Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 310, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 May 1934 — Page 8

PAGE 8

Young Folk Prepare for Vacations Close of School Term to Be Followed by Trips Northward. BY BEATRICE BI'RGAN Timrt Woman* Pa** hditor WHEN school days are over this spring. many of the young vacationists ■will begin scurrying about to make ready for their favorite summer camps. Only a few weeks will remain after the school close, for most ramps bosun their seasons the last week in June and

the first week in July. On June 25. Mrs. M. A. Sockwell will leave with her daughters Nancy and Mary Stuart, who have summered at Camp Na g a wi c k a. about twentyseven miles west o f Milwaukee. Wis., during the last two vacation seasons. Mrs. Sockwell will motor with

Miss Burgan

her daughters; other mothers are planning to accompany their daughters. Betty and Mary Ann Pearce, daughters of Mr. and Mrs. E. S. Pearce, are marking off the days of the calendar until they will join Nancy and Mary Stuart at the camp. Louise Wilde, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Carl Wilde, has attended the camp before and will be accompanied this year by her sister Barbara. Patsy Boggs, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Boggs; Ruth Cronk. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Cronk: Thalia Eby, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. L. J. Eby, and Nancy Hurt, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Hurt, are making preparations to attend Camp Nagawicka. Martha Ann Fupcl. daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Ernest Rupel. remembers the fun she had at camp last year, and is making ready to at- ; tend again this year. Michigan Camp Chosen Anne Davis, daughter of Paul G. Davis, will leave July 3 for the Pmewood camp in Michigan where she has spent four summers. Martha Anne Schaaf will join Anne. For several years in June Hillis Howie, headmaster at Orchard school and conductor of the Children's Museum annual prarie treks, has taken groups of boys and girls for separate weeks’ camping. This year he has fashioned the trip after I the treks. A group of boys will leave June 9 in a truck used on the summer; treks and station wagons for the Brown county state park where they will camp for three days. From there they "ill journey to Spring Mill park for a day and then to Me- j Cormick creek state park, where they will remain for three days. Girls to Make Trip Mrs. Howie will accompany a group of girls who will leave June 17 for a similar trip. Gordon Thompson and Philip Sw’eet will assist Mr. Howie with the group of j boys. Children will receive letters ! this week from Mr. Howie. Miss Helen Fleischer will go to I Fairlee, Vt. on July 1 to begin her I ninth summer as a counselor at i Aloha camp. During the season she ! instructs the children in handcraft, j Peggy and Barbara Winslow, | daughters of Mrs. Robert Winslow, j will be among the girls in the first ! camp period of the Girl Scouts at ; Camp Dellwood.

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School 66 Will Hold Homecoming,

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Left to right—Frank Cooper, Walter Vonncgut and Betty Jean Koss.

Manners and Morals

If you benefit or fail to benefit from the advice of Jane Jordan, you are welcome to express yourself in a letter to the column. How many of our readers have the same impression as the disappointed mother who writes today? Dear Jane Jordan —I have read some of your answers in this pa'per, but I really believe if the Times knew what influence the kind of advice you are giving had on our children, they would stop

it.. For instance, it has come in our own home. Our daughter took your advice and by so doing has ruined her life. She, along with other people, thought you were modern and educated and knew more than parents. Through your advice she

Jane Jordan

married a boy after we tried to show her things in his life that would cause an unhappy marriage, such as mixed religion, no education, no ambition, no nomemak- 1 ing, and no financial background. | Now she bs realized them all, just j as we told her. In your answer to her letter you j told her that parents have no , right to help their daughter pick ! a husband and that a boy docs , not need an education, that the day for parents’ marrying their daughters to a bankbook was gone. We know our child better than you and what it will take to make her happy. While they are so infatuated in a love affair they hardly know their own minds. As they say, “Love is blind.” They think parents are only finding fault until we can show them differently. Before we can do that they write to you and you give them just such advice when you know nothing of the circumstances, or persons, only what they write in a love fit. They fall for it. the same as our daughter did. to Tier sorrow, and now she has lost her sweet, happy smile that she always carried. Now I want you to be honest with yourself and me. Do you think it right for you to continue giving this kind of advice. MRS. E. S. Answer—lt is always convenient to have someone to blame when things go wrong. Your letter reveals the fact that you do not read the column. I doubt if you read the answer to your daughter's letter. I am handicapped in replying because the case as you state it does not tally with any letter I have received. What was her name? When did she write? Did you read the answer yourself, or accept her version of it? Whichever way it was, the reply has now been so twisted and garbled as to be unrecognizable. If you read the column you would know that I discourage young marriages and often have quoted statistics to prove that the majority of marriages which fail are made in youth before the partners are mature enough to know their own minds. You also would know that I have written reams to young couples warning them that the glamorous halo of courtship makes it difficult for lovers to discover or disclose their true selves or appraise qualities which under greater intimacies would make or mar companionship Courtship is a sort of continuous falsification in which each party shows the best and hides the worst in order to please the beloved. The depressed part of the personality is sure to com out under the stress and strain of living together, and grief ensues. I know full well that I never in mv life made the idiotic statement that a boy does not need an education. That simply is not true. I have comforted young people deprived of a formal educa.ion by pointing out that many people have succeeded without it. but only when

A Day’s Menu Breakfast — Halves of grape fruit, cereal. cream, codfish hash, corn bread, milk, coffee. Luncheon — Asparagus with hard cooked egg? on toast, new onions and radis he s, canned peaches in raspberry gelatin, plain cookies, miik, tea. Dinner — Vegetable loaf, shoestring potatoes, ten minute cabbage. spring salad. Norwegian prune pudding, milk, coffee.

JORDAN

BY JANE

their intellectual curiosity was great enough to supply the deficit through seif-education. I resent it when either parents or th”ir daughters judge a man in terms of his check book alone, when the youth has a good character and enough aggression to acquire what is needed to maintain a decent standard of living. I do think, however, that the success of a marriage depends to a large extent upon its financial status, and I am exceptionally pessimistic about the outcome when young people marry without resources to meet unexpected difficulties. I do not think that parents should pick husbands for their daughters under any circumstances. If the parents have behaved in such a way as to win the girl s respect for their judgment, she will consider their objections to her choice seri- , ously, provided they are made on rational grounds, and not issued as unconsidered prohibitions. The child’s attempt to escape from the | parents’ domination is responsible j for many foolish mistakes. a o Dear Jane Jordan—l am a ' young man of 21 with no bad habits. I never cared much for girls and have practically ignored them. I make frequent trips away ! from here and have been staying at a residence where I met a | young girl of 15. She is good look- | ing and extremely sensible and ini teliigent for a girl of that _age. | I'm not serious about her but I enjoy her company very much. Her parents are poor and she is deprived of entertainments and other things. I want to take her out to shows and dances occasionally. The thing that, bothers me is that she is too young for me. I have a feeling that because I ! hardly know*any one else in town that I have selected her because she is easier to get, and that I should try to find someone nearer my age. Do you think she is too voung for me and that mv reasoning is right? DOUBTFUL PHIL. Answer —I think you’ve analyzed yourself pretty accurately. It isn't that you do not care for girls, as ! your experience with this 15-year-old has taught you. but that you do not fee adequate to them. I think you would do better to overcome your timidity and associate with j girls your own age. even though the conquest would be more difficult. a u a Dear Jane Jordan —In regard to the letter where the other woman writes and says she is madly in love with a married man whose wife is in a sanitarium, I think such women should be tarred and feathered, for just such women as she are the ruination of any country. What do you suppose will happen to his poor wife when she learns her husband has been untrue? It probably will mean a backset or crepe on his front door. A. READER. Answer —I hope that the wife does not discover what has happened until she has the physical strength to deal with her problem. If the lovers are humane they will protect her. Tarring and feathering are exceptionally ineffectual as a means of emotional control.

MISS COFFEY HEADS BRIDGE HOSTESSES Mrs. R. C. Fox. general chairman cf Indianapolis Athletic Club lunch-ton-bridge parties, announces Miss Helen Coffey will be chairman of hostesses for the party to be held Tuesday, May 22. This is ,the last of the season's parties. Accumulative score winners will be announced. Assisting Miss Coffey will be Mrs. Norman Baxter and Mrs. Frederick Holliday; Misses Mary Jo Pavey. Anna Marie Dungan. Alice Baker. Elizabeth Heiskell, Ruth Beckman. Betty Bertermann, Elinor Stickney, Josephine Madden. Frances Lemaux and Helen and Ruth Sheerin. IXDIANA CENTRAL’S DEAN HEADS GROUP Virginia Cravens, dean of women at Indiana Central college, was chosen president of the Council of Administrative Women in Education at a meeting held yesterday in the Children's Museum. Other new officers to serve next year are; Carrie Francis of the visual instruction department of the Indianapolis public schools, treasurer; Laura Hanna, principal of School 27, secretary i and Jeanette Riker. assistant principal of School 74. and Hilda Stewart. prmHoal Tudor Hall, directors. Mary S i Ray is retiring president.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Parents, friends and former students of School 66 will attend a homecoming to be held tomorrow night by the Parent-Teacher Association. Visitors will inspect projects in all class rooms. Pupils in Mrs. Grace Grime's room have erected a Swiss chalet, pictured above, and will present a puppet show. Bridge Section to Meet Mrs. Charles V. Raiser, 39 West Forty-sixth street, will be hostess for the bridge section of the Mothers’ Club of Phi Delta Theta fraternity, at 1:45 Thursday.

Contract Bridge

Today’s Contract Problem Just because your contract Is six, it doesn’t mean you shouldn’t try for the seven South, the declarer, gets a spade opening. His contract is six spades, but now he can make seven. How does he do it? A K VAJ 10 9 4 4 Q S AKJ 9 4 2 A76 5 2 N |AS ■ 3 VKQfi \V EIVB 73 2 4 K 1 0 5 3 s I 4 J 7 4 A 8 7 Dealer | A 6 5 3 A A Q J 1 0 9 V 5 4A9 6 2 AAQ 1 0 Solution in next issue. 1

Solution to Previous Contract Problem Bv W. E. M’KENNEY Secretary American Bridge League WHY is it that some players will worry so much about bidding a hand, that they forget how to play it? Take this particular hand, which I watched played in a rubber game one night. North bitterly complained to his partner that they should not be in a six contract, but w'hy complain? It is not going to chance the contract. Fussing with your partner and getting all upset will only cause you to drop tricks. You are in the six contract and it is your job to try to find a way to make the contract. West had doubled ana when the dummy goes down, you immediately decide that his double was based on trump. He may have all five of them. Try to analyze the hand. Could you make the contract even though

AAK 1 0 Q 10 $ C 5 •• 4 None *AQ9 7 6 4 A C 4 3 2 AQ.HB V 9743 2 > 7 5 4 A 7 " E y None A52 5 4 Q 9 4 3 1)<,;<lor A K 10 S A None VA K J 4K.1105652 AA J 3 Rubber bridge—None vtil, Opening lead—A Q South West North Easi 1 4 Pass ltf 1 A 2 A Pass 3 A Pass • 4 A Pass 4 Pass li V Double Pass Pass 1

West held all five trump? Yes, there is one way that it can be done and that is with a club finesse. While I advise against a finesse, if there is any other possible way to play the hand, here is a case where there is no such fray out and you do have to take the finesse, because you need the entry. If you make the mistake of dis-

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Bridge Fete Headed by Mrs. Wolf St. Margaret’s Guild Entertains Today at Marott. One hundred and twenty table reservations were made for the spring bridge party of the St. Margaret’s Hospital Guild today at the Marott. Mrs. Gayle B. Wolf was general chairman. Several luncheon parties preceded the bridge play. Mrs. George J. Grinsteiner entertained Mesdames J. H. Aufderheide, Edward Treat. George Jones and Harry Moore; Miss Marv Joe Pavey had Mesdames Arthur Meng. Charles Mallorv, Albert Rust, Thomas Twyman and L. R. Thomas as her guests. In another party were Mrs. G. I. Seybert, hostess, and Mrs. L. A. Cortner, Knightstown; Mesdames Harry McLain, Paul Meloy and William Woodworth, all of Shelbyville; Mrs. Russell Handy, Morristown and Mesdames Frank Finney, F. H. Spencer and Pleas Greenlee. Mesdames Chester Neal, Edgar Goss and George Evard were guests of Mrs. P. H. Aiken and Mesdames Albert Harris, Charles Ertel, Thomas Hayes and Howard Koch formed another party. Mrs. H. T. Van Landingham entertained Mrs. William Rowe Simpson New York; Mrs. Harry Miesse and Mrs. Alex Thompson. Mrs. Wolf's party included Miss Mayme Matthews, Mrs. William Harris and Mrs. Dick Barnett. In Mrs. Preston Rubush’s party were Mesdames G. M. Sanborn, E. O. Hunter, Charles Hall and W. J. Logan. An election meeting next Tuesday, May 15, will conclude the guild activities for the year. Mrs. Myron McKee, Cold Springs road, will be hostess, assisted by Mrs. Jack Adams. Mrs. Thomas is chairman of the nominating group and has as her committee Mrs. Seybert and Mrs. Dudley Griffith. Mrs. Rubush will preside.

carding two clubs on the ace and I king of spades, your contract will ibe "’defeated. The bidding given j above is as it actually occurred. tt a SOUTH’S bid of two spades over one spade showed normal heart j support, no losing spades, and inI vites a slam. North’s bid of three j clubs is quite constructive. South 1 shows a fit in his bid of lour clubs. North shows a preference for I hearts. South’s bid of six hearts | without the ace of diamonds —that ! is, without control of his own suit I —is rather optimistic. However, the contract can be made. u tt tt WITH the opening of the queen of spades, a small club should |be discarded from dummy and the j declarer should v'in with the ace. He can see that the only chance he has is to cross-ruff the hand. He needs to make eight heart | tricks, the ace and king of spades, the ace of clubs —and he still needs one trick. His only chance to make his contract is to find the king of clubs in the East hand. Therefore, he should finesse the jack of clubs rather than discard it on the king of spades. Now, when the jack of clubs holds, that gives him five entries in dummy and he can ruff five diamonds, of course, v/ith his aee, king and jack of hearts, he will be able to ruff the losing spade and two clubs. At the end he will lose only one trick to the nine of hearts. (Copyright. 1934. by NEA Service) Bridge Date Changed Regular meeting of the bridge section of the Woman s Club of Woodruff Place, scheduled for tomorrow. will be held Wednesday, May 16, at the clubhouse. Mrs. Edmund Horst, chairman, will be assisted by Mrs. Logan Hughes and Mrs. George Karst.

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PROPYLAEUM CLUB ELECTION SET

Propylaeum Club will elect five directors at the annual meeting at 2 Monday, May 21. at the clubhouse. Mesdames Edgar H. Evarts. William Ray Adams.*Charles Latham, Walter C. Marmon and Charles W. Merrill are members of the nominating committee. Five will be selected from the following list of nominees submitted by the committee: Mesdames Theodore B Griffith. Fletcher Hodges. Km Hubbard, Sylvester Johnson Jr.. Frederick R. i Kautz. Charles Latham. Albert Seaton and Edson T. Wood. The following, elected by the board, will be ratified. Mrs. Frederick E. Matson to fill the unexpired term of Mrs. Robert A. Adams: Miss Genevieve Scoville, ; to fill the unexpired term of Mrs. | Frank M. Reed, and Mrs. Frank Powell, to fill the unexpired term j of the late Mrs. Thomas R. Kackley. Both Mrs. Adams and Mrs. Reed resigned.

Card Parties

St. Barbara Circle of St. Francis j de Sales church will hold a card party at 2:15 tomorrow at the Ban-ner-Whitehill auditorium. Mrs. Edward Springer is chairman. Altar Society of St. Philip Neri church will sponsor a card party at 2:30 tomorrow in the school audi- ! torium. Mrs. Henry King is chairman. Banner Temple, Pythian Sisters, will hold a euchre, bridge and bunco party tonight at 119 East Ohio street. Announcements R. S. Higgins, delegate to the convention of the Order of Railway Conductors, has left for Toronto, Canada. Past presidents of George H Chapman Woman's Relief Corps will meet for noon luncheon tomorrow at the home of Mrs. Minnie Metevier. Letter Carrier Auxiliary No. 140, will hold a meeting at 7:30 tonight at the Severin. MISS SERHANT TO PRESENT PROGRAM Miss Emily Serhant of Ladywood school will read the Greek mythological comedy, “Pygmalion and Galitea,” by W. S. Gilbert, tomorrow for the Irvington Catholic Woman’s Study Club at the home of Mrs. J. S. Bray, 987 North Campbell avenue. Miss Serhant, advanced dramatic pupil of Mrs. George S. Foerderer, will be assisted by Miss Lillian Michuda. vocalist, and Miss Antoinette Holzborn of the music department of the school. MOTHERS WILL BE BREAKFAST GUESTS Mrs. Edward Rahe is chairman of the May breakfast to be held by the Indianapolis Educational Council tomorrow morning at Whispering Winds for mothers of members. Mrs. Rahe will be assisted by members of the social committee. Mrs. G. W. Horst will preside at an election of officers to follow the breakfast. Glee Club Heard Members of the Indianapolis Junior League Glee Club sang yesterday at the spring guest meeting of the General Arthur St. Clair chapter. Daughters of the American Revolution. Mrs. Paul E. Fisher is chairman of the glee club and Edward LaShelle, director. Herman Koethe sang a group of songs.

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Motion Picture Showing Vogue Pattern Costumes Presented at Ayres Store All Attire Worn in Film Can Be Washed in Lux; Summer Frock Display, Also on Week’s Program. BY HELEN LINDSAY THE importance of motion pictures in the world of fashion has been recognized for some time. With many of the leading designers coming from Hollywood, and an entire feature picture. ’’Fashions of 1934,” built around the designing of clotljes, there is no longer any doubt about the influence of the films. Now the manufacturers of Vogue patterns, co-operating with the manufacturers of Lux soap, have marie a film to show the clothing of the debutante for all hours of the day. It was to be shown in Indianapolis for the first time today, in the auditorium of the L. S. Ayres store, at 3. The film will be show n at 3 each day this week. The film is called "Around the Clock With the Debutante,’’ and spotlight fashions made from Vogue patterns, which may be washed in Lux. During the program, Ayres tea room mannequins will model summer

frocks from the various departments of the store which are ’Luxable.’’ Questions concerning the proper laundering of these garments will be answered by a representative of the Lux Company, who also will be in the yardage section on the second floor for consultation. During the week, a box of Lux will be given with each purchase of a Vogue pattern, and with each dress length of silk or cotton. tt a tt t Makeup Lessons to Be Given ANOTHER feature of the week at Ayres will be lessons in makeup by Miss Marian Lee, representative of Max Factor makeup authority for Hollywood screen stars. Miss Lee points out that only a few years ago flappers used little restraint in their makeup. She

M Jg|

Mrs. Lindsay.

calls atten’ibn to the practice of the modern girl, who has departed from the bizar . and is using toilet accessories with an eye to natural beauty. a a a a a tt New Bags Offered by Schiaparelli SCHIAPARELLI always is a news source for fashion writers, whether she is designing dresses, coats, or merely adding a bit of her own Individuality to the current silhouette. The latest news which she has provided is bags, shown at a recent opening. Last year bags designed by Madame Schiaparelli were copied throughout a number of seasons, and those that she has presented recently will probably have the same prestige. They are all done in a heavy box design, without any trimming other than the leather itself. One has a rigid satchel base, with the envelope closing its slit at top sliding over the little leather ring by which a mannequin held it. Another bag was flat, caught together at the top with a straight pin covered with leather. The pin slipped in and out of holes in the leather, just as a pin does when it is holding two fabrics together. A broad leather wrist strap was used on a pentagon bag, which swung from the arm of the mannequin. The sides were sectional, coming to a point at the center of each side. Schiaparelli show'ed with these bags wide leather belts of the same box, fastened by big hooks of various shapes, and made entirely in leather. The belts were all irregular, wider at one side, and narrowed toward the other, where the fastening was placed, or wide at front and narrow at back.

0. E. S. CHAPTER TO MARK FOUNDING Twelfth birthday of the Nettie Ransford chapter, O. E, S., will be observed with a meeting and reception tomorrow night at the temple,

COMFORT • • • FOR ACTIVE SUMMER FEET I ■H v s/' m Have you ever slipped your foot into a shoe that hugged the arch and heel that allowed for toe room that was snug around the top made you feci that the shoe was designed for you? That’s Nisley’s meaning in perfect fitting footwear. are not alone flattering to your feet, but give comfort because they fit perfectly each type of foot. Costs of materials and labor are rising rapidly, . predicting higher prices. Buy your white shoes early. \\ j 1 B B NO. 314 Perforated two-eyelet Tie in I 'Tv jfe. White, Black and Blue kid. Gray atitch. Sizes2'/2t09- Width* AA A to C $3.95 / ® ® NO. 302 Cut-out Tie in White and /&¥&?£ X** Black. Sices 2V4 to 10 Widths AAAA to D ... .Arch Comfort. .. $4 45 *095 J all vl STYLES I# EXCEPT I _/ _ _ ARCH COMFORTS hlLia It' i| I IRON NEEL HOSE J 69c 5 ’ll" 95c V.;" l 44 NO. PENNSYLVANIA ST. I AAsl^OrdsrFilUdProipt|rWNoAccompiiidbyPureii^Pric^tv^A^o^A*iliiv^l

MAY 8, 1934

Forty-second street and College avenue. The reception will honor Mrs. Rose L. Malcolm, past w’orthy grand matron of the Indiana grand chapter, who recently was elected grand treasurer. Mrs. Wilma Van Osdol i3 worthy matron.