Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 290, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 April 1934 — Page 4

PAGE 4

Give Youth Jobs to Bar Rebellion Inability to Do Away With Idleness Makes Bad Situation. BY GRLTTA PALMER Times Special Writer NEW YORK, April 14. not sec how there could be a revolution of youth in this country.” I said at the lunch table. “The col-lege-age boys, I know, are dreamers. They are melancholy about their chances of getting jobs, and they are a fairly unhappy crew, but there

is not an ounce of rugged desperation in a class of them.” ‘ Well," said a World war veteran, "we were squeamish and delicate esthetes, too, when we enlisted. But we weren’t when they got through with us in training camp. Do you know' the details of bayonet drill?’* I didn’t. It was not one of the facts of war-

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Miss Palmer

fare that were brought to the attention of the sock-knitting sex. This is how it goes; You are prepared for bayonet drill by preliminary practice with a rifle in which shouldering arms and such gestures become automatic. No mention of an adversary is made at this stage; you are being taught to handle arms habitually and without thought. Then a new' element is introduced into the practice—you are taken out to a row of sandbags and are told that at a certain order you must lunge, make a fierce face, plunge your bayonet into the bag and roar. Now, that roar is very interesting. Obviously it is not intended, simply to scare the man you are attacking in the trench, who is personified, for the present, by a sandbag. That roar is intended to make you angry enough to kill a man whom you never saw before. a a a OUR war department' seems to i have a good grasp on the principles of psychology. It w'as William j James who said 1 hat a man does not ; run away from a bear because he is afraid; he is afraid because” he is running away. By the same token it seems reasonable to suppose that if you teach a man to look and sound ferocious he will feel ferocious—ferocious enough to kill a soldier for the cardinal offense of wearing a different sort of uniform than his own. Mass Insanity Produced That kind of mass insanity can be j induced and is induced very cannily i by any government at wmr. It is particularly easy, it seems, to I persuade very young men, by an ap- j peal to their idealism, against their j natural distaste for the horrid business of killing. This is w’ork which requires strength and youth, and in | these qualities the young excel. It is only natural that a young j man should eagerly embrace a philosophy caters to his self-es- j teem by rating his qualities higher j than those of older men. The susceptibility of youth to the ' glamour of arms is the greatest prop ! that the Fascist and militaristic J leaders have today. And the young men of the Fascist countries, mind you, are no different from our own. They have simply been conditioned by bayonet practice and slogans, stirring airs and flattery into a state of mind where murder seems an acceptable means toward Utopia. World Offers Little The young men of America come j pouring from our schools every,] spring into a world which seems to offer very little to them in the way | of opportunity. If we make room for j them in constructive ways they will be content. But if we fail and if some leader i sells them on the idea of a pink or purple-shirted fascism they will be a very different lot from the peaceful and idealistic boys w'e see today. They will have had their bayonet drill.

LEAGUE SINGERS HEARD AT SCHOOL

Indianapolis Junior League Glee Club presented a program of three groups of song Wednesday before the Pa rent-Teacher Association of School 66. Edward LaShelle. director, accompanied by Bonnie Blue Brown, sang two groups of numbers. Mrs. Herman Wolf is accompanist for the club and Mrs. Paul E. Fisher, chairman. MISS FACEMAYER WED IN CHURCH Marriage vows were exchanged bv Miss Margaret Facemayer, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Louis H. Facemayer. and D. Fred Shannon in a ceremony Thursday morning at Sacred Heart church. The Rev. Ethelbert Harms officiated at the ceremony and high mass. The bride, given in marriage by h£r father, was attended by her sister, Miss Alberta Facemayer. as maid of honor, who wore peach mousseline de soie with white accessories. and Miss Billie Brandmair. who wore a yellow dress with white accessories. Miss Facemayer carried pink roses and Miss Brandmair. Talisman roses. With a white satin gown, the bride wore a tulle veil, caught to a shadow lace cap. She carried a bridal bouquet of roses. Joseph McNamara was best man. and ushers were Edwin Shannon, brother of the bridegroom, and Daniel O'Neil. After a wedding breakfast and reception at the Facemayer home, the couple left for a short wedding trip. They will make their home at 703 Lincoln street. MISS SIELKEN TO BE WED IX JUNE Mr. and Mrs. Herman H. Sielken announce the engagement of their daughter, Miss Nellie Inez Sielken. to William C. Brandt, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles C. Brandt. The wedding will take place in June. Mij* Sielken is a graduate of Earlham college and Mr. Brandt attended the university of Cincin*n£ti and belongs to Sigma Chi fraternity.

Assist in Ticket Sale

Left to right, Mrs. Harold L. Hocfman and Mrs, T. 11. Detlaff. Two of the ticket committee. Mrs. Harold L. Hoefman and Mrs. T. H. DetfafT. for the St. Vincent Hospital Guild supper-dance, are distributing tickets in their sales campaign. The dance will be held Saturday night. April 21, at the Indianapolis Athletic Club.

A Woman’s Viewpoint

BY MRS. WALTER FERGUSON

T HAVE long since become impervious to the cussing of those who are somewhat dotty about dogs. It may surprise them, therefore, to know I am ready to take the advice of the veteran campaigner who said. “If you can’t lick ’em, jine ’em.” Well, I’m jining ’em. On one issue at least. Fortifying myself with another stick of gum, I w'ave the flag of truce and for the time being pledge my allegiance to Odd McIntyre, Mrs. Diana Bellais, Irene McLaughlin and a hundred million other individuals who are ready to fight and, if need be, to

BRIDE OF WEEK

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Mrs. Raymond Austermiller

The marriage of Miss Hazel Ringo. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Louis Ringo. and Raymond Austermiller, son of Mr. and Mrs, Charles Austermiller, took place last Saturday with the Rev. W. H Kendall officiating. Mr. and Mrs. Austermiller are at home at 1512 North Pennsylvania street.

♦h. S' (JL?ca> '- UhftiW t cJhoo-**®. doantU VuvcK, I\ma o£ AruH-^ed^. x/ ukM [re. hi<£\K ‘Potato. 231 Inclosed find 15 cents for which send me Pattern No. 231 or 232. Size Name ~..• Street City State

H| ERE are two dresses for street and party wear that any young miss will be proud to wear. The party dress. Pattern 231, which can be made in crepe, organdy or dimity, is designed in sizes 6 to 12 years. Size 10 requires 2 1 ; yards of 39-inch fabric. a pattern and simple sewing chart Os this model, tear out ti* • coupon and mail it to Julia Boyd, The Indianapolis Times, 214 West Maryland street, Indianapolis, together with 15 cents in coin.

die so the American dog may have a square deal. When Governor William H. Murray of Oklahoma threatens to call out the national guard—and calling out the guard is all in a day’s work w’ith him—in order to shoot down any adventurous canine who feels April in his blood, I forthwith desert to the enemy camp. The spectacle of 5,000 militiamen patrolling the public highway for the sole purpose of taking pot shots at stray mongrels makes me a dog-con-scious citizen. Even the threat of it sets me gibbering and gnawing my knuckles. In a season when the sap is rising, when romance blossoms and the heart is filled with strange, sw r eet desires, and w’hen even husbands roam, far be it from me to sit silent while the noble dog is chained to his kennel and forbidden to sniff the delights of spring. The just ire of a great people has been roused, I assure you by this gubernatorial ukase. Other issues have found us inert, but once your true Oklahoman sees injustice rampant in his midst he goes berserk. We remained comparatively calm when the Ku Klux Klan carried on its infamous persecutions back in the glad, mad days of 1926. The campaign of the Silver Shirts, now' going on, moves us little, while the plight of the hapless Negro in our state has alw’ays left us cold. But as citizens of a powerful commonwealth we will brook no attacks upon life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness for our dogs. When the bayonets bristle against Fido, look out for trouble. Literary Clubs to Meet Fletcher Hodges will talk on “An Ohio Pilgrimage” at a meeting of the Indianapolis Literary Club Monday night at the D. A. R, chapter house. Mrs. T. C. Scott, Los Angeles, Cal., has come from Florida to visit Mrs. M. C. Grimes, 3530 Guilford avenue.

THE INDIANAPOLTS TIMES

Piel Home to Be Scene of Wedding Miss Helene Sudbrock Will Become Bride of Frank Hegeman. A wedding in the home of her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Cnarles F. Piel, 3266 North Meridian street, tonight, will unite in marriage Miss Helene Sudbrock, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Walter A. Sudbrock, and Frank A. Hegeman, son of Mr. and Mrs. Fred T. Hegeman. A mantel arranged with palms, cibotium ferns and dresden flowers and lighted with cathedral candles will form the background for the service to be read by the Rev. William H. Eifert. The family kneeling bench will be used for the service. The Piel home will be arranged with cut spring flowers and the serving table for the reception to follow the service will be centered with a tiered w'edding cake. Assisting at the reception will be Mesdames Harry F. Brinkmeyer, Carl W. Piel, Herbert C. Piel and Charles F. Piel and Miss Josephine Meloy. The Tannhauser “Wedding March” and “Pagan Love Song” and other traditional bridal airs will be played during the ceremony. The bride, who will be unattended, will enter with her father. Her gown of double faced satin will be fashioned with a draped neckline fastened with a pearl ornament worn by her mother at her wedding. The gown will be worn with a matching jacket, and a tiered tulle veil W’hich will fall from a tulle head band caught at the sides with orange blossoms. She will carry the handkerchief carried by her mother and her bouquet will be a shower of white spring flowers. Mrs. Sudbrock will appear in a gown of white crepe and will wear a dresden corsage; Mrs. Hegeman will wear nile green crepe with a corsage of pink roses and Mrs. Piel’s gown will be black lace and chiffon. The couple will leave on a motor trip to Wisconsin, the bride traveling in a chartreuse green tweed suit with yellow and black accessories. The at-home address is 3356 North Pennsylvania street, after May 1.

HOSTESS

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Mrs. Nancy E. Shelby Dinner meeting will be held by the National Association of Women Monday night at the Washington. Mrs. Nancy E. Shelby will be dinner hostess.

State Sorority Observance Will End With Dance The pine tree symbol of Delta Delta Delta sorority predominated in the decorative scheme at the annual state luncheon and dance today at the Claypool. Delta shaped centerpieces of pine branches centered the small serving tables. At each point was a lighted silver taper and corsages for guests were arranged in the branches. Small pine trees decorated the speakers table, seating Mrs. Amy O. Parmelee, editor of the Trident; Miss Pearle B. Bonisteel, national treasurer; Mrs. Edward Haan, province deputy; Mrs. Otto K. Jensen, president of the Indianapolis Alliance, who greeted guests; Mrs. Alton Snyder, Franklin, and Mrs. George A. Bowers, Ft. Wayne. Chapter presidents ' who responded were Misses Louise Link, De Pauw university; Margaret Hougham, Franklin college; Avanelle Brenneman, Butler university, and Mary Alice Stewart, Indiana university. Scholarship awards were presented to Misses Louise Link, De Pauw; Mildred Avery, Franklin; Helen Riggins, Butler, and Bdith Alice Prentice. Indiana. Musical entertainment was provided by Miss Imogene Pearson and Mrs. jane Johnson Burroughs. Active chapter of Indiana presented a stunt, “Once in a Lifetime,” written and directed by Miss Betty Furr. Taking part were Misses Angeline Vernon. Josephine Ford, Ruth Sprauer. Margery Thurman. Bernice Purcell, Bernice Adley, Betty Strack, Ruth Barr, Bonnie Mclntosh, Vera Braun, Alice Joyce Cody, Virginia Lyday, Jean Cadick, Frances Forsythe and Lena Heller. Three hundred active and alumnae members of state chapters joined the celebration. Chaperons for the dance tonight will be Mrs. Ann B- Repass, Mr. and Mrs. William H. Book and Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Coy. CANDIDATES WILL ATTEND RECEPTION Seventh Ward Woman's Democractic Club will hold a reception for candidates at 3 Monday night at the Barbara Frietchie tearoom, 1739 Forth Meridian street, instead of with Mrs. Hereford Dugan as previously announced. All Democratic candidates are invited to attend. Mrs. Badger Williamson is president. Troop to Entertain Catholic Daughters of America. Troop 18. will entertain in honor of Troop 17 tonight with a progressive dinner. Hostesses will be Misses Margaret Fennal, Patricia O'Donnell, Mary Seal and Mary Catherine DippeL

The Week’s Calendar for City’s Clubs

MONDAY Indianapolis Associate chapter. Tri Kappa, will meet wdth Mrs. John Riester, 3015 College avenue, hostess, assisted by Mrs. Elgan Stark and Mrs. Joseph W. Walk. Miss Clarissa Ahl, Centerville, will inspect the chapter. Guest day will be held by the New Era Club with a 12:30 luncheon at All Souls Unitarian church. Indianapolis Tri Kappa Club will meet at 6:30 at the Barbara Frietchie tearoom. Mothers’ Club, Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity, will hold a bridge party for members and their guests at 1:30 at the chapter house, 4721 Sunset lane. Mesdames J. C. Stipher, H. P. German and C. E. Lett w r ill be hostesses. Mrs John Downing Johnson, 2060 North Alabama street, will be hostess for a meeting of the Parliamentary Club. Mrs. J, Norman Bailey will assist. Mrs. Bert Westover will review the autobiography of Mary Austin before members of the Sesame Club at the home of Mary Cottage, 2346 Carrollton avenue. Members of the Monday Afternoon Reading Club will entertain their husbands at 8 at Foster hall. Hostesses will be Mesdames Russell E. Atkins, Leland K. Fishback, Lee Walker and John W. Maltby. Mrs. Louis W. Bruck, 52 South Audubon road, will be hostess for the meeting of the Irvington Woman's Club. Dean Albert E. Bailey will give an illustrated lecture on "Trailing the Pedigree of Colonial Architecture” at a meeting of the Woman’s Research Club at the Third Christian church. Each member is privileged to bring three guests. , Luncheon meeting of the Carnelian Club will be held at 12:30 at the Spink Arms, to be followed by a business meeting at 1:30. Mesdames John Connor, George Barcus and Basil Vaught will be in charge of the meeting. Mrs. William B. Schiltges, 3642 Watson road, will be hostess for a meeting of the Monday Conservation Club. TUESDAY Mrs. Kathryn Turney Garten will review “The Native’s Return” and “Ridgeway” at the meeting of the Woman’s Council of University Park Christian church at 8. Paul Walters will sing. Birthday party will be held by the Women’s Federation of the Sutherland Presbyterian church at 1. Covered dish luncheon will be served with Mesdames George Noble, H. C. Fledderjohn, Carl Tezzman, Roy Beasley and Will Bicknell, hostesses. Mrs. A. W. Antrim and Mrs. James H. Brayton will present the program at the meeting of the Heyl Study Club at the Rauh Memorial library. Mrs. Kathryn Turney Garten will give the seventh in a series of book reviews for the Martha Hawkins Society at the First Baptist church at 10 in the church parlors. Garfield Park Mothers’ Club of the Indianapolis Free Kindergarten will hold a card party at 2 and 8 at the kindergarten. * Mrs. Harold C. Meyer, assisted by Mrs. Floyd Brown, will be hostess for a meeting of the Calcedony Club at the Snively tearoom, 1930 North Alabama street. Guest day meeting is scheduled by the Tuesday Quest Club with Mrs. J. G. Dunn hostess. Mrs. Kathryn Turney Garten will present a book review. Fortnightly Literary Club will elect officers at a meeting at the Propylaeum. The Rev. M. W. Lyons will present “The Council of Trent” at a meeting of the Procter Club with Mrs. Gilbert McNutt, 5438 Lowell avenue, hostess. Mrs. Edgar A. Perkins, 5457 Julian avenue, will entertain members of the Irvington Chautauqua Club. “Nevada,” “Desert Utopia” and “The Truth About Reno” will be discussed by Mesdames Robert E. Allen, H. B. Pearce and T. B. Davis, respectively, at a meeting of the Hoosier Tourist Club which will be held with Mrs. C. C. Spurrier, 4455 North Pennsylvania street. Irvington Home Study Club will meet with Mrs. L. Murray, 64 East Seventy-third street. Mrs. John Thornburg will talk on “Distinguished American Women” and Mrs. Noble Allen will discuss “With the Poets of New England” at a meeting of the Wy-Mo-Dau Club with Mesdames Elmer Bcstic, Alonzo Cherry and H. Thomas, hostesses. WEDNESDAY Mothers' Alliance of Alpha Delta Theta sorority will hold a luncheon meeting at the home of Mrs. A. F. Austin, 1410 North Gladstone avenue. Mrs. Anna Pence, 2415 Carrollton avenue, will entertain members of the Olive Branch Social Circle at her home. One’ o’clock luncheon of the chapter F, P. O. E. Sisterhood, will be held with Mrs. Clark Wheeler, hostess, to be assisted by Mrs. Paul Kilby and Mrs. Leslie Crockett. Mrs. Chic Jackson will be speaker. Mrs. E. J. I|irschman, 27 Kenmore road, will be hostess for a meeting of the Irvington Mother Study Club. Reports from the Indianapolis Council of Women will feature the meeting of the Oct-Dahl Club with Mrs. Samuel B. Taylor, hostess.

PROGRAM AID

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Mrs. Francis Fargher Kappa Delta sorority will observe its annual state day April 28 with a luncheon at the Charm house, followed by a dance at the Lincoln. Miss Thelma Bingman is general chairman. Mrs. Francis Fargher is a member of the program committee.

THURSDAY’ Mrs. A. C. McKee, 617 North New Jersey street, will be hostess for the 1908 Club. “The Rise of the First Republic” will be the meeting theme for Beta Delpiuan with Mesdames F. E. Williamson. E. G. Reese, T. H. Cory, J. H. Zinn and R W. Johnson, leaders. Mrs William B. Norris, 1416 West Thirty-fourth street, will entertain members of the Ladies Federal Club. Mrs. H. W. Laut Jr. will be hostess for the meeting of the Aftermath Club.

Heads Club Auxiliary •v

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Activities of t'h e Southern Club Auxiliary w ill be directed by Mrs. John A. Beatty, 'president. Other officers are Mrs. W. D. Brown in g, vice-president; Mrs. Anne K. Moschelle, corr e s p o n ding secretary, and Mrs . Ki r k Cole man, recording secre-tary-treasurer. The auxiliary w ill hold a party April 20 at the Riviera Club.

Delta Gamma Sorority Marks Sixtieth Anniversary

By Times Special BLOOMINGTON. Ind.. April 14. Three hundred members of Delta Gamma sorority from over the state attended the luncheon today at the Indiana university chapter house, observing the sixtieth anniversary of the sorority founding. Palms formed a back ground for the speakers table w'hich was centered with mirrored plateaux of spring flowers in the sorority colors, bronze, pink andsblue. The candles for the candlelight-

RECENT BRIDE

: .MaSaSik In SraHK&’sjH

Mrs. M. O. Durman —Photo by National. Before her recent marriage, Mrs. M. O. Durman was Miss Gertrude Heinz.

‘Don Pasquale’’ Director Lists Separate Casts Alexander Von Kreisler, director of the presentation of the opera, “Don Pasquale,” to be held May 17 and 19 by students of Arthur Jordan Conservatory of Music as part of the first annual conservatory May music festival, has announced two separate casts, each of which will give one performance. Casts include Charles Kennett and Virgil Phemister, baritones, who will have the leading role of Don Pasquale; Robbye Cook Ridge and Eugenia Magidson, sopranos, will take the femine lead of Norina; Sam Sims and George Schrader, baritones, Dr. Malatesta; George Potts and Ferrell Scott, tenors, Ernesto, and Walter Weeks and Vernon Roth, tenors, the notary. Three major events will comprise the Conservatory festival: Shakespeare's comedy, “Midsummer Night's Dream,” to be given May 9; a festival concert by the conservatory orchestra and string quintet, May* 10. and the opera presentations on May 17 and 19. All performances will be at Caleb Mills hall. Choruses for the opera will be selected from students of Butler university and the conservatory. A pit orchestra, comprised of students, will provide the opera accompaniment. The opera will be sung in English.

Sororities

Founders’ day observance will be held by Theta chapter, Sigma Epsilon sorority, Tuesday at the home of Mrs. Russell Sayer, 6111 College avenue. Mrs. Oscar Chithe will assist and guests will include Misses Jane Gross, Margaret Farr, Helen Foster, Mary Elizabeth Keys, Sally Sawyer, Catherine Wacker, Leonore Hockman, Hazel Carlisle and Mrs. M. Karabell and Mrs. Cheesman. Initiation services will be held tonight at the Palmer house in Mooresville, by Beta chapter, lota Psi Omega sorority, for Misses Mary Alice Randolph, Rufji and Marjorie Gadsbury, Charlotte Wheeler, Opal Rogers, Leona Benson and Artie Clark.

FRIDAY’ Members of the Indianapolis Womans Club will hear talks by Mrs. Elizabeth L. Haerle and Mrs. Samuel Deal. Mrs. George Buck and Mrs. C. L. Withner will be hostess for a meeting of the Irvington Fortnightly Club. Exhibit of wild flowers will be held at a meeting of the Irvington Women's Garden Club with Mrs. Charles Hartley, 381 North Bolton avenue, hostess.

Mrs. John A. Beatty

ing ceremony also were on the table. Miss Mae Louise Small, Rushville, and Miss Winifred Flood, South Bend, gave the ceremony in honor of the founders. Tables for six and eight guests were arranged with spring flow'er centerpieces. At the speaker’s table were Mrs. Dryden Eberhardt, Chicago, honor guest; Miss Betty Weintz, Evansville, province secretary; Mrs. Elfred H. Guyot, Indianapolis alumnae president; Mrs. David A. Rothrock, Bloomington alumnae president; Miss Marigrace Majonnier, Chicago, Butler university chapter president, and Miss Edith Browne, Hobard, Indiana university chapter president. Mrs. Rothrock presided at the luncheon. Reports were given by active and alumnae presidents. Miss Weintz addressed the group. Mrs. Rothrock and Mrs. Guyot were cochairman of the luncheon. Miss Denison Wed Mr. and Mrs. W. Bert Denison announce the marriage of their daughter. Miss Gladys Denison, and Henry K. Spaulding, which took place April 7. The Rev. G. D. Billeisen read the service. Mr. and Mrs. Spaulding will make their home at Seventy-ninth street and Allisonville road.

Contract Bridge

Today’s Contract Problem South, a weak opener, started the contract with one club. East finally arrived at a four-spade contract. The king of clubs was opened. How should the hand be played to make four-odd? (Blind) 4Q 10 7 5 4AK .1 8 3*V A 9 6 V J 4 2 E ♦ A J 5 ♦K92 8 *432 * A J T> * W (Blind) Solution in next issue. 7'

Solution to Previous Contract Problem BV W. E. M’KENNEY, Secretary American Bridge League THE tferms used in the game of bridge have been carried down for more than 100 years. All trick plays in the old days were termed “coups.” There were the bath coup, the grand coup, the Vienna coups and others. However, I sometimes wonder if bridge players haven’t misused the word. The distinction between a simple coup and a grand coup is that, to complete a grand coup, you must trump a good card. You can make the same kind of play, but if the card you trump is not an established card, the play is only a simple coup. It is true that it is harder to trump a good card than a worthless one. Today’s hand is an example of a grand coup. East’s opening lead was the eight of diamonds. The jack was finessed from dummy and West's king held the trick. West returned a small diamond, hoping that his partner could ruff, and dummy’s nine won the trick. Declarer returned the six of spades

A A Q J 10 2 V 3 ♦65 4 2 *Q97 AKB7S N A 9 3 V 9*B 4 \V EVAQ 76 5 ♦KIO3 g ♦ 8 7 + 8 6 2 Dealer j + K 10 5 4 A 6 4 V K J 10 2 ♦AQ J 9 ♦A J 3 Duplicate—N. and S. vul. Opening lead—-♦ 8 South West North East 1 ♦ Pass 1 * 2 V 2N. T. Pass 3 + Pass 3N. T. Pass 4 * PAss 7

.'APEnJ 14,1934

Club' Will Entertain at Festival Meridian Hills Members and Guests Will Attend Fete. Chinese festival is scheduled for Saturday night. April 21. at the Meridian Hills Country Club when members and their guests will attend a dinner and program. Wilbur D. Peat, director of the John Herron Art institute, will give an illustrated lecture on “Oriental Art" and other features of the program will be a musical duet by Ruth Wagener and Mrs. J. E. Thompson, accompanied by Frances Wallace; Chinese songs by Mrs. Wendell P. Color, aceompanied by Mrs. Dorothy Knight Greene. Chinese games will be played following the program, and will be in charge of men members of the arrangements committee. Mr. and Mrs. Wendell P. Color, general chairmen, will have as assistants Messrs, and Mesdames Frank C. Ayres. J. W. Hutchings, James L. Murray, J. E. Thompson, Russell Byers and the Rev. and Mrs. W. A. Shullenberger. Mrs. Murray is in charge of decorations and Mrs. Hutchings, music. x Regular Sunday night buffet suppers have been replaced by the Sunday night plate dinners for which reservations are to be made in advance with the club. Members and guests will attend the women's luncheon bridge party Tuesday when auction and contract bridge will be played. Luncheon will be served at 1, and a bonus of 250 points will be given guests arriving at that time. Mrs. C. C. Binkley, chairman, will be assisted by Mrs. W. D. Little and Mrs. E T. Haynes.

FEDERATION GROUP INITIATION SET

American home department of the Seventh Ditsrict Federation of Clubs is making preparations for an institute May 2 at the BannerWhitehill auditorium. Announeement of plans will be made at the regular meeting of the federation at 10 Friday morning in Ayres’ auditorium. Annual district meeting is scheduled for Friday, May 4, at the Severin. State officers will be guests at a luncheon following the program. The district will celebrate its silver anniversary this year. It was organized in the Downey Avenue Christian church when Mrs. Grace Julian Clarke, first chairman, was president of the Irvington Woman's Club. Reports will be given Friday by presidents of clubs in the Sixth district, including Mesdames M. C. Lewis, R. O. McAlexander, E. D. Clark, Clifford B. Moore, Walter H. Vinzant, W. H. Hodgson and R. H. Hollywood. Fred Hoke, compliance director for Indiana, will talk on “Why the NRA?” MRS. HITZ TO BE~ MEETING HOSTESS Mrs. Benjamin D. Hitz will entertain members of the Society of Colonial Dames of America Tuesday at her home in Brendonwood. Anton Scherrer will talk on “Finding Indiana in Europe.” The social committee, composed of Mrs. Clarence Alig, Mrs. John Glendenning and Miss Belle Dean, will assist Mrs. Hitz.

from dummy and finessed the ten, which held. n u tt A SMALL club was led and c ummy’s jack finessed. When it held, the four of spades was played from dummy, declaring finessing the jack, and East’s nine spot dropped, warning the declarer that the two remaining trump were in the West hand. Declarer now’ led a small heart. East went in with the ace and, of course, was helpless. If he returned a club, it would be into declarer's queen; so he elected to return a small heart. The ten was played from dummy. This was a winning card, but the declarer realized that he must shorten his hand in trump, so he literally discarded a trump on the dummy’s good ten of hearts. He then led a small diamond ar.d won in dummy with the ace. The king of hearts was played and the six of diamonds discarded. Declarer then led the good queen of diamonds from dummy. West refused to trump, discarding the six of clubs, and declarer discarded the nine of clubs. The ace of clubs was cashed next. Now the declarer returned the jack of hearts from dummy. West was forced to trump with the eight of spades, declarer over-trumped with the queen and made the last trick with the ace, scoring five-odd. If West had trumped in on the diamond, East would have been squeezed. (Copyright. 1934. bv NEA Service. Inc.) New heels New colors in Nisley Spring Styles all priced at except Arch Comforts $4.45 44 N. Penn St.

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