Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 54, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 July 1934 — Page 12

PAGE 12

Polo Team Practices Seriously Rolling Ridge Players Prepare for Game With Lexington. BV BEATRICE BI'KGAN Timr* Woman's Pair l.ditnr f | 'HE afternoon promised to be uneven ful. We quickly were sinking into a lethargy because the afternoon was pleasant with cool breezes fluttering the leaves of trees. But why squander a perfect afternoon Just lolling under a tree? What day is it. and what does it hold 1 Wcd-

Miss Burgan

sharp crack of mallets hitting \ the white ball. Sharp cries of the ! captain guided the players, comfort- j ably garbed in their favorite bright colored sweaters. Jesse Andrews Sr. 1 wore a pair of tan suede chaps Yellows, reds and blues flashed by as the players pursued the ball. Thomas Ruckelshaus, Dudley and Samuel Sutphin. Charles DuPuy' and Je.sse Andrews Jr. practiced determinedly and thrilled at every good shot. The team is serious' about its practice now. for on July' ~8 it will meet the Lexington (Ky.) team, captained by Howard E. Madden. On the following week-end the team will return for a game. The Lexington team is filling a six weeks' playing schedule. .After it meets the Rolling Ridge team, the members will ship their ponies | to Dayton and Cincinnati for j games. Two years ago the local : team played at Lexington and the i series of games ended in a draw. Miss Lois Graham watched her fiance, Mr. DuPuy, practice. She wore a white pique shorts outfit 1 with a detachable skirt buttoning dtwn the front. And so the day was eventful The 1 practice game stirred its to mark the Lexington game on our calendar. Captain John M. Wier is visiting his parents. Judge and Mrs. Clar- 1 enco E. Weir, before going to the United States Military academy at West Point to accept an appoint- ! ment as assistant professor of law.: I He has been stationed at Fort! Haves, Columbus, 0.. where he was 1 judge advocate for the Fifth corps area. FortriUc Reunion Set t All former residents of Fortville! and friends will attend the seventh I annual reunion at Brookside park at 2:30 Sunday. The program will include songs, recitations, stories and short speeches, to be followed by a basket lunch. S. B. Prater will give a history of Fortville and the Rev. W. W. Wyant, pastor of the North M. E. church, will be' in charge of a memorial service. Women of the Moose drill team will give a card party at 8:30 Sunday night at 135 North Delaware street.

Contract Bridge

Today’s Contract Problem South is playing the hand at three no trump West opens the four ot hearts and East puts up the jack. How should South play the hand from here? AK Q 2 V S 6 #6432 *l9 8 2 * N * V N y (Blind) W < E (Blind) * * AAJ 8 3 ¥A Q 2 ♦ Q 9 * A K 10 5 Solution tn next issue 0 Solution to Previous Contract Problem BY W. E. M’KENNEY Secretary American Bridie Leacue IF you are a good guesser. you will win better than 50 per cent of your finesses, but if you are a good

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WIW * * * HralliPl

nesday. the calendar told us Rolling Ridge polo team practice day, we recalled. We orove out to the field. The r h ythmic thud of the racing feet of sturdily built poni*s mingled wi t n their excited breathing and

A Woman’s Viewpoint BV MRS. tV ALILK FLRGLSON

WESTBROOK PEGLER, with with other metropolitan columnists following his example, takes some mighty cracks at clerical heads, jeers at the public’s intolerance, and gulps down sobs over the miseries of the moving picture producers. A great to-do goes on because the church people are asking a little less smut In

their entertainment. This is once I’m siding with the preachers. If we are to be regimented in all other activities in order that the whole population may benefit, I see no valid reason wh y we can not demand

changes in the cinema for the ultimate good of society. We have begun several campaigns for the sterilization of criminals and morons, yet the major part of our theatrical entertainment seems designed for their edification. ‘ Why not keep the children away from the movies?” cry the defenders of our freedom. One thing we overlook, I think, and it should be made clear to them. It is the American adult who asks this favor for himself. He furnishes the money to pay for the pictures, and he has a right to be heard. He is not objecting to present programs altogether because they are harming his chil-

card player, you will try to eliminate .the guess on most of your finesses. In today’s hand we find George Unger. New York, refusing to take any one of the three apparent finesses in the hand. North’s bid of one no trump shows a hand containing at least three and one-half primary tricks and one that is very apt to gain a trick on the opening lead. South's bid of two hearts guarantees a five-card suit, and when he bids clubs on the next round, that is a highly constructive bid—a sure game forge and a mild slam try. North's jump to four hearts is not just taking the strain off the hand, but is inviting a slam. a tt a WHEN West opened the jack of spades, Mr. Unger did not take the finesse, but went right up with the ace and then led three rounds of diapionds, discarding his losing spade on the third diamond. The queen of spades then was played and trumped by the declarer with the nine of hearts. A small heart was won in dummy with the ace, the eight of diamonds returned and trumped with the ten of hearts, and now all the declarer had to do was to lead his queen of hearts and let East win with the king. East then was forced to lead a club; or to lead a spade, which the declarer would trump with the jack of hearts, discarding his losing club from dummy. ,By playing the hand in this manner. Mr. Unger eliminated the necessity of taking any finesses. (Copyright. 1934. NEA Service, Inc. A A Q ¥AB 6 5 * KQ 8 4 A K 10 S AJIO9S A K 7 6 3 N _ ¥K 2 ¥74 W . £ #10976 ♦ J32 Dealer * *Q6 3 J A 5 2 ¥ Q J 10 9 3 ♦ A 5 *AJ 9 * Duplicate—All vul. Opening lead—* J. South li’est North East Pass Pass IN. T. Pass 2 y Pass 2N. T. Pass 3 * Tass 4 ¥ Bass 6 ¥ P ass Pass Bass G

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Married in Irvington

Mrs. Edwin Barrows Seelye

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Mrs. Ferguson

Before her marriage Monday in the Graham chapel in Irvington, Mrs. Edwin Barrows Seelye was M iss Joyce McGavran, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. G. McGavran. Dr. and Mrs. Seelye will make their home at 7 Winsor street, Worcester, Mass., after Sept. 1.

dren, but because he is tired to death of them. The gangster has been glorified on the screen beyond all belief. The prostitute has been held up continually for our admiration. Greed, chicanery, lewdness, infidelity, dishonesty of the most flagrant types have been made the normal characteristics of screen heroes. The good man in the movies, you will have to admit, is generally a silly loon, while the decent woman usually is treated with a flippant condescension that leaves us doubtful of her intelligence. There is no gainsaying the fact that stage and screen have helped make indecency fashionable. My quarrel with the movies is not that they have over-emphasized sex but that they have insulted its beauty. Mr. and Mrs. Harvey J. Elam and children are spending the summer at Torch Lake, Mich. Mrs. E. F. Smith and daughters, Misses Jeanne and Virginia Smith, and Mrs. Edward Thayer, Greenfield, are spending the summer at Carp Lake, Mich.

of “37 3Mfl I ■ 1 \ V 1 \ moaning <yi tr- • \ 1 \ aJitxnoorn (ycca*tOTb^ 1 1 H \ \ \ #<*> Hi Sll \. \ 1 \ AmahJlu, cloud ir\ l\ | \ \ iruwik-. *U)ea>u II 1 \\ 1 ii* u&m tWaM - I ’ \ l\ 1 • I f \ l\ 1 fIV I* made—" oul 297

Enclosed find 15 cents for which send me Fattern No. 297 Size '.. Name Street City State

SIMPLE, isn’t it? And yet its so cool and neat in pique, percale or seersucker. The designs come for sizes 32 to 42. Size 38 requires 4 's yards of 35 inch fabric. 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. ¥ • • The Summer Pattern Book, with a complete selection of Julia Boyd designs, now is ready. It’s 15 cents when purchased separately. Or, if you want to order It with the pattern above, send in just an additional 10 cents witfi the coupon.

Miss Madge Mehring has left on j a motor trip to Gainesville, Ft. i Pierce and St. Petersburg, Fla. Miss | Mehring will be the ' est of Dr. and Mrs. Edwin Andrews in j Gainesville.

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Paris Again Takes Style Leadership All-French Label Put on Fashions for Coming Season. H;i United Press PARIS, July 13.—With the sun streaming down in blistering arrows, Paris dressmakers today began the new deal in haute couture. The semi-annual ritual of showing the world what the well dressed woman will wear was stamped with an all-French label for 1934-35. To among the fashionably elite. Paris says, Eve's sisterhood will wear: Longer skirts. Narrower shoulders. Quantities of dead black slightly relieved. Exotic hats—many knitted and flat furffypes. Kid, peccary, doeskin and flat fur shoes for daytime; satin, brocade, velvet and platinum for evening. Costly fur coats and fox capes. A modicum of jewelry when not genuine. • Gloves matching ensembles and mid-elbow. Skin-fit lingerie. Colors from the East lndies, deepened, blended, combined and contrasted with black and anew blackiris brown. As the next few days pass, the list will be varied by each house to express its particular conception of the winter mode. Realizing the impossibility of catering to past extents to the buyers from the “great beyonds,” Paris dressmakers turn once again to themselves and made Frenchier clothes than has been their custom for years. Nothing could be more in their favor, for they sadly had allowed the pendulum of “piease the customer” to swing too far westward. To take Paris creations back to New York was not unlike carrying coals to Newcastle. Not only were the French making clothes on the American last, but they were doing a slap-stick job. A buyer overheard during the mid-season collection, remarked: “What’s the matter with this dress?” Upon reflection he added: “I know! it isn’t French —we can do that in America!” And the secret was out. Women who buy and wear Paris creations this winter will be better dressed in the mode Francaise than they have been since the war. Husbands to Be Guests Members of Mayflower chapter, International Travel-Study Club, Inc., will entertain their husbands at a picnic Sunday in Lebanon. Mrs. S. R. Artman will entertain the group at her home preceding the picnic.

Card Parties

Capitol City Council, D. of A. fancy drill team will hold a supper and card party at 5:30 Tuesday night in the hall, Eleventh street and’ College avenue.

AnnouncementlreJ^^ Morrison’s^,®® BEAUTY SHOP^.^!/^ OPEN TO 6 P. M. SATURDAY LADIES’ APPAREL SHOP 20 W. Wash. St. sth Floor XO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY

Recent Bride at Home

*** mmmamm, <Ov%|:v: : :_. y .-: ; .- #v:* :: . m-. : : : : aft.. X .^^fflsj^HK^>v.

Mr. and Mrs. Dick Kersey announce the marriage of their daughter, M iss Marguerite Kersey, and F ran k Krueger, son of Mr. and Mrs. Fred W. Krueger, which took place June 5. Mr. Krueger and his bride are at home at 825 North ' Dcla ware street.

Manners and Mortals

If you like to read this column, feed it with letters! Ge: that problem off your chest! Write today!

Dear Jane Jordan—You’re such a hidebound realist that sometimes you give mo the chills. Examined in the cold light of reason, your remarks usually are ti'ue. But is there no place for ideals in your philosophy? Is the idealist always a washout in youropinion? Answer—By no means. Ideals are very useful as an antidote for discouragement. A soul - satisfying

ideal keeps us going in the very teeth of an extremely unsatisfactory real. Our feelings of inadequacy urge us to borrow strength from our conceptions of the ideal. The only time' I dver discredit ideals is when they ai e vague and unobtain-

IhTl

Jane Jordan

able, and tend to lead away from reality. Where dreams are preferred to concrete problems, no good can come of it. Idealists must be able to stand the check of the real. o tt tt Dear Jane Jordan —Can anyone succeed who has an inferiority complex? INQUIRER. Answer —If not, we would all be sunk. There never has been a human being completely free from feelings of inadequacy. Probably all ambition has its root in inferiority feelings for which we are striving to compensate. When inferiority complex becomes “the spark which stirs our clod” it is a socially useful thing instead of a bugaboo. * * a a tt Defy: Jane Jordan—Do you remember “Soon lo be a bride” of last year? (She was afraid to be married and reluctant to leave her family). I have been married almost a year now and I want to thank you for your encourager ment. Through reading your column and watching the lives of my friends, I saw that marriage wasn’t any paradise. But I decided I wanted it, trouble and all. At first, especially the first three weeks, it was terrible. Although only three blocks from home I was so homesick that I would go home even when I knew there wasn't anybody home at mother’s and wander through the rooms and cry. It seemed to me that I was left out of everything that was ' dear to me. I loved my husband, but we did j not seem to understand each other and everything went wrong. Gradually we began to adjust ourselves, and now every week brings us closer together. I love him more and more. Os course, he isn’t perfect, but I wouldn’t love

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BY JANE JORDAN

him if he were, for I’m not perfect myself. We live just two doors from mother's, but I’m sure we would be just as happy away, for I love my own little home and it means more than mother's ever did. Thanks a lot for giving me the courage to take my happiness when I had the chance. . A HAPPY WIFE. Answer—And thank you a lot for letting me know how your problem worked out. Very few people take the trouble to tell me what happens after they write a letter to the column. I am very glad to publish your letter for the benefit of other engaged girls who have the jitters and think that their growing pains constitute a serious illness. Mother love is a good thing, but to hang on to it after the period of girlhood is past is too much of a good thing.

Personals

Mr. and Mrs. Nels Seirsdale and children, Lavon, Velma Lee and Nels Seirsdale Jr„ will come Sunday from Bogalusa, La., to spend two weeks with Mr. Seirsdale’s sister, Mrs. Thomas F. Shortall, 942 North Riley avenue. Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Collins and son Dob will leave tomorrow for a visit at Silven lake. Mrs. Genevieve Wells and Patsy and Barbara Wells will leave late in July for a vacation in Colorado and Yellowstone national park. They will be accompanied by Mrs. Wells’ brother, Dr. Pierce Kelley, Arkansas, who has been visiting in the city. Mr. and Mrs. L. E. Freeman are the guests of Mr. and Mrs. H. O. Page at their summer home on Lake Michigan. Mr. and Mrs. Fred B Keuthan and Miss Anna Gerke will leave Monday for North Tonawanda, N. Y., where they will visit Mr. arid Mrs. E. A. Wills. Mr. and Mrs. Victor H. Rothley have returned from Chicago and St. Louis, Mo. Mrs. P.O. Power and her daughter, Miss Marian Power, and son Richard Power, and Harry Sargeant will go to Chicago Sunday for a visit. Miss Power and Mr. Sargeant will be the guests of Charles Sargeant at his home in Kalamazoo. Mich., before returning to Indianapolis. Mr. and Mrs. H. J. Behrmann will leave Monday for Lockport, N. Y., I for a visit with their son, Robert Behrmann. Mr. Behrmann will return to Indianapolis with his parents to join Mrs. Behrmann, who is spending the summer in the city.

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Unusual Diversions Fill Longer Leisure Periods Created by NRA Regime Collecting’ Troubles of Others Whiles Away; Time for Insurance Agent; Nut Trees Constitute Hobby of Another Man. BY HELEN LINDSAY . HOW to spend leisure time has problem with many oersons who have shorter working days because of the NR.v Men and women who are given extra leisure hours or an occasional day off. and who have not acquired the golf or fishing habits of their associates, find these hours difficult to fill. The Leisure League of America has made a study of the problem, and has unearthed some interesting facts concerning the recreation of persons who have benefited by NRA. Letters in the organization's files indicate there are any number of Americans who don’t know what to do with their spare time. Many of

them have developed a fancy for unusual hobbies. A woman in Ridgefield, N. J., recently wrote the league, asking for information on how to tell fortunes with spinach. Others have the idea that their hobbies should bring them extra money. The league has pointed out to persons seeking hobbies to interest them that it is more fun to do something that every one else isn’t doing. Collecting ship models or Currier and Ives prints, hunting for old pewter or rare stamps, are fairly common hobbies. But the league has discovered that there is a man who collects French cook books, another who collects spurs, and a woman who gathers antique china dogs. In the first Leisure League book, “Care and Feeding of Hobby Horses," by Ernest Elmo Calkins, is the story of a man who collects others troubles. It is a satisfying hobby at no cost whatever.

He is an insurance agent, who has the gift of encouraging persons with a combination of hope and reason. He sets aside Saturday mornings for seeing those who are tormented by financial, social, mental or other troubles. A manufacturer of shoe polish spent all his spare time raising nut trees. When he retired from business, he devoted all his time to them, crossing them and producing new specimens until he had 400 varieties. It was the biggest nut orchard in the world. The owner ended up as president of a nut growers’ society. ana tt tt Neurologist Tunis Cabinet, Maker A WELL known New York physician escapes from his patients into a workshop which has more than a thousand tools. Another New Yorker, a distinguished neurologist, spends a month each year working in a high-class cabinet maker’s shop. A well-known advertising executive carves soap statues, usually cartoons of his friends. Rex Brasher, Kent (Conn.) artist, devoted forty years to a hobby of painting birds. He neglected more remunerative work, sometimes getting up at 3:30 to catch an early bird. He worked waist-deep in cold water for many hours making his paintings. His collection of 1,200 species is considered more complete than Audubon's book of American birds. Many persons make ship models, and others collect them. Henry Culver, New York lawyer, specialized in an unusual branch of the ship model hobby—the design and rig of ancient ships. He .designed historically correct models of famous old ships, and found that wealthy patrons wanted his work. Six wood carvers were kept busy for six months in Mr. Culver’s reproduction of King Charles’ famous “Sovereign of the Seas,” which cost $30,000. nun a it is Educator Collects Toy Soldiers AMONG the unusual hobbies discovered was that of an insurance company executive, who collects old tin fire signs and leather fire buckets. Dr. Clarence Cook Little, former president of the University of Michigan, collects lead soldiers of all nations, and Charles F. Gettem.v, assistant federal reserve official, Boston, makes scrap books which contain the history of his life, in snapshots and clippings. Mr. Gettemy presented his daughter with a scrap book story of her life to date on the day of her wedding. Indianapolis has a number of unusual hobby riders. Jack Adams, in charge of merchandising for L. S. Ayres & Cos., has reproduced in his office the atmosphere of sailing vessels. Fred Bates Johnson, attorney, entertains himself with amateur psychoanalysis. Dr. Francis Smith carves amusing pictures with the aid of a Jig-saw,

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JULY 13, 1934

SsSlp'

Mrs. Lindsay