Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 12, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 May 1934 — Page 31

MAY 25, 1934.

Abolition of Anger Advocated

World Peace Would Be Furthered and Curb Set on Hypocrisy. BY GRETTA PALMER Times Special Writer YORK, May 25.—Anger is one of those remnants, like beards and wisdom teeth, which were useful to primitive man but are becoming more and more of a nuisance in civilized society. Our great granddaddv, the missing link, lived largely by fighting—

an emotion, like rage, which stimulated hi s gland activities to a high pitch and deadened his native fear and was a valuable asset in an encounter with a sabre-toothed tiger. Today this same emotion is apt to lead us all to do things quite u n a c c e ptable socially. The newspapers told of

IIPS1& *55 .•* SKS&

Miss Palmer

Mrs. Angelina Ippolitto, of Greenwich, who is held by the police on the charge of having stabbed a young woman to whom her husband was attentive. If her case comes to trial we can predict, with fair confidence, what the defense will be—jealousy, sudden rage and perhaps a reference to the unwritten law. Many cases have been'tried with that defense, you remember, and it has proved a remarkably effective one. For we are all possessed of the same tendency to see red at inopportune moments—we are all descended from cave men and women who used anger as a trusty weapon. And that includes “the gentlemen of the jury.” They will be inclined to listen with sympathy to the plea of a prisoner who was motivated by an emotion they have felt themselves. They would view less leniently the performance of someone who had attempted murder in cold blood for a practical advantage, because the jurors would not have tried it themselves. And yet anger, from the social point of view, is no less destructive for the fact that, we all have a capacity for it. The man or woman who is the victim of a crime of passion is quite as dead as if it had been a calm stickup man who did the job. Sympathy for Killer Silly Our sentimental tendency to condone the emotional killer is, when you think of it, rather ridiculous—as ridiculous, for instance, as our glorification of the crime of murder if enough people are involved in it so that it can be called a war. In one Latin-American country a husband who finds his wife in an act of unfaithfulness and kills her is let out on to the streets on $lO bail and later, if he is found guilty, is exiled from his province for six months. But he must be very careful to kill the man involved, too. If either of the guilty parties is allowed to escape his evidence nas been destroyed. More Hypocritical That state gives a very frank indorsement to the crime of passion by imposing so frivolous a sentence for a tlouble murder. And yet the records of our courts suggest that we are often quite as ready to condone such murders as the southern country which legalizes them. We are, simply, more hypocritical about it. The deadly emotion of anger may help a little boy—or grown man—to win a scrap. Its larger social usefulness is very dubious indeed. Wouldn’t the race be far ahead if we set to work to stamp out anger in any form by refusing to condone it, or to glorify its destruction, whether that destruction takes the form of a crime of passion or a battle in No Man’s Land? GRADUATES WILL BE HONOR GUESTS June graduates of St. John academy will be honored by the alumnae at a banquet at 6:30 Monday night at the Indianapolis Athletic Club. Miss Agnes Cruse, general chairman, will be assisted by Misses Bettie Wolfe, Grace Blackwell and Anna Brennan. In charge of arrangements are Miss Mary Coughlin; decorations, Miss Clara Grande, and publicity, Miss Winifred Mulloney. Miss Rose O’Gara will be toastmaster.

CREPITr"*"/ / Sensational 2 DAY OFFER Fri. and Sat. ONLY V ) Consisting of ) *g (silk dressl all . InIMX { COAT of Waffle Cloth " FOR ( 1 )m (HAT, BAG .M I * | /§L_Y> ) & hose Lmm \ PAY AO/ X if ONLY vO DOWN ( Re S u, a*‘ Price of Com- / \ blnation 5 17 9S —Save 30% > mm{ ONLY ONE OUTFIT TO/ A CUSTOMER )

Correct Wedding Requires Bridal Cake

’’

A beautiful bride's cake is absolutely necessary to any well-planned wedding. Placed in the center of the table at which the bride, her attendants ai.u her new husband sit, it provides a festive and decorative touch. Here is a list of ingredients which one needs to make an excellent bride’s cake: Three and threefourths cups of sifted cake flour, one and one-half teaspoons baking powder, one and three-fourths cups of butter, two cups sugar, one and one-fourth cups unbeaten egg whttes, one-half teaspoon vanilla and one-fourth teaspoon almond extract. Sift the flour once, measure, add baking powder and sift together three times. Cream butter thoroughly, add sugar gradually and cream together until light and fluffy.. Add the egg whites, onefourth cup at a time, beating about three minutes after each addition. Put in the flavoring and beat vigorously. Turn the mixture into a ten-inch tube pan which

Contract Bridge

Today’s Contract Problem South is playing the contract at three no trump. A small spade is opened. The club finesse is wrong and on the second diamond lead West drops the queen. The drop of the cards shows West with only two hearts. With this information, can you make the contract? A A J 10 9 7 VA 3 2 ♦6 4 3 * < 2 4 f~N^ 4 ¥ N ¥ (Blind) E (Blind) ♦n . ♦ A K ¥Q 5 4 ♦AK S 7 AAQ 6 5 3 Solution in next issue 18

Solution to Previous Contract Problem BY W. E. M’KENNEY Secretar • American Bridge League 'yrOU " r ..l never receive any en- *- ment from contract unless you make a definite attempt during the bidding to try to visualize how the play will go, and unless, after you start to play the hand, you have a definite plan in mind. I was surprised at the number of persons who gave the wrong answer to the question asked in today’s hand—which suit would you start first, clubs or diamonds, after winning the spade trick? And without any thought, many answered, ‘“I would start the diamonds, and then if the finesse worked, I would lead a club and take the club finesse.” No thought

AST ¥97 4 3 ♦KJ 8 5 AJ 5 3 N |4AQ 94 2 ¥KQIO6W EyJ2 ♦ 10 92 S A Q 7 3 ♦K j 4 Deslef jf, io 7 2 ♦ K 10 6 ¥A 8 5 ♦A 6 4 ♦AJ 8 Duplicate—All vul. Opening lead —4 J South West North East 1 4 Pass 1 a 1 A IN. T. Pass Pass Pass 18

has been greased-, lined on bottom, sides and around tube with heavy paper, and greased again. Bake in slow oven (278 degrees) for one hour; increase the heat to 300 degrees and bake fifty minutes longer, or until done. Favors can be stuck into the cake while it is still hot. Cut small slits in the cake and after wrapping the favors in wax paper, put them into the slits. A thimble, a ring and a bright, shiny coin are the traditional favors which are put into a bride’s cake for the wedding gests to find and laugh about. Spread a creamy white frosting on and sides of the cake and decorate with simple borders, festoons and rosettes. Serve on a handsome silver tray or platter surrounded with delicate sprays of fern, bridal wreath and spring flowers. Put a special bridal favor on the top of the cake or tie small wedding bells or other favors to white ribbons and intertwine through the green sprays.

was given to what might happen if the finesse didn’t work. Now let use start right at the beginning. You are playing the contract at one no trump. East has bid spades and probably has five. A spade is opened and you win the first trick. You can see that you are going to win a heart trick, two diamonds and a club—five in all. If you take the diamond finesse and it fails, the enemy will cash its spade tricks and will then probably lead hearts, and your contract will be defeated, because you will not have the club suit established. a an NOW let us reason the play by starting the club suit. If we lead a club, we have a chance of establishing three club tricks immediately. We are sure of two diamond tricks and that is enough to give us our contract of one no trump. If the club suit does not establish, as a last resort, we have the diamond finesse. In the meantime, even though the queen of diamonds lays wrong, the wrong hand may get in the lead, or the defense may discard a diamond. • But the real reason for starting the club suit is that, in all probability, you can establish three club tricks quickly and make your contract. And now, if you will look at all four hands, you can see mat 11 you start the diamond suit and the finesse fails, the spades are cashed, the heart suit started and the contract is defeated. If you lead a small club toward the queen, you are going to make three club tricks, which is just enough to give you your contract. (Copyright, 1934, by NEA Service. Inc.) Dance at Club Set Following the swimming championships tournament at the Indianapolis Athletic Club tonight the members of the Sea Horse organization will sponsor a dance on the roof garden of the club. Brown Buddies will play. Miss Constance Leeb, 2808 Cornell avenue, will be hostess for a meeting of Alpha Theta Chi sorority at 8 Monday-night.

Continuing for Suburban Day Beaute-Artes Drive for 2,000 New Customers The only thing cheap about the famous French Tonic Live This superior Open Sunday.A *■ 11 sta y s until the May 27. 8 A. hair grows out. to noon, as an'®*' VV , / 5. Plenty of curls, a c corimodation / A f 6. Will not hurt the to old and new tJ / most tender headed. a friends. So In- f / 7 - ? lakes th,n hair look crease in prices. _ . FREE SAT. ONLY turner $ "Sk A liberal box of “Peggy" permanent NOWFace Powder. Delightfully 100 Sanitation , . _ , , 1 Fresh Supplies fragrant. Regular $1 value. , New Pads _ Expert Come Saturday. Operators. Plenty of j^a 8 ’ I 1 1 Ringlet Ends. $5.5 H Value —Brine a Friend—Divide the Cost — Stylistic Oris ..87 * Tulip Oil. Genuine Swiss Oil, Steam Oil Per- ° ris ** Va,ue ° ri *- 810 Valu e. manent 2 for *2.01 Permanent Permanent 2 for $3.01 2 for *7.01 fill" HAIR OIK SPECIALTY NO APPOINTMENT NECKS.SARI “SERVICE WITH A SMILE” It is extravagant to pay more. AVOID THE U;UAL RACE CROWD RUSH! ACT NOW' BEAU2E-ARTES 601— ROOSEVELT BLDG.—6OI LI. 7203 No Appointment Necessary LI. 7203

■ THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

LICENSED CYCLIST

|||| * ' x * y

Anita Page, winsome cinema actress, has a license to strike this fetching pose. If any hardhearted minion of the law doubts it, he’ll find it affixed to the seat of her bike, as Anita was the first of the filmfolk to buy a license as required by anew Los Angeles ordinance affecting cyclists.

Ladies’ Aid to the Speedway M. E. church will hold a supper at 5 tomorrow night at Sixteenth and Medford streets.

Vegetables Improved by Seasoning

Combinations Offer Way to Break Monotony of Diet. BY MARY E. DAVIS NEA Service Sports Editor If you are at your wit’s ends about what to have instead of fish, cheese or eggs, try a vegetable main dish. Very often vegetables can be combined in made dishes to form a most acceptable “piece de resistance” for luncheon or dinner. If followed by a dessert made of milk and eggs an appetizing and well-balanced meal is provided. The chief requisite for successful vegetable dishes is clever seasoning. Mushrooms give a rich flavor to many vegetable combinations. Spinach and Irish potatoes, particularly, gain interest by the use of this seasoning. In this connection, remember that mushroom catsup and mushroom paste always are available and can be used for flavoring. Since they are in concentrated form a little goes a long way. Onion Removes Flatness A suspicion of onion lifts many an uninteresting and flat dish into the savory and tasty class. The French are noted for their fine cooking, use shallots, which are of the onion family, in almost every meat and vegetable dish they cook. Onion powder, a comparatively new product on the market, makes it possible to gain the desired seasoning without wasting part of a whole onion. Mustard is another seasoning not to be overlooked. Horseradish with its bitey tang is good, too. Celery and parsley fill an important place among seasonings. A little grated cheese—not enough to give a pronounced cheese flavor—adds an indescribable richness of taste to nearly all vegetable dishes. These recipes may be new to you and help solve the daily question of “what shall we have to eat?” N Savory Vegetables One cup dried lima or marrow-fat beans, 1 cup diced carrots, 2 green peppers, 1 Spanish onion, 1 cup broken macaroni, 2 cups canned tomatoes, 2 tablespoons butter, 1 cup sliced mushrooms, 1 teaspoon salt, 1-3 teaspoon pepper. Soak beans in cold water overnight. In the morning drain and parboil for five minutes. Throw away this water and cook in boiling water until tender, about three hours. Add carrots, peppers cut in shreds and onion peeled and thinly sliced. Simmer until vegetables are tender and water is reduced to a few tablespoonfuls. In the meantime cook macaroni in boiling salted water for twenty minutes. Drain and add to vegetable mixture with tomatoes. Melt butter and saute mushroms for five minutes. Add to vegetable mixture and heat thoroughly. Season with salt and pepper and serve.

> MAGIC FOR TIRED FEET 0 The magic in Nisley’s is not alone their beauty and smart A 'i. , tt> style. They are made to fit per(\jl fectly each type of foot, insurYt; —* n S com^ort an d long wear. \y _j After all, isn’t this part of the No. 796 Nurse’s duty oxford in white or bargain you look for in every Black. Sizes Vh to 9 Widths AAA to C. . . . $3.93 pair of shoes you buy? Let Nisley fit you this Summer and iave t^e com plete satisfaction that you pay for . HEEL-WITHIN-A-HEEL HOSE \\ XV Beautiful, Clear Chiffon or Service \jL \S-—-• —V\ Weight Anr , ... ■■■ - No. 316 One strap with Cuban heel. In White or Black. Sizes 2Vi to 9 Widths ~ 95c two pair $1.75 AAAA to C $3.95 • ALL STYLES W Irlrfcr cqmfoots 44 NO. PENNSYLVANIA ST. Mail Orders Filled Promptly When Accompanied by Purchase Prire and 15c for Mailing

A Womans Viewpoint BY MRS. WALTER FERGUSON

“TX7HEN I was a lad,” orated VV one of these passionate defenders of the good old days to a young people’s class, “our frontiers were many and there always was room at the top for the agggressive boy. Today’s young men are having all such opportunities taken away from them.” “Buncombe and bosh,” I want to shout to them, “the man’s a disgruntled old scalawag.” As indeed he is. But today’s young man would be facing better prospects if some of those boys in the good old days had been told occasionally to stop right where they were in the middle. The stuff they had poured into them about every male child’s chance to be president of something or other was enough to get any country into our present economic mess. Nobody, it appears, ever reasoned with the children as to the wisdom of considering their limitations or calling a halt to their ambitions. No, they all scrambled badly for the top with what consequences you already know. Now the only sensible reason for climbing a mountain, for instance, is to see the view. But how many successful Americans looked at the view at all after they had arrived at the top of their little business peaks? Precious few. The idea of wanting to get to

BIRTHDAY PARTY SET BY CHAPTER Annual birthday luncheon of Chapter G, P. E. O. Sisterhood, will be held tomorrow at the home of Mrs. A. W. Macy, 325 North Campbell avenue, with charter members as hostesses. Decorations will be in yellow and white. Mrs. Fern Spurgeon, Terre Haute, a past state president and first president of Chapter G, will be a guest of honor. Mrs. Meriam S. Gallup, superintendent of Indiana Woman’s prison, will talk, and Mrs. Guy O. Carpenter will present a vocql program, accompanied by Mrs. John M. Smith. Miss Dorothy Lorraine Westbay will play the piano.

Daily Recipe KAFFEE CUSTARD 2 cups milk U tablespoons kaff e e hag (ground) 3 eggs *4 cup sugar */4 teaspoon salt 14 +easpoon vanilla Scald milk with the ground kaffee hag. Strain.* Beat eggs slightly; add sugar, salt, vanilla and milk. Strain into buttered individual molds and set in pan of hot water. Bake at 325 degrees until firm, about thirty minutes.

the top only because you are obsessed by a wide desire to beat somebody else doesn’t go for mountain climbing or for living. There always are a thousand more opportunities for the average boy or girl in the middie, rather than at the summit of the peak—in the fine plateaus of the temperate zone of life. And it is the individual who prepares himself to do the job in the middle who gets and deserves a permanent place in the upper reaches of the business, artistic or professional altitudes. I for one hope some of this “room at the top” eloquence can be turned off—it’s done quite enough harm already. Just being a success is and never will be adequate reward for any kind of effort. It’s how to en Joy your job while you’re doing that counts—that is real success.

'OEP^fr WAStMBLB cr|f ’Jaliuon.KoiunA. Jet DECORATION DAY • ' / */ ll / A t! ■ Wi l \ \i■ -1 i C<T J ;| i l \ 11 I t I r v jyj Here’s ALL you demand in Washable! COOL enough for the hottest days. PRETTY enough to go a.v where. STURDY enough to hold its shape all summer. VALUE enough, only $0.99 GUAYS 0 M'S 16 E. Washington St.

FLOWER f or Flower Gardens! PLANTS •• • CEMETERY VASES ■i..-. i— Sturdy, First Quality! Pot GROWN Now is the time to JV: plant your Flower V* Beds, Porch Boxes, Cemetery and Lawn HWl'liT ■VI In Vases, Hanging Bas- " Prices Are Reasonable! buif from an ALLIED FLORIST J. W. Anthony Lnebking Floral Company Brandlein’s, Inc. Madison Avenue Flower Shop Geo. Bneseher & Son A. Nelson Elsner-Roberts Pahud Floral Company John A. Grande ({uality Flowers, Inc. John Grande & Sons Randalls' Florists Greene’s Flower Shop Leo J. Rickenbarh Carl & Wm. Hack H. ff Rieman & Sons John Heldenreich Ross Floral Company Fisher & Challis C. H. Schwomeyer Holmes Flower Shop A. D. Stanley Indianapolis Flower & Plant Cos. Temperley’s Floral Service J. B. Flower Shop Washington Flower Shop A1 Kemps Charles Wheateraft Kiefer Floral Company Gus Wledenhoft Charles C. Lock wo, A. Wiegand Sons Company

PAGE 31

SHOWER ARRANGED FOR MISS ROLLINS Miss Irma Kattau, assisted by her mother, Mrs. F. A. Kattau Sr., will entertain tonight with a bridal shower for Miss Mary Thelma Rollins, whose marriage to Francis J. Dux will take place June 5 in Holy Name church. Beech Grove. Guests will include Mesdames Joseph Rollins, Edward F. Dux Sr., Arthur Zipp and Edward F. Dux Jr., Misses Ruth Brogan, Louella Young, Elizabeth Roth, Lois Groves, Mary Fitzgerald, Irene Kattau, Marie Snyder, Marguerite Groves, Mary Kot and Dorothy Filcer. * Founding Party Set * Founders’ day banquet and dance will be held at Omega Phi Tau sorority tomorrow night at the Athenaeum with Mrs. Edgar Pattison, chairman, assisted by Miss Mable Garner and Mrs. Michael Shelburn. Representatives will attend from Beta, Delta, Eta, Kappa, Lambda, Mu, Epsilon, Theta and Zeta chapters.