Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 28, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 June 1933 — Page 8

PAGE 8

Club Pools Are Havens for Society Swimmers Find Relief as Mercury Climbs Toward ‘Century.’ BY BEATRICE BL'RGAN Timf* Woman’s Pare Editor A FORTUNATE few can rise above thermometer watching as the mercury leaps in record-break-ing bounds. Humidity means nothing to the set which hies to the country club swimming pools to drench discomfort. Dally the Indianapolis Country

club welcomes city sufferers to the coolness of its veranda and pool. To make the scene even more inviting, an exfootball star sits on guard to aid the distressed and to teach the inexperienced. William Rhem, listed in the hall of fame of Indiana university football, began his first season at the club this year.

Miss Burgan

After a ducking good time in the pool, members need only to ring a bell from the water’s edge, to order for an aroused appetite. Gay deck chairs invite lounging. Tennis courts entice any one with a scrap of energy into activity. They drive one away—mopping and awry, but happy with the effort. There’s always the pool and refreshing drinks to sip. A Fourth of July meet challenges members to dip for more than comfort. It’ll be worth while to “jackknife” with ease and grace. Prizes in various classes will be awarded to the champions. Highland Is Busy Spot Breakfast bridge parties and swimming will invite women members of Highland Golf and Country Club to flee from the torridity of the tow'n. The end of school brought shouts from the children. They remembered the morning swimming classes which Alvin Romeiser held last summer on Tuesday and Friday. He’ll be on duty again this year. Fourth of July and Labor day will be the signal for meets among the Highland swimmers. With graduation over at Tudor Hall, Philena Hamill will be at the pool frequently. Misses Dorothy and Betty Reed and Louise Hanley spend many hours at the pool. Meets with Woodstock and Meridian Hills swimmers will provide outside competition for the expert swimmers. Swim at Meridian Hills Since the opening of the pool on Decoration day. Meridian Hills Country Club swimmers have been checking out of the city for daily swims. The group of “just returned from school” members have made lively use of the club. Miss Jane Diddel of Wells college and Miss Anna Marie Dungan from Florida State College for Women have been sharing the fun with Misses Helen Taggart, Judy Diddel, Jean and Ruth Coler and Jean Underwood. Bill Bertermann from Indiana, Bud Underwood and Bob Rhode - hamel, both from Wabash, are frequenters of the pool. Bill Weiss, swimming instructor, keeps his eye on the activities and is planning with the entertainment committee for a special program of events. SCHOLARSHIPS ARE GIVEN BY SORORITY Scholarship awards have been made by the Kappa Kappa Kappa sorority to the following: Miss Andra Flick, French Lick: Miss Georotha Nance, Jeffersonville; Miss Helen Louise Lowe. Columbus; Miss Bessie Lorena Uland, Bloomfield, and Miss Mary Cassidy, Spencer. Others were Charles Wilford ennett, sponsored by the local chapter for a scholarship at Butler and Arthur Jordan Conservatory of Music; Miss Eleanor Glaze, West Lafayette; Kelso Myers. Wabash, Miss Mary Katherine Kain, Hammond; Miss Ruth Barf. East Chicago; Miss Mary Margaret Benjamin, Crown Point; Miss Evelyn Warner, Warsaw, and Miss Mary Naomi Smith, Warren. Alternates are Miss Leah Frances Worrell, Orleans; Virgil Schoeff, Lawrenceburg; Miss Julia Jean Bauragarner, Monticello, and Miss Ruth Arlene Brewer, Greenwood. MRS. FAIRBANKS TO ENTERTAIN AT TEA Mrs. Richard Fairbanks, 5700 Sunset lane, will be hostess Friday to the Indianapolis Garden Club at tea. The group will visit estates of Mrs. Charles Lynn. Mrs. Frederick M. Ayres, Mrs. F. T. Holliday, Mrs. Hathaway Simons and Mrs.-W. R. Sinclair. Miss Harvey Weds Announcement is made of the marriage of Miss Reva Eloise Harvey. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John W. Harvey, 936 North Beville avenue, to Earl Frederick Beck, son of Mr. and Mrs. Carl Beck of Rochester, June 3. at the Woodruff Place Baptist church. After spending the siimmer at Lake Nyona, they will live at Rochester.

A Day ’s Menu Breakfast — Oranges, cereal, cream, toasted tomato and bacon sandwiches, milk, coffee. Luncheon — Ham and egg timbales with creamed peas and browned carrots, strawberry salad, rye bread, milk, tea. Dinner — Casserole of salmon and potatoes, beet greens, ■ugared cherries, milk, celery and apple salad, coffee.

Ensembles of Linen Are Fetching

All the ensembles sketched above are linen, but they run the gamut of formality.. Left, a casual frock for active sports or veranda frivolity is shown, complete with a short box jacket which matches the frock stripe. Center, a commuter’s jacket and skirt with a dark thin linen blouse is sketched. The figure at the right models a plain linen suit with a knee-length loose coat and a striped gilet and tie, suitable for the tea or luncheon date, in town or in the country.

Manners and Morals 3Y JANE JORDAN

Young: people can depend upon Jane Jordan for honest answers to tneir questions. If you are ha filed by your situation, write your letter now! Dear Jane Jordan—lntimacy seems to be spoken of so lightly, so casually, by some of the people who write your column. Apparently it is indulged without the slightest fear. Where do these girls find out such things? I always was taught that if I ever was indiscreet even once that there was one inevitable result, that there was no loophole or naturally I always have been too afraid to chance anything. I am 19 now, not married and not likely to be for a few years, and this has become an obsession with me. if I were a really good girl, 1 never would dream of presenting my husband with anything out an absolutely undefiled body, and I never would consider the matter of sex. But I would know that my husband had known otner women intimately, and why should I give him something which I do not get, an innocent body. I do not want to be promiscuous. I merely want some satisfaction, some relief from the strain of thinking about it in a guilty way. And how can I get it if I can’t get married? I can’t drag the first man I see before a justice of the peace and marry him. I want to be careful about choosing a husband. There are several qualifications I want to make sure he has. I am depending a great deal upon your advice now, and if you tell me to forget it I am afraid I can not obey you, although I could try heroically. MARGARET. Answer —You must reconcile yourself to the fact that you are facing a problem to which there is no immediate solution. It won’t be. the last time that you are caught in a predicament about which you can do nothing. Whatever gain in poise you make now will be valuable in later life, when you face other strangling situations. The long gap between puberty and marriage constitutes a problem which has baffled society. Those who have suggested a sensible solution. like Judge Ben Lindsay, have been stoned out of court by a terrified populace, afraid of love set free, as it were something dangerous to face outside the confines of a straitjacket. Nature intended

us to mate somewhere between the ages of 14 and 16. She did not count on the ramifications o f culture which delay for ten or fifteen years the date when marriage is economically possible. What goes with all the erotic energy which is generated during this time?

Ifcte v

Jane Jordan

Puritans urge the disquited body sweetly to surrender its disappointment to the higher dictates of the mind. As well will the same body not to be hungry when it can't find food! Futile command, possible only to the emotionally anaemic. Defiant youth seeks to solve the glaring disharmony with casual erotic experiences which still the senses, but

1 leave the heart as tragically empty as before! Knowledge of birth control, which is easy to obtain, has outwitted nature in her inexeorable purpose to reproduce the race at all costs. Woman released from the fear of child-bearing is left as free as man for pre-marital experiment. Why should she give something which she does not get —■ an inexperienced body? The logic is perfect. But, as so frequently happens in life, the most impeccable logic fails ignominiously. # tt tt Man, unable to adjust himself to the new situation, fills the air with his cries of pained protest. To him woman still fall into two classes: The woman one marries and the woman one doesn't After disporting himself for years with the woman one doesn’t he eventually reaches a point where he is financially able to take unto his bosom the woman one does, only to find that his angel hasn’t kept herself intact of the bridegroom’s coming. His inalienable right to possess a female untouched by any other male creature has been violated. Woman must lie to him or lose him. In either alternative there is no peace. In the long interim of waiting for the man who could marry, has woman enjoyed her season of imitating the freedom of the male? | No. She has suffered. Apparently j she is incapable of performing the sex act without involving every element of her being, whereas happy-go-lucky man involves only one. Each time she is called upon to | tear her affections loose from their | moorings, she is ripped asunder inside and left heartsick, sore, and I disillusioned. tt St tt The woman bereft of her love is not free to go forth and search for another. She must wait for man | to make the first move. If she dares to break the tradition which follows him to do his own hunting, the silly creature takes to his heels like a startled fawn, frightened out of all proportion to the cause. Is it any wonder that woman has resorted to the tricks, subterfuges, and deceptions for which she is famous. to catch the male in her toils? So far I have pointed out only the perils of the problem which sluggish humanity refuses to face. There is one thing you can do. You can prevent your energies from turning inward to destroy yourself. You can turn them outward on your environment and make them serve you well. tt tt u You can engage your complaining body in healthy athletic activities and avoid morbid imaginings. You can throw yourself into : some form of endeavor which takes care of your creative faculties and keeps you too busy for brooding. Only tomorrow a chance encounter may bring you face to face with your fate. But in the meantime avoid passivity like the plague. Love is not the only interesting thing in the universe. While you wait, search for entertaining substitutes. It is not necessary to forget your urges or to be ashamed of them. The beginning of wisdom is to learn how to deny the immediate needs of the personality in the interests of its future welfare.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Pilgrimage to Be Conducted by Federation A luncheon at the North M. E. church Saturday will begin the pilgrimage of the Indiana Federation of Garden Clubs. Gardens and estates to be visited include those of Mrs. Kin Hubbard, Mrs. Charles Lynn, Mrs. J. S. Holliday, Mrs. J. I. Holcomb and Mrs. Perry O’Neal, president. The trip will end at the home of Mrs. O’Neal, who will be hostess for tea. Mr. and Mrs. Holcomb will receive the visitors, including members and their guests. Mrs. W. D. Hamer is making arrangements for the affair. Reservations are in charge of Mrs. M. S. Goulding, secretary of the organization. Honors for Graduate George A. Newton Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. George Newton, 5859 East Michigan street, has been graduated with honor from the Juillard Graduate School of Music in New York. Beginning July 1, he will sing for six weeks in the choir and opera at the assembly in Chautauqua, N. Y. He is a graduate of Arsenal Technical schools and Princeton university. Mrs. Vestal Hostess Mrs. George Vestal, 53 North Bolton road, was hostess today for a covered dish luncheon of the Zeta Tau Alpha mothers’ club of Butler university. Alumnae mothers were guests. Luncheon to Be Held Indiana Branch of the National League of American Pen Women will attend a luncheon and program Thursday in Newcastle. Luncheon will be held at the Plaza hotel at 12. Reservations may be made with Mrs. L. D. Owens. The tour has been arranged by Mrs. Horace L. Burr, Miss Helen M. Goodwin. Paper to Be Read Miss Anita Craft will read a paper on “The Influence of the Catholic Church on Literature and Drama” at the meeting of the Study club of Daughters of Isabella tonight at the home of Miss Marie Bagnoli. 5029 Kenwood avenue.

Daily Recipe BAKED FISH After a three or four-pound fish has been cleaned at the market wash it, dry it and fill it with a stuffing made of newly boiled and mashed potatoes that have been seasoned with salt, pepper and butter, and into which some chopped bacon has been beaten. Close the opening, rub the fish all over with butter and put it in a pan with half a cup of water and a floating bay leaf. Bake in a moderate oven about twenty-five minutes, until the flakes will separate with a fork. Sprinkle minced parsley on the cooked fish and garnish with wedges of lemon. Beans and carrots go well with fish and potatoes.

Six Bridal Parties Set for Month June Social Event Will Be in Honor of City Girls. June forecasts showers, with six parties scheduled this week in honor of brides and bride-elects. Miss Henrietta Jungclaus will entertain with a luncheon-bridge Wednesday at the Avalon Country Club in honor of Miss Frances Smith, a bride-elect. The marriage of Miss Smith, daughter of Mrs. Frank M. Smith, 536 Sutherland avenue, to C. Alden White of Chicago. son of Dr. C. H. White of Mooresville, will take place June 21. Covers will be laid for Miss Smith, Mrs. Smith, Mrs. T. L. Campbell, aunt of the bride-elect, Mesdames Charles Walker, Orien W. Fifer Jr., Douglas Hoskins, Adrian B. Nail, Malcolm Campbell, Misses Pauline Becker, Jane Messick, Mary Hannah Peterson and Anna Louise Burkert. Entertain at Shower Miss Smith will be honor guest at a miscellaneous shower and bridge party to be given Friday night by Miss Burkert at her home, 2942 Broadway. Miss Lois Jackson and Miss Susan Aughinbaugh will entertain at the home of Miss Aughinbaugh, 5010 North Illinois street, Wednesday night with a crystal shower and bridge party in honor of Mrs. Edmund Burd Mrs. Burd was Miss Anna Lois Becker, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Becker, 215 East Fiftieth street, before her marriage Jan. 7. Appointments will be in gold and white, and the hostesses will be assisted by their mothers, Mrs. George Jackson and Mrs. S. L. Aughinbaugh. Other Parties Planned Guests with Mrs. Burd will be Mrs. Becker, Mrs. Tom Noblitt, Mrs. Robert Tope, Misses Annje Dungan, Jean Winchell, Pauline Becker, Helen Walls, Dorothy Arnholter, Dorothy Fitzpatrick, Irma Drake, Jean Smith, Barbara Barret and Margaret Renick. Other parties planned for brideelects are those those to be given by Miss Alice Evans Wednesday night in honor of Miss Marian Smith, Mrs. Charles Lay for Miss Mildred Lawler and Mrs. Artist Gant for Miss Martha Worth.

NICHOLSON TO BE GUILD'S SPEAKER

Meredith Nicholson will be guest speaker at the annual June breakfast of the Riley Hospital Cheer Guild at 11 Thursday at the Claypool. Chapter members will attend and work of groups throughout the state will be displayed. Guests with Mr. Nicholson at the speakers’ table will be Mr. and Mrs. J. B. H. Martin, the Rev. and Mrs. C. W. Atwater, Mesdames Carl R. Semans, president of the cheer guild; S. G. Huntington, J. F. Ward, and A. J. Porter; Misses Mary Heckard, Cordelia Hoffman, Gertrude Tencher, and Hugh McLandon, and James W. Carr. Frederic Krull will present a program of readings and songs by Riley, and Vaughn Cornish, will sing. Mrs. Ira Fisher and Miss Margaret McFarland are in- charge of reservations. The display will be in charge of Miss Alice Velsey and Mrs. Blanche B. McNew, assisted by Mrs. Robert Mattern and Mrs. Owen Bohannon. HEAD OF mJSIC DIVISION RESIGNS Mrs. Jane Johnson Burroughs has resigned her position as head of the music department of the Indiana Central college to devote her time to teaching, directing chorus work, and concerts. Mrs. Burroughs, a graduate of De Pauw university school of music and graduate student of New York university, is director of the choir of Roberts Park M. E. church the nurses’ chorus of the Methodist’hospital, and Frieden’s octet. She is a member of the Mu Phi Epsilon musical sorority, Matinee Musicale and Harmony Club.

CHURCH OFFICERS TO BE INSTALLED Officers of the women's committee of Northwood Christian church will be installed at 11 Thursday at a meeting in the church. The officers are: President, Mrs. H. C. Gemmer; vice-president, Mrs. Fred Crostreet; secretary, Mrs. T. R. Meade, and treasurer, Mrs. A. E. Ottinger. Chairman of various groups who also will take their posts are Mesdames T. W. Grafton, R. N. Thompson, Mary Penrod, C. A. Young. J. W. Ford, Wilda Babbitt, Fred Pollock, Paul Winter and C. F. Mc- ; Daniel. BABY HOMECOMING WILL BE PLANNED Mrs. Harry W. Krause is chairman of the luncheon meeting of the service committee of the White Cross Guild of the Methodist hospital, to be held at 12 Wednesday in the guest department of the hospital. Plans will be made for the baby homecoming, June 26. Assisting Mrs. Krause are Mesdames David Ross, S. M. Myers, Fred Hoke, W. E. Tinney, Edgar Kiser, Frederick Balz, Adah O. Frost, Dr. Adah Sweitzer and Miss June Gray. ♦ TUDOR HALL CLUB RE-ELECTS HEADS Mrs. Clarence Alig was re-elected j president, and Miss Priscilla Miner j was re-named treasurer of the Tudor Hall Alumnae club at the meeting held recently. Directors carried over are Mrs. William Griffith and Mrs. William VanLandingham. New officers chosen were Mrs. Henry C. Atkins, vice-president; Miss Elinor Stickney, secretary; and directors, Mrs. J. K. Lilly Jr.„ Mrs. Conrad Ruckelshaus, Miss Katherine M. Brown, Miss Courtenay Whitaker and Mrs. Robert Todd. * Services at Hall Golden Rule Lodge 25. L. A. to B. R. T. will hold memorial services at the regular meeting at 2 Wednesday in Trainmen. haU.

Patterns Pattern Department, Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Ind. Enclose find 15 cents so: which send Pat- COOT tern No. D 6 O / Size Street City State Name

l ' . ... fgp, £237

SPORTS MODEL

“One-piece for comfort, two-piece for chic” seems to be a byword in fashions. The clever trick is to combine them and be both comfortable and chic. This is the kind of little fro* that makes up in a jiffy, and is suitable for most active sports, as well as for applauding. It’s just one of the new easy-to-make models in our summer fashion book, which is something you can’t afford to be without if you intend to make a versatile summer wardrobe. We can think of no better way of doing it than by choosing one of your favorite checks and combining it with white of a plain color in the simple little dress illustrated here. Notice the other fashionable details of this particular model . . . the deep cape collar attached in front, the wide belt to make your waist look slimmer, the smooth line over the hips, and the inverted pleats adding fulness to the bottom of the skirt. For fabric requirements see pattern envelope. See our summer fashion book before you make your vacation wardrobe. Pattern No. 5237 is designed for sizes 14, 16, 18, 20 years, 32, 34, 36, 38, 40, 42 bust. New summer fashion book is out! Send for it—put check here □ and enclose 10 cents extra for book. (Copyright, 1933. by United Features Syndicate. Inc.)

City Girl Weds Raymond Ridge in Altar Rites The marriage of Miss Robbye Cook of Indianapolis, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Cecil R. Cook of Pensacola, Fla., to Raymond F. Ridge, son of Mrs. Anne Marie Ridge, took place Sunday in the Third Christian church. The Rev. William F. Rothenburger officiated. Miss Maxine Moore, accompanied by Miss Grace Black, organist, sang bridal airs. The bride, given in marriage by her brother, Vance Cook of Pensacola, Fla., wore an eggshell crepe ensemble with brown three-quarter swagger coat and brown accessories. Her flowers were white roses, lilies of the valley and gardenias. Miss Georgia Baumann, bridesmaid, wore eggshell and blue silk pique with matching garden hat, and wore shoulder corsage of Talisman roses and gardenias. Fred E. Shick w r as best man and Morrison Davis, John Troyer, Dean Brossman and Kenneth Lemons, ushers. Mr. and Mrs. Ridge will be at home at 1408 Broadway. The bride studied voice from Glenn O. Friermood and Mr. Ridge is a graduate of Butler university and a member l of the Delta Tau Delta fraternity. DINNER TO HONOR SHRINE OFFICER Mrs. R. S. Craig, officer in the j grand council of Ladies’ Oriental Shrine of North America, will be honored at a dinner-dance Wednesday night at the Lincoln, to be given by Tarum Court, No. 14, L. O. S. Mrs. Lloyd Tucker w’ili receive. Mrs. Florence Snope is in charge of the program, which will include band numbers played under the leadership of Mrs. Martin Birk. The affair is open to the public and reservations may be made with Mrs. Lou Tracy. SORORITY TO ELECT AT SUPPER SESSION Mrs. Everett M. Schofield will be hostess for the election and supper meeting of Mu Alumnae club. Kappa . Kappa Gamma sorority, Thursday j night at her home, Pendleton pike, j Mrs. Frances Terrell Dobbs is in > charge of reservations; Miss Vir-1 ginia Kerz. supper; and Miss Jean Coval, chairman of the nominatng j committee. Mrs. B. M. Guedelhoeffer, president, will preside. Card Party Scheduled Mothers’ club of Sigma Pi fraternity of Indiana university will hold a card party at 2 Wednesday at Banner-Whitehill auditorium. Mrs. R. H. Kroger is general chairman, assisted by Mrs. Charles Cherdron, tickets; Mrs. Alice Applegate, prizes, and Mrs. H. B. Hollo--1 way, publicity.

Summer Fruits Furnish Inspiration for Colors in New Women’s Attire 'Beet Root’ and ‘Currant Red’ Are Among Shades Introduced for Sport and Afternoon Ensembles. BY HELEN LINDSAY SUMMER fruits and vegetables have furnished the inspiration for three of the new colors in women’s apparel. Beet root” is a deep, dull shade of red. which is being used in triple sheer material with snow white accessories for ensembles of the newest mode. “Currant red," a similar shade, also is developed in sheer materials, many in prints or with varying sized polka dots. “Raspberry," another summer shade of red, will be particularly effective in showing off the popular fad for sun tan. At Rink's, these three shades are to be seen in soft sport and afternoon dresses, many with coats of matching material,

cut on full swagger lines. A printed sheer ensemble of white on currant red at Rink’s has pleated pique collars and cuffs on the coat. The coat is made with long sleeves, and the cuffs are deep and fitted. In beet root, Rink's is showing a simple girlish dress of crepe with a deep V shaped tucked yoke, which forms tiny cap shoulder sleeves. White organdy frills peep demurely from the sleeves, which extend slightly over the shoulders. The sleeveless coat, which is threequarter length, has a small white organdy collar. A corded sheer material also has been developed in beet root, at Rink’s. This is relieved only by a jabot effect of white down the front of the dress. A square sailor collar is featured on the coat. Twin prints have ben used in an ensemble of striped red and w r hite. The dress is made of triple sheer, with the stripes of white shown on a background

of red. ’Die same pattern, developed in red on a white background is seen in the coat, which is of a rough crepe. The coat is three-quarter length, wuth full push-up sleeves. quarter An unusual combination of silk and linen is seen at Rink’s in an ensemble. The dress, a sport model, is of silk crepe in a large checked gingham pattern of blue and white. Inserted at the waist is a wide band of white linen The dress is worn with a blue suede belt, finished with ciasps. With this a white linen coat is shown, winch features the Schiaparelli sleeve, deep revers, and slashed pockets. ° n a U a tt Special Organdy Machines Imported /~VNLY three machines in the United States capable of making the W finest sheer embroidered organdy, outstanding in graduation and bridal party costuming this season. They were imported from Switzerand. From the output of these, the L. S. Ayres store has secured bolts of fine sheer fabrics in oblong checked designs, blocks, and figured patterns. These are shown in the most delicate colorings, as well as white Other organdies are imported from Switzerland, where the technique of the manufacture the material has been perfected. The June bride this year will have as her attendants demure vounc K° n For? ° rgandy - with Plated organdy ruffles reaching to the llooi. For the br de herself, Ayres is showing trimmings of either conies of Alencon lace, or an all silk Chantilly lace. Real rose point which had and ^< i! d S °. ln pnce as t 0 make ifc almost an impossible luxury, is to be ?H° Se P > mt ° ften is 1156(1 for finishin g the bridal costume. Emu wedding lfc 1S stored away, to be added to the collection of “ n he “ 1 ° oms - 1S use <i fr °m generation to generation in family wedding parties. The bridal veil will be of tulle. It is designed this year shoit in front, coming to the tips of the fingers, and sweeping into the long, graceful lines of the train. D *** * * Deodorant Supplied By Compact HTHE manufacturers of Odorono now are making Odorono compact. It will ,hA S ™ U sil y. er one ’ filled with a P ow der in compact form, which will check perspiration, and act as a deodorant. It is suggested for use in summer sports, to prevent shiny foreheads and ndses. and should oi application to the palms of the hands before donning the smart new summer gloves. The compacts are shown in the toilet goods department at Rink s. Previously, Odorono was made only in liquid and cream forms Compacts which will carry out the mode of naval effS thfsSummer' ” BlOCk °™ ' for l *d^igns° r The 9 *and looja?ffil!s S to be supplied with individual choice of powder. ’

Contract Bridge

BY W. E. M'KENNEY Secretary American Bridge League. THE principle at auction bridge was to open with a weaker hand in first or second position than you would in third or fourth position. However, this principle definitely has been proved wrong at contract. When you make a first or second hand bid, you are laying the foundation upon which you and your partner hope to build for a game or slam. If this foundation is not sound, and you arrive at a high contract, you are apt to suffer a severe penalty. South, in the following hand has a doubtful bid, therefore no serious harm can come from a pass. West also will pass. North makes a protective third hand bid of one heart. South puts in a one over one force of one spade. West can bid two diamonds. North, due to the fact that he has made a weak opening, now should pass. East can reserve his bid and pass. South then will bid two spades, and West passes. North shows his second five-card suit by a bid of three clubs. East bids three diamonds. South now is justified in jumping to four spades—because, since he passed originally, partner won’t mistake this for a slam invitation. As East and West were vulnerable, and North and South not vulnerable, West could not take the sacrifice of five diamonds. a a a THE king of diamonds was opened by West, who then shifted to a trump. The nine was played from dummy, but South, the declarer, overtook with the ten, and then led a diamond, ruffing in dummy. A small heart was returned and won with the king. The ace and king of trump were led, leaving West with the good queen. East echoed in clubs. The declarer must not lead the j trump, or West will knock out his : ace of clubs immediately. What he must do is to lead the ten of ’ hearts. When West plays the jack, declarer should go up with the ace in dummy and return a heart, which East will win with the queen. Now, when East returns the king of clubs, the declarer will win in dummy and discard his losing club ! on the dummy’s good heart. West is helpless. All he can do is to

0 Bridge Prizes Expert suggestions by L. STRAUSS & CO.—“The W’on Over One System.’’ Bowl of Yardley’s Shaving Soap.. $ 1.30

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.JUNE 13, 1933

\ ■<**

Mrs. Lindsay

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trump with the queen, and the declarer has made his contract of four odd. (CoDyrieht. 1933. by NEA Service. Inc.) Final Meeting Held Inter-Arts club held its last meeting of the year Monday at the Indianapolis Country club with Mrs. Clayton Ridge as guest speaker. Mrs. Ridge reviewed “The Story of Nancy Meadows,” by Louise Hauck. Swimming at 5 was followed by a dinner and business meeting.

■ A \ t ft PERMANENTS SALE aglQp 1 WEEK omtJ g3 Genuine Push-i p ■ Self-Setting Spi- ■ ralette and Cro- lvalue quignole combination. Complete With Shampoo and Finger Wave. SS’mReg. J 5.00 Value Wave Permanent* Taken From A. M. to 7 P. M. BEAUTE ARTES 601 Roosevelt Bldg. Illinois and Washington St*. With or Without Appointment El. 0070 El. 0670