Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 December 1940 — Page 18

OCAL HUNTER KILLED ED BY GUN

Theodore Sander Is County's Ist Fatality of Season; ‘Dies Near Bridge.

Funeral planned today for Theodore San-

der, Marion County’s first fatal hunting accident victim this season, Mr. Sander, who lived gn the Stop 8 Road one-half mile St of Madison Ave., left home yesterday morning to hunt ducks His body was found in the afterhoon lying beside his car at the end of the covered bridge over Yhite River on the Soy thport

Wiliam ‘Schinoll, R. R. 6, Box 144, who discovered Mr. Sander, notified the: Sheriff's office. The 20gauge shotgun was on the. floor of the ‘car and apparently was dis- : charged when Mr. Sander was either placing it in the Sehine or Saking it out, deputies d. He was He 5. survived by his wie, Lena @& son, Theodore Sander -Jr., and

a daughter, Miss Magdeline Sander. :

BUDGET COMMITTEE VISITS INSTITUTIONS

The State Bdget Committee lis visiting all State schools and institutions this month to study the budget requests before they are submitted to the coming Legislature. The Commission study, which began Thanksgiving, will continue until Christmas. Members of the committee are Anderson Ketchum, budget director, State Senator Floyd Garret (R., Battle Ground), State Senator John Jonas (D., South Bend, and | Reps. - Hobert Creighton (R., Warsaw) and Winifield Denton (D. Evansville),

NAZI GENERAL DIES STOCKHOLM, Dec. 5 (U.P.)— A Berlin dispatch to the newspaper Aftonbladet said today that| Maj. Gen. Wolff von Stutterheim died of injuries received when his airplane 3 Was machiie-gunned during 8 raid on England.

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CL Bi THING Nashington St.

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School Neve :

Tudor Hall ls Pride of Al Its Pupils

FOWLER IS NAMED TO CULVER STAFF

Times Special CULVER, Ind., Dec. 8.—Directors of Culver Military Academy have named Commander O, W. Fowler, U. 8. N,, retired, as director of the Culver Summer Naval School, succeeding Admiral Hugh Rodman, who died last June. Commander Fowler, whose home is at Chula Vista, Cal, has been a member of the naval school and

athletic staff at Culver 19 years.

© |can breathe easier. Its new modern

i |and other dangers.

| pied by the boiler room. The boiler

i | of equipment in the shop and pack-

Georgiana Dedaker, who wants to be a kindergarten teacher after she graduates from college, admires the Christmas fairy Suzanne Clark, 5, of the Tudor Hall Kindergarten has just painted. Four-year-old Lee Beaman, also of the kindergarten, thinks Suzanne is an excellent artist, too.

School's Activities Varied; Student Association Rules

By EARL HOFF

From the street Tudor Hall looks just like another of the brick apartment houses that line N. Meridian St. ‘There are no signs. Green ivy trails across the front of the building in the summer time, But inside there are 200 girls

01,

ranging from | pig-tailed moppets

to dignified high school seniors, all togged out in the school uniform of blue serge, jumper-style dresses. From the youngest first-grader, they've got their eyes on college. Nearly every Tudor Hall pupil continues her schooling after she receives her diploma, ' Many go to colleges and universities in the East.

30 Live at School Tudor Hall is a private girls’

school. The elementary grades are called the Lower School, the secondary grades the Upper School,

ART STOREROOM

Underground Space Once Housed Boilers; Part of $50,000 Program. .Now the John Herron Art Museum

nderground storeroom for art treas-

they were available to dust damage

. This is a part of the $50,000 remodeling program undertaken last summer. The new picture storage room is in the space formerly occu-

room was eliminated when the Museum, as the first step in the program, installed city heat.

There is space, too, for a large and representative collection of prints which is housed in specially constructed cabinets. Other basement improvements were the modernizing

ing room. Greatest changes are taking place in the Sculpture Court. The place still is a maze of scaffolding but the room is near the plastering stage. The ceiling has been lowered 18 feet, to make room for a new exhibition gallery on the second floor. The Court now will be an assembly hall. Thus, there is new exhibition space for the Museum's ever-ex-panding collection, and there will be a place for lectures and addresses: Wilbur D. Peat, Museum director, and his associates are experimenting constantly with lighting and color effects. There will be no outside light. Mr. Peat believes the lighting will be a combination of flourescent and incandescent. The new gallery will be used for special and travelling exhibits, and the old galleries will be freed for the permanent collection. Feb. 1 has been tentatively set as the opening date and Mr. Peat is planning an important inaugural

TFire Never Idle, Lynch Says,

Repeating Plea a Caution)

The Fire Department today issued a public appeal for extra holiday precautions against fires in an effort to halt ‘mounting fire losses. Fire Chief Fred C. Kennedy and Chief Bernard C. Lynch of the Pire Prevention Department warned

that: 1. Christmas decorations may become fire hazards unless proper safeguards are taken. - . 2. Defective ‘heating equipment, responsible annually for more than 50 per cent of Indianapolis’ residence fires, should be repaired at

once. Watch Those Trees

3. Christmas trees, wreaths and. holly decorations should not be placed near an open flame. A lighted tree should be watched constantly and paper decorations sho be kept away from heating appliances. | | Already this year, 16 have died. and 83 have been injured in fires,| Chief Lynch said: There were only | 11 deaths last year and 11§ injuries as the result of| fires. “Fire: is never idle,” he said. “It is always a possibility, A single spark leaping from a flue is enough. Fire travels faster through the nouse ‘than people think—it can race upstairs faster than any human being.”

Winter Worst Season

Winter is the worst fire season, he said. In cold weather, heating equipment is put to severe tests.

If the heating plant is faulty, . fire :

almost inevitably results.

Chief Lynch offered this advice |

to householders: 1. Examine the smoke pipe to see

that it is free from rust, has no|

cracks and fits tightly into the flue. 2. Examine .all heating units for cracks or leaks in fire bowls and

always keep a screen jetore an open

fireplace. 3. Furnaces, | | stoves ‘and pipes

exhibition but details have not yet been announced.

Thirty of the girls, from out of | NN towp, live in the Residence, a home- |

like building adjoining the 32d and Meridian Sts. school. Although many of the girls don't enter Tudor Hall until they are high school juniors, they are intensely loyal to the school. One reason for that probably is the voice the girls have in the government of the school. Another is the amount of after-school work that ties in with classroom lessons. The after-school work knits friendships.

Students. Make Rules A Student Government makes

‘| rules for conduct during the school

day and regulates school affairs.

It also has drawn up a set of rules N&

for examination periods. - Tudor Hall girls take examinations on the college plan, part of the end of each semester being set aside for tests. previals with each'bound to neither give nor receive aid during examinations. Tudor Hall classes are small, with no more than 15 in any one. There are numerous conference periods when the pupils . may meet with teachers for additional help.

During the school day nearly |RaN:

every girl engages in some athletic activity. ' There iS a- swimming pool,

two gymnasiums and a concrete |§

tennis court at Tudor Hall, Posture Stressed

Especial stress is placed on posture, the entire school being divided into “White” and “Green” and a contest being held each year. The name of the winning team is engraved on a loving cup. To date the “Whites” have won the cup the most times. :

During the school year plays are|} AN given by the Masquers Club and the 3

various classes. The Prelude Club sponsors musical affairs. Art com-

mittees make the settings for the |§

|school dramas.

The honor system |7%

teams | &§

will jump an airspace to cause fire. | 4. Inspect the chimney - carefully. Soot marks will indicate = where there are cracks and defects. Where

soot gets through, ‘a spark can get

through. Be sure there are no defects where the chimney pastes through the: roof, 5. Don’t overheat your furnace. Keep the draft coor closed before leaving the house or: retiring.

Next to defective flues and] sparks waich fly. up the chimney ||

and. fall on. roofs, the Chief listed

defective smoke pipes, overheated |

furnaces, carelessness with cigarets

and children playing with matches|§ as the Shief. causes of residential

fires.

EDUCATION ‘WEEK TERMED SUCCESS

American Education Week last|/

month, during which parents and

patrons were invited to visit public| schools, definitely was a success,|

William A. Evans, director of pub-

lications and safety education, re-|| today.

Mr. P wim "said 65,602 visits were made to schools during the week by adults. Open house exhibits

were listed as the most effective

way of Informing parents o | school activities. ;

SPECIAL

JUDGE FINES some _ SANTA CRUZ, ‘Cal, Deo

P. )~Police Judge Williams A.

"Friday and Saturday

Ladies’ HALF SOLES

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Gifts for every name on your list! Prices to fit avery purse! Check your Gift List—Then double-check these exciting

Murphy values. USE OUR CHRISTMAS LAYAWAY PLAN!

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The most outstanding assortment we have ever:

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DRESSER SETS 5 19

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HOSIERY | We Pr.

For every woman on your list. Full Fashioned, perfect quality 2 and Serviceable 4-thread. All the new: vibrant shades.

She walks in loveliness who wears Murphy’s Carolina Moon Hosiery.

One distinctive feature of Tudor|?

Hall is morning assemblies. The girls look forward to these, especially to the one each week in

|which the Upper School girls meet

ANY

DIRECTLY OPPOSITE INDIANA THEATRE.

WE CARRY A SAI 34 R13 OF SLI

with those from the Lower School.|

Founded In 1902 °

Tudor Hall was founded in 1902 at 16th and Meridian Sts. where it stayed until 1917. Then it moved to the present location. It is administered by a board of

trustees of 11, six of whoms are [aN

fathers of students now in school and two are alumnae chosen by the Tudor Hall Alumnae Association. The founder was Miss Fredonia Allen, who had been a teacher in

the old Classical School for Girls. |

Incidentially, the plaque just inside the door of the school in her honor, is the first sign to tip off visitors that they are inside Tudor |; Hall. Miss I. Hilda Stewart is principal. 3

«Ot Ady ertised Watches her ga to LJ Si. ind E'S ‘EASY pf 5

Ri RE TENG ST.

White SCARFS

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Ladies’ and Mens’ Tubular satin stripes-and plain, 2 Initials ap~ - plied W 1 THOUT CHARGE.

Taces, : Embroideries. Chic tai= loring. Sizes 32 to 44.

arty rs $7: 00°

Frilly . ruffles,

"Boxed Ames CARDS Cc

Save time. Get these lovely box assortments. 15— 21—50 Cards to a box. Individual Cards from

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gaat, 91.00

. -Give him comfort ons Christmas in a pair ‘of + these roomy, well-fit-ting slippers. All sizes. Brown, “

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‘Means Merry Christmas to him. Patterns, plain colors and white, All sizes.

. Something new and different. Crystal and assorted attractive ns

Imitation pigskin and cape. Complete range - of sizes.

HANDBAGS

Soft dressy = fabrics. Plain calf grains in Lt attractive Gift Bo.

] —}-PRICE SALE...

$ Friday & Saturday Only 100 Jackets—Corditray,’ wool and rayon suede cloth—Wide

Reg. 3.98 JACKETS ___._____.$1.99 Reg. 2.98 JACKETS. ___...___$1.49 Reg. 1.98 HOODED JACKETS. ---.9% :

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MEN'S SHIRTS HD “Elasti Glass” Belts. uspenders 1: 00

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