Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 6, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 May 1933 — Page 7

MAY IF, 1933

Voters’ Club President Is Elected Mrs. J. J. Daniels Is Named at Session ()n Wednesday. Mr. J. J. Daniels was elected president of the Indianapolis league of Women Voters at the annual meet ing held Wednesday morning at the Woodstock club. O'hers officers are: Mrs. Warren K Mannon. first vice-president; Mis Thomas D. Sheerin. second vice president; Miss Frances Holliday. recording secretary; Mrs. Edwin M McNally, re-elected corresponding secretary; and Mrs. William P. Snethen, re-elected treasurer. Directors for the league are Mesriames Fred E Matson, Sylvester Johnson. Oscar Baur. Smiley Chambers, William Ray Adams and Miss Margaret, Denny. Other business included discussion of a citizenship school and the adoption of a guest policy which will entitle members in good standing to bring guests to league meetings on •'guest tickets." Mrs. Sigel Judd of Grand Rapids, gave a talk on “The League and the Times,” summarizing the activities of branches of the league of women voters in all parts of the United States. Mrs. Sheerin gave the president’s address for Mrs. Walter Greenough, who was unable to attend. Mrs. Daniels presented a summary of the year's activities and Mrs. McNally reported the study of the voters mind made by the national league in co-operation with Yale university. Mrs. W. N. Campbell presided at the business session and Mrs. Daniels at the luncheon.

KITCHEN SHOWER IS GIVEN BRIDE-ELECT

Mrs. Robert C. Schetter, 607 East, Fiftieth street, was hostess this afternoon for a green kitchen shower and bridge party, honoring Miss Mary Frances Ogle, who will be married to Dr. Ernest Henry Warnock Saturday. All appointments and decorations were in shades of green. The guests with Miss Ogle and her mother, Mrs. A. A. Ogle, included Mrs. G. Herbert. Smith of Greencastle, Mrs. Horace Storer and Mrs. William Bußg. both of Plainfield, and Mesdames Robert Nipper, Cranston Mugg, E. U. Pauley, Ralph Bockfitahler, Joseph Cripe. Robert Armor, Garth Marine, Noble Ropkey, Russell Spivey, Frank Langsenkamp Jr. and Bert Arnold.

Manners and Morals

Wriir to .lane .Jordan for advice on vour . p,,riling love affairs. She will answer vonr problem* in this column. A YOUNG married woman who shrinks from seeing the exact del ails of her love affair in print, asks my opinion about an extramarital love experience. Although she is a cold wife, her husband loves her dearly and does not know that site had a brief love affair with a young man whose past holds much philandering. The pair of lovers were thrown together in the same house for a

time. It was then that the affair germinated. Later, when circumstances took the young man out of the house, he did not pursue the woman further, because he said he was afraid. According to his own confession, this young man had a habit of picking up women for a time, only to cast them

hi'

Jane Jordan

aside again. He assured the young wife that his feelings for her was different, and that he did not tise her for a plaything. However, his extreme discretion troubles the wife, who asks me if he really meant what he said. I imagine that he was perfectly sincere and meant every word at the time he said it. But. when he was removed from the constant stimulus of the young woman's presence, his common sense asserted itself and he cooled off rapidly. In the first flush of desire, men will say almost anything to win their objective, and often they sincerely believe their own words. Their emotions seem real and enduring in the presence of anew love object, and they're convinced that the experience is in some way unique.

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BY \V. E. M’KENNEY American Bridcc Leacue OCCASIONALLY at a tournament a freak hand will be dealt which will produce a lot of fireworks. One of the most unusually freakish hands that I have s°en for a long time is the following hand which was dealt at a bridge tournament in Cleveland recently. Looking the hand over, you will find that North and South can 1 make six no trump, six diamonds or six clubs, while East and West can make six spades or six hearts. You can imagine the great variation of bidding, and it was unusual to note that top score on the hand was received by a pair who bid for the least number of tricks, i South, the dealer, opened the bidding with one club. West overcalled with one heart. Personally, in the constructive , one over one system. I would not open South's hand in this manner, and if South had opened with one club, I would make a negative double with the West hand. It is an ideal hand for such a double as it has both spades and hearts. However, as the bidding actually j occurred, North then bid three diai monds, East bid three hearts and j South bid three no trump. West bid four spades, North and East passed, and South bid four no trump, which West doubled and | North redoubled. A small heart was opened, and the declarer made seven odd. As his side was vulnerable, he scored 400 each for the three overtricks, 560 for the four no trump doubled ! and redoubled, and 500 for the vulI nerable game, for a total of 2,260 I points, a it tt IT is rather difficult to give the correct bidding in a freak hand from both sides, as you always have the human equation to deal with. However, I believe it should be along the following lines; South should pass, West should bid one heart. North and South are vulnerable, and North can make an overcall of two diamonds. Remember that, when vulnerable, an overcall guarantees at least a five-card suit and a pretty good hand. East, having normal support for his partner and a void in diamonds, is justified in making a constructive response of two hearts. South should support his partner’s suit by bidding three diamonds, as this is the real safety of the hand. West then will show his second suit by bidding three spades. North can bid four diamonds—remember his first bid showed a five card suit; therefore, his second bid must show it to be either a sixcard suit or a fairly solid one. East will now support spades to four.

BY JANE JORDAN

For the moment t hey live in a i dream world of pleasure and delight, j But, when they encounter cold, hard | reality, they recover with the most; amazing speed. No woman can believe in the sincerity of a temporary love affair. 1 Unless it is lasting it has no value in her eyes. If a man gets over his emotion easily, she is sure he is a liar and the truth is not in him. The hardest task a man has to do is to hurt the woman he has loved for a day, a week, a month or a year by retracting his tender statements. Painfully he evades her anxious questioning. How can he explain that it is over without stirring up a scene? Sometimes he feels a terrific impatience with the way in which women hang on to love. Why can’t they enjoy what the moment offers and then let go? It may be that I do the young man in this case an injustice by according him with the well-known masculine psychology. Perhaps he is shaken by an enduring love, but there is nothing in his behavior, past or present, to tell me so. a tt n Dear Jane Jordan—l am a young man of West Indianapolis in love witn a Jewish girl. Although I am a Gentile, I look very much like a Jew and am considered handsome. I am with this girl every day and almost every night. She says she loves me more than any one in the world, but still the nights when I am not with her she is out with other fellows. As I am very much in love with her, these things nearly break my heart. Will you please advise me what to do? LOVESICK FINK. Answer —I always have believed that if young people in love couldn't trust each other in other friendships, their love was not worth worrying about. Find yourself some girl friends to enjoy while she goes out with other boys. If after both of you have seen all you care to of others, you still prefer each other, you have something to build on. an a Dear Jane Jordan—For the last J four years I had had dates now and then with a fellow for whom I care a lot. Every time I see him : my heart leaps and I'm all excited. But I’m at a loss when it comes to his conduct. He can not touch me without displaying emotion and several times he has made bold remarks and attempts. I often kiss him and wonder if that has given him the opinion that I might go on. I haven't had a lot of experience in handling men of tills nature. I never knew any other fellow who reacted in such way when I was near him. I wonder if I am playing with fire by thinking that he cares for me. Would you advise me to quit dating him and do you think he cares anything for me? BLUE EYES. Answer—Possibly the young man is a little more honest about the way he feels than the other boys you have known. He has fewer civilized inhibitions to trouble him. His impetuous conduct is not necessarily an indication of love. If he cared for your seriously, I imagine he would have told you so long before now. If you are smart enough to make him desire you and then Convince him that he can't get you without marriage, he probably will , succumb. That is the pattern upon which the average marriage is made, although I can't say much for its per- ; manence. Satisfactory unions are j built upon mutual tastes and objectives. ’

Contract Bridge

A 6-3 V 2 ♦ A-Q-J-9-7-2 AA-K-8-2 AK-Q- WORTH 10-4 NUKIM 7.5.2 VA-Q- £ > V 7-6-10-9 w </> 5-4 8-3 H ♦None ♦ B - 6 - 5 south * 9 ’ 6 ' 4 A None ISOUTHIl SOUTH I AA ¥K-J ♦ K-10-4-3 ♦ Q-J-10-7-5-3 12

South can bid five clubs, and West five hearts. North will bid six clubs and East six spades, and now South can bid six no trump. West should not double, North will and East might be justified in trying for a sacrifice by bidding seven spades, as his side is not vulnerable. iConvr.eht. 1933. bv NEA Service. Inc.)

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

i Contest Prize Puppy to Be Shown in Toy Shop

Chance Here for Boy or Girl to Win Fine Pet; Write a Letter. Through the courtesy of the L. S. Ayres store, the full-blooded, wirehaired terrier to be given by Marion Davies to some lucky Indianapolis boy or girl through co-operation of The Times and Loew’s Palace theater, is to be on display in the sixth floor toy department all day Saturday. All boys and girls are invited to come and see for themselves just what a fine prize they are working for. Do you remember the rules of the contest? If you don't, here they are again. Any boy or girl not moH’e than 16 years old is eligible. All you need to do is write a letter to the Marion Davies Puppy Editor, care of The Times, on this subiect: Why I Should Have a Dog.” Nothing very difficult about that.

Make these letters as interesting as possible. Tell why you honestly think you deserve a dog. Can you offer it a good home? Do you like animals and will you make a pal of it? The boy or girl who writes the best letter will be awarded the puppy. Two guest tickets to Loew's Palace theater to see Marion Davies in her newest production, “Peg o’ My Heart,” will be given for the next best twenty-five letters. Don’t miss your opportunity of see him at Ayres, Saturday. Further public appearances of this now famous pup will be disclosed in The Times. Watch the-paper closely lor further developments. Pushmobiie Race Planned First pushmobiie race, sponsored by the Indiana Amateur Pushmobiie Association, will be staged at 8. May 29. at West Michigan street and King avenue. Entries are being received at 1022 East Michigan street, or call Cherry 6273.

NOTCHED STICK BARES RECORD OF ROT BANDIT Youth, 17, Keeps Tally Like Movie Desperadoes; Given Reformatory Term. At some time or other during his 17 years, Jack Stearns, 2827 North | Talbot street, devoted a great deal ! oi attention to dime novel or motion j pictupre portraits of "two-gun desperadoes from the great open spaces”! ; who cut a notch on their guns when | they killed another gunman. Stearns brought the idea a little | more up to date, it was revealed j today in criminal court, when hej , received a one to ten year sentence j to the state reformatory on con- j ; viction of burglary and grand lar-1 | ceny. Every time Stearns robbed a i north side residence, he cut a notch j ‘ in a stick he carried with him. Ex-

animation of the stick in court revealed nineteen notches. Sentenced with Stearns by Judge Frank P. Baker were six other youths. Lewis Walton. 16. of 27 West Twenty-first street, received the same sentence on the same charges. Eugene Eklund. 17. third of the burglar trio, received a year at the penal farm and a $1 and costs fine. Three other members of the gang. Ray Baker. 23; Jerry Nutter, 16. oi 4707 Carrollton avenu.e and Frank Robert Carron, 25, of 115 North Arsenal avenue, were sentenced to a year at the penal farm and fined $1 and costs on charges of receiving stolen goods. Leo ivlcDanieis, 16, of 3506 Kenwood avenue, was sentenced to ninety days at the penal farm on the same charge. After sentence. Eklund tried to escape through a locked and unused door of tin courtroom, but was halted by bailiff Roy Lowe. In the Air Weather conditions at 9 a. m : South-southeast wind. 12 hnles an hour; temperature, 67; barometric pressure. 30.11) at sea level; general conditions. high. thin, broken clouds; ceiling, unlimited; visibility. 15 miles.

PAGE 7

MUNCIE SUIT TESTS NEW INTANGIBLE TAX Constitutionality of Law Is Questioned in Court. Bn I nited Frcst MUNCIE. Ind.. May 18.—Constitutionality of Indiana's new intangibles tax law will be tested in Delaware superior court. Will F. White, Muncie attorney who assisted administration leaders in drafting the bill, will assist in its defense. The suit was brought by the Muncie Finance Company. It asks for an injunction restraining the state board of tax commissioners. County Auditor Joseph T. Meredith and County Assessor Pearl C. Hopkins from carrying out provisions of the act. "This is not the first court action directed at the intangibles act. but it is the first in which all constitutional questions are raised.” White explained. No scientist ever has measured the wind of a tornado.