Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 88, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 August 1934 — Page 6
PAGE 6
Vacations Still Call to Society w Travel and Lake Resorts Attract With School Openings Near. BY BEATRICE Bt ROAN Tinri Homin'* Pr* Editor still is coming and going. During the last few weeks remaining before sons and daughters will be packing up to go to schools, families are traveling or Idsiting at lake resorts. Mr. and Mrs. Warrack Wallace
and Mr. and Mrs. Guy W a 1 nwright left last weekend on a ;ruise to Swede n, Denmark. Holland and Belgium. Edgar Evans has gone to Ro a r ing Brook, Mich., where he joined his and a u g hters, Mrs. Samuel Harrel, and
J I
Miss Kurgan
Mrs. Erwin Stout, and their families. John Hare has joined his family, which has been vacationing at Forest Beach. Mich. After Edward Mayer spent the week-end with Mr. and Mrs. C. Harvey Bradley at Lake Maxinkuckee, he went to Chicago for a visit. Mr. and Mrs. Miles Chapman are touring through the east, and Mrs. Jesse Fletcher has been visiting Mr. and Mrs. Francis Dunn at Lake Maxinkuckee. Miss Virginia Anderson is at Lake Maxinkuckee with her mother. Mrs. J. W. Anderson, and thoughts of going away to school are beginning to bid for her attention. Mr. and Mrs. Frederic M. Ayres have gone to Eaton's ranch at Wolf. Wyo., whore their daughter. Miss Anne Ayres, and their son. Fritz, have been vacationing for several weeks. Before Mrs. Charles A. Pfafflin returns from Teton Lodge, Wyo., she will visit at Lewiston, Idaho. Mrs. John H. Roberts is expecting her daughter. Miss Virginia Roberts, to return late next week from Camp Meenaghaga, near Green Bay, Wis., where she has been acting as counselor. Miss Roberts will visit friends in Milwaukee before returning home. Mr and Mrs. Charles P. Adams and daughters are guests of Mr. Adams' mother. Mrs. R. H. Adams. After spending most of the summer in San Francisco, Mrs. George T. Parry and daughter. Ann. will return next week. They spent murh of the time vacationing at Carmel-by-the-Sea as guests of Mr. and Mrs. Lowell Wilson. Miss Margaret Pantzer has gone back to New York after visiting her parents. Dr. and Mrs. H. O. Pantzer, and sister, Mrs. Elsa Pantzer Haerle. The Indianapolis Propylaeum will provide an evening's entertainment Friday when the contract bridge committee will sponsor a dinner bridge party. Mrs. Frederick E. Matson -will be assisted by Mrs. Walter C. Marmon and Mrs. St. Clair Parr}'.
Personals
Professor and Mrs. George A.! Shumarher are home after a visit at Lake Tippecanoe with friends. Mr. and Mrs. T- W. Haas. Columbus. O. Mr. and Mrs. E B. Rieman have returned from a vacation at Lake Tippecanoe. Miss Rose Laurence. New York. 1 Is visiting her brother. Dan Laurence, and Mrs. Laurence, and Mr. and Mrs. John Laurence. Mrs. Walter Hiser. New York, will arrive Saturday to visit her parents, i Mr. and Mrs. M- R Schooner, and to be here for the wedding of her sister. Miss Marthalou Schoener. to Richard T. Hill on Sept. 8. Mr. Hiser will arrive later. Mrs. Burchard Carr has gone to Heavener. Okla.. to visit her parents. Mr. and Mrs. James W. Murdoch, formerly of Indianapolis, she was accompanied by her brother. James Murdoch, and Mrs. Murdoch. New York. Miss Mary Farrell, national secretary of Phi Sigma Tau sororiiy. returned today from St. Louis, where she attended a meeting of the national board of regents. Mr. and Mrs. William F. Gansberg. 2468 North Meridian street. ha\e returned from a trip on the St. Lawrence and Sacuenav rivers to Montreal. Quebec, and other points in eastern Canada. Mr and Mrs. William H. Faust will attend the American Bar Association meeting at Milwaukee Aug. 29 and 30. Mrs. Jacoo P Dunn and daughter. Miss Eleanor Dunn, are vacationing in Rapid City. Mich. Beta chapter. Omega Kappa sororitv, will meet tonight at the home of Miss Mildred Twietmycr, 3523 North Illinois street. Miss Jeannette Uhl. 820 Parker avenue, will be hostess Thursday night for a meeting of Alpha chapter. Rho Delta sorority.
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Contract Bridge
Today’s Contract Problem South has bid one no trump East overcalls with two spades. which South doubles. South cashes ace, king, and queen of hearts. What would your next lead be and how should East play the hand from here to make his contract? You will find that this hand contains several interesting angles. A 7 * VJ7 4 3 ♦Q9 5 2 A7 5 4 *9BA K Q J 6 ygs2 N s 9 *JId 63 w E ylo 9 6 * Q 10 6 3 *AB L2!!!!LJ*A9 A A 10 3 ¥. A K Q ♦K 7 4 AKJ 8 2 Solution in next issue. 15
BY YV. E. M'KENNEY Secretary American Bridff# League MANY a slam bid is defeated by bad distribution of trtump, which can not be foreseen in the bidding. Yet a resourceful declarer sometimes will make his contract in spite of the adverse tricks of fate. Do not concede defeat as soon as you find an outstanding trump honor, which can not be caught by finessing or by straight leading. There still may be a chance to avoid losing a trump trick, if you play the cards carefully. Today's hand illustrates how this may be done by a single coup, a play which never fails to give the declarer a well-deserved thrill, if properly executed.
WM l'^A' s yy, urtyui \nj crux/ ,v , /^\^( I‘\ SWcuicrur- Atfuitrl. -%/ >l / J//S N &U.u to make._/v// X .;/ I \ to ureaA. y t 332. Inclosed find 15 cents, for which send me Pattern No. 332. Size Name Street - City State.
THE chic twins wear a charming, shadow-proof house apron that can be opened out flat for ironing. Easy to make, in gingham or seersucker, it is designed in sizes 14 to 20 and 32 to 42. Size 18 requires 4 : * yards of 3S-inch fabric. To obtain a pattern ana simple sewing chart it this model, tear out the coupon and mail it to Julia Boyd. The Indianapolis Times. 214 West Maryland street, Indianapolis, together with 15 oenus in coin.
EAST took the first trick with the ace of diamonds, and returned a diamond. Declarer discarded a small club, winning the trick with dummy's queen. He then started to draw trump, but when West discarded a diamond on the second round, it was apparent the ten of spades could not be picked up by regular play. Declarer drew the second and tmrd round of spades, first discarding a club, then a heart from dummy. His next lead was a small heart to dummy's ace, after which the six of diamonds was led and ruffed with the four of spades in his own hand. He cashed the two remain ng heart trick and the ace of clubs, and then put dummy in the lead with the club king. This left East with only the ten and seven of spades, so when another club was led from dummy, East had to ruff. Declarer's last two cards were the jack and nine of spades, so he was able to win the last two tricks, and fulfill his six spade contract.
A S yAK 9 5 ♦Q 6 2 A K 10 9 7 3 A 5 A 10 7 6 3 yJIO 3 N _ 2 +.J 1097 W _ E y 8 7 2 434 A 8 5 AQ J 5 Dei,l<> '’ A8 2 AAKQ J 9 4 yQ 6 4 ♦ K AA 6 4 Duplicate—All vul. South West North East 1 a Pass 2 A Pass i 3 A Pass 4 V Pass 5 a Pass SN. T. Pass 6 a Pass Pass Pass, Opening lead —A J. 15
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Oldest o.f Clubs Will Celebrate Minerva Group to Mark Seventy-fifth Year at New Harmony. Ft 7 Tim'l Sprrial NEW HARMONY. Ind., Aug. 22 The Minerva Club of New Harmony, founded in 1859. was the first woman's club in Indiana and now' is the oldest woman's club in the United States with constitution and by-laws extant. On Sept. 20 the seventy-fifth anniversary of the founding will be celebrated accord- j ing to announcement of Mrs. James ; S. Boonshot, Petersburg, general ! chairman of the celebration for the Indiana Federation of Clubs. Prof. Ross Lockridge of Indiana university will be the speaker at a dinner on Sept. 19 at New Harmony, with a boat ride on the Wabash river following. A short program at the auditorium and a sightseeing | trip are scheduled the following morning. In the afternoon a pageant of the Old Fauntleroy Home, entitled “The , House of Dreams,” will be presented. ! Bess V. Ehrmann, Rockport, is pre- 1 paring the pageant, to be presented by New' Harmony residents. A tea ! party will follow' on the home ground. The celebration, which will mark seventy-five years of progress by Indiana club women, will honor the memory of Constance Owen Fauntleroy and the women who formed the club initiating the club movement now' embracing 700 clubs and more than 20,000 members in nine-ty-one counties of the state. The home in which the first meeting w r a.s called now is maintained by the federation as a shrine. It was built in 1815 by the Rappites, the first communistic settlement in Indiana. John Duss of “The Great | House” of Ambridge, Pa„ the living ! Rappite, will attend the celebra- | tion. City Woman to Lead Ceremony at Convention Mrs. Irene Hermann Faust is national chairman of the model in- j itiation of Phi Delta Delta, women’s) international legal sorority, to be! held at the convention Friday, Saturday and Sunday in Minneapolis.j Mrs. Faust is delegate from the In- I diana Law school chapter. Mrs. Faust's assistants will be} Miss May L. Mosher, Portia School} of Law, Boston; Miss Mary A. Han- j nin, University of Southern Cali-} fornia, Los Angeles; Miss Amelia Buckmann, Loyola university. New j Orleans, La.; Miss Nadine Burke,} Northwestern College of Law, Portland, Ore.; Miss Naomi L. Irvine, Dickinson School of Law, Carlisle, Pa.; Miss Grace Benz, St. Paul College of Law, St. Paul, Minn., and Mrs. Catherine Doody, Minnesota College of Law', Minneapolis, Minn. Music will be provided by the Washington and Los Angeles alumnae chapters. Katherine Jones Becomes Bride in Church Rite Miss Katherine Jones’ marriage to William Fiske Cleaver took place this morning in the First Presbyterian church with the Rev. J. G. Moore, Greencastle, officiating. The bride, daughter of Mrs. Jessie Denbo Jones, was given in marriage by her uncle, Dr. E. S. Denbo, Orleans. The bride’s gown was of ivorysatin, worn with a hip length veil. She carried a shower bouquet of Johanna Hill roses, lilies of the valley and maiden hair fern. Her sister, Miss Ruth Jones, was maid of honor and wore a leaf beige satin dress and carried Talisman roses and delphinium. Miss Eleanor Clever, the bridegroom’s sister, and Miss Ruth Jordan, Corydon, were bridesmaids and wore gowns of sunset satin and carried Sweet Adeline roses and morning bride. Ross Barr, Kentland, was best man, and J. Howard Alltop and Robert E. Gates were ushers: The bridal party and families attended a breakfast at the Marott before the couple left on a motor trip. They will return to live at 327 East Maple road boulevard. Theb ride attended Indiana university and was graduated from the University of Southern California. She belongs to Chi Omega sorority. Mr. Cleaver, son of Mrs. Florence Horne Cleaver, is a Wabash college graduate and member of Sigma Chi fraternity. SHOWER ARRANGED FOR BRIDE-ELECT Miss Helen Farrell, whose marriage to Edward James Troy will take place next Wednesday morning at St. Philip Neri Catholic church will be guest of honor tonight at a miscellaneous shower to ; be given by her sister. Miss Mary } Farrell, who will be her only at- | tendant. The gifts will be presented ! to the bride-elect by Eleanor Pat- | rick dressed as Cupid. Appoint- | ments and decorations will be in } pink and green. j Guests will be Mesdames Arthur iJ. Padgett, Everett J. Campbell, i Alma Ford, Bridget Mulhern. Otto j Frenk. Edward Glimm, Albert Tay- ) lor, Victor Massing, John Lucid, Martin Farrell. George Gilby, John Cox, George Ayres, Henry- Bischoff and Clocord Voges. Misses Mary Hayes, Hannah Lynch, Elinore McCambridge. Rosemary Ford, Mary Mollov, Magdalene Hurley, Helen Tarpey and Margaret Farrell. The hostess will be assisted by her mother, Mrs. James J. Farrell. Mrs. M. J. Silver and son Irving have returned from a two weeks' trip to New York. Boston and other points east.
gVANSt'
Latest Paris Offering
WEARING a handsome two-piece woolen frock with bright silk scarf tucked into the amusing square neckline. Miss Wilma Splivalo, young California sculptress, arrives in New York after two years of study in Paris.
Manners and Morals 3Y JANE JORDAN
If you are unsuccessful in solving: your problems, write a letter to Jane Jordan. Her reply will help you to see what is wrong: with your method. Dear Jane Jordan—l have been married almost fourteen ybars. We have three girls. My wife’s mother has been dead about four years and
her brother ha s b r e e n staying with us off and on ever since. He is 32, but won’t pay any board even when he is working. If I get after him for board money he leaves and boards elsew here until he gets laid off or quits the job. Then
Jane Jordan
he comes back to me and there is nothing I can do about it. As long as I keep him and say nothing, ve get along all right, but if I say anything I get it plenty from both of them. My wife goes around for a month or more at a time without saying a word to me only when it’s necessary. I am not making enough now to support my own family. I don’t know whether to stick it out and let them have their own way or leave. I’m afraid I couldn’t take care of the children very well and pay my board somewhere else. Thanking you for any advice. PAT Answer—The trouble is that you have made stands against the young man but did not stick to them. You are one of those people who put up with a lot for the sake of peace. When you are pressed beyond endurance you fly off the handle and get results, but you undo what you have accomplished by dropping into your old easy habits. When the young man’s mother died he put his sister in her place and expects you to enact the role of father. He acts exactly like a spoiled child who runs away and hides when his father is mad but sneaks back at the first sign of relenting. Your best bet is to stick to your decision not to support a 32-year-old man who recognizes no debt
ORGANIZER
m
Mrs. Ida Neal
Mrs. Ida Neal, Aurora, is state organizer of the Indiana Pythian Sunshine Girls, junior order of Pythian Sisters, which will hold its second state convention today.
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to you for his board. If your wife feels any real strength back of your decision instead of temporary indignation which she can lick by pouting long enough, your battle will be won. a a a Dear Jane Jordan—l am 21 years old and have been dating a girl my own age for two years. She is very attractive and her character is beyond reproach. I fell in love with her and was sure she had the same feeling for me until recently. She has a very close girl friend who, I am sorry to say, has very few friends. She likes to talk about people and intrude in their personal affairs. Sometime ago, I told her about this in a nice way. Ever since she has disliked me. She talks against me to my girl friend and says she doesn’t think there will be any future for us together. My friend seems disappointed and talks as though she agrees with this girl. I am not employed now and have nothing to offer at the present time but I expect to in the future. It seems as though I will have to put up with one girl in order to have the other. What do you think I should do? X. X. X. * Answer—After an honest selfexamination if you find that there is absolutely no truth in what the girl you dislike says about what you have to offer, you can suspect her of an ulterior motive in causing trouble. It may be that she has considerable reality on her side when she sees no future for the two of you in starting out together totally unprepared for the problems which are sure to beset you. If she is only a mischief-maker, and her influence is stronger than yours with your girl friend, it looks as if there were plenty of trouble ahead. Perhaps the best thing you can do is to avoid it by placing your affection on a girl less susceptible to the opinions of her feminine friends. a a a Dear Jane Jordan—When I was a little girl I fell in love and I fancy I still love the boy although we have not lived in the same town for several years. But I can not get interested in other young men for I am always comparing them with the boy I imagine him to be. How can I cure myself of this hopeless idealism? Would it be better to stay away from him entirely, or should I set out deliberately to make his acquaintance again so that I will have some way of judging him. I have friends in his town who also know him. GIRL FROM MISSOURI. Answer Look him up by all means and see if he is all you think he is. If he isn’t you'll be free. If he is perhaps the old attraction will wake up between you. It is not a good idea to spend much time dreaming about things which you never have the courage to do. Dark Colors Dominate Dark green, rust and black, in the order named, are the leading colors for September street dresses. Brown, oxford gray and dark blue follow in popularity. If you want to combine colors in an interesting manner, try putting a wide belt of rust-colored velvet on a dark green frock or a red velvet one on a black dress.
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University Women Work in Varied Fields With Nurserv School as Center * Head of Indianapolis Branch Describes Activities and Objectives in Education and Other Endeavors. This is the third of a srrirs of articles bring written by prrsidrnls of some of the outstanding women's clubs, in which plans for the coming season are bring outlined. BY MRS. N. TAYLOR TODD President, Indianapolis Branch. American Association of t niversity Women. THE fall opening of the Claire Anne Shover nursery school the last week in September will be a signal to members of the Indianapolis branch of the American Association of University Women that the 1 association's activities have begun. From then until May each member j can be as busy as she wishes. Besides the nursery school committee, there | are twelve other committees on which she may choose to serve. In i addition to the general meeting of the association each month, there will be nine study groups meeting once a month or oftener. With such % range of interests it is hard to imagine any member of A. A. U. W. idle. After one year of successful operation of the nursery school, the A. A. U. W. is prepared to continue the school this year with a wider appeal both to patrons of the school and to members of A A. U. W. The school now will be available to pupils from 9 to 12:30. including the noon meal, as well as for all day pupils as it was last year. This will be of especial interest to those parents who are convinced of the value of nursery school training for their toddlers but do not feel they want them away at school all day. Mrs. Paul J. Stokes, parent education chairman of A. A. U. W., is chairman of the nursery school committee. Mrs. J. A. Bawden is business administrator of the school. Mrs. Stokes this year is offering to A. A. U. W. members an opportunity to become acquainted fully with nursery school technique. A study group, under Mrs. Ina K. Joyce, after a period of study and training both in and out of the school, will assist in the school. A group under Mrs. William Regers will continue the pre-school study group with study supplemented by observation of how theory is put into practice in the school. This group of mothers who are interested in getting practical help with methods of dealing with the problems of their own children will seek to discover how like problems of social adjustment, anger, eating, etc., are met at the school. Mothers of pre-adolescent children will find an analysis of their problems in a study course conducted by Mrs. John Cunningham. a a a a a a Favors High Educational Standards WITH the avowed purpose of maintaining high standards in education, the A. A. U. W. is interested in all forms of education from } pre-school to after-school, from the education of their children to the education of themselves. Women are realizing increasingly the power of trained women, trained >y their own study after formal schooling is over. The insistent problems of social and economic reconstruction must be solved. A beginning can be made in educating for national and International understanding of the problems of the day. Thus certain study groups have grown up to meet this need. The legislative study group functions for two years in order that its members can study during the year the legislature is not in session and be prepared to act when it is in session. Last year the legislative group, under Miss Jenna R. Birk. chairman, made an intensive study of state support of education. This year wnen the legislature meets the group members will be able to give intelligent support to the vital questions at issue. The international relations study group realizes that international understanding can not come without national understanding. Thus the group is studying current history and policies. This group is becoming larger each year, as women come to realize more and more that international relations are not something distant and unrelated to them, but something very closely allied to their immediate happiness and well being. The glories of peace and the disasters of war are too real to be unnoticed. And so the international relations study group is composed of women who believe that through a greater education of themselves and others for national and international understanding they can help achieve security for their families. Mrs. Leonard A. Smith is chairman of the group this year. The members again will co-operate with the state round table marathon on international relations. Mrs. Horace Shonle and her committee have made arrangements for the annual book and toy exhibit to be held at the L. S. Ayres & Cos. store the week of Nov. 12. They plan to extend the exhibit this year to include furnishings for children’s rooms, and music. Mrs. John Cunningham, who has charge of a lecture to be given one day during the week, is making every effort to get an outstanding speaker for the occasion. a a a a a a Better Movies Campaign Continues THE motion picture committee, under Mrs. Walter P. Morton, will continue its drive for better movies for children. The committee publishes each month a bulletin rating the movies which are appearing that month at neighborhood theaters. A new group to be formed this year will make a study of the economic and legal status of women. This is in response to the realization that an understanding of the whole political economy is necessary to help women create their future economic and legal status. Another new group to be formed as a result of modern trends will be a group studying scientific consumer purchasing. Material for this group has been prepared by the national A. A. U. W. committee on consumer interests. Remembering that “all work and no play makes Jack a dull boy” (and Jill a dull girl), a. A. U. W. has its lighter moments. Once a month the members will get together at a general meeting for tea or dinner and an interesting program. General meetings are held in the afternoon in alternate months, and at night in the other months. Study groups meet in the morning, afternoon, or night to suit the needs of the group. Thus every A. A. U. W. member can find a group in which she is interested at a time when she can attend. a a a a a a Proposed New Groups Discussed THERE is talk of meeting for lunch on “college club day," and of forming a drama group for aspiring dramatists. Once a month or oftener the bridge groups will piay. Each year more members are playing bridge for the benefit of the fellowship fund. It is such a pleasure to spend a purely sociable afternoon among women they like, and yet have that satisfied feeling that they still are doing something worthwhile. Many organizations give scholarships and loans to untried undergraduates, but the A. A. U. W. is one of the few to offer assistance to the graduate student who has proven her worth. At present there are twelve fellowships awarded annually by the American Association of University Women to graduate women of outstanding ability. Once a week for twenty-four or more weeks the arts section will meet to hear programs arranged by Mrs. O. M. Helmer, chairman. Members and their friends have come to look forward to the arts meetings held once a week in the morning at the Rauh library. An innovation this year will be a course on interior decorating. This series will be followed by talks on drama, music and books. In May the association will close its year with its one big social event, the annual bridge party 'or the benefit of the fellowship fund.
RECENT BRIDE TO BE HONOR GUEST Mrs. E. Hobart Burgan, formerly Miss Katherine Tarr, will be entertained tonight at a bridge party and shower, to be given by Mrs. Charles E. Yott, Mrs. Louis Isenee and Mrs. Gilbert Templeton. The party will fee at Mrs. Yott’s home, 5738 Guilford avenue. Guests with the bride will be her mother, Mrs. A. M. Tarr; Mesdames Marvin Jones, R. Frank Denny. William Mace. Arthur Schultz and Carl Burgan; Misses Harriett Swain, Virginia Kerz, Loretta Galm, Edith Stahl and Maryette Southworth.
AUG. 22, 1934
PARTY SCHEDULED BY GAMMA GROUP Gamma chapter of Omega Nu Tau sorority will have a benefit bridge party Saturday afternoon at the home of Mrs. John E. Wyttenbach. Misses Blanche Shane, Lillian Chapman and Nehersta Pierce are in charge of reservations. Other committees are: Prizes. Mrs. Wyttenbach. Mrs. Charles E. Rimp and Mrs. John A. Lyons, and tickets, Miss Bernice Cain and Miss Alice Massey.
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