Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 45, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 July 1933 — Page 5
JTJEY 3, 1933
Polo Playing Is Adopted by City's Society Folk as Exciting New Pastime Rolling Ridge Field, One of Best in Country, Is Trysting Place of Local Veterans of Game. BY BEATRK E Bl ROAN Times Woman's I’aee Editor WAS someone lamenting that the season was dead unless, by the grace of fortune, we could go away to some distant resort for the summer? "Nothing new to do," someone fusses? There is something different to do. and Indianapolis seems to be slow in realizing its facility lor anew pastime. One of the finest polo
fields in the country is here, and matches every Saturday and Sunday are open to the public. Shouts of excited players mingled with the footfall thud of racing ponies. Cheers of "good shot” and “ride your man" rang out as Robert Hassler of Long Island and Aiken, S. C., and Samuel B. Sutphin led two teams in a match Sunday at. the Rolling Ridge field. Rain threatened to halt the game, but the sun finally shot through the clouds, leaving a glowing rainbow in its wake The freshly tempered breeze pleased the spectators—not to mention its welcome by the players and ponies. Mrs. Conrad Ruckelshaus, daughter of Mr. Hassler, and Mrs. Sutphin looked on from their car and cheered as players made drives down the field. Mrs. Ruckelshaus' fancy for fashionable comfort dictated a white rough straw cartwheel hat, its flat crown wreathed with rustic red, white and blue field flowers. These
Miss Burgan
wide brimmed hats are fashion’s foils—they do keep the sun out, and they are bewitchingly feminine. Her dress was of tearose crepe. Mrs. Ruckelshaus formerly played polo herself, when her father first built a field here at the Speedway. When she visited Aiken, she matched
her skill with other players. But 1 now—with women here not actively interested in playing she's content to watch her father, husband, and brother-in-law win polo laurels for the family. Mrs. Sutphin has played, too. but with her husband and two sons so active, she thinks the family quota has been reached. Samuel R. and Dudley V. Sutphin, her sons, were responsible Sunday for several goals. “We really have one of the best, fields in the country,” remarked Mrs. Sutphin, smartly gowned in a gray and white plaid silk knit dress, with a dashing contrast of Irish green in the belt and laffeta bow at the neckline. Follow Leaders’ Call “Mr. Hassler brought the grass seed from England, and the field was not used until the turf reached its growth. Visiting players have re- 1 marked about the excellent turf and the ideal levelness of the field." Mr. Hassler, builder of the field, is so interested in progress of the game here that he returns every two weeks to take part in games He keeps a string of several ponies in the stable, as do the Ruckelshaus, Sutphin and other players. Hassler and Sutphin. owners of the club, are among the few local ve,teran players who still play. At the game Sunday the younger players obviously followed the two leaders’ calls. The three Sutphins with Charles Dupuy formed the red team, opposing tile white team, composed of Hassler, Conrad and Thomas Ruckleshaus and Lester Canary, Harry George and Claude Barnum, alt of Franklin. Mrs. George accompanied her husband. Wearing a tea-rose printed crepe dress and white widebrimmed hat, she watched the match from her car. Contest on Fourth The fashion of the players must not be overlooked. They wore white gaberdine breeches, brown boots, short-sleeved polo shirts, no ties and helmets, resembling sun hats. Fine string gloves enabled a firm clasp of the reins. Matches here consist of six ehukkers, periods of seven and a half minutes, with the longest rest coming after the third. A special game will be played on the Fourth. Games with out-of-town teams tentatively have been arranged. When the Ft. Harrison players return from Ft. Knox, games with them will be resumed.
Personals
Miss Georgianna Rockwell and Mesdames W. B. Lee Richman, James L. Wagner and Charles J. Gaunt have returned to Indianapolis after visiting Mrs. William P. Anderson 111 at her summer home on Lake Wawasee. Miss Mariam Hedge. 1241 Central avenue, and Miss Beatrice Oldey, 2168 North Oxford left Sunday for a visit in Chicago. Mr. and Mrs. George B Morrison and daughter. Miss Lucille Morrison. 4007 College avenue, and Miss Phyllis Sharp are spending this week in Chicago attending A Century of Progress exposition. Rodman Close will be their guest over the week-end. Mr. and Mrs. S Olive. 3666 Watson road, left today for New York, where they will sail Thursday to spend the summer in Europe. They will return in September. Mr. Olive will be a delegate from the American Institute of Accountants to the international congress to be held the week of July 17 in London. Mis. Olive just has returned from a visit, with her parents in Rutherfordton. N. C. Mr. and Mrs. Louis W. Bruck, 52 South Audubon road, had as guests over the week-end Mr. and Mrs. Dan Avey of Cleveland. O . and Mr. and Mrs. Mingle and children. Phyllis, Eleanor and John of this city. Richard G. Bailey, son of Mr. and Mrs. Louis J. Bailey. 895 Middle drive. Woodruff place, a senior at the University of Michigan, has returned to Ann Arbor to enroll in the summer session of the school of music*. Mrs. Romney L. Willson. Golden Hill, is in New York 'visiting Mrs. Bertram Taylor. Miss Martha Ann Rupel. daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Ernest Rupel. 5716 North Pennsylvania street, and Arlene Marjorie Dalton, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank A. Dayton, 817 East Fifty-seventh street, are enrolled in Camp Nagawicka at Delafleld. Wis. Both Mrs. Rupel and Mrs. Dalton recently visited their daughters at camp. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas McMurray Jr. have taken a cottage at Lake Wawasee for the rest of the season. Mr. and Mrs. Charles O. Van Horn, 5327 North Pennsylvania street, will be the guests of Mr. and Mrs. McMurray over July 4. Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Allerdice and family. 145 East Forty-fourth street, left Saturday to visit Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Langtree in Evanston, 111.
Patterns Pattern Department, Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Ind. Enclose find 15 cents for which send Pat- C O A C tern No. D & c f D Size Street City State Name
% „ ! ■9O ! II II fjjjlg 111 If Nil vw2l |y| | | lUwl \J5246
COTTON MODEL
It's conservative to be extreme. Just one short year ago, towering fezes and jutting shoulders would have made us conspicuous. But now these striking ideas have met such enthusiastic acceptance that we are apt to be conspicuous if we don’t adopt them. And really, what fashionable woman in search of new id Q as wouldn't snatch up a frock as flattering as this? First, it has exaggerated shoulder width in the form of perky frills that present no difficulties to the amateur dressmaker. Then, the liberal use of white emphasizes the shoulders in a manner that makes the rest of the figure simply melt away by comparison. The zigzag skirt seam terminating in an inverted pleat does its bit to add to the swagger streamline effect. For detailed fabric requirements see pattern envelope. Other up to date summer styles in our fashion magazine. Pattern No. 5246 is designed for sizes 14, 16. 18. 20 years. 32. 34, 36 38. 40. 42. 44. 46. bust. Price for pattern 15 cents. New summer fashion book is out! Send for it—put check here [ ] and enclose 10 cents extra for book. iCopvrieht, 193 V bv United Features Syndicate. Ir.c.i
JUNE BRIDE
—Photo bv Moorcfteid. Mrs. Richard Warren Garrison
Mrs Richard Warren Garrison was Miss Lucille Costello, daughter of Mrs. Helen V. Costello. Bluff Crest, before her marriage Sunday at the home of the bride s mother.
Garbo, Kay Francis Among Ten American Women Who Set Fashion Pace Which Millions Folloic
BY JULIA BI.ANSHARD NEA Service Writer VIEW YORK, July 3—Who is America's best-dressed woman? Who really sets fashions for the millions to follow? "There is one woman on the stage or in society who functions as an all-round style leader,” Wilhela Cushman, fashion director of Bonwit Teller, declared in response to that moot question. “Women today specialize,” Miss Cushman pointed out. “It is an age of types. One woman may be marvelous in sports clothes and undistinguished in evening attire. Another may be extremely smart one season and just miss the next. However, though we lack one dominating spirit in America, we have a number of perfect types. Together, they set style.” When Miss Cushman, just recently appointed to her present important position, makes such a statement, it carries tremendous value, because of her outstanding reputation as a fashion expert. She has one of the most rounded and original fashion experiences of any one in the field. She has been designer for three of New York's most exclusive clothing houses, practically commuting to Europe for new ideas, and has designed fabrics, working out some entirely new weaves several years ago in Paris that just now are being used by Paris houses. tt tt tt SHE it was who first introduced linen, back in 1929. She also is responsible for bringing back long evening gloves, in their present. thoroughly exciting and fascinating form. And, important from a style point of view, Miss Cushman was the first fashionist who used debutantes for mannikins, a fact which has influenced the mode tremendously. Asked to compile a list of the ten best-dressed women in this country who influence what everybody wears, Miss Cushman nominated six society women, one sportswoman and three screen stars. None from the stage. The list is as follows: Greta Garbo, Mrs. Harrison Williams, Mrs. Marshall Field 111, Nona Cales McAdoo, Gloria Vanderbilt,
Manners and Morals
For a sane solution of your difficulties, write to Jane Jordan, who wili analyse your case and answer your questions' in this column. Dear Jane Jordan—My husband is past 50. We have two children in school, and a nice home. I love this man as no one ever loved, and our home always was pleasant until another woman started something. She has two children and is a widow. She will be a mother again in another month and says the child is my husband’s. He believes her. She came to me and told me this. She thinks I will leave and give him to her. He says he loves children better than anything on earth. I feel so sorry for him that I will stay with him as long as there is breath in my body. Although I know I could get the children without any trouble. I would not be happy away from him. I don't believe the woman’s child is his. Do you think I am soft, or do you praise me for the attitude I have taken? UNHAPPY. Answer—No. I do not think you are soft. You deserve nothing but praise for preserving your affection for your husband while he goes around one of
those dangerous corners we hear so much about. At his age, men often become alarmed over their waning virility and seek to restore it by fresh stimuli. A sympathetic, underst anding wife at this point is worth her weight in rubies. She realizes that
HsH6sl9m£pit
Jane Jordan
a marriage which always has been happy before the emergency arose can not vanish into thin air over night. Many times I have a profound sympathy for the other woman in the case, but I do not like your husband's paramour. A woman so unscrupulous as to victimize an innocent new life to gain her own selfish ends is decidedly unworthy. While I feel very sorry for the coming child, I do not believe your husband should shirk his duty toward his legitimate children for its sake. Adoption by kindly strangers is the best possible solution for the case of the illegitimate child. I am particularly impressed by the fact that you have hidden the father's misdeeds from your own
Daily Recipe PRUNE PUDDING 1 4. pound prunes 1 1 o cups cold water 1 2 cup sugar 2 cups prune ivater 1 inch stick cinnamon 4 tablespoons flour 4 tablespoons cold water Soak the prunes overnight in the 14 cups cold water. Cook in the same water until they are tender. Drain, but save the liquid. Remove the seeds and cut primes into bits. Add sugar, cinnamon, and hot prune juice. If juice does not measure 2 cups add enough water to make up the measure. Bring to the boiling point and simmer for ten minutes. Add the 4 tablespoons cold water to the flour and mix to a smooth paste. Add this slowly to the prune mixture, stir, and cook for ten minutes over slow fire or over boiling water. Remove stick cinnamon, if used, and pour the pudding, into a bowl or mold. Serve cold.
■ **~ ~ ~ i
Given places among America’s ten best-dressed women are Kay Francis (left) for her choice of formal attire; Greta Garbor (center, above) for her influence on fashions; Mrs. Harrison Williams (right) for her originality and fearlessness: Miss Whitney Bourne (left, below) as the personification of Park avenue, and Katharine Hepburn (right, below) for her chic in sports things.
Mrs. Vincent Astor, W’hitney Bourne. Kay Francis, Katherine Hepburn and Helen Wills Moody. “I have put Garbo first,” she explained, “because without caring much for clothes herself, she influences more women and starts more fads than any one in America. tt tt tt ARBO was responsible for the vJ long bob which changed millinery. The beret which she introduced with such nonchalance still is a best seller. Belted sports
BY JANE JORDA:
children. I can not help but feel that so wise a woman will be able to preserve the unity of her own home, even though it rocks on its foundations for a time. If you maintain a helpful, kindly attitude and assist in extricating him from these difficulties, your old age probably will be spent in peace and happiness. tt tt a Dear Jane Jordan—Will you please suggest this solution for M. M.? <M. M.'s husband is enamoured of a young cousin who came to live with the family.) Act very ill for a few days and see a doctor you can trust. Have him order you away for a two week’s rest. Then suggest to your husband that he hire this very cousin to look after him and the children while you are gone. lam positive that in two weeks' time he will be coming for you. The woman who picks a married man is too lazy to hunt for a single one. This heat and three children to run after, with a house to keep clean, is no job for a lazy person. This recipe has cured two other cases. Each time the woman left of her own accord, not to return again in person or letter. Answer for M. M. Answer This shrewd and very practical solution tickles my soul, and I would like to see it tried. Barring exceptional cases, it is true that the woman who falls in love with a married man hasn’t confidence in her ability to compete for a single one. Married men are ensnared more easily because usually they are bored thoroughly, and the illicit adventure offers the only opportunity for the entertainment lacking at home. It also is true that housekeeping, heat, and children is not a suitable background for a romance. The young lady’s halo is pretty sure to be worn askew' after two weeks of w'restling with the wife’s problems. This experiment ought to make the most frivolous husband a sadder but wiser man. Os course I do not think that any trick w'ill make incompatible people compatible, nor destroy love which is based on complete mutual understanding. tt tt a Dear Jane Jordan —I am 23 years old. At 17 I was married to a brute and we have a son 5 years' old who is with my folks. I’ve been going with a man who has an icicle for a wife. He hasn't a divorce and neither have I. He is willing to get a divorce and take me as his own. What holds me up is that he is jealous wdien he has no right to be. Should I make the change or go on as I am? HARD TO PLEASE Answer—l'll believe in the man's divorce when I see it. I think you'd better burn your bridges behind you before you cross any more. Somehow the set-up doesn't impress me as being inspired by true or lasting love. I think you'd better listen to your well-founded doubts. Name Neiv Officers New officers of Valencian chapter of the International Travel Study Clubs Inc. are: Mrs. Rose Braudlein. president: Mrs. Alice Ellison, first vice-president and floral chairman; Mrs. Margaret Wright, second vice-president; Mrs. Lillian Fedwick. secretary; Mrs. Rose Pratt, treasurer: Mrs. Grover D. Slider, publicity chairman: Mrs. Frances Artist, membership chairman, and Mrs. Lulu Mann, telephone chairman. Miss Morris Wed Miss Katharyn Morris, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William E. Morris, became the bride of John Heid. son of Mr. and Mrs. Louis Heid. Sr., Sunday at the Olive Branch church. The Rev. Ephraim D. Lowe read the ceremony. Mrs. Dewey L. Sisk, sister of the bride, was her only attendant. Luncheon for Club Mrs Edith Huckleberry. 552 North Lyon street, will entertain the A. W. T. Pocahontas Embroidery Club at a covered dish luncheon, Thursday.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
City Girl Wed to State Man in Church Rite A half hour of organ music preceded the marriage ceremony of Miss Helen Frances Starr and M. Gordan Bringle of Kokomo at 2:30 Sunday in the First Congregational church, when the Rev. Ellis W. Kay read the service. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles M. Starr, 3442 North Capitol avenue. She entered with her father and was attended by Miss Evelyn Thompson, wearing a pale pink chiffon dress fashioned with a jacket having puff sleeves. She wore blue accessories and carried pink roses and delphinium. The Rev. Wilson S. Parke Jr. was best man. The bride’s dress was of white mousseline de soie, cut on fitted lines with flared skirt and nun collar, edged with flow r ers. She carried a bridal bouquet of tea roses and baby breath. Miss Jeanne Jackson, soloist, sang “Beloved It Is Morn,” “L'Heure Exquise,” and “O Promise Me.” Miss Lois Lehman, organist, played numbers including 'A La Bien Aimee,” “I Wed Thee,” Lohengrin and Tannhauser's wedding marches. Following an informal reception at home, the couple left for a northern trip, the bride wearing an azure blue silk suit with fox trim on the cuffs. They will live at 309 East Walnut street, Kokomo. Out-of-town guests included Mr. and Mrs. Donald Mooney of Muskegon. Mich., and Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Freeberg of Chicago. The bride is a graduate of Arthur Jordan’s Conservatory of Music and member of Phi Beta sorority.
SHOWER IS GIVEN MISS ALICE REED A tea and shower was given Sunday in honor of Miss Alice Louise Reed, whose marriage to Delbert R. Shearer will be solemnized Saturday in the Old Bethel M. E. church. Mrs. Amos V. Smith, formerly Miss Priscilla Shearer, entertained at 4 Sunday afternoon at her home in Oaklandon. Assisting the hostess were her mother. Mrs. Walter Shearer, and her sister. Miss Katherine Shearer. Guests included Mrs. Mason Reed, mother of the bride-elect: Misses Janice Berlin. Mildred Jeffries, Irene Myers, Anna Margaret Snjder, June Ellenberger and June White of Cumberland, Virginia Schlosser. Nellie Knierhm. Tecla Behrm, Opal and Doris Bradley. Dorothy Enners, Helen Harding. Henrietta Askren. Lucille Limbach. Lillian Denny, Marjorie Meyer and Charlotte Lefforge of Oaklandon and Marian Irrgang of Fortville. Schedule Meeting Regular meeting of the Sons of Union Veterans Auxiliary, scheduled for Tuesday, has been postponed until July 18 at Ft. Friendly.
coats have been on the market for years but it took Garbo to exploit them. It is Garbo's dominating personality, her expressive manner, even in her indifference to style, that makes what she wears have such character that it is copied. ‘ Os American society women, I think Mrs. Harrison Williams comes nearest to being a leader because of her originality and fearlessness. At Palm Beach this year, she inaugurated her anti-suntan cam-
A Day’s Menu Breakfast — Chilled grapefruit juice, uncooked cereal with sliced bananas, cream, buttered toast, coffee, milk. Luncheon — Fresh fruit salad, cream cheese on Melba toast, deep dish cherry pie, iced tea, milk. Din tier — Escalloped ham and potatoes in casserole, lettuce salad with Thousand Island dressing,' fresh strawberry ice, coffee, milk.
paign, wearing long-sleeved, highnecked beach things, and a cart wheel hat. This will be copied this summer at Newport and Southampton. Next summer, less exclusive watering places will be influenced by her example. “Mrs. Marshall Field 111 looks exactly as British aristocrats are supposed to look, but seldom do. She has an inate elegance, which dominates even her simplest sports clothes. “Nona Coles McAdoo (Mrs. Edward Coles) senses a style before it is a vogue and discards it the minute it becomes popular. Yet she never is bizarre—just “different” enough. St St St Gloria vanderbilt, widow of the late Reginald Vanderbilt, gives an air of romance and glamour to everything she wears. Though her clothes are distinctly Parisian, they suggest old masters rather than the couturiers of the moment. A certain Monk Lisa quality in her is emphasized by her gowns, though she cleverly avoids being arty. “Mrs. Vincent Astor is the perfectly groomed woman. Her whole attire has the stamp of perfection. She is distinguished looking, always. Conventional and cautious in her selections, she never is startling, but completely dependable. “Whitney Bourne is the authentic personification of smart Park Avenue in 1933. Sleek, sophisticated and very modern, she suggests wit, glitter, sparkling conversation and a sip of champagne. To simple clothes she gives a wise nterpretation and in evening attire she is enchanting. tt tt tt Katharine hepburn and Kay Francis are outstanding in the cinema world. Both have possibilities of greater distinction. Each is original and fresh in viewpoint. Each has a vivid personality. Miss Hepburn is perfect in sports things, and even her evening things have the casual look of sports clothes. Kay Francis is ideal in formal attire. “Helen Wills Moody deserves a place in the list of best-dressed women because she has a sense of fitness and form as fine as her technique in tennis. “The woman who influences fashions most is not a conformist,” Miss Cushman concluded. “Dramatizing some distinctive characteristic of her own makes her outstanding. Though clothes may be her great enthusiasm, she must somehow convey the impression of casualness. “Conscious effort is fatal. Nor must she look as if she had just come out of a smart dress shop, newly outfitted from head to toe. She herself must always be more important than her clothes.”
7TSGDE 8Y BRUCE CATTON
THE bewildering impact of two civilizations in China, where opposite standards in morals, in economics and in politics are brought together tragically a thousand times every day, forms the subject matter for Pearl Buck's new book. "The First Wife.” This book is a collection of short stories; stories which are interesting on their own 'account, and which also give one anew understanding of the strange and chaotic situation into which the worlds most ancient civilization has fallen. The first story, which gives its title to the book, illustrates the matter as well as any. In it the son of a Chinese tea merchant comes home after spending seven years studying the white man's culture. His parents, his wife and his children await him eagerly, but his absence has changed him so completely that he no longer can fit into his old place in society. The readjustment is difficult for all of them: for the wife it is impossible. He has become westernized. There is no longer any ground on which he and she can meet. Her tragedy epitomizes the cruel maladjustment which changing times have forced upon Chinese society. The other stories are equally enlightening. There are studies cf the revolutionists, a savage portrait of the treaty-port white's attitude toward the Chinese, a story of the collapse of a kindly Catholic priest's life work; all thoughtful, sympathetic and revealing. Published by the John Day Company, "The First Wife,” retails at $2.50,
Adrian, Famed Designer of Gowns, Is Creator of New Style Bathing Suits Models Produced by B. V. D. Company Are Offered in Variety of Knits; Wearing Ease Is Feature. BY HELEN LINDSAY TO women who love and appreciate distinctive and exotic clothing, the name "Adrian” is that of a magician. For it was Adrian who created the spectacular metal costume worn by Garbo in Mata Hari; the gowns of Joan Crawford in "Letty Lynton," and many of the different gowns worn by Norma Shearer in her better known productions Adrian not only is a native of America, but a son of the rugged hills of Connecticut. He left his farm home to design clothing for the Hollywood stars. Now he has been enlisted by the manufacturers of B. V D.
underwear, to produce the most unusual and flattering bathing suits, which are the newest venture of the B. V. D. company. These swimming suits which he has designed are of various knits and designs. They are made backless to the waist, with straps crossing to the waist. Elastic bands across the back of the trunks insure perfect fit. The suits made by B V. D.. as shown at L. Strauss & Cos., include a yellow purl knit model, a plain black with white straps, and others of small tweed pattern. The B. V. D. manufacturers have spared nothing in designing these suits. For creative ideas for men's suits, they have secured Johnny Weismuller. The suits designed by him are built for great ease and speed. Two years ago, when these manufacturers first decided to make a woman’s brassiere type bathing suit, they had a special brassiere made, by one of the finest importers and designers on the Plaza in New York. The cost of this one garment was SSO. It was
used as a model for the suits made with brassieres. Every new idea in the B. V. D. suits is designed with this same meticulous care. Strauss is showing as the newest idea in footwear for sports, imported Spanish espadrilles, for men and women. These are of white canvas, with some for women having colored seam bindings. They are flat, with soles made of rope, much in the fashion of shoes worn by Spanish sailors. The rope sole prevents slipping when walking on polished or wet surfaces] and is very pliable. Espadrilles of this design have been very popular during the past winter along the Mediterranean and in Florida. They have been used extensively on Malibou beach, and rapidly are gaining favor at all fashionable beaches. "Bunborees” are shorts, made of imported heavy gaberdine, to bo worn for sports of all kinds. They are ideal for bicycling. Thev have high waist lines, and stripes of colored silk braid down the outside of the legs. Clipper shirts, of soft mesh, in white or colors, are to be worn with them. Women's slacks, though they may be worn in careless fashion, must be tailored well to be smart. New ones shown at Strauss are of white or colored gaberdine, and are made on the same fitted about the waist lines as men's slacks. The waist lines are high, coming to a point in back. Short gaberdine mess jackets are to be worn with the gaberdine slacks. Flannel slacks come in white or navy flannel. St St tt tt tt St Exclusive Beer Display Opened THE first exclusive shop for the display of beer merchandise was opened at Charles Mayers Saturday morning. This is called the “3.2" r shop.” It has shelves of the most distinctive of the new drinking accessories. An attractive bar. bearing illustrations in John Held style, has been decorated by William Hickson, graduate of John Herron Art Institute. The lighting is effected with a bottle-shaped lantern swinging from the ceiling. Newest of new pitcher and mug sets is of earthenware, bearing caricatures of President Roosevelt, A1 Smith. Garner. McAdoo. Robinson and Ritchie. Other sets also are of earthenware, deco.ated with brightly colored stripes. Mugs bearing the seals of famous old German establishments are on display. One shows the baby monk, the seal of Munich; another the insignia of Hoffbrau brew. A toby jug, originally designed lor the serving of ale, was the original design of Josiah Spode. Basket weave has been used for a coaster for cold bottles. One stein bears the German inscription. “Ein frischer trank macht Alte jung” (a fresh drink makes the old young). Copper goblets are arranged in attractive manner on a serving tray. The shelves display trays in individual designs. One shows an airplane view of the World's Fair buildings at Chicago: another is in the shape of a good luck horseshoe, and has a decorative design of horseheads. Others show bright colored hunting scenes. * * * tt tt a Tray Has Pretzel Rack A BEER tray of spun aluminum is large enough to carry a number of 1 *• bottles and glasses, and is designed with a pretzel rack in the. center - China coasters, with the marks for French fennigs, are like the ones used in France for the keeping of the drinking account. Bright-colored print mittens, lined with outing, are for use in the handling of iced bottles and glasses. A copper beer holder is designed like a kettle, with a removable top o^" s into which the bottles may be set, with ice in the bottom For the comfort of the customer, seats in the form of beer kegs hava been placed in front of the bar. S
Contract Bridge
BY W. E. M’KENNEY Secretary American Bridge League IF you are to become a successful contract bidder you must set up in your mind an electric sign with the following slogan blazing forth in red letters—‘ Look for the safety of the hand.” This is what protects you against misfit hands, insures your playing the hand in the right suit or passing at early stages of the bidding even though you do hold a number of high card tricks. The following hand has several interesting bidding angles. The proper bidding is as follows: South begins with one heart—the hand is not strong enough for a two bid, as it has more than three losing cards. Holding tw r o major suits the longer suit should be bid first. West passes. While North has a no trump distribution and has every suit, but hearts stopped, he is not strong enough to overcall with two no trump and is too strong to bid one no trump. Therefore, his best constructive bid is two diamonds. East passes, and South now' shows his second suit by bidding two spades. North knows that he and his partner have discovered the safety of the hand, and this should be showm immediately by a bid of three spades. They now can bid what they wish, knowing that they can alw r ays safely come back to spades. a a o SOUTH bids four hearts to show a long solid heart suit with honors and asking North if there is any possible chance of playing the hand at hearts. North then should AQ-10-7-3 V 9-3 ♦ A-Q-J-2 AQ-J-6 AJ-6 NORTH aß _ s _2 *B-6-4 5> > VJ-7-2 ♦ 9-8- u 5) ♦ K-6-4 7-5 £ H A A-9-AlO-8- Dealer 3.2 7-5 SOUTH A A-K-9-4 V A-K-Q-1 0-5 ♦ 10-3 AK-4 13 bid four no trump denying ‘the heart suit and showing strength in the other suits. South should then bid five spades, and North will go to six.
PERMANENTS THERE IS A UEST: ‘DLR-O-LISTIC” (Method and Process) @I.OO to 810.00 Does Not Discolor White Hair BEAUTE ARTES 601 Roosevelt Bldg. LI. 06*0—No Appointment Necessary.
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V A J*L
Mrs. Lindsay
A double by East will make it rather sample for the declarer to make his contract, because West will open the nine of diamonds, and if East has doubled declarer will know that he can not take the finesse but must go right up with the ace. If there is no double, the declarer may take a chance on the finesse which, of course, will lose and the ace of clubs will be cashed, defeating the contract. If the declarer goes up with the ace of diamonds he then takes three rounds of trump, starts the heart suit, w'hich will break, discards the three diamonds in dummy, ruffs the ten of diamonds in dummy and loses nothing but the ace of clubs. < Copyright, 1933. bv NEA Service. Inc.) Miss Dungan Hostess Week-end guests of Miss Anna Marie Dungan, 470 East Seventyfirst street, were Misses Sarah Stuart of Tampa, Fla, Myra Mooney and Katherine Barrs of Jacksonville, Fls., and Evelyn Hanie of Gainesville, Fla., w’ho left today for Chicago. They were guests at a tea given Sunday afternoon by Miss Dungan for Miss Mary Virginia Warren of Tampa, Fla., who is spending several weeks with her. Cumberland Girl Wed Mr. and Mrs. H. A Wampner, Cumberland, announce the marriage of their daughter, Miss Emma Wampner* to Fayette H. Burroughs, son of Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Burroughs, which took place June 1. Mr. and Mrs. Burroughs are at home at 3714 East Washington street.
You’ll prefer the flavor “When you are offered a substitute for genuine Kellogg's, remember it ia seldom in the spirit of service.” # / /f ihtmhp or BATTLE CBEIK
