Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 44, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 July 1934 — Page 4

PAGE 4

‘Stay Home’ Vacationing Made Lively Tennis Play Centered Social Attention on Woodstock Club. BY Bi: \TRICE BI'RGAN Timo Unman * Tage Editor SOCIETY agrees on one point of procedure in the sumiti'T months. 'lf we don't go away to 101 l ;n lake sands, well make our stav-at-home days as diverting as possible," we all acclaim in one breath. After Miss Isabelle Parrv played in the Wood-

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be at the resort during July. Young daughters felt very grown-up Thursday, lunching with their mothers, when Mrs. Sylvester Johnson Jr. entertained before she .played her tennis match with Mrs. Kurt Pantzer. Mrs. Garvin Brown attended with her daughter Nina, who played in the tournament and won her way to the finals. Virginia Brown was there with her mother, Mrs. Austin Brown, and Anne Elder with her mother, Mrs. Bowman Elder. Mr'. Johnson's daughter Mary had a: her guest Martha Lois Adams, daughter of Mrs. Robert A. Adams. Mrs. Pantzer was hostess at another table for a luncheon party. Among the spectators of the tennis matches were Mrs. Theodore Stem Jr. and her daughter, who hav*- been living for several years in California. Mrs. Stem is remembered as one of the founders of the Indianapolis Junior League—a worthy heritage she must think when she reviews the accomplishments of the league. Mrs. Charles Schaf was one of the friends with her at the club. Mrs. Stein plans to remain in the citv most of the summer. Ruth Page, daughter of Mrs. La- - Page, with her husband. Tom Fisher, will return tomorrow to Chicago after a trip to Alaska. Miss Page toured the Orient before she look a short trip to Honolulu and Alaska. Members of the Radcliffp College Club gathered toriav for luncheon at the Meridian Hills Country Club. Mrs. Austin V. Clifford presided.

Sororities

Lambda Alpha Lambda sorority vail meet tonight at the home of Mr c . Ernest Schuster, 2755 Napoleon street. "* ■ chapter, Omeca Phi Tan sorority, will meet tonight at the Spink Arms. MISS MA.IOXXIER FETES DELEGATES Miss Maricrace Majonnier. River Forest, 111., had as week-end guests, Misses Dorothy Helmer, Elizabeth Ann Nichols, Jane Fisher. Margaret Mattingly and Marjorie Mcßride, all of Indianapolis, and Miss Mae Louise Small, Rushville. a group of Dha Gamma sorority members returning from the national convention held last week in Green Lake. Wis. The group will attend A Century of Progress exposition in Chicago. Miss Ma.ionnier is president of the Butler university chapter. MISS EMMOXS WED IX CHURCH SERVICE Miss Leatha M Emmons, daughter of Mrs. Margaret Davis, was married to William P. Mulnne Saturday morning by the Rev. Clement Bosler in St. Johns church. Miss Teresa McMann bridesmaid, wore a shell pmk lace gown and picture hat and carried pmk roses and blue delphinium. The bride's gown was of ivory lace, worn with a tulle veil. She carried calla lilies. Matthew L. LafTey was best man.

Announcements

Indianapolis lodge. L. A. E R. T.. will meet tomorrow night instead of Wednesday, as previously scheduled. The lodge will meet the first Wednesday m July and August

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Myrna Loy in Mousseline

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stock Club tennis tournament, she decided It was time to be off for a vacation with her mother. Mrs. D. M. Parry, at Mansur B Oakes’ summer cottage at Torch Lake, Mich. Miss Parry and h p r mother will

Brown dots on background of chartreuse mousseline de sole form an effective contrast for the gown worn by Myrna Loy, screen star.

Manners and Morals Bv JANE Jordan— :

A Idler lo Jan* Jordan is one method of tonkin; before you leap! Let her help too view tout problem from all angles before you act! D* ar Jane Jordan —My girl friend and I are very much in love. We have been going together for almost a year. I want very much to marry her, but my finances will not permit

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Jane Jordan

hard to resist. This yearning is making us very restless, and I am very nervous as a result. I have very high ideals in regard to love which I try to live up to. I think that when two people are sure of their love for each other it is all right to be intimate if circumstances are such that they can't marry. Am I right in my beliefs? PUZZLED. Answer Shakespeare says, "There is nothing either good or bad. but thinking makes it so.” Love without benefit of clergy is not evil m itself, but it might as well be as long as the majority of people think so. The consequences of what you propose will be just as tough as if you actually had indulged in a criminal act. No one can escape the judgment of the people who live around him. Even when it remains unspoken. the silent condemnation is just as keenly felt. Your environment <a small Indiana town) is not one which feels any tolerance for a departure from the popular mores. Os course, you plan to keep your friends in the dark, but you may be sure that they have a decided nose for unearthing love which begs to remain hidden, and never wait to verify the facts before reaching a conclusion. Now the point I am coming to is this: Can you stand isolation from your group? Can you bear to have your girl placed under hateful suspicion? Do you care for the good opinion of the world

in which you live? If you didn’t care a whoop for any of these things, you wouldn't be writing to me in search of courage to defy them. All life is a selection. You must regard each circumstance in its relation to the whole. Will the gratification of the moment be great enough to pay you for what you lose, or will postponement mean the realization of all your desires instead of just one? I can't decide for you. All I can do is point out the cold, hard facts without attempting to moralize. u n n Dear Jane Jordan—The unhappy wife WTites thanking you for your good advice about her nervous condition. I left my husband before I got my answer. I can't stand the sight of a drunken man or woman. Now he comes to me and says he is sorry for everything. This is the first time he ever told me he was sorry. He says he will do any way I want him to if I only will forgive him. Would you advise me to give him another chance or not? I don't love him like I once did, but he is good io our child and she surely loves him. He has been promoted to a better position out of town and receives a good salary. I am expecting another child in seven months. AN UNHAPPY WIFE. Answer—The penniless mother of two children can not afford to discard a good bread winner simply because she does not love him like she once did. You’ve won a temporary victory. The wise thing would be for you to enjoy it while it lasts, and not worry about the next emergency until it comes up. Even though you have doubts, act as if you believe that his reformation is permanent. It will not help your case any to be suspicious and unpleasant, or to hold what is past over his head. For all you know his flareup may have been a temporary spree which is all over. If he breaks out in anew place later on, you needn't say "I told you so,” but calmly lay plans for escape. But now that you have a breathing space, try to relax. Bridc-Elcct to Be Feted Miss Margaret E Beckwith, 18 East Thirty-second street, will entertain tonight in honor of Miss Hazel Rutledge, who will be married to William Schweickhardt on Aug. 5. Guests will be Mesdames T. De Witt “Schneider, * Glenn Newton, Thomas Faith. B. C. Rutledge, Harry Becker and Peter Spiecher; Misses Bobbie Hawkins, Rosemary Bosson and Jeannette Dillen.

me to take rare of her. Then, too, she has to finish her college educ a t i o n. We've talked the matter over several times but we do not knowjust what to do. She is 19 and I am 23. We have a great deal of sex attraction for each other which we find

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Program of . W. C. T. U: Unchanged Mrs. Ida B. Wise Smith, .National President States Policy. B’j TSpecial EVANSTON, 111., July 2.—Before Mrs. Ida B. Wise Smith, national president of the Woman's Christian Temperance Union, left for the world convention at Stockholm, Sweden, she discredited rumors that the union had shifted its program. "The union rather has broadened and intensified its program of education and constructive action on the alcohol problem,” she said. "Widespread reports that the National W. C. T. U. has changed its historic plan of attack upon the beverage liquor and all allied social and industrial evils, has no basis whatever in fact,” continued Mrs. Smith. "The mistake, perhaps, grew out of the nation-wide interest in and commendation of the program of alcohol education as developed by Miss Bertha Rachel Palmer, director of the National W. C. T. U.'s department of scientific temperance instruction, which in the past six months has won the attention and support of thousands of educators and leaders in social work. i "But scientific temperance education as to the effects of alcohol is but one of thirty distinct battle fronts on which the White Ribbon movement continues to wage relentless war upon the liquor evil. "These thirty battle fronts include every relation of the alcohol question to modern life, such as child welfare, Christian citizenship, health, medical temperance, nonalcoholic fruit products, social morality, temperance and missions, legislation, motion pictures, international relations for peace, religious education, work among youth, research and literature. As has been the case during the last six decades, constructive activity on each phase of the many-sided issue is being directed by able leaders. "The demoralization of the people, either individually or collectively, by the liquor habit or the liquor traffic, will be challenged by the W. C. T. U. through every Christian and patriotic means available till the awful grip of liquor has been broken by the spread of truth and by the education of public opinion leading to the enactment of protective legislation, "As evidence that the movement is winning a rapidly widening acceptance among thoughtful women the nation over, we are glad to announce that all recent new membership records have been broken, with thousands of accessions recorded from practically every state in the union during the last ninety days.”

Personals

Miss Ann Pryntalski has returned I to Chicago after visiting Miss Mary j Gertrude Cregor, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. F. W, Cregor. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Haarer will ! leave Monday for New York, where ; they will meet Mr. Haarer’s parents, who will arrive Thursday from Germany aboard the Bremen. Miss Maxine Rigsbee and Kuhrman Stephens are guests of Mrs. H. R. Bliss this week at her summer home at Lake Maxinkuckee. | Miss Jane Gatti spent the weekend at Lake Manitou. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Raichall 1 are vacationing at the Provincetown Sippican hotel, Hyannis, Mass, j Mrs. Jack A. Stevens has left for I Chicago to visit friends. Misses Edna and Alice Dimmick land Miss Lavon Whitmere are j spending some time in Washington. Misses Waneta Groves, Virginia Taylor, Getrtrude Pence, Margaret Shively and Mary Harvey have returned from a trip to Baltimore, Annapolis, Washington, Huntington, W. Va., and White Sulphur Springs. They were guests of Miss Virginia Logan in Huntington. Mrs. Warren K. Mannon and her I sister, Miss Anne Moorehead, returned Friday from a visit in Memphis, Tenn. _ Mr. and Mrs. Walter Rogers spent last week in Chicago. Mrs. F. V. Rudd and Miss Virginia [ Taylor will leave soon for Bay View, | Mich. Dr. and Mrs. Leonard Ensminger j have returned from a trip to Wash- | ington. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Evans and children have left for their summer home at Burt Lake, Michigan. Mr. and Mrs. David Andrews and children have gone to Maysville, 0., for an extended visit with Mrs. Andrews' parents. Misses Mary Golden. Evelyn Meek and Daisy Overman left today for a vacation trip to Chicago and Wisconsin. Dr. and Mrs. Bernard D. Rosenak, 13715 Washington boulevard, are i spending the summer at Rochester, j Minn. Miss Mary Oval is spending the ; summer at Big Horn ranch, Larai mie, Wyo. Miss Mary Margaret Miller is vis- , iting in Wisconsin. Mrs. Howard B. Mettel and son Robert Tappan will return Sept. 8 from Honolulu after a cruise on the south seas aboard 'the SS. Los Angeles. % Mr. and Mr Harold W. Hancock have returned from a motor trip to Hamilton, Ontario, Canada, where : they visited Mrs. Hancock's sister. Mrs. Kenneth McLaren, and Mr. McLaren. Two Will Be Initiated Garden party and initiation services will be held tonight at the home of Miss Helen Brown. 630 Carlisle place, for Misses Alma Bernhardt and Ruth Cradick. pledges of Beta chapter. Phi Theta Delta sorority.

Cotton for Bridal Gowns

Nothing is more youthful than cotton, brides choose, it for their wedding gowns, tendants in it, too.

The bridal gown, above, an Elizabeth Hawes model, is fashioned from crisp organdy. It has an extremely high neckline, long sleeves and is worn with a short organdy veil. The bridesmaid also is wearing organdy in red, white and green candy stripes with a small hat of matching material.

Today’s Contract Problem West is playing the contract at four spades. South has bid diamonds. North opens the four of diamonds, South winning with the ace. He then plays the ace and king of hearts. How should West play the hand from here? (Blind) 4A 10 3 6 *K J 7 52 N _ *lO 976 VQ W - E 54 ♦KQJ 3 * ♦ 7 4 A Q Pe< r - *865 (Blind) ' Solution in next issue. 23 Solution to Previous Contract Problem* BY W. E. M’KENNEY Secretary American Bridge League TO open with one no trump on a weak hand at contract gives your partner no information. He may not wish to bid, yet he is forced to reply with two of something. If he does not hold much and can not depend on you for much, and if he does step out for a two bid, the opponents will murder him for about 1,400 points. Therefore, the better contract players of today have adopted Sims’ ideas of original no trump bidding —making them only with hands AJ 9 7 5 * 7 5 ♦ 10 5 4AS 7 5 2 4K524 10 4 3 VJ9 64 3 N *K 8 2 ♦ K 7 W *QB64 4 Q 4 3 5 , 2 L DgB ' ?f I*lo 9 AA Q 6 V A Q 10 ♦AJ 9 3 4K J 6 Duplicate—All vulnerable. Opening lead—* 4. South West North East IN. T. Pass 2 * Pass 2N. T. Pass 3N. T. Pass 25 rich in tenace positions, with no singletons or weak doubletons—hands that contain at least three and one-half primary tricks and that may gain a trick on the opening lead. North's bid of two clubs can be made on weakness or strength. However, it is forcing, after an original bid of one no trump, and does guarantee a five-card suit. After South’s bid of two no trump, if North bid three clubs, it would be a sign-off. tt u n THE four of hearts is opened by West. East goes in with the : king and the declarer wins with the ace. There is no use trying to start the spade suit, because only three Fur Coats ,S>fvA Relined t,\ jt J 5 1.50 Loops and Indiana Fur Cos. S Int Ohio Street woMlVheii You Think^^ Os | Dry Cleaning } think or Excelsior Laundry 840 X. NEW JERSEY. Rl-3391

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Realizing this, many smart And they’ll dress their at-

tricks can be developed in that suit. Why not start the suit in which four tricks may be developed? The opponent whom you do not want in the lead is East; therefore, you should play the hand in such manner that East has the least possible chance to get in. That is, play your jack of clubs. The only card East may be able to get in with now is the queen of clubs, and of course, if this card is held by West, you have the chance that West may not cover, in which case you will make five club tricks. That is what happened in this hand—West fails to cover with the queen and the jack holds. Now the declarer runs off four club tricks and West has to surrender a spade and a heart to protect his hand. Declarer then leads the ten of diamonds from dummy, and West wins with the king. If West returns a diamond. South will get two diamond tricks on which West will have to let go another heart. Next the declarer will cash the queen of hearts and throw West in with the jack forcing him to lead from his king and eight of spades into the ace queen. In this way, the declarer makes five odd. (Copyright, 1934, by United Press) j A Days Menu I P'ROZEN FRUIT j j 1-2 cup icater ! j 1-8 teaspoon salt j 2 tablespoons minute j tapioca j 1-3 cup sugar | j 1-ls. cup mint jelly | 8 oz. can crushed pine- y apple j | 8 oz. can peaches j I 1-2 Teaspoon almond j flavoring. j 1 Bring water and salt to a | j boiling point. Add tapioca j | and cook in a double boiler ! j until clear and thick. Add { } sugar and mint jelly. Con- j j tinue cooking until the jelly is • ; melted. Cool. Add syrup and I | fruit of crushed pineapple and i j well mashed peaches and : S almond flavoring. Turn into I I freezing tray and freeze to a { | mush.

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Ayres Presents Gowns in Boy’ Design Created by Mainbocher Rosamond Pinchot, Actress, Pictured by; Fashion Magazine in Silk Pajamas With New Silhouette. BY HELEN LINDSAY THE Russian peasant, the Chinese coolie, and the French sailor have influenced women's fashions during the past season. Schiaparelli has resorted to the costumes of Spanish bull fighters for ideas for hats, and to the paintings by Goya for dresses that billow out in bell-shapes st the bottom. Now Mainbocher, responsible for some of the distinctive silhouettes* and fashion trends that have held favor in other seasons, presents a new. silhouette, which he admits is copied from the French porter, or butcher boy.

Rosamond Pinchot, niece of Pennsylvania's Governor. Gifford Pinchot, appears in the new silhouette, carried out in a pair of silk pajamas, in the July Harper’s Bazar. Miss Pinchot is interesting in her own right, in addition to being a member of the prominent eastern family, because of her stage successes. She appeared as the nun in Max Reinhart’s production of "The Miracle.” She recently has signed a contract to appear in motion pictures. The pajamas which Miss Pinchot wears, carrying out the Mainbocher silhouette, arc of polkadotted silk. The trousers are full, and worn over them is a smock with small tailored collar at the high neck, and long full sleeves, caught in at the wrist with hands which button with the same fastening as that used up the front of the smock. ana

Two Models Shown, in Neiv Alpaca THE silhouette has made its appearance in Indianapolis in two evening gowns at the L. S. Ayres store, both in the new alpaca which promises to be the outstanding fabric for fall. One is of black alpaca, cut like the pajamas featured by Miss Pinchot. The dress is loose from the shoulders, with a yoke in back, and fastens with three large crystal buttons high at the neck. The other is a wine-colored alpaca, the back straight, and fastens with three large red buttons in front. It is belted with a narrow string belt of the same fabric as that used in the gown. The butcher boy'silhouette will appear probably in various types of women's clothes during the fall season. tt n an n it Bananas Provide New Drinks IF you are asked to "come, drink a banana,” don't think that the excessive heat has affected your host's mind. It's the latest idea in nourishing, cooling drinks. Bananas have been enjoyed as a fruit for many years. Lately they have entered the vegetable class of foods, and appear on menus in surprising forms. For the banana drink, there already are several variations. In a milk shake, the banana is sliced in small pieces into a wire-mesh strainer, through which it is forced with a spoon. Then it is combined with cold milk and one-fourth teaspoon of vanilla, and mixed in a cocktail shaker. Just before serving it is sprinkled with nutmeg. Other drinks, including eggnogs, chocolate malted and other milk drinks, are being made different by the addition of strained banana pulp. The drinks have appeared at drug store soda fountains throughout the country, where they promise to become special favorites.

Miss Penish and Herschell Rudy United by Rabbi Only immediate families attended the marriage of Miss Lena Penish, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Myer Penish, and Herschell Rudy, son of Mrs. Mary Rudy, which took place yesterday. Rabbi Morris M. Feuerlicht read the ceremony before a fireplace banked with garden flowers. A reception followed from 7 to 10. The bride, given in marriage by her father, wore white satin designed with a train and high neck-

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.JULY 2, 19f‘

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Mrs. Lindsay

line and carried bride's roses and baby breath. Her tulle veil fell from a coronet of orange blossoms. The couple left on a wedding trip and will be at home in Indianapolis after July 15. Sorority Elects Phi Theta Delta sorority elected Mrs. Morris Corvin president at the annual meeting Friday.