gives Meal Base Dressings Are Different for Heavier Type of Dish. Miss Ruth Chambers, whose articles will be featured in The Times, is a home economics lecturer and writer of wide experience. She is a member of the staff of the National Live Stock and Meat Board, has done considerable work in experimental cookery and is a dietitian of note. BY RUTH CHAMBERS While salads which have their part on the dinner menu are usually an accompaniment to the main dish and therefore are light and designed to stimulate the appetite rather than to satisfy it completely, there is another category of salads which forms an excellent basis for a lighter meal, such as lunch or supper. These salads have meat as their basis, combined with vegetables, both starchy and succulent. Cold potatoes or macaroni are used for the starchy ingredient or it may be supplied by the rolls, sandwiches or biscuits served with the salad. Potato chips also may accompany* the salads which do not contain potatoes. The dressings for meat salads are somewhat different from the light cream or French dressing of the dinner salad. Boiled Dressing Better A boiled dressing or mayonnaise is better with these meat and vegetable dishes. If the ingredients of the salad are very rich, the boiled or cream dressing is preferable to mayonnaise. Here are some suggestions for salad combinations: Cold beef, string beans, new onions, with a garnish of tomato jelly. Corned beef, potatoes, carrots and celery with garnish of gherkins. Veal, cabbage and pimento. Lamb, celery and asparagus, with garnish of mint jelly. Pork, celery, chopped olives, red peppers. (This is sometimes called mock chicken salad.) Ham, potato and celery with tomato garnish. Bacon,' spinach and cold cooked eggs. Lamb’s tongue, potato and endive with garnish of dill pickles. Sweetbreads, celery and peas in cucumber cups. Marinate the Meat The meat in these salads is given a more delicate flavor if it is marinated one or two hours with a dressing of one part oil to three parts vinegar, salt and pepper. The vegetables should be fresh and crisp. Combine the Ingredients and the salad dressing shortly before serving, blending well, but taking care not to mash the food. VEAL SALAD Cut cold roast veal into small dice. Add one-half the quantity of crisp celery. Marinate in French dressing in a cold place. When ready to serve mix with mayonnaise. Season with salt, pepper and paprika. Pile in a mound on a platter garnished with lettuce leaves. Spread a little mayonnaise over the top. Garnish the 'base with sliced beets, olive rings and pimentos. Sprinkle finely chopped hard-cooked eggs over the top. For variation, instead of garnishing with vegetables, surround the mound with slices of pineapple over which has been sprinkled riced cream cheese. The pulp of a grapefruit may be added to it and it may be garnished with sections of the fruit. SWEETBREAD AND CELERY SALAD Cut sweetbreads, which have been parboiled and blanched, into small dice and add as much diced celery. Marinate in a cold place until needed. Mix with mayonnaise dressing. Serve in a cup of crisp lettuce leaves and garnish with slices of sweetbreads coated with jellied mayonnaise. JELLIED MAYONNAISE Soak 1 teaspoon of gelatin in 2 tablespoons of cold water for ten minutes; dissolve over hot water. Beat into 1 cup of mayonnaise. Before it hardens, spread over the slices of sweetbreads. This recipe wil serve six persons. TONGUE AND SPINACH SALAD Cook 1 peck of spinach until tender, drain and press out liquor thoroughly. Season with salt and pepper to taste and add 1 teaspoon lemon juice. Pack in small timbale molds and chill. Slice cold boiled tongue and chili. Mark each slice of tongue with jellied mayonnaise just before it gets firm and chill again. Unmold the spinach, arrange the tongue around it and garnish with lettuce. Top each spinach mold with mayonnaise. MRS. C. W. FOLTZ NAMED BY COUNCIL Indianapolis Council of Women t elected Mrs. C. W. Foltz president ’at the meeting Monday at the home of Mrs. D. O. Wilmeth. 4337 North Pennsylvania street. Mrs. Wilmeth entertained the old and new board members with a noon luncheon at her home. Other officers are Mrs. Wilmeth, vice-president; Mrs. Edna Pauley, recording secretary; Mrs. W. F. Holmes, corresponding secretary, and Mrs. Walter H. Geisel, treasurer. Host for Meeting Mrs. Henry I. Raymond Jr., 5855 ; Central avenue, will be hostess for ! the meeting of the Indiana Poetry Society at 2 Thursday afternoon. , Luncheon Postponed Frances Review 8. W. B. A., will meet at 2 Wednesday at 116 East Maryland street. The coveed dish luncheon has been postponed.
Fur Coats S |slo-50 Relined with Genuine , *** H v SKINNER'S mpf S'wtdi 1 * LINING. Buttons \ Two Year Guarantee. Stored * an d Deliver < fuh Coe ViL.&fuxr 4t Cl - 2290
Prize Setting for Table .
Plates of white milk glass with goblets and wine glasses to match were chosen by the Hollis Women’s Club for this table, which won the championship prize at a table-setting tournament now' on display at the Abranam and Straus store in Brooklyn. Color is supplied by bunches of pui-ple grapes in the central compote and cornflowers and lilies-of-the-valiey in the baskets.
Patterns Pattern Department, Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Ind. Enclose find 15 cents for which send Pat- C on c tern No. O U O Size Street City State Name
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WAISTED BLOUSE Ruffles rate for everything—even the boyish “w'aistcoat” blouse. Sounds like a fashion pardox, doesn’t it? But wait ’til you see how smart this looks with your new spring suit! The broad revere-like collar is stunning w'orn outside of any coat, and you’ll like the brief cufftrimmed sleeves, not to mention the soft but tailored drape at the waistline. Make it .in crisp W'hite taffeta — that’s one of the newest blouse fabrics—or a heavy sheer, or fine white batiste. This blouse is so easy and inexpensive to make, you’ll probably want it in several different colors. Don’t forget that dark blouses are ultra-smart with light suits, and the delicate pastels take first honors with the classic black or navy costume. Size 16 requires 2 yards 36-inch material, l?i yard ruffling. New spring fashion book is out! Send for it—put check here Q and inclose 10 cents extra for book. Price for pattern, 15 cents.
Sororities
A slumber party for all Indiana chapters of Epsilon Sigma Alpha sorority, May 20 and 21, is being arranged by Misses Lucille Alexander, Mary Farrell, Grace Jenner, Anna Harkema, Grace Furgeson, Dorothy Johnson and Rosemady Kirkhoff. A banquet will precede the party at the Washington. Zeta Rho sorority will hold a party Wednesday at the home of j Miss Dorothy' Smith, 112 North Jefferson avenue. Alpha chapter. Phi Tau Delta sorority, will meet Friday night at the home of Mrs. Edwin R. Fitch, 825 North Grapt aventre. Regular meeting of the Thesi Club will be held tonight at the home of Miss Janet Hill, 6051 Central avenue. SORORITY CHAPTER TO BE ENTERTAINED Gamma chapter, Alpha Beta Phi sorority, will be entertained at a party to be given by the Alpha and Beta chapters at 8 tonight at the home of. Miss Mary Keating, 1302 Hoyt avenue. Mrs. Lucille Rufli and Miss Marie Nies. Alpha and Beta rush captains, will be in charge, assisted by Miss Odelia Bauman. Mrs. Pauline Kappmeyer, and Miss Rose Marie Yanzer.
Observance of Better Homes Week to Start
“American Home day” will be observed Wednesday afternoon at the Banner-Whitehill auditorium in connection with the local observance of “Better Homes week,” sponsored by the American home departments of the Woman's Department Club, the Seventh District Federation of Women’s Clubs and the Indiana committee of Better Homes in America. This is the first of the series of features in the women's clubs “Century of Progress in Home Making” exposition to be held each afternoon through Saturday. Mrs. R. C. Alexander, president of the Woman’s Department Club, will preside at the “American Home Day.” Fermor S. Cannon, president of the Railroadmen's Building and Savings Association, will talk on "The Home of a Century Ago and Today.’ Dr. Ada E. Schw'etzer, president of the American Women in Public Health, will talk on “A Century of Progress in Child Care.” Mrs. Charles A. Breece will sing “A Song of a Century Ago” and “A Song of Today,” accompanied by Mrs. Will C. Hitz, pianist. Vice-chairman of the exposition are Mesdairies Edmund B. Ball of Muncie, Mrs. Ldwrence V. Mays of Anderson, John W. Moore, Mrs. William C. Bartholomew, Frank Kinzie and A. C. Rasmussen.
Personals
Mrs. Harry Fernding. 925 Berwin avenue, and Mrs. Carl Krueger, 3735 Creston drive, left Monday for a visit in Huston, Tex. • Mr. and Mrs. M. Stanley McComas Jr. entertained informally at tea Sunday at their home, 1920 Talbot street, in honor of Mr. McComas’ parents, Mr. and Mrs. Sanley McComas of Bel Air, Md., who are in the city for a few days. ST. VINCENT GUILD WILL HOLD PARTY Two hundred reservations have been made for the bridge party to be given at 2 Friday at the home of Mrs. Rudolph C. Aufderheide, 4950 North Meridian street, under the auspices of the St. Vincent Guild. Mrs. P. W. Zimmer, chairman of the ticket committee, is being assisted by Mesdames Frank Madden, George A. Smith and J. William Wright. , Party for Bride Misses Mary K. Mitchell, Helen Tumbleson and Dortha Butz wall entertain at 8 tonight at the home of Miss Butz, 5254 North Pennsylvania street, wath a kitchen shower in honor of Mrs. Paul Suits, a recent bride. Decorations will be in green and white, and the hostesses will be assisted by Mrs. Ward Rice.
Wednesday is the day } J { < VL “Buy Buy” for Baby! <op Infants’ Outing 83.79 Apparel* 4 for °? n l la r' v specially r*. 77 duced tt .*dnesday. In ivory. ]_ r - en antl I‘ink. Usually 3.9 c each. Gertrudes, 8 HSr o~ f L.;i,l gowns and kimonas. Cello- **’ “’h- v Illlultn S phane wrapped. Wicker Bassinettes Hose, Reduced Regular 51.59 QQ 1 ( \ Sweaters, now SuTSSnSP or " 0,70 £ I Aft 50c Beacon Blankets StX&Z A * UU 20*42-In eh sir,. In Sift * 8 ‘ = For infants. With touches of . h*-# f* hand embroidery. In pink. pink or blue. U 79c Knit Underwear, SpecianFiber FLANNELETTE Summer weight. For fhCARRIACrES DIAPERS, Pkg. children. .3 for SI,. OVC D1 A AA Vests for Infants . Silk and wool. Sizes -■ Strong, durable spring.-’ 4 and 5 only. Dras- | (L, Heavy rubber tires. trtr., Os soft flannelette. All ready ticaliy reduced. 11 y llned ' In tan or Kree " hemmed: 27x27-inch size. One u . wet.,.. Hip;h Chair, Special 51.59 Toddlers, 2T!IV;,'C9 QO Infants’ Infants’ Dresses * reen and “MM*-70 Pillowcases SI.OO n I CW'C 3 for 50c „ . kC II II I I Fine fl ual it v Attractively Os finest nainsook and voile. |'m | % i \ ks finished. Special for WednesAll hand-made. In pink, blue, ■ f ■ dav only green and maize. Mb | 1 BLOCK S—Fourth Floor.
Epicures Find City Has Numerous Dining ‘Nooks’ Catering in Specialties Bruce’s Tea Room Is Example of Places Available for ‘Diners Out’; Clever Wall Aquarium Placed on Sale Here. ’ BY HELEN LINDSAY “TWINING OUT" means so many different things to so many differ--L' ent people that someone has suggested a "gastronomic guide' : r Indianapolis epicures. Such a guide indeed would be interesting—there would be the “clubby” little places, where artful presentations of different foods is the specialty; interesting and delightful roadside inns.
close enough to the city fo’* just a comfortable drive —and there would be Bruce's tea room. Unique in its air of home-like wholesomeness, Bruce’s offers that most delightful pleasure good food, served in a quiet and unobtrusive style, under the personal supervision of Mrs. Leona Bruce. A new' feature of this tea room has been inaugurated in the last few w’eeks. and daily brings additional guests for the evening meal. Mrs. Bruce has arranged a different musical program each evening, not “jazz,” not “high-brow,” just the kind of music that one likes to hear during a pleasant meal. As an added attraction on Saturday and Sunday nights, Mrs. Bruce has secured “Dorothy and Doris," child dancers, to entertain her guests. Their repertoire includes amusing character tap dances, in costumes, and they have gained a great degree of popularity among the clientele of the tea room.
Aquarium Is ‘Living Picture ’ THE lack of privacy in a goldfish's life has long been just "one of those things." Now it has been developed into something new in the decorative idea for solariums and drawing rooms, with the introduction of a wall aquarium w'hich really is. according to the manufacturers, a “living picture." The aquarium, manufactured by the Ideal equipment Company, and sold by the Wilcox Aquarium. 1009 Central avenue, has a glass mirror in the back, and a mirror on the under side. At each end is an ultra violet ray glass, to which lamps can be attached. The aquariums are made "to hold seven gallons of water with decorative designs according to the ow'ner’s individual taste. These are furnished complete with brackets to attach to the wall, and directions for mounting come with each packing slip. There are five models, differing slightly in finish and mirrors. Plants and fish for the aquarium may be secured from the Wilcox Company. About a half dozen ordinary plants are used in the aquaripms, and forty or fifty varieties of tropical fish, besides the usual kinds of goldfish. The wall aquarium is suitable to the tropical fish, w'hich have gained in popularity in the last few years. While young goldfish can only be raised in ponds, tropical fish live and breed in aquariums. There are "bubble blow'ers." which deposit their eggs in bubbles on the top of the w'ater, others which make nests in the sand in the bottom of the aquarium, and queer varieties which carry their young in their mouths until they are several weeks old. Ranging in price from 25 cents to as much as S6OO or S7OO. the tropical fish offer kinds suitable to tastes and finances of every collector. The highest priced fish bought by an Indianapolis connoiseur, according to the Wilcox aquarium, is a "Betta,” which is a bubble blow'er, and which sold for sls.
Women Voter to Hear Talk on Budgeting Mrs. Leo M. Gardner, chairman of the efficiency in government committee of the Indianapolis League of Women Voters, will analyze the 1933 city budget at the final meeting on “City Government and Its Cost” at 10 Wednesday in the Rauh Memorial library. William H. Book, civic affairs secretary of the Chamber of Commerce, will present “A Critical Analysis of City Services and Their Cost.” and Miss Florence Kirlin, executive secretary of the Indiana league, will compare Indianapolis with other cities of similar size. Professor Mollie Ray Carroll, director of the University of Chicago Settlement, will speak at the luncheon meeting of the state convention May 6 in Bloomington. Professor Carroll, who has investigated various proposals to stabilize employment and to relieve unemployment will talk on “Problems Relating to Employment.” SOCIETY'S DINNER TO BE AT CENTER Queen*Marguerite Society will entertain with a dinner and card party tonight at the Catholic Community Center, with Mrs. Vincent A. Lapena as chairman. Assisting Mrs. Lapenta will be Mesdames Vincent Russo, Nicholas Iscobelli, Thomas Maddalena, Andy Maddalena, Nicholas Rosasco, Jack Calabrese, Vincent Amato, Misses Anne Raitano and Assunta Cardarelli.
.APRIL 25, 1933
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Mrs. Lindsay
TUDOR HALL TO HOLD OPEN HOUSE
The advisory board of Tudor Hall will sponsor an open house at the school May 3. A program, illustrating the school work will be followed with a tea in the residence. Mrs. Theodore B. Griffith is in charge of the tea, assisted by Mesdames Clarence Alig, J. K. Lilly Jr., Otto Frenzel. H. A. O. Speers, Alex Metzger, Anna Marie Gall-Sayles, Elsa Haerle, John Curry and Robert Winslow. Invitations have been issued to alumnae, parents and friends of the school.
Teacher to Speak Miss Frieda Ann Bach of Arsens! Technical high school will speak on home economics at the annual May festival of the Indiana State Normal school at Terre Haute May 4 and 5.
A Day’s Menu Brfakfast — Stewed dried figs, cereal, cream, waffles, syrup, milk, coffee. Luncheon — Spring rice, rye bread, canned cherries, cookies, milk, tea. Dinver — Tomato juice cocktail. Frenched pork tenderloin, potatoes au gratin, broccoli with lemon butter, stuffed apple salad, deepdish rhubarb pie, milk, coffee.
