Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 47, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 July 1934 — Page 17
JULY 5, 1934
First Five Years Test Marital Tie Detroit Man, in Spirit of Times, Proposes Planned Unions. BY f.RITTA TAIMYR linn Writer VJEW YORK Julv 5.—A five-year plan for married couples is i > ir.g worked out by Robert G. Fo-ter, CK'ro;?. one of the delegates to the American Home Economics Association convention here. According to his statement, the first five years of marriage are the hard-
est. If the confident young bride and groom will follow an in t e 11 i gent schedule of conduct in those years they will be more apt to celebrate their golden wedding anniversary. It is our belief tha. Mr. Foster has got hold of a good thing. Marriage, nowadays. leans too heavily upon the shifting e m o-
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Miss Palmer
Lons of the man and woman involved. Onlv rarelv do you find a modem couple whose association lias other props, to support it. Love is the emotion essential to a happy marriaee. But love requires a culture and a technique if it is to thrive. You can not safely trust to rhanee to keep you enamored of tne lady of your choiee; you have to exercise some direction over events If you do not want an emotional smashup. Many a man who plants his business operations with caution and vision permits his marriage to be a hi-tor-miss affair in which he blindly counts on luck. He is pleasant and agreeable enough around the home, and he provides his wife with a very fair allowance, but men have done these things and still ended up as alimony payers. You have to try a little more than that. We have heard a good deal rcrently about a planned economy. We have heard very little about planned Jiving. Most of us grope our way alone, from one month's bills to the next, with no clear idea of where we are drifting It is a weakness of human nature to expect miracles to supply the realization of our dreams. Blundering Prevails Many men who are unhappy in their jobs go to work every day in a melancholy mood, expecting that fom*' tinv they will wake up to find that they are sculptors or physicians or railroad magnates or what-; ever they want to be. They forget that there is such a thing as cause and effect in living. And in the same way they hope to blunder through to happiness in marriage, without ever taking steps to make the outcome probable. In old-fashioned marriages the bride and groom were not afraid to look twenty or forty years ahead and plan accordingly. They planted acorns for their grandchildren's oaks, and they recognized a common goal which cemented their relationship. Happiness Rewards Faticnce Today we are a little youth-mad. j The 18-year-old girl does not want to think about the time when she may be 40. If you asked her what she hoped to be at that age, she would be greatly annoyed at your reminding her that she might ever be older than she is now. Happiness in marriage does not come through accident; it is the reward for a patient and honest following of the rules. It requires a ! technique as surely as any trade or sport, and it can be learned by most j couples who are sincerely interested ■ in acquiring it. If Mr. Foster can give such brides and grooms a concrete schedule for the first five years, he will be doing more to contribute to human happiness than mast men of his generation. CLASS TO HOLD LAWS PARTY Lawn fete will be held by members of the Heath Hustlers class of the Heath Memorial M. E church Saturday night with entertainment by the k. of P. band. The committee in charge includes Messrs, and Mesdames Esty Harrell. Abel Warner. Don Gordon and Mesdames Edward Smith, Bill Willis. Harry Warner and Albert Camuie and T. O. Smith. Mrs. I William Baker is class teacher and Walter Summa is president.
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Lead National Sorority
—Photo bv Kindred. Seated, left to right. Miss Mary Farrell and Mrs. Francis Nicholas. Standing, is Miss Cecelia O Mahony. , Three Indianapolis members of the Phi Sigma Tau sorority were clcrteo national officers at the recent convention at Memphis, Term. The 1935 convention will be in Indianapolis. Miss Mary Farrell is national secretary; Miss Cecelia O'Mahony, national editor of the Interior, publication of the sorority, and Mrs. Francis Nicholas, assistant editor.
Contract Bridge
Solution to Previous Contract Problem BY W. E. M’KENNEY Secretary American Bridge League OUITE often, when the opponents arrive at a game contract and you make an opening that permits them to make a trick, declarer and his partner will discuss why they didn't arrive at a slam contract, yet you know that against a slam contract you would make another opening that would defeat them. That is why I want you to study today s hand.
A A S VlO 5 4 ♦K 10 fi 3 AlO 3 2 A7 5 4 j n 'A.TI 03 2 V ; 8 !m/ E V 9 2 ♦ AQTS i S ♦ J 9 *KJ | Pe,W A9S 75 4 AK Q 9 VAKQ J S 3 ♦ S 2 A A Q Duplicate—N. and S. vul. Opening lead—A *- South West. North East. 1 V 2 A Pass Pass 2 Pass 2N. T. Pass 4 V Pass Pass Pass 28
I don't think North is strong enough to go to two no trump over two diamonds. It is better for him to pass and see what his partner is going to do about the bidding. There is a question whether North shrould carry the contract to three hearts, over South's bid of two. or to show the diamond stopper by bidding two no trump. I don't believe either bid can be criticised severely. Os course, as soon as South receives a constructive bid from his partner, he takes the strain off the hand by jumping to four hearts. And here. I believe, is where the contract should stop. 000 SIX hearts can be made with any opening but the ace of diamonds. If a spade is opened, the declarer will cash the ace. run all the heart tricks, cash the king and queen of spades, and bear down to the eight and deuce of diamonds and the ace and queen of clubs. Now a small diamond is led to- ; ward the king. West has had to bear down to the ace and queen of i diamonds and the king and jack of clubs. If he wins the first diamond trick with the ace. and returns a diamond. East's jack is going to drop on the king, and the queen of clubs can be dscarded on the ten , of damonds. If West refuses to win the first ' diamond trick, and plays the queen, the declarer will win in dummy
with the king, return a diamond, throwing West in the lead, and West will have led away from his king and jack of clubs into the declarer’s ace-queen. If South were to arrive at a six contract, however, West should cash the ace of diamonds to avoid an end play or a squeeze. With this opening, only five-odd can be made. (Copyright, 1934, by United Press) DOLLMANS HAVE SUPPER GUESTS Mr. and Mrs. Henry Dollman entertained several guests last night at their home, 4243 Washington boulevard, at a buffet supper and fireworks display. Among the guests were Mr. and Mrs. Charles Roberts, Evanston, 111.
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Plea Made for Women at Parley Miss Phillips Makes Fervent Defense in Paris. By Tiwt Fprcint PARIS, France, July s.—“No one j questions women's right to the poor- J ly paid drudgery of the world,” j Miss Lena Madesin Phillips of New York city, president of the National Council of Women of the United i States, said in an address on “The i Underlying Principles of Women's j Right to Work” at a mass meeting in the Sorbonne Ampitheater here I today. “It is women's right j to equal pay for equal work, for \ the jobs paying more money for less j work, which is challenged—also her right to independence and power, with their attendant prestige.” Miss Phillips’ address was a feature of a demonstration in defense of women’s right to work, under the auspices of the International Council of Women, in which women of many nations participated. Makes Fervent Plea “The protection of the morals and health of women and of the'; heritage of unborn generations arc urged as the primary reasons for discriminations against women in gainful occupations,” Miss Phillips ; said. “But these are red herrings 1 drawn acrass the trail. Such protective measures have not followed ' women into jobs so poorly paid! that others do not seek them. ! “If women are too frail in body i to work, let us have more tractors j in the field, more washing machines in the home. Let us abolish child labor, let us have scientific care for our babies, if motherhood is too sacred to draw a pay check. "It has been urged in defense of discrimination against women that there are not enough jobs to go around and that men have families to support. But women, too have families. If need is the criterion, why do we not limit the employment of those who because of accumulated wealth have no need of gainful employment? Why do we not send the industrial overlord, the banker, back to the chimney corner that needy men may have income producing work? Many Americans Present “Let us say for the sake of argument that the power of a nation depends upon the strength of its men. Women must conceive and bear those men. To deny women a just opportunity for development is to frustrate her strongest emotions—and this frustration has its effect upon her children. Members of the delegation from the national council of women of the United States who participated in the Sorbonne mass meeting were former congresswoman Ruth Hanna j McCormick Simms; Mrs. William Brown Meloney, editor of the New
York Herald-Tribune Sunday magazine; Mrs. Grace Thompson Set on, author and explorer; Miss Alice Paul, one of the organizers and former executive chairman of the national women's party; Mrs. Maude Miner Hadden, organizer and vicepresident of the International Students’ Union; Mrs. Estelle M. Sternberger. New York city, former vicepresident of the National Council of Women and executive director of World Peaeeways; Mrs. Louise Y. Robison, Salt Lake City, president of the National Woman's Relief Society; Miss Winifred Smith of Vassar college faculty; Mrs. Maria H. C. Bye of the National Woman's Party, Washington; Miss Helen Havener, New York, member of the public relations department of the Motion Picture and Distributors of America. Inc.; Mrs. J. Stuart; Reynolds of Richmond. Va., treasurer of the Southern Woman’s Educational Alliance; Dr. Catherine S. Lynch. Dr. H. Carter Purdom and Dr. Charlotte Weaver, Paris; Mrs. Emily T. Merrill. London.
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... Because they're checking Resuits... More and more people in Indianapolis are turning to The Times for Want Ad Results. sAa sAA Q* Rented First Day ▼Q* Rented Thru Times DEARBORN. N . 450—Convenient 30TH W. 1125—3 unfurnished 5-room double, good condition; rooms: garage: good location: tracer paid, CH-4569. very reasonable at 32 per week. vK.._ vK—--1933 CHEVROLET master coach, 11.000 miles. $375: trade or BROADWAY. 2217-Light, clean! 1: 1 3 Der.r.-., DF-.'m. 3-room, bath: private homeutilities. HE-5591, ’ \AA ▼o* Found Thru Times ykJF J(ijr I v fi * * Rooms Rented LOST —Boston ternor, male, near w Capitol avenue and McCarty; w . brindle. with white brear-t; BROADWAY. 1326—2 pleasant blind in left eye. TA-6650. Re- cleaned rooms; full kitchen. ward. sink: yard. THEY’RE PI SS S1 FOR CALLING 1x 1 • ** ** 1 RESULTS
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