Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 1, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 May 1934 Edition 02 — Page 4

PAGE 4

—Sunday Sermon — CAESAR'S COIN USED TO TELL GREAT TRUTH Jesus Replied to Pharisees on Duty to God and Man. Text: Matt. 22:1-23:39. a a a BY WM. E. GILROY. D. D. Editor of Advance Human nature does not change through the years. It might b** said that it does not change at all except as the grace of God transforms It and makes it better. Here, in contact with Jesus, in our lesson, were certain persons who r.iad high profession of religion. They were Pharisees. The word has become a sort of term of rebuke today, but the Pharisees were earnest, high-mind-ed, very sincere persons in the Jewish religion of that time, persons of strict views and practices, so that one might almost speak of them much as one would speak of church members today. Yet, here were these religious people in contact, if they had but known it. w'ith the greatest teacher and the purest and noblest man of all ages, and all that they were concerned about was to entangle him in his talk. Jesus was not easily entangled. Men of gentleness and goodness often show remarkable clarity and soundness of judgment. Jesus was a man of supreme wisdom, as he was a man of supreme goodness. Net Issue of Tribute One of the vexed questions in a country subject to a foreign yoke was the attitude toward that foreign powder. Should they pay tribute or not? The Pharisees knew that it was an entangling question among Jewish patriots and so they took occasion of it to catch Jesus. How aptly Jesus replied to them. He called for a coin which bore the image of Caesar and, asking whose image and superscription it was, he received the only answer that they could give. “Caesar’s.” It was then that he spoke those memorable w'ords, “Render therefore unto Caesar the things which are Caesar's; and unto God the things that are God's.” He effectually silenced the Pharisees. but the words have a far deeper significance than either the Pharisees or the world have given them. They have been taken often to imply that Jesus w r as teaching the separation of church and state, that we have some duties to Caesar and some duties to God. Obligations Linked That was not his teaching at all. He most, certainly would have denied that there was anything that did not belong to God. But he was meeting these Pharisees upon their own ground. Man's obligation to the state, his duty to his fellow-men, are a part of his debt to God. The state might require him to do something that he believed to be wrong, and in that case the sincere Christian disciples replied. "We ought to obey God rather than man.” The second part of our lesson enforces his great truth. When a lawyer asked Jesus concerning the great commandment, also wishing to entangle him, Jesus answered with the great words concerning, love to God and love to man as constituting the highest thing in life and the deepest obligation of religion. The two parts of the lesson must be taken together. The latter gives fullness to the former and offers us the deepest teaching of Jesus concerning the heart of true religion. WAR MOTHERS TO MARK BIRTHDAYS Quarterly birthday party of the Marion county chapter. American War Mothers, will be observed Tuesday with Mrs. T. A. O'Dell, 3406 Roosevelt avenue, hostess. Members whose birthdays occurred in April. May and June will assist the hostess. Mrs. M. D. Didwav will be program chairman for the afternoon. Corinthian chapter. O. E. S. will hold a Mother's day pageant at a meeting Wednesday night at the Evergreen Masonic temple, 2515 West Washington street. Mrs. Maggie Scott has returned to her home in Greencastle after ,a visit with Mrs. Luther Williams. Mrs Scott attended the luncheon of the Woman's Press Club of Indiana Tuesday.

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Tonight’s Radio Tour *■ NETWORK OFFERINGS

SATURDAY P M. 4:00 A1 Pearce and Gang (NBC) WJZ. Van Stecden s orchestra <NBC) WEAF. 4:ls—Raginskv ensemble (CBS' WABC. 4:3o—Frederick Wm. Wile (CBSi WABC. Jack Armstrong (CBSi WBBM. Himber’s orchestra (NBCi WEAF.. 4:4s—Captain A1 Williams (NBC) WJZ. Charles Carlile. tenor (CBSi WABC. s:oo—Baseball resume (NBC) WEAF. Feature iNBCi WJZ. Elder Michaux and congregation i CBS i WABC 5:15 —Religion in the news (NBC) WEAF. s:3o—Serenaders (CBSi WABC. WGR Eddie Peabody, banjoist, De Marco sisters; Himbcr's ensemble (NBC) WEAF. Bestor’s orchestra (NBC' WJZ. American quartet (CBSi KFAB. s:4s—lsham Jones' orchestra (CBS) WABC. 6:00 —Morton Downey's studio party (CBS' WABC. Art in America INBCi WJZ. Teddy Bergeman; soloists. Stern's orchestra (NBCi WEAF. 6:2o—Bavarian Peasant band (NBC) WJZ. 6:3o—Hands Across the Border (NBC) WJZ. 6:4s—Fats Waller (CBS) WABC. 7:oo—Grete Stueckgold and Kostelantez orchestra (CBS) WABC. Donald Novis, Frances Langford. Vorhees’ orchestra (NBC) WEAF. Jamboree (NBCi WJZ. 7:3o—Beatrice Fairfax (NBC) WEAF. Looking at Life" (CBS' WABC. Duchins orchestra (NBC) WJZ. 7:4s—Piano team (CBSI WABC. 8.00 —Terreplane Travelcade (NBC) WEAF. Bvrd Expedition broadcast (CBSi WABC. Feature (NBC) WJZ. B:3o—Peter the Great (CBSi WABC. "Coping with Crime" iNBCi WEAF. Barn dance (NBC WJZ. KYW. B:ls—Sylvia Froos (CBS' WABC. 9:oo—Maririguera's orchestra (NBC) WEAF. 9:ls—News; Little's orchestra (CBS) WABC. 9:3o—News: Biltmore orchestra (NBC) (NBC). One Man's Family (NBC) WEAF. 10:00—Russo's orchestra INBCi WEAF. Denny's orchestra (NBCi WJZ. Fiorifos orchestra (CBS) WABC. 10:15 —Carefree Carnival INBCi WEAF. 10:30—Arnheim's orchestra (CBS I WABC. Lopez orchestra iNBCi WJZ. WFBM (12.‘>0) Indianapolis (Indianapolis Tower and Light Company) SATURDAY P. M. s:3o—Marimba band. s:4s—Pirate Club. 6:00 Bohemians. :00—Grete Steuckgnld orchestra (CBS). 7:30 —Looking at Life (CBSi. 7:4s—Fray and Braggiotti iCBSI. * 8:00—Byrd Expedition broadcast (CBS). B:3o—Elder Michaux congregation (CBSI. 9:oo—Sylvia Fros (CBS). q-ts Vpu'c icnt;i 9:2o—Little Jack Little orchestra (CBS). 9:4s—Johnny Johnson orchestra (CBS). 10:00—Ted Fiorito orchestra (CBSi. 10:30—Gus Arnheim orchestra (CBS). 11:00—Atop the Indiana roof. 11:30—Eari Hoffman orchestra (CBS). 12:00 Midnight—Sign off. SUNDAY A M. B:oo—Church of the Air (CBS). B:3o—Male choir. 9:00 —Jake's entertainers. 9:3o—Christian Men Builders. 10:30 to 12:00—Silent. 12:00 (Nooni—Dessa Byrd. P. M. 12:15 Bible school. 1:30 Symphonic hour (CBSi. 2:oo—Mother's Dav concert (CBS). 3:oo—Chicago Knights (CBSi. 3:ls—Tony Wons iCBSi. 3:3o—Bakers iCBSi. 4:oo—Wheeler Mission program. 4 30—Jordan Conservatory program. 4 45—Christian Laymen's League. s:oo—Hampton Institute choir iCBS). s:ls—Second Presbyterian church. s:4s—Rin-Tm-Tm iCBSi. 6 00—Freddie Rich entertains (CBS). o:3o—California Melodies (CBS'. 7 00—Family theater iCBSi. 7.30 —Waring’s Pennsylvanians (CBS). B:oo—Lady Esther Serenade (CBS). B:3o—Fireside Singers* 9:oo—Message from Governor McNutt. 9Ts—Little Jack Little orchestra iCBSi. 9.4s—Johnny Johnson orchestra (CBSi. in oO—Red Nichols orchestra (CBS'. 10:30—Henry Busse orchestra (CBS'. 11:00—Atop the Indiana roof, 11 30—Jack Russell orchestra (CBS'. 12:00 Mid.—Sign off. WKBF (1100) Indianapolis (Indianapolis Broadcasting. Inc.) SATURDAY P. M. 400 AI Pearce and His Gang (NBCI. 4 30—News flashes. 4:4s—Little Orphan Annie iNBCi. 5 00—Three Scamps (NBC I . s:ls—Dr. Stanley Hign (NBC). s:3o—Martha Mears 'NBC'. 5 45—The Man on The Street. 6 00—Happy Long. 6:15—T0 be ann-uneed. 6:3o—Hands Across the Border (NBC'. 7.oo—Silent. 8 00—The Other Americas—With Ed L. Tomlinson (NBCi. 8 30—Coping With Crime (NEC). 8 45—Morton Gould <fe John Ersklne (NBCi. 9:00 Ramm Sport review. 9:ls—Harrv Bason 9 SO—One Mans Family iNBC'. 10 00—Carefree Carmva’ 'iNBC'. 11 oo—Seymour Simons orchestra 'NBC'. 11 30—Clvde Lucas orchestra (NBCi. 12 OO—Midnight—Sign off. SUNDAY T M 8 00—The Radio Pulpit (NBC'. 8 30—Samovar Serenade NBC 1 9 00—Press Radio bulletin iNBC>. P 05—The Magic of Speech iNBC 1 . 9 30—101 Men's Bible Class. 10:00—Watchtower. 10:15—Gordon String quartette (NBC). 10 30—Crystal Melodies. 11:30—Sunday Forum iNBC' 12 00—South Sea Islanders (NBC).

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P. M. 12:30—T0 be announced. 12:45—The Jesters iNBCI. I:oo—American Melodies. I:3o—Special Mother's day program 1 NBC 1 . 2:oo—Hal Kemp orchestra. 2:ls—Harry Bason. 2:3o—Trial by Jurv (NBC). 3:oo—Newspaper Adventures. 3:15—T0 be announced. 3:3o—L’Heure Exquise (NBC). 4:3o—Morris H. Coers. s:oo—Negro Melody hour. 5:30 —Marshall Players s:4s—Wendell Hall (NBCi. 6:oo—Kaleidoscope (NBC). 7:oo—The Stevedores. 7:ls—Everett Hanks. 7:3o—Honolulu duo. 7:4s—Dental Gloom Chasers. B:oo—Victor Young orchestra (NBC). 8:30—Hall of Fame INBCI. 9:oo—Canadian Capers iNBC). 9:3o—Ben Pollock orchestra (NBC). 10:00—Jimmy Lunceford orchestra (NBC). 10:30—Clyde Lucas orchestra (NBC) 11:00 —Seymour Simons orchestra (NBC). 11:30—Frankie Masters orchestra (NBC). 12:00—Sign off. WLW (700) Cincinnati SATURDAY P. M. 4:00—To be announced. 4:3o—Jack Armstrong. 4:45—T0 be announced. 5:00—To be announced. 5:15—T0 be announced. 5:30—80b Newhall. s:4s—Reservoirs and Other Methods of Flood Control.” Prof. Harold. 6:OO—R. F. D. hour, with “Boss” Johnston. 6:2s—Pathfinder talk. 6:30 —Johns-Mannville (NBC). 7:00--House Party (NBC*. 7:3o—Beatrice Fairfax Dramatization (NBO. B:oo—Travelcade (NBC'. B:3O—WLS barn dance 'NBC). 9:3o—Gibson dance orchestra. 10:30—News flashes. 10:35—Carefree Carnival (NBC). 11:00—Paul Pendarvis dance orchestra. 11:30—Gibson dance orchestra. 12:00—Mid —Paul Pendarvis dance orch.

Club Meetings

MONDAY Lampas group of Epsilon Sigma Omicron sorority will hear reviews of “The Sheltered Life,” by Mrs. Edna Sharp and Mrs. W. C. Borcherding at a meeting at 10 at the Rauh Memorial library. Board of directors of the Woman's Municipal Gardens Department Club will meet at 1, followed by a business meeting, drill and tea. Mrs. Lat Gatewood will be hostess. Guests will attend a meeting of the Present Day Club, with Mrs. H. E. Daugherty, 3440 Central avenue. hostess. Mesdames C. F. Voyles, W. H. Tennyson and R. H. Pinkham will assist. Mrs. Henry Lester Smith. Bloomington, will talk on “Women in World Peace Movement.” Mrs. Charles W. Roller. 2301 East Garfield drive, will be hostess for a 12:30 luncheon of the Welfare Club. Mrs. Raleigh Fisher is chairman. Mrs. John M. Hobbs. 5260 College avenue*, will be hostess for a meeting of the Monday Afternoon Reading Club. Mrs. G. A. Evereti will talk on “Discovering New Poets” with a program of original poems to be read by Mrs. O. S. Guio, and current event by Mrs. D. S. Morgan. New officers of the Inter-Arts Club will be installed at the meeting at the home of Miss Virginia Brookbank. 3645 North Delaware street. Miss Marian Marshall assist the hostess. Mrs. James Lesh. Mrs. John Hillman and Miss Helen De Veiling will be speakers. Anniversary luncheon of the II Jamalie Club is scheduled for 12:30 at the Washington. Officers will be elected, followed by a bridge party, j The committee in charge includes Mesdames Robert Price. W. U Meyers and Louis Heinrichs. TUESDAY Fortnightly Literary Club will en- ' tertain guests at a meeting at 2:30 at the Propylaeum club. Mrs. Robert Foltz and Mrs. J. C. More will present a program on “Recent Spanish Dramatists.” Social committee of the Proctor Club will be in charge of May outing with Mrs. William F. Kuhn, 3835 Forest Manor avenue, hostess, j Mrs. W. H. Burgess will discuss “The Evolution of Loyalty” and Mrs. A. Reid Liverett will talk on "The Declaration of Ideals'* at a meeting of the Irvington Chautauqua Club with Mrs. Mavme Findley, hostess. Mesdames R. H. Peterson, C. C. Spurrier and D. T. Brownlee will present the program at a meeting of the Hosier Tourist Club. Mrs. W. C. Harrison. 3628 North Illinois street, will entertain the group.

Tune in WFBM Mon . Wed., |Aj Fri. 12:45 noon -Daily 8:45 I^^* WLW Sun.. 1-1 M ■ '

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

—Conservation — MILT WYSON6 AVOIDS HURRY IN HISHSHING Promoter of Conservation Makes Catches When Others Don’t. BY WILLIAM F. COLLINS Timet Special Writer I have had more opportunity to become acquainted with the personnel of the present state conservation department. If any of you can engage the services of Milt Wy- I song, employed to promote the establishment of conservation clubs. in the state, fiave him relate to you : out of the fullness of his fishing knowledge the details of the capture of game fish. He is an outstanding example of the desire on the part of Virgil Simmons, conservation director, to procure for the sportsman men versed in the business who have callouses on their hands from actual work in the field instead of shiny spots on the seats of their trousers from following office theory. Milt likens the taking of any game fish to the art of hunting fox squirrels. i'll not attempt to quote him verbatim; I’ll just relate his story with a few personal observations ; to round it out. Let us take the black bass to start! with. If any fish is foxy, he is. In the confines of our state hatcheries, you will see him traveling in small schools, on the alert for wind blown grasshoppers or luckless frogs. Take a bucket of crawfish with shells so hard they are black covered with horns. Throw one in, Bango! The nearest fish has him by the thorax, a quick flick of the head and he is downed tail first, the movement of reversal is too quick for the eye. Throw in several; all disappear as if by magic. Fish Wariness Shown Now tie a string to the claw of one and throw it in. Not so fast this time. Something is funny in the fishes’ mind about this string business. They may not take it at all or only after the string has settled into the moss or mud and is partly concealed. Now take a fly with a barbless hook. The fish still are timid about anything with a string tied on it, but finally one rises and is hooked. After af lurry of activity he is released. Try again. You may hook another, but that is about the last out of that school. Go out into the timber and find a family of fox squirrels. When you have shot two or three, its almighty hard to take any more in that area. They know what you are there for; you are there to kill them. I have sat in a hickory slashing along the St. Francis river, where there are more squirrels to the square mile than there is to the square county in Indiana and have seen fifty squirrels in view at one time cutting Hie young hickory nuts. Two shots, two squirrels and for an hour there will not be a squirrel in view. If your shots are simply fired into the air and no are killed, in a few moments after the noise dies aw-ay out they come. These long waits between fish can be accounted for partly by the fact that within one pool the first fish caught constitutes a piscatorial advertisement that all is not quiet along the Potomac. I Uses Simple System Mr. W.vsong catches fish in Wawasee when the mine run of fishermen give up in disgust. His is a simple if rather prolonged system. When you are out squirrel hunting. you don’t hunt the willows; you hunt the oak ridges. Then you find the hollow trees where they den. With that combination, there must be squirrels. He has applied this to fishing. First find the food. He takes a treble hook and carefully investigates the bottom. When his hook brings up grass or moss that has ‘skippers’ on it, that is the food of blue gills. But you don’t find bluegills every place w-here ‘skippers’ abound just as you do not find a squirrel in every oak tree. Milt then looks for the dens. He anchors in a spot over the ‘skippers’. A casting rod is his exploratory wand. An ounce 'ight, a dropper hook baited, a long cast out on the radii of the hub where he sits, gradually reeling in and stopping for long intervals finally locates the den tree of the bluegills, deeply hidden in some mossy crevice. It Takes Time When one is hooked, that means more in the neighborhood as they ; invariably travel in schools. In midsummer, this practice takes as ! long as three hours in forty feet of i water, but the final results are what ! counts in fishing. The same procedure applies to bass excepting that the food is of another kind and bass prefer deep dens in tobacco w r eed rather than 1 moss. A study of the habits of game fish at any one of the state hatcheries will enable you to inject a lot of your own personality into the sport of fishing and the time spent at it will be more than repaid when the season opens if you happen to I be the only man on the lake that j has taken a fish that day. There is more time spent by the average fisherman casting over i barren ground or fishing over foodless and denless bottom than w'ould pay off the national debt if a fisherman's time was worth only 10 cents an hour.

Card Parties

Triangle Club will sponsor a benefit card party tonight in the community house, Carson and Troy avenues, Mrs. Margaret Metthews is chairman. Drill team of the Women of the Moose will hold a card party tomorrow night at the hall, 135 North Delaware street. Card party will be held at Holy Rosary hall, 520 Stevens street, at 8:30 Monday night for the benefit of the church. A card party will be given at 7:45 Wednesday at the Y. W. C. A.. 1627 Prospect street, for the benefit of the camp scholarship fund. Ways and means committee of th: Women s Auxiliary to Sahara r otto will entertain with a card party at 8 tonight at the Grotto home.

Date Chosen for Wedding Told at Fete Miss Sielken Will Be Bride, June 6, in Church Kite. Miss Nellie Inez Sielken has named Wednesday, June 6. as the date for her marriage to William C. Brandt, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles C. Brandt. Announcement was made today at a bridge party given by Mrs. Herman H. Sielken at her home, 4001 Guilford avenue, for her daughter. The ceremony will be read at the First Friends church. Miss Charlotte Wainwright will be maid of honor. Bridesmaids will be Misses Gretty Lou Sielken and Louise Brandt. Ralph Brandt, brother of the bridegroom-elect, will be best man. Guests today were Mesdames W. M. Mace. Fred Zwicker, Paul D. Whittemore, Edwin Haerle, Ruth Anna Routh and Miss Wainwright, Miss Brandt, Miss Gretty Lou Sielken and Misses Betty Sahm, Mary Frey, Hazel Henson, Lucille Johnson and Herberta Bell, Richmond. The hostess was assisted by Mrs. Brandt. Mrs. A. H. Sielken and Mrs. E. E. Christena.

A Woman’s Viewpoint

BY MRS. WALTER FERGUSON “npHE mean old skinflint, the -I- miserly wretch,” w’ere only a couple of the terms used in describing a certain rich city man who had refused the request of three women to donate to a popular children’s charity. Another name, less harsh and equally illustrative, -would be “poor, deluded creature.” Those people, who having more money than they need, yet hang onto every penny with a desperate tenacity, actually possess less than the, rest of us. They have no faith in their kind, no imagination, no conception of the proper destiny of the dollar, and what’s -worse, no firm foundation for their lives. Money may be their compensation for an arid round of dismal days. Why should we grudge them their gold when they have so little else? Far beneath their worship of material things they must often be torn by anxiety and horror. Probably when they awake in the deep night they feel a desperate fright, having no place for the shelter of their lonely souls. They must have a sense of being lost in illimitable space. It may be that sometimes their beings cry out and listen in vain for a friendly response from an empty universe. So it is, they hold their gold dearer; they part with it more reluctantly and instead of hating we should pity them. Existence must indeed be a terrible experience for the person who has only money to give in ‘ exchange for life, for sunshine, for spring lilacs, for the light in other men's eyes, and for the heart’s ease of kindly deeds. Think of what it means to be obliged to depend wholly upon soiled bits of paper for all one's security and happiness. No matter how high may be the piles of notes and bonds and royalties, they are never quite enough. It is strange and tragic that so many of us art* eager to fortify our old age by economic security and yet are careless of the need for accumulating mental and spiritual safety for those years w r hen we shall w-ant them most. The sweet serenity of an untroubled conscience is the best bit of wealth in any man’s strong box.

ENGAGED

——■gww 1

Miss Mary Thelma Rollins.

—Photo by Platt. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Rollins, Beech Grove, announce the engagement of their daughter, Miss Mary Thelma Rollins, and Francis J. Dux, son of Mr. and Mrs. Edward F. Dux. The ceremony will be read June 5 at the Holy Name church, Beech Grove. DANCING CLASSES WILL GIVE RECITAL One hundred members of Young Women's Christian Association dancing classes will present a recital in Hollenbeck hall Thursday and Friday nights under the direction of Miss Vonda E. Browne, instructor. Leading parts will be taken by Joan Freihage, Virginia Cathcart, Rita Catherine Rohr and Richard Sayles. Social dance numbers will be presented by Alma Teifert and Mary Jean Sayles with according numbers by LaVerne Lamb. Sorority to Give Tea , Members’ mothers and rushees will be guests of Indiana Alpha. Lambda Alpha Lambda sorority, at a silver candelight tea from 3 to 5 tomorrow at the Barbara Frietchie tearoom. Miss Edna Wilkenson, president, will pour and will be assisted by Miss Emma Lou Voelker, chairman; Misses Virginia Johnson, Bonnie Nash and Alverina Summers. Other committee members are Misses Louise Farmer, Helen Wilkenson and Geneva Robbins.

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Enclosed find 15 cents for which send me Pattern No. 250. Size Name Street City State

A FROCK you’ll want to wear a good deal about the house this summer is the one pictured here. It can be made in gingham, percale or printed linen. Designed in sizes 34 to 42. size 38 requires four and one-eighth yards of 35-inch fabric plus one-third yard contrast. To obtain a pattern and simple sewing chart of this model, tear out the coupon and mail it to Julia Boyd. The Indianapolis Times, 214 West Maryland street, Indianapolis, together with 15 cents in coin.

Contract Bridge

Today’s Contract Problem South has the contract at three no trump. West opens the eight of hearts. How should declarer play the hand? And when he plays the diamond suit, what defensive play can East make that wil) defeat the contract? AA 3 2 V 10 7 6 ♦K 7 2 A Q 10 8 3 A7 6 I~n 'A QlO S 4 V A Q 9 8 2 w E y 53 ♦ JlO9 S ♦ Q S 4 A765A K J 4 2 AKJ 9 5 VK J 4 ♦ A fi 5 3 A A 9 Solution in next issue. 5

Solution to Previous Contract Problem BY W. E- M’KENNEY Secretary American Bridge League THERE are two types of hands—defensive type hands and declarer type hands. When you pick up your cards, you must first determine which of these types you hold. If you have a hand containing a lot of aces and kings, wouldn’t you much prefer that the opponents play that contract? Then your aces and kings would take tricks, each of which would be worth 100 points or more. However, if you have a long suit and little high card strength, that is the declarer type hand. You know that the only tricks you can hope to take are long card tricks. Too many persons are anxious to bid on aces and kings. You need a lot more than that—you need favorable distribution. tt tt tt THAT is why South, with today’s hand, should not open the contracting. If his partner can not make a weak third hand opening bid. there certainly is no reason for him to step into the bidding. South makes a serious mistake on this hand in doubling the fourspade contract. True enough, it looks as though he certainly could defeat the contract, but his partner has passed third hand, showing that he has an exceptionally weak hand. If East and West are in a fourspade contract against this type of hand, you know that they are in the wrong contract, and you will have a good score on the board. To double it may just locate the missing high cards that the declarer will need to make his contract or#to go down one trick less—and it is better to set the hand two undoubled vulnerable than one trick doubled. tt tt it AFTER the four spade bid, South opens the king of clubs. When he continues with a club, East, the declarer, ruffs it. East now leads a small spade, winning with the king in dummy and returning a small spade, winning with the ace. Now the declarer decides that the only missing high card in which

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he is really interested is the queen of hearts, and as South has doubled, it at least gives him a reason to believe that South holds that card. Therefore, he leads the jack of hearts. Os course, South must cover with the queen. A heart is returned and then the ten is played. This establishes the three of hearts for the declarer. He leads it and regardless of whether or not South ruffs with the queen of spades, the declarer will discard the losing diamond from dummy. This will allow' him to ruff one diamond in dummy so that all he loses is a spade, a diamond, and a club, making his contract of four against this big hand. If South had not doubled, the declarer might have finessed the hearts the wrong way. (Copyright, 193-. by NEA Service) State Auxiliary Convention Will Be Held in City Mrs. Paul Stiers, Anderson, state president of the Ladies Auxiliary to the United Commercial Travelers, w'ill preside at the convention to be held at 8:30 Saturday morning at the Antlers. Other state officers are Mrs. Arthur Betz, Ft. Wayne, vice-presi-dent; Mrs. L. S. Krieder, Terre Haute, recording secretary; Mrs. Farland T. White. Plainfield, treasurer, and Mrs. Leroy S. Martin, state press chairman. Annual business meeting will be followed by a luncheon which will be attended by all active auxiliary members. A card party will include activities, with the Indianapolis auxiliary as sponsor.

TICKET CHAIRMAN

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Miss Janet Bradley. Miss Janet Bradley is chairman of the ticket sales for the Dutch supper to be sponsored May 13 by the Butler Alumnae Club of Alpha Chi Omego sorority. Other members of the committee are Misses Deloris McDaniel, Ann Hall and Mrs. Henry Unger. Breakfast Scheduled Mrs. C. H. Heid, 430 North Euclid avenue, will be hostess for a breakfast at 11 Wednesday with members of the Mothers’ Alliance of Alpha Delta Theta sorority as guests. Mrs. Arthur Robinson will talk on “My Trip to the Orient” after the business session. Two Will Give Program Mrs. Leslie McLean will present a program on Mothers’ day and Mrs. Edward J. Hecker, Memorial day, at a meeting of John A. Logan chapter, Daughters of the Union, Monday afternoon at the home of Mrs. W. L. Carey, 126 South Ritter avenue. ,■

"MAY 12,1931

State Group to Meet in Convention Voters League Members Will Gather Monday in Lafayette. The fifteenth annual convention of the Indiana League of Women Voters, to open Monday at Lafavette, will attract a group from the Indianapolis league, headed by Mrs. J. J. Daniels. Attending the board meeting and committee conference will be Mrs. Daniels. Misses Sarah Lauter. Margaret Denny and Frances Holliday; Mesdames Robert. S. Sinclair. Walter S. Greenough, Smiley Chambers. Fletcher Hodges. William Ray Adams. Silvester Johnson Jr., Thomas D. Sheerin. Oscar Baur, Leo M. Gardner. William P. Snethep, Frederick E. Matson, Clarence Morrell. Lehman Dunning. William A. Moore. Ralph C. Vonnegut. Addison Parry. Mesdames C. O. Page. Walter E. Rogers. L. A. Ensminger and Mrs. John Goodwin are alternates. Local committee chairmen will meet on Monday afternoon at the Hotel Fowler. Mrs. Daniels. Mrs. Campbell and Miss Lauter will attend a dinner and board meeting Monday night at the home of Mrs. Charles E. Cory, president of the Tippecanoe County League. Three Points Emphasized. Programs of three of the six departments of the league will be stressed at the convention. The efficiency in government department, renamed the department, of government and its operation, has devoted much time in Indiana to the study of local units and the need for local reorganization. David Ross of Lafayette, who has made a study of the subject, -will speak at the Tuesday afternoon session on “The Reorganization of Local Government.” Mr. Ross sponsored a bill which was introduced in the last session of the Indiana assembly, providing for a reorganization of Tippecanoe county. The department of government and education will be featured at the dinner meeting of the convention Tuesday night. This department in Indiana has been interested in attempts to keep schools functioning during financial depression. Dr. G. Bromley Oxnam of De Pauw university will give an address on “The Need of Public Education in a Democracy.” Peru Woman to Speak. Mrs. Richard Edwards, Peru, third vice-president of the Indiana league and former member of the state board of education, will preside at a dinner and will close the night program with a talk, "Putting Dr. Oxnam’s Suggestions to Work Under the League Program.” The department of government and international co-operation will provide a speaker for the final session. At a luncheon meeting on Wednesday, Mrs. James W. Morrison, Groton, Conn., will give the closing address of the convention on “Control of the Manufacture and Shipment of Arms.” Mrs. Morrison, native of Indiana, has lived in various sections of the United States and has traveled in the Orient and in Europe. She has been a member of the Institute of Pacific Relations. Among the offices vacated this year is the presidency, held for five years by Mrs. Charles W. Teetor, Hagerstown, who has resigned, and the treasurership, held for eight years by Mrs. Ora Thompson Ro-s, Rensselaer. Mrs. Thomas D. Sheerin, Indianapolis, is chairman of the nominating committee.

Sororities

Alpha chapter, Pi Omega sorority, will celebrate founders’ day with a slumber party tonight at Whispering Winds. Arrangements are in charge of Mrs. Herbert Norvill, Misses Patricia McGinley, Burnelle Bailey and Mary Bradley. Upsilon chapter, Sigma Phi Gamma sorority, will meet at 7:30 Monday night at the Spink Arms. Delta Rho chapter, Phi Pi Psi sorority, will hold a business meeting Monday with Mrs. Evan McBroom, 2015 Mansfield avenue. Beta chapter, Sigma Delta Zeta sorority, will entertain mothers of members at 2241 North Delaware street, tomorrow. Miss Mayme Hamilton is chairman. The sorority will hold a business meeting Monday at the Lincoln. Mothers of members of Beta chapter, Alpha Beta Phi sorority, will be entertained tomorrow afternoon at Cifaldi's with a dinner and program. Miss Patricia Worihaye is chairman. Alpha Theta Chi sorority will meet at 8 Monday night with Mrs. Elizabeth Grove, 1311 North Denny street. The sorority will hold a weiner roast tomorrow night at Forest Park. Misses Marjorie Lewis, Dorothy Rainwater and Audrey Osgood are in charge of a bridge party and style show to be given by Theta chapter, Pi Omicron sorority, May 19, in Ayres auditorium. Benefit Part;) Set Proceeds from a benefit card party at 2 Wednesday afternoon at the English will be used for the championship cat show to be held at the Indiana State fair Sejv 6 and 7. Mrs. John Kiemeyer is party chairman.

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