Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 313, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 May 1934 — Page 24
PAGE 24
Dinner and Dance Will Open Season Country Club Event to Attract Members and Guests. BY BEATRICE BURGAN Times Woman s Pace Editor INDIANAPOLIS Country Club members and guests will welcome the summer season of social Activities tomorrow night at a dinner dance. Earl Barnes, house chairman, and Herbert C. Piel, entertainment chairman, have been made responsible for success of the Party.
Mrs, Barnes and Mrs. Piel are adding their share of ideas to increase the e n t ertainment. Assisting with the party will be Messrs. and Mesdames Cornelius O. Alig, Joseph J. Daniels, G. A. Harms, Sylvester Johnson Jr., Norman Keevsrs Herman C. Krannert, Irving W. Lemaux,
f m II -a—— • T ■lUtfA
Miss Burgan
William F, Munk, William H. Wemmer, Jacob S. White, Romney L. Willson, Burrell Wright and Judge and Mrs. Russell J. Ryan. Mr. and Mrs. E. M. Chamberlin will have as a week-end guest Miss Helen Morrow, Jackson, Mich., and they will begin the evening with a cocktail party at their home in Miss Morrow’s honor. Mr. and Mrs. Piel will be in the party, later to attend the club dinner dance. Other guests will be Mr. and Aire. A. L. Piel. Mr. and Mrs. R. W. Fleischer, Mrs. Joe Patton and Major Downing. Miss Elizabeth Hurd and Robert McMurray, who will be married on June 2, will be honor guests at the party which Mr. and Mrs. Russell McDermott will give. Lieutenant-Commander and Mrs. Henry P. Burnett will entertain a group of friends with Major Howard Donnelly, stationed at Madison, as honor guest. Fred W. Jungclaus, club president, and Mrs. Jungclaus will come to the party with a group of friends as their guests. William Ansted and Oscar Kaelin Jr. will be hosts in two of the larger parties already ar- j ranged for the dinner and dance. The season of exodus to summer Cottages is beginning. Mr. and Mr=. J. Duane Dungan have opened their cottage at Lake Tippecanoe, and this week-end, Mr. and Mrs. Walker W. i Winslow will motor there to.be their house guests. Three young hostesses will take their friends to the Riverside rink He' Friday for a skating party. Patricia Jameson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Donald Jameson; Susan Gatch, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. W. ! D. Gatch; Priscilla Johnson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Bates Johnson, and Jeanette Tarkington, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Elvan ■’Srekington, will be hostesses. SOCIAL WORKER TO BE CLUB SPEAKER Dr. Elizabeth H. Nutting. Dayton, 0., will address the School Women’s Club tomorrow at the Lincoln. Dr. Nutting, executive secretary of the Council of Social Agencies in Dayton, will discuss her work in connection with the subsistence farm project. . Officers will be elected and a short business meeting will precede the CLUB MEETS WITH MRS. SCHEIGERT ' Mrs. F. W. Scheigert, 444 West Forty-fourth street, entertained members and guests of the Wednesday Afternoon Club at her home yesterday, assisted by Mesdames Lewis Shott, Irene Campbell. Harold Tortter, John Horne and J. R. Horne. Mrs. Glenn Diddle gave an illustrated talk on Mexico. Robert Rothman played the accordian, and Mrs. Will Adams read a Bible story. Mrs. A. F. Walsman presided.
fOMBIIMr/o# MAROTT S (Se® ■ V 1 # * 1 MAJ!((!tr^S/ SUPPORT WHIT^HOES MAROTT’S HUG-TITE ARCH SHOES offer the ideal solution for your white footwear problem. Light-stepping and comfortable, smart-looking and fashionable, they will give you pleasantly cool service through the hot summer months when FOOT COMFORT is ALL IMPORTANT. Careful fitting and courteous service assured. A complete range of styles, widths, and sizes means there’s a Marott Hug-Tite Arch Shoe for you! Now sold EXCLUSIVELY at Marott’s in Down-Town Indianapolis. STORE HOURS:. 8:30 TO 6:00, SATURDAY 8:30 TO 6:30 .
(JiMett downstairs : jwWe department ■ - - • - -
Orphans’ Aid Chairman
Mrs. Carl Koepper
Contract Bridge
Today’s Contract Problem How would you bid the following hand? South Is dealer and both sides are vulnerable. A 2 V 9 8 6 % ♦lO6 5 3 A J 10 9 8 2 AK9SI ~ AAB 76 3 VA 7 4 W E VKJ 10 3 ♦ 987 S ♦ A J 2 A7 6 4 Dealer A 5 A Q J 10 VQ 5 2 ♦K Q 4 AAKQ3 Solution In next issue. 4
Solution to Previous Contract Problem BY W. E. M KENNEY Secretary American Bridge League WHEN the bidding indicates that the declarer has an exceptionally strong hand, you should try to rpake any play that will deceive him, or make it difficult for him to locate the missing cards. There isn’t anything difficult about today’s hand —you can see that the ten of diamond finesse will stand up. But if East will refrain from winning the heart trick until he is forced to do so, he will at least make the declarer guess on the hand, while if he wins the heart trick early, the declarer can get a perfect reading on the lay of the cards. South's jump to three fio trump told his partner that he had an exceptionally strong hand, and it was a mild slam invitation. North assisted the slam invitation bv shewing the new feature in the hand when lie bid four diamonds. If he had bid four hearts, that
A9 5 3 VAQ 6 5 2 ♦ A 10 5 4 A 10 AJB42 N A K 10 VS W E V K 9 7 4 ♦J972 S ♦ S 3 AJ7G2 Dealgr Q9B 4 3 AAQ 7 6 V J 10 3 ♦K Q 6 AA K 5 Duplicate—None vul. Opening lead— A 2 South West North Fast 1 A Pass 2 V Pass 3N. T. Pass 4 ♦ Pass 6N. T. Pass Pass Pass 4
Recently organized Lutheran Orphan Welfare Association has elected Mrs. Carl Koepper chairman of the ways and means
—Photo by Bretzman.
would have been signing the hand off, asking to play it at hearts. But the diamond bid asks, “Partner, will this help you make the slam?” Os course it does, and South bids the slam. a tt St THE opening lead is the deuce of spades. East plays the ten and declarer wins with the queen. He immediately starts the heart suit by leading the jack. Now if East would refrain from winning this heart trick until the third round, the declarer would be forced to lead a diamond to get into dummy to make the two long hearts, and would have to guess whether to take the finesse. He would probably play for a break ip the diamond suit, in- which case the would be defeated. But when East wins this trick with the king on the first round and returns the king of spades. South will go right up with the ace and will now run off four heart tricks, discarding two spades from his own hand. West must make four discards. Suppose he lets go three clubs and a diamond. Declarer will now lead the ten of clubs from dummy, which South will win with the king, West's jack falling. Now the declarer can get a perfect count on the West hand by leading the ace of clubs. If West plays another club, it would mean he had only two diamonds. Not having a club, however, West is clearly marked with three diamonds. The deuce of spades opening showed four spades, as is shown also by his discard of the eight of spades on South's ace of clubs. The declarer discards the nine of spades from dummy and now the diamonds are all good. Iw West had attempted to hold the diamonds, he would have been forced to discard the jack of spades, in which case thp declarer’s nine would have been good in dummy, and again it would not be necessary to take a finesse. Copyright, 1934, NEA Service, Inc. BRIDGE EVENT HELD BY ALUMNAE GROUP Alpha Omicron Pi Alumnae held its bridge tournament last night at the home of Miss Mary Jo Spurrier. 4455 North Pennsylvania street. Mrs. J. L. Guthridge, Miss Dorothy Lyon and Mrs. Russell Hippensteel, assisted the hostess. A short business meeting preceded the tournament with Miss Gladys Hawickhorst, new president, in charge. Other officers for the coming term are Mrs. Victor L. Brown, vicepresident; Airs. Hippensteel, Panhellenic delegate; Mrs. Russell McKinney, secretary; Mrs. Clarence Deitsch. historian, and reporter, and Mrs. Elmer Singer, treasurer.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
City Woman Will Attend Class Fete Mrs. W. J. Hasselman to Be Honored Before Starting Trip. Before Mrs. W. J. Hasselman returns to Lawrence, Kan., to attend the sixtieth reunion of her graduating class of the University of Kansas. she will attend a tea from 3 to 5 Sunday, planned in her honor by the Indianapolis branch, American Association of University Women, at the home of the president, Mrs. Walter P. Morton. Mrs. Hasselman, who will celebrate her eighty-first birthday May 27, is a charter and honorary life member of the association. Miss Amelia Waring Platter, another honorary life member, will pour at the tea table, to be decorated with spring flowers and a three-tiered birthday cake with eighty-one candles. Assisting the hostess will be Misses Vera Alorgan, Dorothy David, Jenna Birks. and Mary Rigg; Mesdames A. B. Carlile, Arthur E. Focke, Marvin E. Curie, Paul E. Tombaugh, H. B. Pike, J. M. Williams. N. Taylor Todd, Faul J. Stokes, A. D. Lange, James A. Bawden, Gordon Batman, Oscar AI. Helmer. Lester Smith, Merwyn Bridenstine, David L. Smith, John Waldo, T. Victor Keene and Donald C Drake. Mrs. Frank Hatfield and Mrs. F. H. Streightoff, both past presidents, will assist. Mrs. Hasselman. who came to Indanapolis with Mr. Hasselman in 1877, was graduated in 1874 from the university, formerly Lawrence university of Appleton, Kan., in the second class vfith only three members. She attended the golden anniversary of her class in 1924 and the seventy-fifth anniversary of the founding of Lawrence, Kan., in 1929.
FOUR TO ENTERTAIN FOR BRIDE-ELECT
Mrs. John L. Niblack and Misses Gertrude Insley, Virginia Craig and Martha R. McMaster will entertain tomorrow at the CMrm House with a luncheon and kitchen shower for Miss Catherine Jose, bride-elect. Miss Jose, daughter of Air. and Mrs. Oscar A. Jose Sr., will become the bride of Canning Rogers Childes, Pittsburgh, Pa., on May 31. Guests will include Mrs. Jose, Mesdames Mary Keegan, Allen Shinier, Oscar Jose Jr., Mrs. Clarence Morgan, Terre Haute; Mrs. Lowell Amos, Kempton; Mrs. Harry Mayer, Schenectady, N. Y„ and Misses Helen Batchelor. Muriel Adams, Lalah Brown, Ethel Alary Ostrom and Helen Louise Brown.
BENEFIT CONCERT TO BE PRESENTED Indianapolis Methodist Hospital Nurses’ chorus, with Mrs. Jane Johnson Burroughs, director, and Mrs. Panetta Hitz Brady, accompanist. will present a benefit concert at 8:15 Wednesday at the Roberts Park church. Assistants on the program will be Ruth Noller and Ada Straub and a male quartet composed of Delmer Ruppert, James Gilbreath, Fred Martin and Robert Brook. MISS LOUISE FORD HEADS CLUB AGAIN Indianapolis Business and Professional Woman’s Club re-elected Miss Louise Ford, president, at a meeting last night at the Woman’s Department Club. Miss Irefte Daugherty was named first vice-president; Miss Kathryn Petry, second vice-president; Miss Marie Stevens, recording secretary; Miss Lois Baker, corresponding secretary, and Mrs. E. Jane Carter, treasurer. Board members to serve for three years are Mrs. Bertha A. Dixon, Mrs. Abbie Hall MacDonald, Dr. Elsie G. Stewart, Mrs. Gladys B. Vansant and Miss Fannie Miner, to fill the unexpired term of the late Miss Merica E. Hoagland. MISS VINCI WED • IN CHURCH RITE Mr. and Mrs. Joseph M. Vinci announce the marriage of their daughter, Miss Ceanetta Vinci, and James Cecil, son of Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Cecil. The ceremony took place at 8 yesterday mornng at the Holy Rosary church with the Rev. Marion Priori officiating. Miss Marjorie- Meyer was maid of honor and Charles Johnson best man. After a short wedding trip, Mr. and Mrs. Cecil will be at home at 1725 South Randolph street. Mothers of Alpha chapter, Pi Sigma Tau sorority, will attend a tea Sunday afternoon at the Silver Cup. Miss Maragret Arnold is chairman. The sorority will hold a business meeting Monday night at the Fletcher Trust Company parlor.
SUNDAY MAY THIRTEEN hut) tram an J. W. Anthony Luebking Floral Company Brandlein’s. Inc. Madison Avenue Flower Shop Geo. Buescher & Son E. A. Nelson Elsner-Roberts New York Florists John A. Grande Pahud Flora! Company John Grande & Sons Quality Flowers, Inc. Green’s Flower Shop Randalls’ Florists Carl & Wm. Hack Leo J. Rickenbach John Heidenreich H. W. Rieman & Sons Fisher & Challis Ross Floral Company William t. Horn & Son C. H. Sehwomeyer Holmes Flower Shop A. D. Stanley Indianapolis Flower & Plant Cos. Temperley's Floral Service J. B. Flower Shop Washington Flower Shop A1 Kempe Charles Wheatcraft Kiefer Floral Company Gus Wiedenhoft Charles C. Lockwood A. Wiegand Sons Company
Manners and Morals BY JANE JORDAN
Air yoor pet opinions to Jane Jordan and read her cernmnits on them in this column Comment on all problems that interest vou and the best letters will be published. Dear Jane Jordan—There is a tremendous demand for information on “How To Get Alarried at the Drop of the Hat.” The subject is such an easy one to write about that it is difficult for me to
resist the temptation to supply the demand. One of the first things I'd suggest is that you look happy at the sight of a man. You need n't sa\ “How delighted I am to see you,” but simply look sc happy that he can’t fail to get the point. A man older
•r; . •. K
Jane Jordan
than yourself is easier picking. He wants a younger woman to take care of him when he is feeble. If he chews tobacco you must look happy abcut that. I lost my first pros--pect by telling him when he proposed that I disliked a man to chew. He became estranged from me and I was broken-hearted. If you encounter a set-back like that remember there are millions more men in the world and perhaps some of them do not chew tobacco. Select a 'victim with plenty of money. If he wants to kiss you, look delighted. If his mustache sticks your nose, look delighted. If he puts his arm around you, put your arm around him. If you’re asked to join in the drinking, you must refuse, as if you are drunk you might forget to register delight at his antics. Besides your drinks will cost him some money and he will not be so glad to have an expensive wife. Never express annoyance over his drinking nor,tell any friend about it who will make disparaging remarks abcut the prospect. If there is any question as to your virtue, you must see that he understands you are virtuous. Os his virtue you must never question, and if you find he is not virtuous your cue is to look delighted. If the prospect swears, you must never mention the fact to him or any one else. You needn't swear yourself unless you feel like it, and then you must never swear at the prospect or anything he likes. If the prospect is interested in anything, you must be even more interested in it than he is, even if it happens to be another woman. Never see anything but virtue in her. Never talk of her in a disparaging way but always see her beauty of face, mind and body. If the prospect smokes, look happy and run find him a match. Never inquire how much he spends for tobacco. Never ask the men to do anything disagreeable. Ask him to eat a piece of cake, or have a drink of water, come sit by the fire, or swing in the shade, and if a disagreeable situation comes up, take the blame yourself. Show him you always keep the house clean, but never know he brings in mud. In general any man will fall for the above instructions. It is well to dance, play cards, swim, golf, ride horse back and drive a car. SQUAWK. Answer—Your instruction would be remarkably effective on a type of male that is fast becoming a back number. On the whole I believe men are hungrier for compionship than you give them credit for, and that they demand more brains in their women than formerly. I suppose every man has a secret ideal of an uncritical and adoring woman who will accept him as he is without demanding inconvenient changes in his habits. He still has a preference for the leading role in love and prefers the woman willing to give it to him. But I believe he demands more than a nit-wit smile from a typical “yes” woman. What your letter, reveals is a deep-seated envy of men and what you conceive to be their advantage in life. You are not satisfied with the feminine role which you secretly believe to be inferior. Your method of establishing your own prestige is to mmsMe Indiana Fur Cos. 29 East Ohio Street \ tt /-^-r !x J Due to more IV II V I H V costly methods Xx*V. . I I—* A of construction, now ~. Arch Com- SAAC fort Styles I 44 N. Penn St.
poke fun at the masculine sex. When you belittle men you feel pleasantly superior by contrast. Behind your tirade is a feeling of deep discouragement with your own ability to attract and hold a worth-while man. Instead of tackling the job in a direct, courageous manner by making yourself sufficiently interesting, you take the negative method of ridiculing the unobtainable, thereby gaining for yourself a sort of spurious superiority. I admit that some of your points are funny, and well-taken when applied to the great average male, but after all your observations are superficial and confined to one group. They do more to reveal the fact that you have set a goal which you have no hope of reaching, than they do to instruct young women in winning a man with whom they can enjoy an intense reciprocal companionship. In other words, failing to get attention by pleasant methods, you proceed to squawk for it. May Program of Music Sponsored by Church Class May musicale will be presented at 8:15 Friday night, May 25, by the Indianapolis Alumnae Club of Alu Phi Epsilon, national honorary musical sorority, under auspices of the Women’s Circle of the Central Avenue M. E. church. Airs. AI. H. Wall, Airs. Lorenzo B. Jones and Miss Helen L. Quig from the alumnae club and Mrs. T. G. Crawford. Mrs. Charles E. Smith and Airs. John C. Barnhill Jr. of the church, are in charge of arrangements. The program will include organ numbers by Miss Louise Swan, costume songs by Mrs. Charles G. Fitch, with violin obligato by Miss Berenice Reagan, accompanied by Aliss Quig; songs by Aliss Mary Aloorman and a vocal ensemble composed of Mrs. Asel Spellman Stitt, Mrs. John E. Thompson, Airs. June Baker, Aliss Charlotte Lieber, Aliss Ruby Winders and Aliss Dorothy Richardson, accompanied by Mrs. Nell Kemper McMurtrey. Aliss Imogene Pierson, and Aliss Virginia Levenberger from Kappa chapter of the sorority, will assist on the program.
SORORITY OFFICER
j ummi in ii Sk£&.
Miss Eddie Abbott Photo by Holland. Miss Eddie Abbott, national vice-president cf Kappa Delta Phi sorority, left today for Louisville, Ky„ to inspect Alpha Alpha chapiter there.
pIsS/S [PRESSESg ASKIN STO RES, tnc. —St/ccesrors to I KUMiXm ||g 127 W. WASHINGTON ST, M U fSL
Hosiery of Bygone Era Presented by McCallum in Block Store Display Harsh Weaves Offer Sharp Contrast to Filmy Modern Stockings; Clocks Once in High Favor. BY HELEN LINDSAY SILK stockings worn many years ago are shown in a display by the McCallum Hosiery Company in a window at the Wm. H. Block Company store this week. They date hosiery from the days when it was considered not quite respectable to wear such finery, and when dust ruffles discreetly lifted, as the wearer stepped into her carriage, revealed fine lisle hose on the conservative wearer. "Legs were confidential in those days, and after seeing these stockings I can understand why,” one woman has commented. They are not the sheer, filmy stockings of today, but harsher weaves.
many of them black. Black lace was considered Vhe most elaborate kind of hose during the first days of silk stockings. The most unusual pair, and probably the most attractive in the display at Block's, is black half way up, and white the rest of the way. Clocks were used extensively in the decorations of these hose, some of them showing clocks of Aloorish embroidery and others decorated with Chinese embroidery. One pair has clocks made of feathers. Another design idea of these days was that of using an elaborate embroidery pattern up the front of the stocking. Colors were bizarre and brilliant. One pair in the McCallum display is a paisley pattern. Another is a grassy yellow, which makes one wonder just what kind of a costume could have been worn with them. The AlcCallum factory is one of the oldest in the hosiery business. In comparison to this display of
iLt
Airs. Lindsay
the first made silk stockings, AlcCallum's new hosiery shows the sheerest knit, in colors suitable for wear with new spring and summer colors. tt tt tt eats Suggests Style Shows at Races A WELL known millinery manufacturer, in a letter to a racing commission, has requested that race tracks be improved, to make them a background for style shows during races. He has called attention to the practice in Europe of women frequenting the tracks to see the displays of couturiers, with mannequins wearing the newest costumes. Although there was no formal presentation of mannequins at the Kentucky Derby last week, many women from all parts of the country will be wearing costumes soon which were suggested by those seen at Louisville. Although showers were feared, the weather was agreeable, and spectators dressed .for the occasion. Checks and plaids were seen in dresses, coats, hats, gloves and bags. Many costumes had striped or polka-dotted trimming. tt tt tt tt tt a One-Piece Dresses Seldom Seen VERY few one-piece dresses were seen. Almost every costume showed a jacket or coat of some kind. Theie was no taboo on any kind of fabric. Taffeta, seersucker, silk crepe, stiffened net. light weight woolens, tweeds and sheers were seen, in addition to peasant linens and crash. Peggy Bradley, daughter of E. R. Bradley, appeared in a plaid homespun suit with matching hat. and wide leather belt. Mrs. A. G. Vanderbilt wore a plain navy crepe dress, with navy basket weave collarless coat. tt tt tt tt tt tt Blue Worn With Yellow Accessories THOUGH she probably forgot all about her costume in’ the excitement of seeing her horse, Calvacade. win, spectators admired Airs. Isabelle Dodge Sloane in a navy ensemble. Her dress was a jacket model of navy crepe, and she wore with it a desperado type hat in the same shade. Colors were abundant. Contrast in costumes was accented. One navy costume was complimented by all yellow accessories, even to yellow sandals. A white jacket dress was worn with red accessories, and a beige knit costume with bright blue. The effect of racing on current fashions is seen also in anew fabric, which recently has been introduced for active sports dresses. It is jockey crepe, and is said to be the same material which is used for the bright colored suits which jockeys wear.
OVERLOADED POTTERY SALE At the largest display In Indiana. ,®r Two car loads of vL" MOTHER’S DAY GIFTS ML A X th BW $1.59 mussA rs gG “ $2.59 Beautiful Vases, to rTQ $2.00 value / *7 C HP&f. Lawn Statuary, Gnomes, Frogs, Tur- | I . JM§ ties, Squir- o-r / \ IPI Painted Wooden Lawn Figures: Fish- 1k.... 1? M in* Rastus, Fox Terriers, Girls Sprintel s^' DutchGiris ’. 50c. .p c i"x [}y | Open Daily, Evenings and Sundays. V. '7:l'' M Retail, Wholesale and Mail Orders. ffedf Outdoor Pottery Show -• —** N W. Corner 16th and Meridian Sts., .. '£££s* Indianapolis.
MAY 11, 1934
