Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 32, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 June 1934 — Page 5
JUNE 18, 1934
Older Man’s Friendship Helps Girl 'Summer Widower’ Season Prompts Comment on Associates. BY GRETTA PALMER Times Special Writer NEW YORK, June 18. The summer-widower season is now beginning. Girls who have spent the winter dining on basement restaurant table d’hotes may now get a chance at Voisin’s and Pierre’s. The New York tradition of sending the wife and children to the
country for the hot months is a beneficent one all around. It gives each husband an annual taste of bachelor life and keeps him from getting stodgy. It gives his wife days of carefree in - dependence, with nobody’s moods to be considered
$3
Miss Palmer
but her own. And it does add zip and novelty to the social life of the women who stay in town. We are far too much inclined in this country to keep the generations in decade-tight compartments. The love affair with a woman past 30, which is the normal experience of every 20-year-old Frenchman, is a rarity among boys in America. The young girl in this country finds herself invited to parties at which no man more than three years out of college appears. And yet you are leading a drab and limited life unless it includes some friends of a different age and attitude and even race from yourself. In the most cosmopolitan city in the world many New Yorkers lead lives as provincial as if they lived in a hamlet in Arizona. They have restricted their sympathies to a single type of person, and they pay for it in poverty of living. To have a few close friends is an essential of happiness. But if you see them, to the exclusion of every body else, you are apt to fall into a deep rut conversationally. You develop little jokes of your own and talk in an idiom which is almost unintelligible to an outsider. Entertains “Other Women” A few acquaintances who have no real affection for you will keep you on your toes —you have to be entertaining with them, for otherwise you will never hear from them again. The summer widower knows that his wife will go on loving him whether he is amusing at dinner or not. But when he takes another woman out, roof gardening, he puts his best foot forward conversationally. And it does him a world of good to have to be self-critical about his dancing, too. Aids in Getting Poise Contact with older men of authority and attainments is one of the most civilizing things that a young woman can have. Poise is rarely learned by going to college dances and cocktail parties given by the young married set. It requires a certain background for its development, and background is apt to run into money. That is where the prosperous summer widower comes in. When the old convention that forbade a girl’s going out with a married man was swept into the dust bin Americans took an important step toward breadth of living. It takes all kinds of men to make a world, and it takes some acquaintance with most of them to make a completely sympathetic woman. PARTY TENDERED TO MAXINE M’KAY Mr. and Mrs. Fred Keithley entertained Saturday at their home, 706 South Sherman drive, for Miss Maxine McKay, Mrs. Keithley’s sister, who will leave today to visit her aunt, Mrs. D. A. Terradell, in California. Guests included Misses Mira White, Helen Barnes, Betty Jane Watkins, Virginia Pitman and Messrs. Wendell Humphrey, John Baker, Charles Cumbo, Lester Hart, Joseph Roberts and Frederick Winter.
A Day’s Menu Breakfast — Cereal with strawberries, cream, spinach with poached eggs on toast, milk, coffee. Luncheon — Baked timbale of carrots, graham bread and butter, hearts of lettuce, cherry cobbler, milk, tea. Dinner — Jellied bouillon, baked stuffed veal steak, tomato sauce, creamed chard, cottage cheese and beet salad, cherry mousse, sponge cake, milk, coffee.
You Need More Vitamin “D ’-Get It This Delicious New Way! “ORBIT” VITAMIN “D” GUM Doctors Say Children and Adults Need More Vitamin “D” Than Every-Day Foods Supply. Fights Tooth Decay, Improves the Appetite. Get It in This Delicious New Form.
Cool Clothes Presented by Ayres
-n ii 1 f' * i'- . % ? jj^ lIP iL s•' if '■ - i < , ***4k', * 'l :• I \ , V ' ■ ' ' ' . ,
The casual suit of brown seersucker, pictured above, is included in the summer collection of L. S. Ayres & Co. Worn on the swagger coat is a bunch of colorful field
A Woman's Viewpoint
ONE bright lining appears in the clouds that darken June horizons. Commencement speakers simply can not tell graduates this year that the world is all theirs for the asking. Just about the sanest advice we can give them now, and what they should have been told long ago, is that the world doesn’t
really care a thing about them. The sooner they find it out the better for their peace of mind. College graduates face a universe in which they must justify their personal existence ; and this they can never do without exer-
Ja se
Mrs. Ferguson
cising all the intelligence they possess. The same old admonitions retold so often from Erasmus to Spinoza, from. Spinoza to Dewey and Santayana, must be told once again to the boys. From them should come strength of body, mind, heart and soul. But for girls new messages are necessary. Women have one important gift to bestow upon their universe—beauty. Not the beauty which is to be had from lip-stick and mascara, but that which comes from qualities of tenderness, delicacy, compassion and an acute consciousness of human
Sororities
Beta Alpha chapter, Pi omicron sorority, will hold its last meeting of the season with a dinner party at the home of Miss Amelia Cook, Greenfield, tomorrow night. Miss Opal Skinner is in charge of reservations. Guests will attend. Phi chapter, Delta Chi Sigma sorority, will meet tonight with Miss Ruth Eaton, 6112 Primrose avenue. Beta chapter, Phi Theta Delta sorority, will meet tonight with Miss Thelma Greenwood, 3721 East Vermont street. Members of Beta chapter, Theta Nu Chi sorority, will meet tonight at the home of Miss Virginia Lee Mock. Bridge will be played. Lambda Alpha Lambda soroi’ity will be entertained tonight at the home of Mrs. John Yates, 755 North Riley avenue. Regular meting of Lambda chapter, Omega Phi Tau sorority, is scheduled for tonight with Miss Isabel Boggs, 1259 West Thirtyfirst street, hostess. Mrs. Eugene D. Wilcox will entertain members of Alpha chapter, Phi Tau Delta sorority, Friday night at her home, 322 East Twenty-fourth street. Business meeting of Alpha chapter, Delta Phi Beta sorority, is scheduled for 7:30 tonight at the home of Mrs. Nelly Cory, 1305 West Thir-ty-fifth street.
riowers. A white linen cartwheel hat, white linen shpes and white gloves are the accessories. Cool and comfortable for summer horseback riding are the white gaberdine jodhpurs and sleeveless vest
needs. To be specific, it is the grave, brooding quality of maternity, which is so comprehensive it can include within its circumference the frailest and the strongest, most arrogant life. Women are keepers of the social conscience because wherever they are, there is home for man. And tomorrow’s woman can not exert her power merely by performing the duties of the orthodox good wife and mother. To be sure, this will be asked of her, but she must be ready to do far more. The civilization of the future depends largely upon the attitude of mind of those girls who are now leaving college and high school. If, like so many of their mothers, they are content to regard marriage as the end of their existence, or a career as sufficient excuse for life, then we are doomed to flounder and grope longer in our present confusion. But if, as I hope and believe, they are conscious of their responsibilities in a time of great emergency, anew world will be theirs, not for the asking, but for the making.
/\yy \ / jP /7v = c / .sss- p / / i Qo jjo-uj kncyu*- /*/ •* r ihad- cjofed /• /* # # I kuvck can. //•*•/•* w rr\&h!r made.— / r * N * €o4llm. or>d r * 0 0 • ° < x f/,) eaULtu tlLbired ? I * • \ §§in /V unJl We, It ♦ * * > 'Beside*,.iked - 1 jIH : : r•r‘ * f *||m jJL, a, ii> I 0 J * * • * # # *W I and 'wmfnr U I Zll )\l j> I~
Enclosed find 15 cents for which send me Pattern No. 277. Size Name Street City State
HERE’S the frock that will have a place in the summer sun! The materials? Cotton voile or printed silk with organdie trimming. The designs are for sizes 36 to 52. Size 46 requires 4% yards of 39-inch fabric plus % 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.
BROOKSIDE CHORUS SPONSORS PROGRAM A program of Stephen Foster music will be presented tomorrow night at the Brookside park community house under the auspices of the community chorus with Karl Seyboldt, director, and R. A. Woolery, president. A sketch of the life of Foster and group singing will be included in the program which Is open to the public. \
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
jacket. The white acetate shirt is fastened with a zipper and has short sleeves. A bit of color is provided by a red beret and red linen kerchief, tied smartly around the neck.
Lace Gives Very Able Assistance to Today’s Mode By United Press PARIS—Lace probably is the most friendly of all materials. It never gets stubborn or refuses to adapt itself to various natures. If you are the strictly feminine type it will envelop you in wispiness, and if you lean more toward the sturdy oak it in no way makes you a “softie” for it can be crisp and utterly independent. Agnes Drecoll gives you a good idea about what you can do with lace. She uses it for an evening gown in black over a slip of black cire satin. The pattern is very fine and weblike and there is an oval trail edged with knife-pleated volants of lace. The cape worn with it, and shaped just like the train, is of sky-blue lace. Lucien Lelong interprets the lace movement W'ith a lovely thing in black called “Corinne.” It is made over a clip of black crepe de chine and has a mat surface therefore, which is the direct reverse of the Drecoll gown.
\ THEDFORD'S J BLACK- : draught; f FAMILY f ' r r LAXATIVE Y ; y Cfuldtea t/xr Sytufyiy
Graduate of Butler Will Wed Carol Margaret Mayborn to Be June Bride in Cleveland. Of interest to Indianapolis society is the announcement that the marriage of Miss Carol Margaret Mayborn, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William A. Mayborn, Cleveland Heights, 0., and formerly of Indianapolis, and A. Hugh Howard Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Howard, Cleveland, which will take place tomorrow in Cleveland. Mr. Mayborn, formerly was business manager of The Indianapolis Times. The bride-elect attended Butler university where she was a member of Alpha Chi Omega sorority and Mr. Howard attended Miami university and is a member of Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity. The ceremony will be read at 8 at the Mayborn home, 3255 East Overlook road, by the Rev. Clayton L. Feck of the Friends’ Methodist church, Cleveland, who officiated at the marriage of the bride’s parents. Mrs. William C. Otto, who was Miss Dorothy Lambert before her marriage yesterday at the Tabernacle Presbyterian church, and a classmate of the bride, will be matron of honor. Peggy Ann Mayborn, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Leolin Mayborn, Kinsman, 0., will be flower girl. Eighty guests will attend the ceremony, after which Mr. Hoyard and his bride will leave on a motor trip to Chicago and Canada. They will make their home in Cleveland after July 15.
LAVONNE SLICK WED IN CHURCH RITE
The Rev. M. W. Lyons read the marriage ceremony Saturday morning at Our Lady of Lourdes church for Miss LaVonne Slick, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Val Slick, and David J. Moriarty, son of Mrs. Mary Moriarty. Miss Margaret Fox and James Cullin played bridal music and accompanied Thomas Keller, who sang “Ave Maria.” A breakfast at Whispering Winds for immediate families followed the service. The couple left on a wedding trip and will be at home at 715 North Bosart avenue upon their return. Miss Thelma Slick and Miss Florence Pfeiffer were attendants and wore gowns of green and yellow mousseline de soie and carried Johanna Hill and butterfly roses. The bride wore ivory satin with a tulle veil and carried bridal roses. James Lynch was best man and Carl Harnischfeger and John Moriarty were ushers.
Among the out-of-town guests were Mr. and Mrs. M. J. Moriarty, J. M. Moriarty and Miss Julianna Moriarty, Norwood, O.; Mr. and Mrs. M. R. Maney and Miss Jean Maney, Columbus, O.; John Morley, Brooklyn, N. Y.; Mrs. Letha Foster and James Foster, Otterbein; Miss Irene Hallar, Lafayettte, and Mr. and Mrs. Morrison Baker, Memphis, Tenn.
Three Initiated
Misses Esther Schuch, Daisy Watson and Ruth Krammer were initiated into Gamma chapter, Rho Delta sorority, last night at Maple Manor, 40 West Maple road. Orchid and rose appointments were used. The initiates received gifts. Miss Ione Thomas, chairman, was assisted by Misses Sue Chaplin and Daisy Watson.
Keep Sportswear Bright and New With Tintex That fresh sparkling • appearance so easy with these Tints and Dyes. Tintex banishes the fear of "summer-fade”. Let sun or laundering play havoc with your sport things. No need to worry! Tintex restores color in a jiffy... or gives different colors, if you wish. 35 brilliant, longlasting colors from which to choose. Tintex also works • wonders on your faded summer drapes. At all drug and notion counters 15c Tintex Tints & Dyes PARK & TILFORD DISTRIBUTORS
Contract Bridge
Today's Contract Problem West, has the contract at four hearts. North opens the ten of diamonds, which South wins with the queen. South then cashes the king of diamonds. North plays the three, leaving West with the jack. What should the next lead be? If it is a diamond, w 'Hid you lead the ace or a 1& ’ card to set the hand? (Blind) * n |* K Q4 y IN K 5 3 (Bind) W c E ♦6 I ♦ "Dir * J 2 1075 JU , .i..J *973 V Q J ♦AKQ 8 5 2 *A6 Solution in next issue. 11
Solution to Previous Contract Problem BY W. E. M’KENNEY Secretary American Bridge League JUST because your contract is for only game is no reason why you should not try for the extra tricks. Os course, when you have a long trump suit and control of side suits, j your first thought should be to try for a squeeze play. The bidding—or the opening lead—may help you locate some of the cards. In today’s hand, after South opens with one heart, when West overcalls with two diamonds, vulnerable, he is showing a very good hand. When North makes a free bid of two hearts, which is possibly just a little optimistic, and East bids two spades, East is also showing a fivecard suit and some side strength—possibly a fit in diamonds. a n WEST is eager to get a ruff, and- since his partner has bid spades, he opens the deuce of spades. The eight is played from dummy, East plays the jack, and South wins the trick with the ace. He then leads a small heart and wins in dummy with the queen. This picks up the outstanding trump. The nine of spades is returned
|||k |||| m 7 9 V H § - Curbohited T.nrse A'/i-oz. A _ Mauf Floor* 1 B3TS bottle, TUESDAY ONLY! IST QUALITY PA pE R NAPXUNS PUKE SILK MESH sLfS&ttQ for Cc DUAVIITY nics> irHoor.J w Kn vXSin 1 A bottle caps HOSIERY gst tk 1 AAforßc ito Sell at SI.OO MB {Cr. '" d '“ ' V_ aSTswE'S TIT TOILET TISSUE w IK, p-' ; a4>*ii' ' rT # J Unbleached M'S L morrow and B AM 36 InchPS wide. soft finish 1$ Buy a Supply BJ| Q C < Ou/l/, /^an* ' W 1 -15 c RAG RUGS WASH FROCKS sa^lO. S'* 59c TO 69c VALVES! * GUARANTEED WASHABLE! TEA STRAINERS • Dimities, Voiles, Broadcloths Three sizes to choose I and New Summer Prints sale price. each-2nd nor \*Bow and Tie • Organdy and aril Biark and brown _27-inch rr • MS m M lacos. n Pale luesday 'H Trimmings g H on iy. JL v //J Circular Skirt INFANTS’ RUBBER PANTS L-V A-V / / Ssfnlett H Small, medium and large , rp . m JB sizes. Pair, only I • Button Trims Infants’ Dept., Floor Women’s Wnmpft’c Fine INFANTS’ SHOES w omen s fine Soft SOIPS in white, tan Handbags Nainsook ;-.'l *° c 59c to 98c Values! SLIPS INFANTS’ RUBBER SHEETS "V ® ZlDOerS Reversible in pink and \ \ .ttrVVT White ---Wte.. Size 18*28. Limit-WC K* \ \*Whites Wm M,r," *u .“■ y \\> \ * BIOChS /. INFANTS' V\ 4 \J* Browns v ** Rose 2-PIECE DRESSES Pouch Style s •Sizes 34-44 •Strap Stoles •On Sale whUe,l " ,l “ t 3 \m I F mF&k Daintily embroidered \Jp d] \ 2t c s ssX9 Main Floor / v \ Women's 59c Hand Embroidered Girls * Rovon Children’s Ist Quality Porto Rican GOWNS n A V a miv A C Combed Yarn and J™““ 11c PAJAMAS n Rayon ss> • Just the Thing J|lik, * Pastel Colors patterns. All sizes, 10 to 12, | to'l for These Wm, • lstsandlrrea _**" W^,l° tD T ! , jSm of 15c to 25c TURKISH WASH CLOTHS 'll? * Large Sizes! P3B Assorted colored 4% nB r •/In Cn/p Tn. Quality plaids in size lit far t V /*\ W &ai€ 10 ■■W me 11/ x in 11-in. Sale price / morrow at Sizes 4/2 to 10 !'i-'t Only— Women’s and Girls’ RUBBER BATHING SHOES v'-'H ,s ißm]* *• ■ aii to W ■— Pair-Shoe Dept,-Main lW ■§;£: Mam Floor FI „ or ,
from dummy, East covers with the queen, and South wins with the king, West discarding the five of diamonds. Most players now would make the mistake of leading a club toward dummy’s king, hoping thereby to find the ace of clubs in the West hand and make six odd. You are assured of your contract even though you were to lose two club tricks—and you are pretty sure of being able to get an end play or a squeeze play to make your six odd. The proper play Is to lead a small heart, win in dummy with the king, return a heart, and then lay down five straight heart tricks, getting yourself down to the eight and four of clubs and the four of spades. In the meantime, dummy is down to the king of clubs and the ten and six of spades. West is down to the ace of diamonds and the jack and seven of clubs. East, however, becomes squeezed. He can let go the nine of clubs and three diamonds, but on the fifth heart he has to let go his queen
A 10 9 S 6 y KQ 4 ♦ J 10 9 7 * K 10 A 2 A Q J- 7 5 VJ w c 4AK 5 4 w . V 6 3 2 n . ♦ Q 8 6 AJ7 63 2 D * algr J*AQ 9 a AA K 4 VA 10 987532 4 None S 4 Duplicate—E. and W. vul. Opening lead—4 2. South West North East IV 24 2 V -4 4 V Pass Pass Pass 11
of clubs, because, if he drops the spade, both spades in dummy will be good. Now all declarer has to do is to lead a club, throw East in with the ace, and he is forced to lead from his seven and five of spades into dummy’s ten and six, declarer thereby making six odd. (Copyright, 1934, NEA Service. Inc.)
PAGE 5
Couple to Wed Saturday Feted at Dinner Party Dr. and Mrs. Joseph F. Goode and Mr. and Mrs. Francis Feeney entertained last night at the Feeney home, 251 East Forty-seventh street, with a buffet supper honoring Miss Nan Marie Collins and Frank Oakes Goode. The marriage of Miss Collins and Mr. Goode, will take place Saturday at the First Baptist church. Out-of-town guests included Mrs. Peter Norval, Salt Lake City, Utah; Miss Dorothy Goode, Brookline, Mass.; Mr. and Mrs. Richard Goode, Los Angeles, Cal.; Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin A. Pollet, New Canaan, Conn; and Mrs. Edwin H. Andrews, Janesville, Fla. Other guests included Mr. and Mrs. Ira H. Derby, Dr. and Mrs. Damon Goode, Mrs. Mary Feeney, Albert Feeney. Miss Mary Virginia Feeney, Miss Gertrude Metzger, Mr. and Mrs. E. O. Marquette, Mr. and Mrs. Warren Oakes, Mr. and Mrs. Perry Oakes and Mr. and Mrs. Dillon Huder MRS. PALMER WILL ’ BE PARTY HOSTESS Garden party will be held at 2:15 tomorrow afternoon at the home of Mrs. E. B. Palmer, 5122 Grandview drive, for members of the Mary Conkle Circle of the Third Christian church and their guests. Mrs. T. G. Inw'ood and members of her section will assist Mrs. Palmer. Mrs. M. V. Warner arranged the program, which will include songs by Mrs. Ray Ridge, accompanied by Mrs. Palmer, and readings by Miss Ethyl Seaman. Mothers to Meet Business meeting of the Mothers* Alliance of Alpha Delta Theta sorority will be held at a noon luncheon Wednesday at the Maple Lawn.
J \ TMI MAKini 1A o. kh.vrs
