Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 56, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 July 1933 — Page 5
JULY 15, 1933
Garden Spots Inspired by Desire for Beauty Add’ Charm to Homes of City Rustic Corners ‘Off Beaten Path' Provoke Admiration of Visitor; One Is ‘Burst’ of Rarity in Color. BY BEATRICE B! ROAN Tlm Womtn'i Pare Editor IN a day’s meandering about town there ar any number of bright spots that provoke varying degrees nf admiration. Reactions may be inspired by wonder, or just simple appreciation, but they're sure to be satisfying to those who vicariously enjoy another's handiwork. There's Mrs. Perry O'Neal’s garden. Who ever heard of a poor mans orchid' 5 perhaps a horticulturist, but certainly not a casual admirer of flowers. Mrs. O'Neal can tell you without hesitating that scientifically it is a Schnizanthus but looks so much like a miniature orchid that it is known ordinarily by the more descriptive name. These flowers are
colored exquisitely, and their petal formation is like the rich man's flowery tribute to his lady fair. Even with its five petals unfurled to the sun, the flower is not much larger than a violet. Its central petal is striped with yellow and orange, and its long, golden stamens complete the orchid similarity. Another annual which makes Mrs. O’Neals garden a burst of rarity and color is the nemesia, resembling a snapdragon in shape. Its delicately colored pink petal curls up to reveal its orchid color underneath Some are pink on one side, orange on the other. The colors vary, but the petals invariably are two-toned Mrs. O’Neal is particularly proud of this flower, because it ordinarily is the size of a for-get-me-not. Nodding on long stems beside these flowers are the salpiglosis, whose velvety petals are veined with contrasting colors. A white one is veined with gold. A rare one was bluish-black, with stripes of gold.
Miss Burgan
A striking thing about Mrs. O’Neal's garden is its lack of red. She eliminates all flowers of red. because “they fight with everything else.” This spring she ordered pink roses for her rose garden, and all but one bush bore red flowers. Another year will find them replaced, she says. In her greenhouse Mrs. O'Neal
has a few gardenias in bloom. Tiny plants she pointed out as next year's snapdragons and "year-after-next” Canterbury bells. She starts all her flowers in flats instead of by seed, a practice which makes better plants in this climate. Haven Off Beaten Path Away from the beaten path is Mrs. Erwin Coburn's French retreat on White river at Seventy-second street and Fitch road. “Lone Oak" it's called, from a single sturdy oak on the grounds. The blue and white Provencal haven was transformed from an old three-room cottage. The walled-in garden looks rustically quaint with strings of peppers, garlic and dried fruit hanging on the porch. A hundred-year-old dinner bell swings over the door. Iron racks wreathed on the wall hold pots of bright colored geraniums A lantern which once lighted the way in France casts dim shadows on the cobbled yard. The early French living room has softly toned walls of peach with blue predominating in the drapes and cushioned furniture. A Napoleon desk is one of many pieces brought from their native land by Mrs. Coburn. Parrot Greets Visitors An old French dough hoard has a central location in the dining room, where an exotic blue and yellow parrot with piercing eyes and raucous chatter greets visitors. Down in the basement of the Propylaeum Club is the elubroom of the Portfolio Club, whose members gather to exchange their ideas on art activities. They've given the 100 m an intimate touch with decorations of their own executions. Over the mantel is an oil landscape done by Clifton Wheeler, who changes its subjects as he tires of the scenes. He washes off the paint and suits his fancy with another painting. On another wall is a pair of silhouettes which Mrs. Clifton Wheeler made of Luther L. Dickerson and Mrs Herbert Foltz, both members.
BOSTON WOMEN TO BE ENTERTAINED
Miss Genevieve Pickrell will entertain informally at her home. 3060 North Meridian street. Sunday afternoon in honor of Mrs. Robert A. Dole of Cambridge, Mass., and Miss Jane Wiel of Boston, Mass. Mrs. Dole, who was the house guest of Miss Pickrell and her mother. Mrs. Albert. E. Sterne, earlier in the season, returned to Indianapolis today. Miss Wiei is visiting her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Rauh, 3025 North Meridian street.
Personals
Mrs. F. R. Chandler and Misses Helen and Lucille Chandler, 611 Berkley road, return Friday night after a visit to Chicago. Mr. and Mrs. E. V. Alexander and daughter Lorna. 715 East Fiftyseventh street, are spending the week-end at Frankfort. Doris Alexander. another daughter, is visiting her cousin. Mary Jane Vermillion of Greencastle. Mr. and Mrs. L. J. Moran. 137 South Spencer avenue, are visiting Mrs. Moran's parents. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Brouillette. of Vincennes. Mrs. B \V. Power and son Richard and daughter Marian. 4820 Washington boulevard, will leave Sunday to attend the Chicago exposition. Miss Irma Drake, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Drake. 5230 North Meridian street, left Friday afternoon to spend the week-end with Miss Dean Rogers at Culver. Mrs. Caca Hostess Mrs. Finley Caca will entertain the members of the Dulcet Club at a bridge party Tuesday at tier home, 1254 Maple avenue. Noblesville. Mrs. Raymond 3aca will assist the hostess. Dine By Candlelight For summer suppers indoors or on the porch, there is real charm in serving by candle light. You can get such colorful tapers that they fit into any floral table decoration you may have. Or they are pretty alone, just candles in attractive holders. Keep Purses Clean Few women take the care of their pocketbooks that they do of their shoes. Use the same cream on leather bags that you use on shoes. And rub them glossy with a flannel cloth. Clean the inside with fluid and air them well before using again.
Open Forum Is Scheduled for Club Assembly An open forum on "Is the Federation a Vital Force in Your Community?” will be included in the program of club day at the Bethany Assembly Monday, July 31. Mrs. James S. Boonshot of Petersburg, chairman of the trustees of the Indiana Federation of clubs will preside at the session. She is a candidate for president of the state federation, opposed by Mrs. Robert A. Hicks of Cambridge City. Officers of the federation will attend, each extending greetings. Others on the program will be Mrs. A. O. Benson chairman of the district: Mrs. Ora Cox, chairman of Lawrence county; Mrs. James Batman of Mitchell, president of the Fleur-de-lis Club; Mrs. R. O. McAlexander of Indianapolis, president of the Woman's Department Club; Mrs. Omar O'Harrow of Martinsville. president, of the Woman’s Department, Club; Mrs. I. N. Williams of Scottsburg, president of the Civic League, and Miss Eugenia Roth of Boonville.
RECEPTION WILL BE GIVEN FOR GUESTS Mr. and Mrs. Bernardus Van Jelgerhuis, 2041 Prospect street, will entertain at a reception tonight for Mrs. Katherine Wit and daughter, Miss Claska Wit, of Los Angeles. 1 The visitors are guests of Mrs. Wit’s daughter. Mrs. E. C. Rilke, and Mr. Fulke, 1346 Barth avenue. Mrs. Wit. Miss Wit and Mrs. Fulke will leave Sunday for Toledo for a week's visit. They later will visit a A Century of Progress exposition in Chicago before returning home. MISS MALOY TO BE ' MARRIED ON AUG. 5 Miss Florence Therese Maloy, I whose marriage to Philip Leo Early, son of Mrs. E. F. Early. 1903 North Talbot street, will take place Aug. 5 at the SS. Peter and Paul Cathedral. has announced the attendants for her wedding. Miss Norline Eardly, of Detroit, will be maid of honor and James Maloy, brother of the bride-elect, has been chosen as best man. Miss Early wall come to Indianapolis next Friday.
ON HONEYMOON
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—Photo bv Voorhis. Mrs. Adrian L. La Follette Mr. andMrs. Adrian L. La Follette. who were married Saturday at the home of Dr. and Mrs. L. W. Kirtley, 202 Hampton drive, will return Monday from their wedding trip. Mrs. La Follette was Miss Clara Mae Kirtley. The bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. William Robert La Follette of Thorntown.
Prominent Brides, Bride-Elect of Summer Season
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Students Will Give Series of Plays at Lake Maxinkuckee
BY BETTY CONDER Times Special Writer LAKE MAXINKUCKEE. Ind., July 15.—College students visiting Lake Maxinkuckee are providing entertainment by banding them- ; selves together as the Maxinkuckee | Mummers for presentation of a series of six plays. ! The first, “The Butter and Egg iMan,” was given Friday night, and j the cast included students from Unijversity of Kansas, Purdue and Yale j universities and Culver military academy. | Every day for the past week the | Mummers who are not in the cast j have been working on sets for the i show. The younger crowd of the j lake colony find time away from their usual pleasures on the lake to | build scenery, paint and do odd jobs. ! These Mummers are Misses Mary Crawford. Betsy Home, Dorothy Barlow, Mary Birch Ingram, Virginia Maynard, Betty Conder, and Paul H. Krauss 111, Jerry Colman, Fletcher Strang and A1 Fiilian. Fillian is directing the set building. William Berterman and Frederic L. Baxter stopped at the Baxter cottage Wednesday night after motoring from the northern part of Wisconsin. While at Culver, Berterman and Baxter attended the academy dance. Mr. and Mrs. Frederic Von Ammon of Chicago are spending the week-end at the slimmer cottage of Mr. and Mrs. Wesley Shea, Mrs. Von Ammon's parents. Mrs. Von Ammon has as her guest for a few days Mrs. Arthur Schumacker of Indianapolis. Harvey Hunter of Indianapolis came Wednesday to visit the remainder of the week with Whitney Barlow, who is spending the summer with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Cone Barlow, in East Shore lane. A number of the younger crowd enjoyed an evening of dancing at Colonial Gardens at Lake Manitou Saturday night. The party was made up of Misses Elizabeth Heiskell, Alice Shirk. Dean Rogers, Jean Underwood. Jane Diddel, Betty Conder. and James Watson, Robert Wirnmer. Jack Pinnell, Richard Conder. Norman Perry Jr., Charles Rogers and Edward Horner. Miss Mary Ellen Mowbray and Miss Nelly Ray were hostesses on Wednesday night for a dinner party preceding the regular Wednesday night dance at the Academy. The party was given for ten couples at the Maxinkuckee inn. Guests were: Misses Laush Failey. Mary Crawford. Betsy Home, Mary Stewart Haines. Laura Sheerin, Mary Jane Sheerin, Beverley Hoag and Mary Birch Ingram: Messrs. John Ray 1 Newcomb. David Newcomb. Richard Jennnings, Tom Allen, Norman Michael. William Ingram. Dan Morse, David Cooper, John Brandon and David Nussbaum. Mr. and Mrs. Norman Baxter are visiting Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Baxter at their summer home. The Norman Baxters are waiting for the completion of the Baxter annex in which they will spend the remainder of the summer. Arthur and Mary Alice, children of Mr. and Mrs. Norman Baxter, also are at the lake. Miss Elizabeth Heiskell and Richard , Blacklidge motored to Indianapolis 1
Photo by Dexheimer, Mrs. Kenneth Brady
Wednesday and returned to the lake later in the week. Miss Mary Stewart Haines is visiting at the Newcomb cottage this week as the guest of John Ray Newcomb Jr. Miss Mary Elizabeth Pell, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Glen Pell, is visiting Norman A. Perry Jr. Mrs. Arthur Baxter went to River Forest, 111., to visit Mrs. Charles B. Ford. Miss Martha Ann Kirby of Indianapolis is the house guest this week of Miss Elsie Ann Locke at her parents’ cottage, “Sleepy Hollow.” Mr. and Mrs. William Ray Adams had as their guests over the weekend at their summer home Mr. and Mrs. T. H. Johnson of Indianapolis, and Mrs. Clyde Hadley and daughter Katharine of Washington, D. C. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Adams and daughter, Miss Janet Adams, came to the lake from their summer home at Lake Wawasee Sunday to be with the Adams family. Mr. and Mrs. Gideon W. Blain are here for the season. House guests at Blain cottage are Mr. and Mrs. Gurney Munn of Richmond, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Langsenkamp Jr. and children, Henry 111 and Nancy Jane. Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Paul, who formerly owned the C. O. Lanzer cottage, recently leased the Lynn Milliken cottage for the summer. Mr. and Mrs. Paul's daughter, Mrs Henry Todd, and Mr. Todd, will visit them this summer. James Puett, who is spending the summer at Culver, went to Indianapolis for a few days this week.
Wedding, in September
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Miss Priscilla Ann Miner
Mrs. Edward Robert McKinley was Miss Betty Hereth, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Grant Hereth before her marriage Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. McKinley will be at home at Lake Shore in Cleveland. The bride is a graduate of Tudor Hall. Smith college and a member of the Indianapolis Junior League. Dr. and Mrs. Paul Randall Oldham, 5224 College avenue, announce the marriage of Mrs. Oldham’s sister, Miss Esther Louise Angrick. tot Edward Garwin Jelsma of Enid, Okla. The ceremony took place June 29 in In-
NEWS OF SOCIETY FOLK
Mr. and Mrs. H. B. Perrin of Pasadena, Cal., formerly of Indianapolis, are in the Thomas Hendricks cottage for the summer. Guests of the Perrins were Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Schaf Jr. and Miss Julia Brink. Mrs. Wesley Shea has as her house guests this week-end at her cottage on the east shore of the lake Mr. and Mrs. Frank Severns and Mrs. Walter Eaton. Mr. Eaton will come to the lake Monday to spend a few days. Mrs. Jessie Gremelspacher, 1634 Central avenue, is spending the summer with her son Joseph at Interlochen, Mich., where he is assistant superintendent of the national high school band and orchestra camp. Dr. and Mrs. Julius H. P. Gauss will leave a week from today for a motor trip to Ephraim, Wis., and Newton, la., where they will visit their daughter, Mrs. L. B. Maytag. They will meet another daughter, Ruth Beckman, at Newrton. She
A September wedding of interest will be that of Miss Priscilla Ann Miner, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Allison Miner, to Malcolm Hoagland Tinker, son of Mr. and Mrs. Wesley Ravner Tinker of Pittsburgh. The bride-elect is a graduate of Tudor Hall and attended University of Wisconsin. Tinker was graduated this June from .he United States naval academy at Annapolis after attending Carnegie Institute of Technology.
Photo by Bretzman, Miss Beatrice Moore
dianapolis and the couple will be at home after Sept. 1 in Enid. The engagement of Miss Beatrice Moore to Kenneth R. White, son of Mr. and Mrs. Clifford N. White of Chicago, has been announced by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Albert D. Moore. Miss Moore, graduate of Butler university, is a member of the Kappa Alpha Theta sorority. The wedding is scheduled for September. Mrs. Kenneth Brady before her marriage July 7 was Miss June Darnell, daughter of Mrs. Florence Darnell.
has been visiting in Cheyenne, Wyo., as the guest of Colonel and Mrs. Daugherty, formerly of Indianapolis. They will return Aug. 15. Miss Cora Bottcher of Chicago will come to Indianapolis Friday to visit Miss Margaret Schumacher, 2724 North Meridian street. Miss Jane Fitzgerald returned to her home in Springfield. 111., today after a visit with Miss Jane Hennessy, 340 East Maple road. Miss Shirley Howell. 3901 GraceI land avenue, will leave Monday for Camp Kosciusko at Winona lake. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Quinn, 2340 North Pennsylvania street, have as their guests Mrs. John Mullen and children of Denver. Miss Hope Pfafflin will spend the | wewek-end at Edgewater beach in | Chicago with her mother, Mrs. Charles A. Pfafflin, who is attending A Century of Progress exposition. Msr. W. B. Rossiter is visiting Mrs. Herbert Rieber at Walloon lake. Misses Anna Marie nd Frances Louise Dungan and their house guest. Miss Mary Virginia Warren of Tampa, Fla., and Miss Marion Gearen left Friday morning for Chicago. where they will visit the exposition for several days. Beta chapter of the Epsilon Sigma Alpha will hold a picnic Tuesday at Riverside park. Mr. and Mrs. Staanley Gray and son Stanley of Cambridge, Mass., wall be in the city for the remainder of the season. Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Richard wall return this week-end from Chicago to spend ten days w:ith Mrs. j Richard's parents. Mr. and Mrs. W. | C. mith. 2910 College avenue. Miss Evelyn McDermit of Greensburg. is visiting Miss Jeanne Spiegel, 321 East Forty-ninth street. E. E. Temperlev, 4511 Washington boulevard, wall return this w-eek-end fro ma trip to Atlantic City. Miss Dortha Goddard of Greensburg. is visiting Miss Dorothy Jane Atkins. 4056 College avenue. Miss Harriett Clark of Bloomfield will be a week-end guest of Miss Atkins. Mrs. Frank Hatfield, 3858 North New Jersey street, is visiting in Rockville. Mrs. S. B. Walker, 3454 East Fall Creek parkway, is in Ft Wayne, where she has been attending parties for Miss Louise Zook. Miss Zook's marriage to her son. Horace Walker, will take place Sunday in Ft. Wayne. Miss Vera Rodv is on a month's tour of eastern United States and Canada. She will visit the Chicago exposition on her return.
Season’s Smartly Gowned Woman Selects Perfume to Match Her Costumes Delicate Flower Scents Take Place of Heavier Odors in Varieties on Display; Designers Offer Brand. BY HELEN LINDSAY WHEN Joan Lowell wrote about "ambergris" in "The Cradle of tha Deep.” she brought to the attention of many women he strange, far-from-esthetic facts concerning the manufacture of their favorite perfumes. Ambergris, the base used for most of the delightful perfumes which finally make their appearance in beautiful bottles on the counters of the best stores, is decidedly not a delicate substance It is very rare, and the goal which many a sailor seeks as he sails the high seas. Ambergris is the secretion formed in whales, to protect their digestion from the claws and beaks of squid. Squid is a small creature on the bottom of the ocean. After gorging himself on squid the whale
expels the beaks and claws, coated with a mysterious secretion. This is ambergris. It floats on top of Jhe water, is retrieved by sailors, and sells for many thousands of dollars a pound. Other perfume bases are frankincense, a gum obtained from East Indian trees, first used by the Egyptians in embalming and fumigating, an oil obtained from glands of beavers and musk. Musk, used in the heavier, more exotic perfumes, previously has been obtained from the horns of deer in Tibet. Because the demand for it has been so heavy, these deer are becoming extinct, and in recent months DuPont has perfected a synthetic musk, to take its place. Just a few hours from Monte Carlo, in Grasse, along the Riviera, vast fields bloom with all species of flowers used in manufacture of fine perfumes. The flowers must be picked early in the morning, when the dew still is fresh, and hundreds and hundreds of blossoms are necessary for the smallest bit of nectar. Visi-
tors to Grasse are taken along the fields of flowers, where they may see peasants at work among them. The smartly gowned woman this season has fitted her perfumes to her costumes. Taking heed of the simplicity of field flower prints and the more feminine lines of design, she has changed her taste in perfumes from the heavier odors to the more delicate flower scents. Coty's newest odor is "Fernery at Twilight,” which in keeping with the name breathes of some fresh, wooded, moonlit spot. Lucien Lelong has created "Whisper,” a dainty blossom-like fragrance. Lelong and Chanel, both primarily designers of clothing, entered into the manufacture of perfumes with a desire to suit them to the gowns they created. Chanel has developed perfumes for sports wear in blue, red and beige. Chanel's "Gardenia” is probably the most popular of her make. The influence of his royal ancestry is seen in the bottles in which Prince Matchabeili, of the old Russian nobility, displays the perfumes of his creation. Each bottle is marked by the prince's family coronet, and the perfumes are named for members of the old Russian royal family. n n an n a Fragrance Altered by Skin ALTHOUGH men ave appreciative of the delicate odors of perfumes, they seldom use them, according to toilet goods authorities at the William H. Block Company. "Eau de Cologne” and other toilet waters, to be used after the bath and shaving, are about all the fancy odors in which men will indulge. Until about three years ago, perfumes always were sold in large, elaborate bottles. Feeling the financial strain of the depression women expressed a desire to buy smaller quantities of their favorite perfumes, so that they might have a selection for different costumes and occasions! Now’, at the perfume counter at Block's, it is possible to buy all of the finer perfumes in small quantities. The manufacturers have developed miniature bottles, replicas of the larger sizes, for the smaller quantities. The proper way to aDDIy perfume, according to authorities, is with an atomizer, to the skin, and not on the clothing. It is explained that chemicals in each person's skin in this way gives the perfume an individual fragrance, and that one perfume, when used by two persons of different chemical makeup, will appear entirely different and individual ana ana Danish Bronze Is Exhibited ANOTHER exclusive showing of Danish craft is shown at H. Lieber's. This is the work in bronze of Carl Sorensen, who first served an apprenticeship under Carl Amundin of Copenhagen, and then spent several years at the Royal Academy. Sorensen assisted Amundin in making manv of the famous bronze pieces in Christianborg castle, notably the candelabra and banister The bronze pieces done by Sorensen, on displav at Lieber's, have taken on unusual coloring of dull browns and vivid greens. These colors have been gained by the use of chemicals individual to Sorensen’s artistry.
Cosmetics Use Is Defended by English Woman Physician
Science Service LONDON, July 14.—Cosmetics have found anew defender in an English physician. Dr. A. Carleton has investigated them, and as a result, has a good word to say for the cold creams and vanishing creams w T hich continue to be used by women the wrnrld over despite the frequent condemnations by “mere male” doctors. Dr. Carleton has reported her study of cosmetics to the British Medical Journal published here.
WEDDING SOON
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—Photo by Dexheimer. Miss Evelyn Wolfard After Miss Evelyn Wolfard's marriage to Richard Bireley, Aug. 12. at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. George W. Wolfard Jr., 4821 Washington boulevard, the couple will live in Chicago. The bridegroom-elect is the son of Mr. and Mrs. C. M. Bireley of Chicago. Miss Wolfard attended Butler university and is a member of Kappa Alpha Theta sorority. Mr. Bireley was a Lambda Chi Alpha at Northwestern university. Your Manners WHEN a woman goes down in an apartment elevator with a man who got on at her floor but whom she does not know, should she wait for him to open the front doer if he is directly behind her?—H. K. She should not have to wait, as he should be agile enough lo have it wide open before she can lay hands on it. But if he is a little slow on the uptake, she should ignore his presence and open the door herself. PERMANENTS , THERE IS A REST! “DUR-O-LISTIC” (Method and Process) #I.OO to #IO.OO Dosi Not Dincolor Hair BEAUTE ARTES SOI Roosevelt Bid*. LI. 0670—N0 Appointment Necessary.
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Mrs. Lindsay
Dr. Carleton does not deny that | injuries effects have been observed j from the use of cosmetics; indeed | she quotes a rather formidable | record of undersirable results, but ; with a suggestion that the harm is j confined to rare cases, while harm- : less or even beneficial effects have ( gone unreported. The statement, made on good au- | thority, that cold creams and vani ishing creams “block the sebaceous | and sweat glands” was tested ex- ; perimentally, but could not be con- ! firmed. The belief that vanishing creams I are drying to the skin was tested on forty women, who, every night for four weeks in the spring, applied a standard vanishing cream to one cheek, leaving the other half of the face untreated for comparison. While in twenty-four of the forty no change was discovered from the use of the cream, twelve found that the | treated half of the face justified all the claims of the advertisers for smoothness while the cheeks that had had no cream were distinctly rougher. In only one case was a drying effect due to the cream evident. One woman ended the experiment with both sides dryer than normal and promptly cured the condition with cold cream. As to the argument that it is “unnatural” to annoint the skin with cosmetics reply is made that it is equally unnatural to treat the natural oils of the face with soap and water. War Group to Meet Daughters of Union Veterans of the Civil War will meet at 2:30 July 24 at F. Friendly instead of Monday as previously scheduled. Chapter Gives Party Alpha chapter of Kappa Kappa Sigma sorority gave a swimming and bridge party this afternoon at the Riviera Club. Dinner was ! served to fifteen guests. Miss Helen Wiebke, Mrs. Cecil Altenbach and Mrs. Guy Smith were in charge.
MENU Chopped Liver or Fruit. Cook tail Chiekon Noodle or Chicken Mondf 1 Soup ROAST CHICKEN With Celery Dressing Combination Salad Roast Potatoes Dessert Bread Drink 55c Prime Kosher Restaurant FORMERLY SOLOMON’S 53Vi S. Illinois St. LI. nS*
