Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 52, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 July 1934 — Page 6

PAGE 6

Lakes Will Be Scenes of Gayety City Young Women Will Be Party Hostesses for Week-End. BY BE \TRICE BIRGAN Timra Wnmn t Pji Editor gavety in numbers is the viewpoint of many of the younger vacationists. House parties to them always promise a store of informal good times. With this prospect several young women have planned house parties at lakes.

m

Miss Burgan

motor to tne lake resort. On Wednesday Misses Anna Marie Dungan and Vera Grey Hinshaw will join the party. Week-end vacationists with the group will be Misses Martha Shirk and Martha Metcalf. Several girls, former college classmates. will motor to Lake Manitou, on July 27, and will remain a week. In the party will be Misses Dorothy Jane Atkins, Helen Carson, Mabel Espey, Janice Kellogg, Betty Warren and Helen Bonnell. Miss Helen Behmer, who is spending the summer at Lake Maxinkuckee with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Behmer, will join the party. Mrs. Elmer W. Piel will attend the Associated Lutheran Charities convention in Chicago this week. Accompanying her to Chicago will be Miss Catherine Stewart. They will meet Mrs. Piel’s niece, Miss Adele Piel Meyer, who will return from Yellowstone park where she attended the Kappa Kappa Gamma convention. Mrs. Piel is one of the pioneer workers in the Lutheran Orphans Welfare Association, which was organized here last fall. Mrs. Claude L. Sumner left Tuesday for Chicago and will attend the convention with Mrs. Piel. The Dunes state park is a favorite vacationing spot of Indianapolis people. Among the local visitors there recently were Miss Helen Schoonover, Mr. and Mrs. R. J. Kane, Miss Margaret Leavitt, Miss Ruby Fallis, E. R. Daggett, C. C. Askin, Mr. and Mrs. F. E. Doolittle. Others are Mr. and Mrs. Bert S. Gadd, Mr. and Mrs. P. B. Bonham and family, Mr. and Mrs. D. H Rowe, Mr. and Mrs. Emerson E Main, Mr. and Mrs. John N. Caylor and Mrs. Martha Caylor. Tomorrow when the Hillcrest Country Club women play bridge, Mrs. Harry Gompf will be hostess. She will be assisted by Mrs. Vance Hall and Mrs. George Livingston. Informality of a picnic supper was enjoyed last night by friends of Mr. and Mrs. Louis Burckhardt, who entertained at their country home for their guest. Miss Gertrud Escher, Zurich, Switzerland. Miss Escher, who also has been visiting j Mrs. Burckhardt's niece, Mrs. Elsa ■ Pantzer Haerle, will be in the city ; ten days more. ZETA TAU ALPHA ALUMNAE TO MEET Zeta Tau Alpha alumnae of Indiana university will be entertained tonight at the home of Mrs. William Blagrave, 4033 Bowman avenue. Pledges and members of the active chapter will attend. Special guest will be Mrs. Ivan Boxell. Baldwin. L. I. Mr. and Mrs. Boxell are visiting Mr. Boxell's parents, Mr. and Mrs. T. B. Boxell, 2613 North Delaware street. Miss Irene Cox will entertain members of Alpha Pi Omega sorority tomorrow night at her home, 1034 West Thirty-first street.

A Day ’s Menu Breakfast — Strawberries, cereal, , cream, ham omelet, crisp toast, milk, coffee. Luncheon — Onion and celery soup. toast rticks. cottage ! cheese and shredded veg- j etab’.e salad, date and nut bread sandwiches, I lemonade. Dinner — Veal loaf with mushroom sauce, potatoes in parsley butter. asparagus on toast, cress with French dressing, pineapple shortcake. milk, coffee.

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a5*55~*8 r J' HE New Deal clothes ha P _ multi- I the beginning of the century—a l ( lots B charm that they lost when we 1 leicer B took up the cu dgels for freedom floral I from wh alebone and to ° many 9, and B There is certainly no reason life B why we should not enjoy shorts Irounds I for . tel ? nis and the beach and a VlOStf ■ joice in the allure of a veil and a venings. I dining and the seductiveness of a . B * ace on a Petticoat that peeks like the muslin photo- **■ graphed left. Both can be throicn in the tub to bloom again another night.

One group will go to Lake Wawase e Sunday and remain for a week. Misses Agnes Ball, Virginia Elliott, Dorothy and Mildred Arnholter, Helen Schmidt, Betty Ford, Emma Louise Reeves and Mrs. Betty P u e 11 will

Cotton dance frocks take degrees off the thermometer in their effect on those who wear them and those who watch them dance by. They do not have to be obviously girlish when treated with sophisticated decolleteges, like that of the dotted swiss dance frock, right. They may be gay and colorful plaids, like the muslin photographed left. Both can be throicn in the tub to bloom again another night.

Today’s Contract Problem South is playing the contract at four spades. South must lose two diamonds and a club. How can he prevent East from making a spade trick? ♦76 5 3 V 4 2 ♦65 4 3 4. Q J 2 A None ; <|KJB ¥Q9S N VJIO 76 ♦AKQ 8 - 5 *9876- , ♦ J 10 7 5 3 D>,Ir JAKIO ♦ A Q 10 9 4 2 VA K 3 ♦ 9 2 ♦ A 4 Solution in next issue. 4

Solution to Previous Contract Problem BY \Y E. M'KENNEY Secretary American Bridge League ARE you a groove player? In other words, do you play your cards mechanically? If so. you are not going to win at contract any more than a pitcher in a baseball game is going to win if he puts the ball in the groove to a home run hitter. Usually your opportunity for a good defensive play comes early in the hand, and therefore you have to do a lot of careful thinking. It is not always hard to plan your play when there are only three or four tricks remaining, so it requires more care early in the hand to put up a good defense. South's bidding is of the constructive type. When North con-

Ultra Feminine Attire Returns

Contract Bridge

Plaids, stripes and multicolored dots are newer than floral prints, and white backgrounds are most charming for July evenings.

tinues to re-bid spades, he, of course, is desirous of signing the hand off, but he is also giving South valuable information with each bid. The first spade bid might show only four spades, but each re-bid shows one more spade. So when North goes to three spades, he informs his partner that he holds either six spades or an exceptionally strong five-card spade suit. n n n p'AST'S opening lead is the jack of hearts. South plays the king. West wins the trick with the ace. West then cashes the queen of hearts and now, if he will continue the third heart, even though declarer is going to be able to ruff in dummy, the contract will be defeated. because West then will be sure of making his king of spades and ace of clubs. However, when the hand was played. West made the mistake of returning the jack of diamonds, which South won with the ace.

▲ A J 10 9 5 2 V 6 4 3 + 83 *64 +K73 N A s 6 VAQ72 W EVJIO 9S + J 10 9 S +Q7642 *A 7 3 Deulet *lO 5 * Q 4 V K 5 +A K 5 * KQ J 9 8 2 Duplicate—N. and S. vuL Opening lead —V J. South West North East 1 * Pass 1 * Pass 2 * Pass 2 * Pass 2N. T. Pass 3 * Pass 4 ▲ Pass Pass Pass A

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

THE New Deal in clothes happily revives the ultrafeminine charm that clothes had at the beginning of the century—a charm that they lost when we took up the cudgels for freedom from whalebone and too many petticoats. There is certainly no reason why we should not enjoy shorts for tennis and the beach and a divided skirt for golf, and yet rejoice in the allure of a veil and a feather on our hat for restaurant dining and the seductiveness of a lace frill on a petticoat that peeks out on the dancing floor.

South returned the king of clubs, and West won the trick with the ace. Here again he missed an opportunity to defeat the hand. If he had held off the first club, won the second club trick, and returned the third club, the contract would have been defeated. Or if, after winning this trick with the ace of clubs, he led a heart, the contract could be defeated. But again West made the mistake of returning a diamond, which South won with the king. South now led the queen of spades and let it ride. When it held, a small spade was played and the jack finessed. The ace of spades then picked up West’s king and now the six of clubs was an entry into dummy and the losing heart was discarded on the jack of clubs. In this manner the declarer made four odd. (Copyright, 1934, NEA Service. Inc.) Miss Sadie Kelly, Chicago, arrived yesterday to visit her brother, E. A. Kelly, and Mrs. Kelly, 5047 North Capitol avenue.

BRIDE-ELECT

jfk 'jin

Miss Bertha Whitaker Miss Bertha Whitaker will be married to Fred R. Herther, son of Ernest F. Herther, her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Edward J. Whitaker announced today. The wedding will take place Aug. 18.

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City to Be Represented at Sessions Mrs. Wirenius to Attend National Meeting of Clubs. Among the thousand delegwtes from eight states at the north central regional conference of the National Federation of Business and Profesional Women's Clubs, July 22 to 25 at Grand Rapids, Mich., will be Mrs. Myra Major Wirenius, representing the Indiana federation. The Indiana club will take part in the activities with 388 other clubs in Illinois, lowa, Michigan, Minnesota, Wisconsin, North and South Dakota. A general theme of economic security will be interpreted by the national officers leading the conference. They are Mrs. Geline MacDonald Bowman, Richmond, Va„ president; Miss Emily R. Kneubuhl, New York, executive secretary; Miss Marjorie Shuler, corresponding secretary, and Dr. Iva Lowther Peters, chairman of the sub-committee on discriminations, both of New York; Mrs. Rosa E. Cunningham, Des Moines, la., legislative chairman; Mrs. Eudora Ramsay Richardson, Richmond, Va., national field representative, and Miss Marion H. McClench, Ann Arbor, Mich., membership chairman. Miss Frances Cummings, New York, national director of education, will preside at an educational round table. Ten occupational round table luncheons will be held during the conference. All of the 1,350 clubs of the national federation will be represented In regional conferences during the summer. BIRTHDAY OF SON MARKED BY DINNER Mr. and Mrs. Charles C. Stone, 6705 East Washington street, entertained at dinner last night in observance of the second birthday of their son, Otto Pierce Stone. Guests were his namesakes, Otto P. Deluse and J. Pierce Cummings, with Mrs. Deluse and Mrs. Cummings.

Personals

Miss Lucy Jane Baker has returned from Bloomington where she visited her sister, Mrs. Bruce Kendall. Mr. and Mrs. Forrest Kellogg and their daughters, Misses Janice and Evelyn Kellogg, are in the east visiting in Washington and New York. Mr. and Mrs. W. K. Gearen and daughters, Misses Helen and Marian Gearen, are vacationing at Bayport, Mich. Mrs. Allen Kahn has been visiting in Chicago. Miss Rosalyn Reed will leave Friday for a visit at Providence, R. 1., and New York. Miss Kathleen Rigsbee, 4002 North New Jersey street, has returned from Arlington, Ind., where she visited her cousin, Miss Eileen Macy. Mrs. William F. Mullen has returned from Terre Haute where she visited Mrs. John Edward Stein. Mrs. Edgar A. Perkins Sr. and daughter, Miss Harriet Perkins, have left on a trip to Columbus, Cincinnati, Pittsburgh and Atlantic City. Dr. and Mrs. Wilbur Dunkel, Rochester, N. Y., are spending the summer with Dr. Dunkel’s parents, Dr. and Mrs. J. Ambrose Dunkel. Mr. and Mrs. George O. Compton, Columbia City, are spending the summer here at 2035 North Meridian street. Mr. and Mrs. W. N. Schlitz, 3642 Watson road, spent last week at the Dunes Arcade in the Indiana Dunes state park. Mrs. George F. Evanson, formerly Miss Arlene Loveland, Peru, now of Washington, is spending the summer here. Mr. and Mrs. A. A. Mercey, Washington, are visiting here for the summer. Mrs. Mercey formerly was Miss Elena Lopez. Mr. and Mrs. Reid Adair have returned from a trip to New York, Canada and Detroit. They accompanied their daughter, Miss Virginia Adair, to New York, where she entered Columbia university for the summer school. Mrs. Philip B. Stapp is in New York. Miss Stetson Linscott, Melrose, Mass., is the house guest of Miss Peggy Morrison, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Morrison Jr., 3601 North Pennsylvania street. Miss Morrison and Miss Linscott were classmates at Sarah Lawrence college, Bronxville, N. Y. Miss Maxine Jones is visiting in Cincinnati. Mr. and Mrs. Victor C. Kendall will leave Saturday for Leland, Mich., to join their daughter, Mrs. Paul A. Hancock, and Mr. Hancock. Mrs. George Walker, St. Louis, Mo., is visiting her parents, Dr. and Mrs. Charles Roller. Mr. and Mrs. Frederick G. 3alz have returned from Bay View, Mich., where they visited Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Green, Providence, R. 1., formerly of Indianapolis.

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Manners and Morals

BY JANE JORDAN

Have yon brought your problem up for discussion in this column? If not, write your letter today and see what our readers hare to say about it! Dear Jane Jordan —About two years ago my mother had an affair with a married man. His wife found it out and told my stepfather everything. From then on he never fully trusted her and insists that I go with her everywhere. She uses me for a blind. When we come to

In dianapolis, she tells me to go to a show while she meets this man. I am supposed to tell my ste pfa ther that we were together. Isn't that a terrible thing for a mother to ask her daughter to do? Here is what I can't

Jane Jordan

understand. She says she does not care a rap for this man only for the clothes he buys her, and she feels sorry for him because he is such a fool about her. We live in a little town and you know how people talk. I feel disgraced. It is so repulsive to me. Why can’t married people act as they should? She carries on a steady correspondence with the man. Should I tell my stepfather what I know before it is too late? WORRIED K. Answer—lt is a very hard thing for an 18-year-old girl to face the fact that her mother is an unscrupulous woman. I do not blame her half so much for what she does as for the fact that she drags you into it, saddling your immature shoulders with her mature problems. In that strange underworld of the mind, every one occasionally has the reckless, selfish impulses to which your mother yields so readily. She is simply less able to keep them chained in their subterranean home than the average person. She is more primitive in her attack on life, # and much less civilized than you are. However, it is her problem, and you would do well to keep out of it. Telling your stepfather would not reform her and would embroil you in a sorry mess which really is none of your affair. You can refuse to act as a blind for her conduct and will be entirely justified in so doing. Your loyalty is given to your stepfather, and you believe him to be on the side of right. However, he had no right to set you on guard over your mother. He is old enough to work out his own problem without expecting aid from a child. You are not mature enough to realize that the bearer of bad news is never popular, no matter how honorable his intentions may be. If you are a wise girl, you will not take sides, and you will avoid being drawn into this ugly problem by either parent. Do not try to punish your mother, for life itself will, deal with her more harshly than you can. And do not take any of her guilt on yourself. You are a person in your own right, and will be respected as such. Dear Jane Jordan—There is a young boy with whom I have dates. When we go places he always shows me a good time and acts as if he likes me, but he hardly ever makes dates ahead of time. I want to see him so sometimes I suggest that we go certain places and he agrees with me. Then we go. I always thought it was a boy’s place to make the dates, but if I don’t make them, he won’t. Then I won’t see him for a long time. Do you think this is all right? DOUBTFUL. Answer—Mast boys prefer to make their own dates and resent it 'when the girl deprives them of the privilege by beating them to it. There is one exception to the rule and that is the cases in whicli the boy is too timid to do his own asking. You simply must be guided by your own intuitive knowledge in this instance. If the boy seems to enjoy the engagements you make and is not hesitant about accepting them, I do not see why you should follow the age-old rules that work with most boys but not with this one. At the slightest sign of boredom or reluctance you should abandon your position as aggressor and leave him strictly alone.

P E R M A NENTS MARY ROSE 507 Roosevelt Bldg. LI. 0673

Martha Washington Shop Patrons Originate Many; Drinks Public Approves

Desserts Also Concocted, Including One Made of Peppermint Ice Cream and Chocolate Sauce. BY HELEN LINDUAY MANY of the delightful summer drinks suggested to patrons of the Martha Washington ice cream and candy shop were not originated in the shop, but are the results of experiments of patrons. One Indianapolis hostess is noted for a dessert which she serves during the summer. It is made of peppermint ice cream and the special chocolate sauce sold by the shop. Because she has found it so popular, the shop has passed the idea on to other patrons. Another summer drink, originated by a patron, is lemon ice in carbonated water, and one hostess has specialized in pineapple ice in ginger ale. One man patron, who delights in concocting different drinks, melts chocolate mints from

the Martha Washington shop, to make a different and individual sundae. Housewives use melted chocolate caramels as a finishing icing for cakes covered with butter cream. Others melt marshmallow creams from the shop for cake frosting. On Sept. 1. the Meridian shop will be a year old. It is under the management of Miss Carolyn Conrad, formerly with the Howard street shop, in Chicago. Miss Conrad's first experience with the Martha Washington candy shops dates back to the time when she was 15, and visited the shop in Washington with her parents. The shop was managed at that time by Elie Sheets, originator of Martha Washington candides. “'He looked just as he does in the picture we have of him here in the shop,” Miss Conrad re-

calls. “He would pass through the shop, giving candies and fruits to patrons. When I left the shop in Washington on that visit, I was impressed with the kindly spirit of the eccentric old man. “Later, when I took a position in one of the Chicago shops, he visited there. One of his peculiarities was in giving silver dollars to his friends. He did it in a very reticent way. When he loft the shop, he shook hands with me, and left in my hand anew silver dollar. a ts a tt a Started Business in Home Kitchen “T)EOPLE who knew Mr. Sheets well recall many amusing little stories A of his early days in the candy business,” Miss Conrad continued. “He began making candy in his own kitchen, with his wife. He gave much of the candy away, just as he gave many gifts during his lifetime. One night when he went back into the kitchen from the shop. Mrs. Sheets scolded him. “Elie, you give everything away. We won't have anything left to sell.” she told him. She had been watching him through a peep-hole in the wall. “They accomplished success together. Their baby son accompanied them to the shop, while they worked. One night they were half-way home, when they remembered that they had left little Jet beneath ono of the counters, asleep.” Before his death, two years ago, Mr. Sheets named the famous Martha Washington chocolate creams for this son. who now is president of the eastern division of the company. They are sold now as Martha Washington jets. Within the past year, the shop has opened the ice cream department, specializing in individual ices, made in the Indianapolis shop. The most unusual confection is an ice-cream pie, made in a size to serve eight. It has proved a favorite for the hostess of two tables of bridge. The pie is made entirely of ice cream. The crust is vanilla ice cream. Fillings vary, according to seasons. During the Thanksgiving and Christmas season, fillings were made of ice cream into which pumpkin and mince meat had been mixed. During the hot weather fresh fruit ice cream is used. The top is decorated with whipped cream. tt tt tt tt tt tt New Room Opened for Fountain Service RECENTLY the shop has added a room, for soda-fountain service. The room has a colonial setting, the walls paneled in white and colonial paper. Maple tables and chairs, in early colonial design, are grouped in the room. Attendants at the shop are dressed in dainty Martha Washington costumes. Two of these young women take care of curb orders. Unusually shaped glasses are used for the serving of sodas. They are flared into wide bowls at the top. The deep bottoms are packed with ice cream, and very little carbonated water is used. The Indianapolis shop is one of a number in various parts of the United States. Several are located in Chicago, and others in the east. The Washington shop is one of the show places of the capital. In it is a collection of unusual articles, gathered by Mr. Sheets. His hobby was the collection of old-time fifes and other musical instruments, many of which are in the Washington shop.

MRS. STECKMAN TO BE SORORITY GUEST

Mrs. F. D. Steckman will be honor guest at a farewell dinner, to be given by Delta Tau sorority tonight at the Marott patio. Bridge wall be played following the dinner. Guests will be Misses Bee Madden, Elveria Klafzinsky, Genevieve Stetzel, Anne Maloney, Helen Reidy, Mary Powers and Mildred McGlinchy. Mesdames Albert Bloemker, Ronald Propps, Robert Vollmer, Edward Miller, Ruth Wasson, Neal Burke, and Herman Schendel.

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KITCHEN SHOWER TO HONOR BRIDE-ELECT,

Miss Kathryn Spall, assisted by Mrs. Forrest Spall, will entertain with a kitchen shower tonight in honor of Miss Ruth Hoskinson, whose marriage to Ovid E. Leonard will take place July 17. The guests will be Misses Lois Ely, Thelma Willis, Alice Yates, Mary Bell, Edna Mae Leonard, Louise Dreier, Mildred. Spacke, Mary Jane Quillin, Wilma Remmeter, Dorothy Haas and Dorothy Henschen.