Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 22, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 June 1934 — Page 5
JUNE 6, 1934'
Real Basis Lacking for Sex Clash Emotional Differences of Men and Women Over-Emphasized. BY GRETTA PALMER NEW YORK, June 6. —“The woman smoker irks the AntiCigaret League,” runs a recent news story which adds, “Women are harder to reach, after they have acquired the habit, than any other smokers.” This, perhaps,
is a news story over which we should all rejoice. For it seems to be the reductio ad absurdum of the idea that a woman is emotionally and by habit very different from a man. The theory that women were a race apart, a little less human, was
Miss Palmer
originated in days when we were definitely a subject race. That it should have survived into an age when a woman is a member of the President’s cabinet is somewhat astonishing. Women, nowadays, whatever else you say about it, are people. So women are cigaret addicts, are they? Aren’t women also sacrificial heroines, defenders of the misjudged and the noblest little lot of martyrs you ever saw? For you may trust a man who sets women off as a race apart to do one thing —he will set a crown of thorns on the brows of the women every time. He may deny them the vote or every other human right, but he will pat them on the back and call them God's own saints. There are, actually, only two schools of thought on the man versus woman question. There is the school which holds that we are nine-tenths different. There is the other school, which believes that our common humanity explains nine-tenths of the makeup of any of us and that the sexual difference accounts for the remainder. We are, in a word, 90 per cent human, 10 per cent woman. And why emphasize the 10 per cent? I have known a good many men—girl and woman. I have found them oppressed by the same troubles and subject to the same major weakness as women. We have, no doubt, our own special set of* difficulties, but in the broad sweep of human events we are pretty much in the same boat. So why insist on the distinction? The fact that a person has red hair rather than black is of a certain interest. So is the matter of weight. But before I care to hear about these physical details I wish to learn whether that person is interesting or congenial. Then you can tell me what is that person’s sex.
A Day’s Menu Breakfast — Diced mixed fruits, cereal cooked with dates, cream, creamed dried beef, toast, milk, coffee. Luncheon — Creamed salmon and peas with Chinese noodles, celery hearts, quick fruit rolls, milk, tea. Dinner — Slice of ham baked in milk, baked sweet potatoes, green beans in cream, endive with French dressing, peach fritters with maple syrup, milk, coffee.
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1 J I\' /©I Qin<jham IrccHiirvj I /l\ o\ I/ I \ f J I \ C^ CKJLn< 3 Qhk J l 19 © Inclosed find 15 cents for which send me Pattern No. 192. Size \ Name Street City State
GET in the beach fashion swim with a charming bathing suit and frock such as the Chic twins wear! Seersucker or jersey are the materials and the designs come for sizes 14 to 20 and 32 to 42. Size 18 requires l 7 g yards of 39-inch fabric for the suit and 2 1-6 yards for the skirt, or 4 yards for the ensemble in monotone. Bow of ribbon, 1 yard. 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 What would your original bid be, holding the South, hand? How should the bidding proceed? And if South arrives at a contract of six no trump, and West opens the queen of spades, how should the hand be played? A 8 7 V 10 8 4 3 ♦ AQ 9 6 4 ♦ K 5 AQJIO 1 A 0 6 532 N VKQJ7 y 6 <- z ♦ JlO 5 n , ♦ 8 2 A8 3 2 Dealef J AJIO 1 6 A A K 4' ¥A 9 5 ♦K 7 3 A AQ 9 4 Solution in next issue. 30
Solution to Previous Contract Problem BY WILLIAM E. M’KENNEY Secretary American Bridge League TTAVE you noticed'that the play of the hand at contract is far superiqr to the play we were accustomed to at auction? In other words, we hear more of end plays, squeezes, and coups. Why? Because the bidding at contract gives a lot of information as to location of high cards, while at auction there was probably only one bid to the hand and the enemy did not disclose the location of any of their high cards. I believe that the beginners spend too much time adding up their half tricks and quarter tricks, etc., to see how many honor cards they hold. Listen to the bidding of the opponents. It plays an im-
AQJ9 VKQ J 8 4 ♦ KQ 5 2 Jt, J AK 6 5 4 2, A ¥ 10 753 N V A 9 6 2 ♦ 8 w _ fc Alo 43 * AS2 dL I*] 0986 A A 10 8 3 ¥ None ♦AJ 9 7 6 AKQ73 Duplicate—None vul. Opening lead — Jf, A. South West North East 1 A Pass 1 ¥ Pass 1 A Pass 3 A Pass 4 A Pass 6 A Pass 30
portant part in the play of the hand later on. A good example is given today in a hand played by Dr. D. D. Tomb, a member of the Youngstown team which recently won the Ohio State contract team-of-four championship, first team outside of Cleveland to win this event. The bidding is according to the one-over-one system. Dr. Tomb and his partner, when the hand was played, however, were using the artificial club bid, but arrived at the same contract. u n u DR. TOMB was sitting in the South. West opened the ace of clubs and then shifted to the eight of diamonds, which Dr. Tomb won with the nine. He now had two good clubs on which he could discard the two losing spades from dummy and cross-ruff the hand out. However, the fact that West did not double marked East with the ace of hearts, so Dr. Tomb decided to set up dummy’s hearts. A small diamond was played and won in dummy with the queen. The king of hearts was led and East made it easy, going up with the ace. Declarer ruffed with the jack of diamonds. A small club was ruffed in dummy with the five of diamonds. A small hpart was led and ruffed with the ace of diamonds. The seven of
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Notre Dame Dance Set for Monday Annual Summer Event to Be Held at the Trees. June .arrives and friends of the Indianapolis Club of the University of Notre Dame anticipate the annual summer dance, which will be held Monday ■night at The Trees. For three years, the club has sponsored a June dance. Louis Lowe’s orchestra will play for the dance, which is being arranged under the direction of Patrick J. Fischer, newly elected president. Graduates and students of the university arrived home this week and Mr. Fisher appointed them on the committees. John F. Carr is general chairman. The committees are: Arrangements, R. Michael Fox and J. Albert Smith, co-chairman; Francis Deery, Joseph Beck and Bernard Burkart; music, Harold Miller and John Sweeney,.co-chairman; Joseph Mazelin, Richard Pfeiffer, and John Kirsch; tickets, Lawrence Sexton and Richard Delaney, co-chairmen; James Foltz and Clyde Bowers; decorations, Michael O’Connor and John Ford, co-chairman; Stephen Burbic, James Rohr and Howard Broeker; reception, Robert Moynahan and John Slattery, co-chair-men; Joseph Argus and Edward Lee. At a recent meeting of the Indianapolis dub of the university, new officers were elected for 1934-35. They are Mr. Fisher, president; Jerry Shine, vice-president; Nicholas J. Connor, secretary, and Vincent Bruno, treasurer. The list of the patrons and patronesses for the dance are as follows: Messrs, and Mesdames R. C. Fox, Bernard Burkart,. Bert Deery, Clarence Sweeney, T. P. Sexton, Clyde Bowers, W. L. O’Connor, F. A. Miller, J. J. Argus, John Carr, Louis P. Kirsch, Leo M Pfeiffer, F. J. Delaney, Henry J. Foltz, N. J. Connor, C. J. Fisher, Charles Bruno, T A. Moynahan, Garrett Kirby, Robert Kirby, William Krieg and T. J. Blackwell; Mesdames William Beck, Mary Mazelin, J. Albert Smith and Julia Shine; Messrs. Michael Ford, John Rocap and John V. Carton. MISS FITZGIBBONS, BRIDE-ELECT, FETED Miss Edna Irene Fitzgibbons, bride-elect, attended a shower last night given in her honor by Mrs. Charles A. Braun Jr. and Miss Mary Louise Langenbacher at the home of the former, 106 Wisconsin street. Decorations and favors were in pink and blue and guests with Miss Fitzgibbons were Mesdames Ella Lee, George Logue, Ross Hutton, William Osterman and August Linne; Misses Ruth Baker, Catherine McAndrews, Elizabeth Buergler, Helen Schilling, Generose Gehrich, Rosemary Livingston, Delia Loftus and Charlotte Mueller. The marriage of Miss Fitzgibbons and William L. Braun will take place June 14.
diamonds was led and won in dummy with the king, which picked up the outstanding ten of diamonds from East. The three good hearts were cashed, South discarding his three losing spades. And it was now unnecessary to take the spade finesse, as the declarer had only the good ace of spades and king and queen of clubs. -
AgETABOX S A FELYTTO DAY!
A Woman s Viewpoint' \ BY MRS. WALTER FERGUSON
“T’D rather have a child in Rus--1 sia than anywhere else in the world. You don’t have to have a certificate, stamped by a notary, to prove it had a father.” Aha! You will say a Communist! But, no; it’s only Miss Gertrude Hutchinson of the United States, who has spoken. Her statement shouts a ringing challenge to our barbaric leanings in the matter of illegitimacy. Talk about progress! Talk about enlightenment! Talk about Christianity! Why our attitude toward the infant born out of wedlock marks us as more backward than any up and coming medievalist. It doesn’t possess the faintest glimmer of common- sense either. Naturally so long as we have the present kind of social system, it will be desirable for our babies to have both a father and a mother. The point to remember, however, is that right now a good many of them actually have neither. Certain types of American men seem to have little sense of responsibility for their legitimate offspring, and none whatever to the casual infants they sire. And more girls than we realize abandon, give away, get rid of their children by some means or other. In short, the value we put upon the child in this country must occasionally strike the observing individual as rather lopsided. Somehow we do not seem to see the live human entity, the baby, at all. We see only the moral code which its coming broke or to which it conformed. Hence, with the desperation of weaklings and a betrayal of all that is fine in the human soul we endeavor to hide, to repudiate, the unwanted child as a citizen. If, by dint of speed, we can get the parents married before the stork comes, well and good. We feel virtuous. We accept the little thing at its registered valuation. If something goes wrong, and the
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shotgun fails to function, the Infant suffers.. We can’t be bothered with it, except maybe surreptitiously. It is an outcast in our society. If it climbs, it must climb alone, and against bitter odds. We talk much about the fine efforts made in behalf of the infant population—nor would I belittle them—but the truth is that the child, strictly speaking, has no legal rights whatever in the United. States. And so long as that is a fact, I shall believe that adults have no morals. Isabelle Early, Bride-Elect, to Be Honor Guest Mrs. C. F. Steger and Miss Anita Brownlee will entertain tonight with a kitchen shower and bridge party in compliment to Miss Isabelle Early, whose marraige to Dr. Henry M. Schmidt will take place June 13. Colors of blue, yellow and white will be used in the decorations and appointments. Guests will be Mrs. D. E. Early, the bride’s-elect mother; Mrs. P. W. Schmidt, the , bridegroom’s-elect mother; Mrs. Harry Brownlee and Mrs. William O. Hill, the hostesses 1 mothers. Other guests will be Mesdames Lester Nicewander and Elmer Robertson; Misses Gladys Hawickhorst, Louise Watson, Dorothy Stoleting, Mary and Eleanor Egan, Joan Sink, Lois Williams, Gertrude Ebner and Lorraine Jackson.
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Dinner Will Be Tendered Bridal Aids Kittle-Lapenta Group to Entertain at the Athletic Club. The bridal party of Miss Marjorie Kittle and Biagio Lapenta, who will be wed Saturday in SS. Peter and Paul cathedral, will attend a dinner which Mr. Lapenta’s sister, Miss Catherine Lapenta, will give in their honor tonight at the Indianapolis Athletic Club. Floral decorations and table appointments will be in peach and blue, the bridal colors. Guests will be Mr. and Mrs. John Sloane Kittle, the bride-elect’s parents; Dr. and Mrs. Vincent A. Lapenta, the* bridegroom’s-elect parents; Mrs. Burton Hart Jackson, the bride’s-elect sister, and Mr. Hart; Mrs. lies Ogle, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Julian, Mr. and Mrs. August Julian, Mr. and Mrs. Earl O. Noggle, Lieutenant and Mrs. Harry Ryan, Mr. and Mrs. Norman Keevers, Miss Elizabeth Heiskell, Miss Betty Wallerich, Frederick Pier and Charles Rogers. Miss Wallerich was hostess today at a luncheon at the club, honoring Miss Kitttle. Guests included Mrs. Jackson, Miss Heisk >ll, Miss Lapenta and Mrs. Henry Todd. Mrs.
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PAGE 5
Daily Recipe CHEESE STRAWS 1 cup grated cheese. Vi tablespoon butter 1 cup bread crumbs Vi teaspoon salt Dash cayenne pepper 2-3 cup flour 2 tablespoons milk Combine dry ingredients. Add bread crumbs and grated cheese, combine thoroughly. Add melted butter to milk and cut milk into dry ingredients as for pastry. Roll thin and cut in three-inch strips one-half inch wide and bake in moderate oven.
Ogle will give a tea tomorrrow afternoon for Miss Kittle, and Mr. and Mrs. Kittle will entertain with the bridal dinner Friday night. Auxiliary to Meet Lynhurst auxiliary, Order of Eastern Star, will meet tomorrow morning at the home of Mrs. Charles Guy, 805 South Roena street.
