Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 66, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 July 1934 — Page 12
PAGE 12
Best Woman Golfer Will Receive Cup Award Will Be Made at Woodstock Club at End of Season. UV BEATRICE BURGAS Tim* )\onan i Pace Lditor 11TOMEN golfers at Woodstock YV Club arc playing for a trophy, which will be awarded to the club champion by the golf committee at the close of the season. On .Tuesday mornings. Mrs. Herman C. Wolff is among the earlv arrivals at the clubhouse, for the weekly tourna-
ments. Mrs. Charles A. Greathous e Jr., formerly a prominent figure in city and state tournament s, is one of the leading golfers at the club. She will be missing for several weeks as she left today with her mother, Mrs. W 1 11 i am M. Rock wood, for
Miss Burgan
a vacation at Northport Point. Mich. Playing frequently in the tournaments also are Miss Katherine Brown, Mrs. Wendell Sherk, Mrs. J. Jerome Littcll, Mrs. Clifford Arrick. Mrs. Oriand Church. Mrs. Jeremiah Cadirk, Mrs. Vance Smith and Mrs. Malott White. Mrs. Lafayette Page usually is among the entrants, but has been absent this month while she visits her daughter, Mrs. Tom Fisher, in Chicago, and friends in New York. Weekly prizes of balls and golfing equipment are awarded for low scores. The mornings of golf end with informal lunching and swimming. a a a Mrs. Alex Metzger, Dorothy. Joan and Ab. returned from Charlevoix. Mich.. Sunday. They stayed at the summer home of Mr. Metzger's mother, Mrs. Albert Metzger, while sHe tours m Africa, South America and other points. a n a Mr. and Mrs. Hubert Hickam and Mr. and Mrs. Frank Dalton still are vacationing at Charlevoix. Mrs. Clayton Mogg has as her guest at her summer home Mrs. Frank Hoke and is expecting Mrs. Ray Bunch and her daughter Marjorie to arrive next week. Mrs. Robert Masters and her daughter Barbara are preparing to go to the lake region next week. Close to this settlement of Indianapolis vacationists are Mr. and Mrs. Lucius Hamilton at Holland, Mich. a a a Mr. and Mrs. Don Test are traveling through the east on their vacation. BUB Mr. and Mrs. Guy Wainwright will sail Aug. 18 for a trip through Sweden. Denmark. Holland and Belgium. BBS Dr. Ernest De Wolf Wales is expecting his daughter, Miss Elizabeth Wales, to return Monday from a vacation at Palisade Park, Mich.
A Woman's Viewpoint
BY MRS. WALTER FERGUSON PEOPLE who assume a holier-than-thou air are a Great nuisance, but are they actually more tryinc than those who carry about a wirkcder-than-thou attitude? It is the latter pose from which we now suffer. The modern gangster is a development of what seems to have become a national habit—trying to outdo all our friends in the
naughtily spectacular. For a very long time man made a circus of his piety. Hermits and saints vied with one another in flaggelating the flesh and humiliating the spirit. They lived filthily in caves, or wilfully in a state of beccary. or imi-
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Mrs. Ferguson
fating the notable St Simoon Stylites. sat upon pillars for decades, thereby putting modern flagpole heroes to shame and becoming at l<*ast famous as examples of excellence for their less noble fellows. Because everybody finally grew tired of that sort of thing, we went galloping off to the other extreme, so that nowadays we are inclined to hide whatever decency we have under a bushel, to perform our good deeds in secret, to be furtive about, and ashamed of our worthy qualities. But how we do shout aloud our vices! We boast of our venial sms like children bent upon startling each other by originating new kinds of mischief Much of
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Frock in Three Colors
Contract Bridge
Today’s Contract Problem Here's the eighth of 18 playing problems by Henry P. Jaeger North has the contract at three no trump No opposite bidding. East's opening lead is the Jack of spades. Par on the hand is to make contract, with the king of diamonds in the West hand. AA 7 5 ¥KB 4 3 ♦A Q J *A9S A N \ A ¥ N V (Blind) ¥ E (Blind! ♦ S ♦ A * A S 4 ¥A 9 7 ♦ 10 9 8 3 2 AK 4 3 Solution in next Issue. 20
Solution to Previous Contract Problem BY W. E. M’KENNEY Secretary American Bridge League THIS is the seventh of a of eighteen playing problems presented by Henry P. Jaeger. And it's an easy one. You know, it is strange that when a difficult hand comes up in a tournament you usually will find that several of the good pairs will find the play. But all of them usually trip on these insignificant plays — onco that tantalize you. The whole secret of today's hand is that you must learn to distinguish between a deuce and a six. When the hand goes down, you see that you have no suit with which to work except diamonds, and that, to make your contract, you will have to take a spade finesse, praying in the meantime that the ace of diamonds is in the East hand. Now’, in order to do all these things, you must have sufficient entries. South’s bid of one no trump shows a hand containing at least three and one-half primary tricks. When North responds with two no trump, he is saying that at no trump he has two probable entries. nun WEST'S opening lead is the queen of hearts, which is won in dummy with the king. Now, if vou are careless and just reach over and get that six of diamonds, your contract is going to be defeated. Par on the hand is to recognize at this point that you are going to need the six of diamonds as an entry, so you play a small diamond from dummy to the king in your own hand, and when the king holds.
our meanness is the result of a puerile desire to gain attention —in itself a wholly childish trait. We realize we can t get much notice by behaving ourselves, so we set out to be as bad as possible In the words of the Arkansas farmer. “We've gone plumb hogwild over orneriness.'’ In my opinion, few of us actually are as bad as we pretend to be. We like playing to the galleries, but a good deal of the silliness in which we indulge is distasteful. We fondly think it can make sophisticates of us. Yet the desire for sophistication is rather a questionable ambition, since it means that one has been deprived of simplicity of mind or manner—and has grown artificial. The sickly grins on the laces of certain men and women when a dirty story is told are enough to prove that our ability to enjoy filth has been much overrated. To pretend to be better than we are generates hypocrisy; but to prptend to be worse than we are stultifies character
CROQUIGNOLE PERMANENTS BY ROYAL x T friend ** Original M Vnloe ( nmplete With shampoo and Set • 'elf-Siting t plmdM for _ ..find*, HLlr >'*. Blo^heH. • I C.rmy Hair CBt Etpert • Fiscal Watertaln Operators ROYAL BEAUTY SHOP 401 RodAevelt Bide- RI-fi'M No Appointment Nfccmry
Plaid mousscline de sole in beige and two shades of green is used to make this formfitting frock with tailored shirtwaist top and dressy shirred skirt. The sleeves full and billowy, fall in graceful folds from shoulders to wrists. The wood brown straw hat has a novelty brim in cut-out effect.
you lead a small spade and win in dummy with the king. When another small diamond is played from dummy, South wins with the queen. South must force the ace of diamonds out and must do this by playing the eight of diamonds, not the five. East wins with the ace and returns the ten of hearts, which the declarer wins with the ace. Now South leads the five of diamonds. which is overtaken in dummy with the six. This gives him the necessary entry so that the jack of spades can be finessed. Os course, the spade finesse gives him his ninth trick and his contract of three no trump. . (Copvrifrht. 1934. NEA Service, Inc.)
AK 7 6 VK 5 2 464 3 2 + 743 A952A Q 16 8 3 VQJ3B N V 10 7 4 w £ 4A 9 7 4 J 10 <. +QJS2 + KlO9 _ AA J 4 VA 6 3 4KQ S 5 AA 6 5 Duplicate—All vnl. Opening lead —V Q. Dealer —South. South "West North Fast IN. T. Pass 2N. T. Pass 3N. T. Pass Pass Pass 20
Manners and Morals _ BY JANE JORDAN-
What's wrong with vour marriaee? Describe your case lo Jane Jordan and let her fißure it out. Letters of comment from readers are invited. Dear Jane Jordan—l am 23 and my husband is 25. We have been married almost seven years and have two children. For the first four years we were happy. Wherever one w’ent the
other would go. Then he got out of work and went to another town where his people lived, came home every week or so but there w a s s o m e t hing that made me think he was stepping out, so I started going
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Jane Jordan
out with fellows. I went with three but decided I was doing wrong. It was on my mind all the time. I wanted to cry and tell him. When he came home to stay he knew there was something wrong and I told him everything. It almost killed him. After a few weeks he told me of going to dances and taking girls home, yet he didn't think that anything. The blame was on me and still is. Over a year ago he left and lived in a hotel with a woman spending every dime he made while the kids were going hungry. When they had split up he started coming over here to see me. telling me howmuch he thought of me. He asked me to let him come back and like a fool in love I did. He acts like he loves me as much as he ever did. but every place w e go someone mentions her. I just get numb and burn all over. It almost makes me hate h'm. The longer I think of it the worse it is. Do you think he cares for me or her? DON'T BET ON LOVE. Answer: Your husband's most tender love and consideration is, of course, reserved for himself. His greatest devotion always will be accorded to the woman who contributes most to his own ease and pleasure. If you persist in reminding him that he is the kind of man who leaves his family to starve every time some woman takes his fancy, he soon will be off in search of a more comfortable companion. You started this pattern of revenge by stepping out with other men because you suspected your husband. Your desire to tell him what you did can hardly be attributed to the majesty of truth. You struck, not to kill, but to wound, and the truth was your most effective weapon. [ The trouble with your device foe hurting him is that two can plajr
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Shower Will Be Tendered Bride-Elect Miss Maxine Rigsbee to Be Feted Tonight at Brown Home. One of the first pre-nuptial parties planned to honor Miss Maxine Rigsbee, will be given tonight by Mrs. George A. Miller and her daughter. Mrs. Royer Knoae Brown. The marriage of Miss Rigsbee, daughter of A. L. Rigsbee. and Dr. K. H. Stephens, son of E. B. Stephens, Ft. Wayne, will take place next month. Cut garden flowers will decorate the Brown l>ome tonight for the bridal shower and bridge party. Appointments will be carried out in pastel shades. Guests will include Miss Rigsbee and her aunt, Mrs. Lee Macy, and Miss Marjorie Macy, Arlington, and the bride's-elect sister. Miss Kathleen Rigsbee. Others will include Misses Doris Hair, Grace Avels, Jean Winchell, Ruth Landers. Winifred Cassell, Alberta Alexander and Mrs. Gregg Ransburg and Mrs. Frank White, Louisville. Mrs. White is visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Katterhenry, Fitch road.
Review Series Covers Pulitzer Prize Winners Members of Theta Tau Psi, dramatic sorority, heard Mrs. Anne Haislup review "Beyond the Horizon” today as the first in a scries of programs on Pulitzer prize novels and dramas. Mrs. Grace Abel entertained the group at her home, 108 Linwood avenue. Other program discussions, to be held the fourth Friday in each month, include "So Big,” by Edna Ferber to be discussed by Mrs. Florence Wright; "Arrowsmith,” by Sinclair Lewis. Mrs. Mabel Stonecypher and "Craig's Wife.” by George Kelly. Mrs. Mary Williams. Mrs. Abel will discuss Paul Green's "In Abraham’s Bosom”; Mrs. Beatrice Haislup, "Bridge of San Luis Rey,” by Thornton Wilder; Miss Jacque Lacker. "Street Scene,” by Elmer Rice; Mrs. Elsie Eberhardt, "Laughing Boy.” by Oliver LaFarge; Mrs. Eleanor Beanblossom, "Both Your Houses.” by Maxwell Anderson; Mrs. Kathryn Holmes, "One of Ours,” by Willa Cather; Mrs. Zelda Kester, "Men In White,” by Sydney Kingsley; Mrs. Clenna Jones, "Lamb In His Bosom,” by Caroline Miller; Mrs. Alma Hause, "Miss Lulu Bett,” by Zona Gale, and Mrs. Helen Pittman, "Early Autumn,” by Louis Bromfield. The organization, which has an active membership of twelve and two honorary members, is affiliated with the Indianapolis Council of Women and the Seventh District Federation of Clubs. Mrs. Anne Haislup is president; Mrs. Mary Williams, vice-president; Mrs. Beanblossom, secretary; Mrs. Beatrice Haislup, treasurer; Mrs. Holmes, historian, and Mrs. Eberhardt, parliamentarian. Mrs. Williams is in charge of membership; Mrs. Beanblossom, press, and Mrs. Abel, flowers. The program committee includes Mrs. Jones, Miss Lacker, Mrs. Beatrice Haislup, Mrs. Anne Haislup and Mrs. Holmes.
at the same game. He retaliated with more of the same and with much less conscience. Each of you is determined to dominate the other. Each time your ego is deflated you are inflamed by the desire to turn the tables. Unless you can replace the effort to dominate with the effort to co-operate, unless you can learn to elevate the self-esteem of your partner instead of tearing it down, your marriage is on the rocks, and there is nothing that I. or anybody else can do about it. Dear Jane Jordan—Six weeks ago I started going with the sweetest girl on earth. I think she is beginning to tire of me because I am very hard to get along with. She begins to doubt everything I say to her. She has been acting very strange lately and I can’t find out what is the matter. She is the only girl i care for. Do you think she w’ill change? J. B. Answ’er —I haven't the least idea what ails the girl. If you will tell me why you are hard to get along with, perhaps I can say something to help you. tt * Mrs. L. W. S.—Your problem is not one which can be discussed in this column. The only thing you can do is to find another home for your daughter. Place her w’ith relatives, friends, or with strangers. Anything is better than keeping her by yourself, get the juvenile court, or a social service agency to help you.
A Day’s Menu Breakfast — Seedless white grapes, cereal cooked with dates, cream, crisp toast, milk, coffee. Luncheon — Main dish macaroni salad, Boston brown bread, honeyball melon filled with mint sherbet, milk, tea. Dinner — Iced bouillon, toasted crackers, cheese omelet, lattice potatoes, creamed leeks, frozen fruit salad, milk, coffee.
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NEWS OF SOCIETY FOLK
Mrs. Ralph Lieber with Buddy and Betty are at the Dunes state park for two weeks. Mr. Lieber will join them tomororw. Mrs. I. V. Giles, 3630 Guilford avenue, will have as her guest this week-end Miss Ezda Devincy. member of the faculty of the Florida Stale College for Women, Tallahass. Mrs. Albert J. Beveridge Jr. has returned from a trip to the east. Dr. and Mrs. Francis C. Smith and Mr. and Mrs. Fred I. Willis will leave next week for Green Bay, Wis., and Duluth, Minn. Misses Marjorie Brownell, Mary Joe Spurrier, Rose McGill, L’Eunice Horne, Ruth Kennedy and Mary
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Enclosed find 15 cents for which send me pattern No. 311. Size Name Street City State
ALL dressed up to go places is mother’s little pet in a crisp dress simply fashioned in either dotted Swiss, mull or lawn. It is designed for sizes Ito 5 years. Size 4 requires 2 3 s yards of 35-inch fabric for both dress and panties, plus 2 yards of Its inch binding. To obtain a pattern and simple sewing chart ot 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 just an additional 10 cents with the coupon.
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Smith will return to Indianapolis Sunday after a stay at Lake Wawasee. Miss Flora Lieber and Miss Martha Persons are visiting Mrs. John Herrmann at her summer home at Mackinaw, Mich. Bridc-Elect to Be Feted Party tonight at the home of Miss Florence Condrey, 3820 Rookwood avenue, for Miss Florence Tridle, bride-elect, will be a miscellaneous shower. Miss Condrey and Miss Edna Cabalzer will entertain for Miss Tridle whose marriage to the Rev. Victor R. Griffin will take place tomorrow in the University park Christian church.
Lingerie Makers Hold Ceremony as Industry Accepts Terms of NRA First Label Marking End of Sweatshop Era Sewed on by Fannie Hurst, \\ hose Pen Depicted Workers’ Plight. BY HELEN LINDSAY WHEN lovely women have admired the delicate lingerie which alwa> % intrigues them, they have not realized that often it is the product of hours of sweat shop labor. The first of this week an event in the Hotel Governor Clinton. New York, marked, according to manj au .ionties, the end of the sweatshop regime. It was the official sewing-on of the first NRA label by the undergarment and negligee trade. To make the occasion more impressive. Fannie Hurst, author, who has written feelingly of the persons affected by the hardships of sweat shops, was selected to wield the needle.
In recognition of her service, the garment, bearing the first official NRA label, was presented to Miss Hurst. Offering the first NRA labels brought a demand from manufacturers, and by Saturday night of last week. 8.600.000 labels had been sold. The occasion of the demonstration by Miss Hurst was an impressive one. Preceding the ceremony, a reception was held in the grill room of the hotel, where civic leaders, labor officials and representatives of the NRA gathered. Out-of-town buyers of lingerie were invited as special guests. Each industry attempted to have some important person officiate at the label-sewing ceremony, marking compliance with the code regulating the industry. Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt recently served in the same capacity for one of the leading industries, and Miss Frances Perkins held the
same honor. The celebration marking the sewing on of the first lingerie label was staged elaborately. The machine on which the sewing was done was m the center of the stage before the speaker's table. It was draped with an American flag. Another feature of the celebration was the arrival of an enormous blue eagle of ice, which was borne into the room on a rolling table. Miss Hurst was led to the machine by heads of the industry, where she applied the first label to a garment. The impressiveness of the occasion was not lost on those present. It meant that the dainty wisps of lingerie will no longer represent hard, long and underpaid hours, but tha* women may wear them with the realization that other women have made them, and received a fair wage in exchange for their work. b n b a an Many Nations to Aid Style Show CO-OPERATING with A Century of Progress fair, the Style Exhibitors Inc., who plan a showing of women's and children's clothing at the Morrison hotel in Chicago, July 31 and Aug. 2, 7 and 9, will show not only American styles, but those of other nations. The show will be at the Terrace Gardens of the hotel. From fifteen of the foreign villages at the fair, girls will be brought to show the clothing of their native lands. , The exhibitors have pointed out, in planning this arangement for the show, that for many years designers have been studying foreign styles in creating clothing for American women and children. New color combinations, contrasting effects, and design, have been taken from the native costumes of many nations. ana a a a Toured Guatemala for Design Ideas MEMBERS of the fine arts group of the summer school of Teachers college, Columbia university, will have the benefit of the experiences of a woman who has traveled into the wilds of Guatemala, in search of inspiration in‘her work as a textile designer. She is Miss Ruth Reeves, who recently completed a research tour for the Carnegie Institute, Washington. Miss Reeves was seeking native sources for new fabrics. Much of her tour was in the highland villages and in the Cuchumatanes mountains, which are inaccessible except by mule or horseback, and are not frequented usually by tourists.
Visit Dunes Flotcl Indianapolis residents at Dunes Arcade at the Indiana state park last week included Messrs, and Mesdames Edward C. Wischmeier, F. W. Pintake, Otto Busching. George Faulstich, L. A. Strack, J. E. Hartman, W. J. Mahan, Ernest B. Smith, J. A. Holman and Dr. and Mrs. Larry Fly, Dr. and Mrs. E. D. Lukenbill and 'imily; Misses Helen Roth and Jea.’ette Swisher; Messrs. Paul Ferry, Paul Lambert, H. F. Sweeney and Sidney Smock.
Daily Recipe CHOCOLATE TARFAIT 1 cup sugar 1 cup ivatcr Whites 3 eggs 2 squares unsweetened chocolate 2 cups cream, whipped 1 tablespoon vanilla Boil the sugar and water to 238 degrees or to a soft-ball stage. Pour slowly over the stiffly beaten egg whites, beating constantly; beat until cool. Fold in the chocolate that has been melted and cooled, cream and vanilla. Pour into refrigerator trays and freeze without stirring. Serves eight.
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JULY 27, 1934
Mrs. Lindsay
WEDDING CEREMONY JULY 12 ANNOUNCED Mr. and Mrs. Ernest E. Bradfield announce the marriage of their daughter. Miss Bernice Hamrick, and Walter H. Rothenbush, son of Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Rothenbush. The ceremony was read in Indianapolis, July 12, by the Rev. Edwin Tomlinson. Mr. and Mrs. Rothenbush are at home at 360 Congress avenue. Residents and former residents of Newpoint will attend the annual reunion tomorrow in Garfield park. Henry Schulz is president and Mrs. James Gilbert, secretary.
Clearance SALE White Shoes & Sandals T.arze selection of other higher priced shoes ineluding Blacks and Browns, $1.49. MEN’S $3.50 Sport Shoes $2.49 TERMINAL SHOE STORE 104 N. ILLINOIS ST.
