Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 67, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 July 1934 Edition 02 — Page 4

PAGE 4

City Folk at Culver Entertain House Guests Plentiful at Cottages; Mummers Present Play. BY BETTYFONDER Tim*t Writer

LAKE MAXINKUCKEE. Ind.. July 23 —Paul H Krause 11l had as his K'af- ■ts ever the week-end at Hsckor -Crest < o’t.ige. J William Wright Jr and Maurice J. Moore jr c.f in? • * returned from a i through the sou*h< rn and eastern ■ l*'-' n/riu . n 'i '.m F"a thrv . ;: .Mi Ham • MBLkan and th r :r daughter, Miss tain* and at a f l r, p sea fi-.ning up the east const *o Wayne, Pa., whore th. v vi. r< dMr Thro Morris, formerly of Indianapolis. They ttopjH- i a* Wa hing.cn. New York and B'ston anti on the homeward tr: th'-y v: .ted Mr. and Mr. Paul Tr it. form* r!y of Indianapolis. now Mr. and Mrs B E La Penta. Ines M. La P r n’is paren's. Mr. and Mrs John S.* ane Kittle, at their s ,n.m* r eottage on the oast Richard S Conder Indianapolis i. spending the week-end with his hi m :• Mrs. Croel P. Conder, East Shore lane. Mi Irving Mosley who is.'pending the summer with her parents. Mr. and Mrs. Barrett Moxley. has | had as her hou,e guests Miss Betty j and Mi. Marie Holihan, Andover, j M it . bo*h cia.'.-mates of Miss ! Moxley at Smith college. Miss! Moxley entertained at a dinner party for her cut * Saturday night and the guests were Misses Jane Ad im: and Mary Birch Ingram and Rob* rt Smith. Sam Foster, Norman Mkliael and George E Home Jr. Mr John Slonne Kiltie and son. John Sloane Kittle Jr., motored to • ? cottage. 1 lir Winds’ Wednesday They have as their ' lo.' Mrs Kittle's mother. Mrs. IP* e B. Jordan. Indianapolis.

Lanirn linlrrtain Mr. and Mr? C. O. Lanzr r entertained guests Tuesday night at two tables of bridge at their East Shor cottage. The guests inClud( ; M< and inu s Rdtare Eggleston. Arthur Wagoner. Harvey Slnfer. J \V. Rrott, Edward Barry and C P. Conder. In an effort to help the cottagers about the lake to forget heat, the M . -.nkut k e Mummers presented a < :r.< dy jammed full of laughs and wise-cracks in the Culver Military academy gymnasium Friday night Th play was "Up Pops the Devil," j wi h I.ad a long run in New York j and rect ntly has been made into a movie. Th* third company of the naval school of the academy was host at an informal dance Wednesday night when the program of dances wa played by Hal Denman and his band. The dance was unusually small due to the optional trip some of the cadets took to Chicago to attend A Century of Progress exposition. Naval school students took their annual trip on Lake Michigan aboard the Wilmette from Thursday until Saturday. Jack Williams has left Culver for New York, where he will sail today with an o: : m ide up of Purdue university students for a month's tour in Europe, playing principally in France and England. Miss Jean Stottset was a guest of Vernon Elbrecht on the west side Sunday. Miss Helen Rehmer left Friday for Indianapolis for the week-end. bu’ will be at Maxinkuckee after Sunday. Miss Behmer will have as her guests for a few days Roscoe Batts. Circleville. ind . and Harrison Thurston. Indianapolis.

Visits Miss Cirund Miss Mary Loui>e Himelburgrr. ■ Cape Giradeau. Mo. is visiting at the Crismond cottace on Long Point as the cues: of Miss Maxine Grund. Mrs. Edvard Drompp and family. Lake Wales. Fla . are visiting at the I. G F.-'her cottace on Loner Point. Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Elbrecht. Mr. ar.d Mrs. William Elbrecht and sen Vernon, have returned to their heme in Indianapolis after spending a week at their summer home on the west shore. Mrs James I. C xiper and son David Cooper, spent Friday in Indianapolis and returned to Maxinkuckee for the week-end. Mrs. John L. Crawford and dauchter. Miss Elizabeth Crawford, were in Chicago several days last week Jerome E. Holman Jr has cone to his home in Indianapolis for a few days, tut will return to the lake the last of the week for the remainder of the summer. Mrs. Edward Barry. Chicago, is visiting her sister-in-law, Mrs. Charles O Lancer and Mr Lanzcr. at their cottage on the cast shore. Frederic I. Baxter had as his Week-end . eats ran* tnr home Maxinkuckee landing. Mi.vs Joan Boswell. Indianapolis. Mr and Mrs Harvey Shaneberger. California, were the week-end guests of Mr ar.d Mrs Roy Shaneberger at their summer home, the Ship House. J H Beider, who has been spending some time at hi> Maxinkuckee summer is me. has gone to Chicago - ir.g to his home in St. Louis. Mr. ur.d Mrs Donald Rolies and small son Danny. Indianapolis, were week-end guests of Mr. and Mrs. Donaldson Trone. Mrs. Fredenc von Ammon. Chicago. is spending the week at Culver with her mother, Mrs. Wesley E Shea.

Make Trip to Chicago Mr and Mrs. Edwin C. McDonald and their daughter. Betty Lynn, and guest. Marjorie Lee Ashby. left today lor Chicago for ten days. From there the McDonalds will go to Kennebunkport. Me., returning to their home in Bronxville. N. Y . Sept. 1 Edwin C. McDonald Jr. is in the summer cavalry school. Mrs. Chester Albright has had as her house guest at her summer cottage on the east shrre Mrs J. Harry Holtman, Indianapolis. Mrs. Holtman and Mrs. Albright went to Chicago Monday to meet their husbands, who will Join them at A Century of Progress exposition. Miss Peggy Chapin and her house

Style Goes Feminine Without Frills

The taffeta evening gown at left, sponsored by Mo Ivneaux, has dominant colors of red and green, and the gloves are dull red velvet. The printed erepe, right, has been given a high front neckline and low back hv Marcel Rochas.

BY ROSF.TTF lIARGROVF, NEA Service Staff Correspondent PARIS —That femininity in fashions need not necps.sarily imply fussiness and complicated effects has been amply demonstrated in the recent collections. These proved that clothes can offer charm, seductiveness and allure to the last degree without indulging in extravagance or reminiscences, historical nr otherwise. There is a decided movement to cover up the excesxively nude and often unesthetic backs that have endured so many seasons, with a corresponding lowering, so to speak, of the high front neckline. Bosoms are being bared, but shoulders are acquiring great modesty of mien with various fichu movements. The new back decolletes are that much more mysterious because they are shrouded in net, chiffon or lace and the couturiers have taken full advantage of the sure-fire transparency effects which never run the nsk of obviousness such as bare vertebrae do. a b a THE evening hemline shows a tendency to reveal the neat ankle, cither in a shorter-in-the-front line or a shorter-in-the-back movement. The latter is newer and a little startling.

guest. Miss Helm Campbell, Anderson, had as their guests over the week-end at the Buckeye cottage. Ray Oakes. Chicago; Dan Walsh, South Bond; Frank Shaver and Roy Shield, both of Indianapolis. Miss Mary Jane and Miss Laura Sheerin, who are spending the summer in the R. E. Edwards cottage with their parents, have as th°ir house guest this week Miss Barbara Sheerin. Indianapolis. Miss Jane Axtell, Indianapolis, has been the house guest of Miss Sally Elliot for the last week. Mrs. Charles L. Barry has returned to her home in Indianapolis for a few davs. but will be at Culver for the week-end. Mrs. William Culloden and daughter. Miss Betty Culloden. have returned to their home in Indianapolis after spending a week in the Perkins apartment. Gordon Culloden spent the week-end at Culver. Robert M. Barry and J. Edward Perry Jr. were at the Charles L. Barry cottage over the last weekend. Return to Indianapolis Mrs. Roy Lazarus and son, Perry Lazarus, have returned to . their home in Indianapolis. Mrs. Lazarus was a house guest at Hickory Crest for the last two weeks. Mr?. Donaldson Trone was hostess Thursriav night for the regular v picnic of the Indianapolis tracers of the East shore lane. Mrs Trone s guests were Lieutenant and Mrs. George Beanfang. Mesdames Wesley E. Shea. Roy Lazarus Josiah Bekteß, Roy Shanebercer. J. W. Scott. C. P. Conder. P. M. Daum. Miss Norma Conder. Stewart Kraus?. George Beanfang Jr. and Peter Trone. Mr. and Mrs. Georee Cornelius and sons George and Edmund stayed at their cotta :e on the east shore over the week-end after visiting Lake James a few days before. Miss Rosemarv Ford. Todd Johnson. Gene Demmrry and Joseph Hasslit. Indianapolis, were guests Saturday of Miss Helen Behmer at I her parents’ summer cottage on the west shore. Mrs. W. E Shea had as her week- : end guests at the Shea cottage in East Shore lane Mr. and Mrs. Mark Warrender and Mrs Ralph WhiteI hill. Indianapolis. Mr. and Mrs. Fredenc Yon Ammon and Harrie Shea. Chicago.

Card Parties

Ladies auxiliary. Fraternal Order of Eagles, will entertain with a card party tonight in the temple. 43 West Vermont street. Miss Pauline Franklin. Tulsa. Okia.. is visiting her cousins. Misses Martha and Dorothy Shepard, 642 East Fifty-fourth street. Miss Mary Jane Salb. Jasper, is visiting her aunt, Mrs. August Krieg. x

The petticoat, complete with filmy lace ruffle, has b?en accepted by the smartest women, and the idea occurs to one that the return of the black silk stocking is not so remote after all. So far, the nude shade is too firmly anchored in the fashion picture to be so lightly discarded, but it wall not be long before a style-conscious woman will appreciate the value of the finest black silk stocking, completed by the black satin slipper, as the only adjunct to the slinky black evening gown, especially if the hem reveals a vivid wave-like color bias, as featured in the Molyneux collection. 808 ("'iOLOR and fabric combinations have been J studied to such a degree that they can now be considered one of the finer arts. Sunray and other pleatings appear everywhere, hemming sleeves, necklines and hems, forming jabots, collarettes and berthas. Belts are either assertive, so far as width goes, or as slim as shoe strings. Buckles make a wild bid for originality. The swagger coat, in lengths too numerous to mention, promises to hold until well on into the fall. The latest and earliest fall coats in fur, or furtrimmed. are either made to swing loosely from the shoulders or else cling to the figure and belted, the latter usually being full length.

if 4! •7 • '•/ „ ■ Jammed/* if 0 j •//• •/I Q ulhu moke, o&icj * / • J I vrne-QjL Itau4 I # / 1 <<*^S=7v\ ck. it / */ \ 7f\ /// cVided nextk and /*i • r \ lye-H - - line. r * • *\ i l^ l V®

Enclosed find 15 cents for which send me pattern No. 301. Size 4 Name Street * City s State

LTSING plaid gingham with white contrast, you'll be surprised how easy it is to fashion this modish summer frock. The designs come for sizes 14 to 20 and 32 to 42. Size 18 requires 3's yards of 39-inch fabric with yard contrast and 4% yards of cord. 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 just an additional 10 cents with the coupon.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Vows Taken by Couple at Church Virginia Casmire Becomes Harl Stanley’s Bride in Rite Today. Only immediate families and intimate friends attended the ceding ceremony, which was read at 9:30 this morning at the Central Christian church, for Miss Virginia Casmire and Harl Stanley Day. The bride is a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lyle J. Casmire, and Mr. Day is a son of Mr. and Mrs. Omar E. Day, /Kansas City, Mo. The Rev. W. A. Shullenberger heard the marriage vows exchanged before an altar banked with palms and white garden flowers. Mrs. Howard Clippinger, organist, played “At Dawning,” “I Love You Truly” and ‘‘Dream of Love” and the bridal marches as processional and recessional. Attended by Sister Miss Clementine Casmire attended her sister. Her gown as maid of honor was of blue mossy crepe with matching turban, and she wore a corsage of briarcliff roses. Edward Lynn Murray, Cleveland, was best man, and Vernon Keely was usher. Given in marriage by her father, the bride was gowned in traditional white. Her crepe dress, designed with a lace collar, was worn with a finger tip jacket with puff sleeves. She wore a small turban with noselength veil. Her flowers were a corsage of bridal roses and lilies of the valley. Trip Follows Rite Mr. Day and his bride left, following the service, for a short wedding trip. They will make their home in South Bend. The out-of-town guests included Mrs. William S. Day and Miss Glenn Day, Rensselaer; Mr. and Mrs. Lynn J. Murray, Cleveland; Mr. and Mrs. Charles T. Martin and Miss Catherine Martin, Huntsville, Ala.; Mrs. Dan Neely and Mrs. Francis Kelly, Las Angeles; Mr. and Mrs. Harry Cohen and Miss Janet Cohen, Kokomo. Frederick A. Jargeson, Glen Ellyn, 111.; Mr. and Mrs. Carl Lorraine, Chicago, and Robert and Charles Martin, Sandusky, O. The bride attended Michigan and Purdue universities and was a member of Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority. Mr. Day, a graduate of Purdue university, is a member of Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity and Scabbard and Blade.

A Woman’s Viewpoint

BY MRS. WALTER FERGUSON IKNOW very little about strikes in general and nothing whatever, so far as first-hand information goes, about the great San Francisco tie-up. Except that I think we’ll get nowhere by crying out, like the wolf-scared boy in the second reader, “Communist! Communist!” I have enough faith in the

essential stability of the American character to believe that wherever thousands of men—upheld by suffering wives and children —,walk out of tneir jobs, they do it not because they have listened to foreign agitators, but

' sjfci I : ;I' J Flh&*4

Mrs. Ferguson

because they feel a very real and deep sense of injustice. I am told by several men who profess to understand such questions that labor is taking advantage of a bad national situation and, once its demands are acceded to, there'll be no stopping it—that the working class wants to bleed I capital white. That may be true. Yet I seem to remember that throughout the history of the race the employer has not failed to take advantage of the worker and has often bled him white. I recall that there was no satisfying capital when it was skyrocketing toward the moon in 1929. I ponder also upr*i the fact that whatever riches the few now possess were dug out of th,? earth, built stone by stone, or manufactured bit after bit, by the many. The living wage, in my opinion, should mean more than a roof over the head and bread upon the table. The animal necessities have never yet satisfied man and so long as the employer does not understand that, we shall have confusions and strife. One may listen to the philosophers of conservatism. They like to talk of the ingratitude, the ne'er-do-wellism of the masses which invariably brings them all to the same conclusion: That those who now’ have w’ealth attained it by the exercise of industry. thrift and devotion to business. Unladylike as the ejaculation may be, I must cry ‘'hooey” to that. A silver spoon in many of their mouths w’ould be far more accurate. All men do not need or desire the same things. But, beyond the necessities, each man needs and should have those particular things which make life rich and full and human,? for him. Club Luncheon Set Members of A. W. T. Pocahontas Embroidery Club will attend a covered dish luncheon at the home of Mrs. Jennie Plascett, 5406 Lowell avenue, on Thursday.

THE ROYAL J 0* CROQUIGNOLE U r PERMANENT M SELF SETTING I nmplfte Original 57.00 Value New Pads Expert Operators 2 Wu\e* f,.r #I.SI ROYAL BEAUTY SHOP 401 Roosevelt Bds No Appointment Necessary

? WARNING! I Be Sure the Name A on Bottle and Cap w are the Same W INDIANAPOLIS DISTRIBUTORS MILK

Winning Fall Silk Design

They look for all the world like microscopic organisms seen in a laboratory, but the unique circle-and-bar design framing the com. ly face of Miss Jane Campbell (above) won for her the amateur textile designing prize. It‘s important because it is to be typical of the neat, precise, rather tailored figured silks that will be smart this fall.

Contract Bridge

Today’s Contract Problem Here’s Henry P. Jaeger’s ninth playing problem. North is playing the hand at four hearts. East opens the king of clubs. Par on the hand is for West to defeat the contract. A8 5 3 V KQJ 9 3 ♦A K 2 * 10 6 N 1AK1076 VA62 N 4 2 ♦ 987 5 W E V 4* *A973 2 c ♦ 61 A K Q J 4 A AQ J vlO 87 5 ♦ Q J 10 3 A 8 5 Solution in next issue. 21

Solution to Previous Contract Problem BY W. E. M’KENNEY Secretary American Bridge League THIS is the eighth of a series of eighteen playing problems prepared bp Henry P. Jaeger. It is not difficult to get into a game contract of three no trump when you hold a lot of aces and kings. The problem generally is to play the hand properly. When we hold an ace-queen combination, we always hope tc find the king on the right side, so that we will make two tricks. Don’t be too anxious to make your ace-queen—or your ace-queen-jack. as is the case in today’s hand. Don't lose sight of the fact that deuces and trays also will win tricks. BBS AGAINST the three no trump contract. East opens the jack of spades. West should overtake with the queen, so as to be able to return the king and unblock. The declarer should refuse to win the spades until the third round, thereby exhausting West of spades. A club is discarded from dummy. Now the declarer can see that his only chance to make the hand is to find the king of diamonds in the West hand. I suppose you would advise him to play a small club and take the finesse. But can't you see that it will take

AA 7 5 VKB 4 3 ♦A Q J *A 9 5 AK Q 3 A TlO 9 V.l 10 5 2 N 6 2 ♦ K 5 4 w EVQI AQ 1° ‘ c * 7 6 „ S *.1862 A 8 4 yA 9 7 ♦ 10 9 8 3 2 *K 4 3 Duplicate—None vul. Opening lead— A JDealer—W’est. South West North Fast • Pass IN. T. Pass 2N. T. Pass 3N. T. Pass 21

El \/M WHEREVER YOU GO Wq. WHATEVER YOU DO MAKE YOUR ijMj; Vacation Complete % TIMES Follow You On \our Vacation Send the Following Coupon or Call Ri. 5551 1 THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES | I Indianapolis, Indiana w ? ! Gentlemen: Enclosed find 5 for which send me The Times to | * 1 Start paper Stop sending paper and then I 00 resume delivery to me at my present city address. 1 Special Vacation Subscription Rate The Indianapolis Times

(Photo courtesy of Mallinson Silk Cos.)

two entries just to finesse the queen and jack of diamonds? And then you will not have a re-entry to make the deuce and three of diamonds? So here is a case where the deuce and trey are more important than a queen and jack. Therefore, par on the hand is first to refuse to win tiie spade suit until the third round, and now to lay down the ace of diamonds and then the queen. When West refuses to win, lead the jack of diamonds. Then, regardless of what West leads—a club or a heart—you will be able to win. cash the good deuce and trey of diamonds in dummy, and make nine tricks for throe no trump. (Copyright. 1934. NEA Service. Inc.)

GARDEN GOWN

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Perfect for garden parties, summer weddings and formal tea dancing is this lovely one-piece dress of pale green organdy that has a circular peplum which gives the dress a two-piece effect. A corsage of pique flowers is W'orn at the point of the slit in the neckline.

.Xt’LY 2?, 193?

Friendship May Last in Separation Ex - Matrimonial Mates Need Not Display Animosity. BY HELEN WELSH IMER SEA Service Slaff Writer. THERE was a time—no so long ago either —when a woman put. a man out of her life when she put him out of her heart. She tacked a "No Trespassing” sign on the front door and her former reason for living and rooking and darning socks became as welcome as a shower on Easter Sunday morning The woman never, under any circumstances, went calling on the man who had not proved a perennial answer to her virginal prayers. You see, nice women didn’t call on former husbands. The women knew how the men looked when they forgot to shave for a day, how men swore when their collar button rolled under the wardrobe, how long they liked their eggs cooked and whether or not they were susceptible to feminine wiles. When two people separate in anger certainly friendship is not possible. When one party, or both parties, still love, but for a certain exigency have decided to go lonely ways, friendship has its drawbacks. But when two persons still like each other, although they no longer love each other, if they want to use first names and ask about each other’s investments, why shouldn't they? There is a catch in the situation, though. Two persons who like each other —and who have once loved each other —usually continue to live together unless there is some obstacle which puts them definitely out of each other's way. Where Modernity Ends We argue that we are modern, We insist that wp are broad-minded. We assert tiiat if John Jones has had seven wives and wants to have them all come to dinner it is his privilege to entertain the chorus. Certainly it is. But most men do not want their former loves around. Most women do not want to meet the woman or women who have appeared in the replacement act. No, marriage is an intimate relationship between two persons. A man or woman who has given up the role of co-star doesn't want to watch the play with another in his or her part. It is human nature. If it were the customary thing for men and women to get together with the men and women who have rated, or are going to rate in their marital lives we would not express surprise when we see the related-by-mar-riage groups rating onion soup together. Wife Meets Sureessor Mrs. Cornelius H. Tuszynski, who divorced her husband in Reno the other day, stopped in Los Angeles, after the divorce, to see her former husband, William T. Davis, and his present wife, Mrs. Florence Aldene Caris Davis. Mr. Davis, you may recall, spent nine years in prison for killing a New Rork detective. While Mr. Davis was in prison, Mrs. Tuszynski, then his wife, made $3,000,000 for him. Os course there is an affectionate memory between the man and the woman who aided him. The divorce that followed, some persons contend, ‘shrould have banished that. Human nature is strange. A divorce sometimes ties the score. After all, if persons want to be friendly, why shrouldn’t they be? Men and women are nice to their former fiances, their ax-business partners. We are not arguing for divorce or against it. That is beside the question. But when two persons have built part of their lives together they should be permitted to conduct a normal conversation without the neighbors raising the blinds or listening to hear what is being said. The chances are that the man and the woman are discussing the pennant prospects of the Cardinals and the Giants. If these men and women felt romantically about each other, they would still be married—or at least they wouldn't be accepting each in a purely friendly manner. Dr. and Mrs. William C. Hall and family are at Weguetonsing, Mich., as guests of Mrs. Carrie Rink. Mrs. A. B. Hanson is vacationing at Benton Harbor, Mich. Reunion Is Set The annual McNeil family reunion will be held in Brookside park tomorrow. Officers are William Cochran, president; Myron Mendenhall, vice-president, and Mrs. Chester Love, secretary. Pastor to Talk on Dillinger '‘Dillinger Reflected in Your Mirror” will be the subject of a sermon by John Roberts, pastor of the Valley Mills Friends church, Sunday morning.