Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 144, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 October 1934 — Page 17
OCT. 26, 1934
Love Making of Caveman Still Liked Doormat Adoration Fails in Leading Women to Altar. BY HELEN WELSHIMER MA St rric# Staff Writer p'OR fourteen years they have beer devoted. They have “gone together," to use the popular parlance —to the movies and the theater and dinner and on week-end house parties. They have ridden up Fifth avenue on top of lumbering green buseg in th** spring, and read in front of applewood fires in the ram Some day, so the boy—when he was a boy—supposed, the girl would marry him. Meanwhile, if she wanted to be independent and go her own way, he would be satisfied to wait. All thing- even love and marriage, so he
had read some- : where, come to those who rest in i expectation. ( For fourteen years he has I trailed along in girl’s wake, wait- | ing for the tomori row. when she will : be ready to make Ia trip to city hall. There is no tor morrow’ on her
Mias Welshimei
calendar. Shell never turn the page. But he doesn’t realize it. He has given the woman a humble variety of doormat love. And he received exactly what he might have expected had he been a wiser young man. He has bren stepped on! Doormats always are. That is the reason that they are placed at the door. Sometime Is No Time Women like gay. buccaneering lovers, who refuse to become putty in feminine hands. They lose their respect for the meek and lowly adorer who sits and worships quietly. hopefully—and does nothing, nothing about it If the man had told the girl to make her decision or he would get out her heart probably would have turned an excited somersault and she w’ould have yielded to—and gloried in—his masculine determination. But he stated humbly that he hoped that some time she would marry him. Some time is no time. He didn’t know that. Women desire mrn who have steel in their fiber. Men who are chivalrous, sympathetic and kind, of course, but who are masterful and purposeful and get what they want —or try hard enough! No woman, whether she is seven or seventyseven, can adore a doormat. She may grow so accustomed to seeing it in front of her door that she would miss it if it disappeared, but she won t bring it in from the rain! Why should she? Doormats are meant to be stepped on! It is the doormat’s own fault that it hasn't a place by the drawing room fire. It should have demanded its rights. Miss Anuta Faircrieve. editor of “All Story." who has made a survey of the type of love story heroes
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Today’s Pattern
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which her readers prefer, has announced that the caveman is the favorite hero. A man in fiction, she has discovered, has the best chance of winning his woman if he reverts to caveman tactics. He must woo with madness! Be desperate, fearless, unrelenting! He must sweep the screaming maiden off her feet, knowing that though she kicks at the moment, in half an hour she will love him! Girls, this editor continues, despise the word sweet when applied to a man w’ho comes to woo. Their favorite adjective is sardonic. It is difficult to imagine a doormat being that way. Fourteen years will wear down a
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doormat. It won’t have much romance in its weave as the winters pass. But even a doormat can move away and leave the persons who have walked on it without a mat to use for the shoe-wiping purposes. If the patient suitor had followed simple, masculine tactics, he would have told the girl to make her choice a dozen years ago. and the chances are all in his favor that she would have gone blissfully along to the minister's. She wouldn't have let him stick around for fourteen years if she didn’t want him near. But to get excited about a doormat. Oh, no! Fiction heroes and historical figures of romance fight tournaments, ride to wars, climb hills for golden apples, battle dragons. They never, never lie down and say, “Step on me!” (Copyright, 1934, NEA Service, Inc.) Class to Give Party Halloween masked party of the Young Maried People’s Class of the University Park church will be held tonight at the Fortieth street social rooms.
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. THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Film Show Arranged to Aid School University Women’s Group Announces Dates as Oct. 31, Nov. 1 to 3. Indianapolis branch, American Association of University Women, will sponsor a double feature program at the Uptown, Oct. 31, Nov. 1 to 3, with a matinee preformance on Nov. 3. Mrs. Maurice Krahl is chairman of ticket sales for the project, which will benefit the Claire Ann Shover Nursery’ school. The motion picture committee will meet at 1:30 at the home of Mrs. Walter P. Morton. A study hour on technique of previewing will be conducted under the leadership of Mrs. j Paul Summers. For two years the committee has ’ co-operated'with neighborhood theaters on a “better movies for children” project and has issued a monthly bulletin, listing the pictures of the current month at the theaters with a classification as to suitability acording to ages. International relations study group of the association will hold a round table discussion on “Conflicts of Policy in the Far East” at 1:15 Monday at the home of Mrs. Lester Smith, 126 Berkley road, who is the leader. Mrs. Leonard Smith is chairman. Among the new projects of the association is the study group in consumers’ research, organized to institute a study of textiles, canned | goods and other commodities. Mrs. Oscar Helmer, 3536 North Meridian street, will be hostess at 2:30 Tuesday for a meeting. Mrs. Paul Berd is chairman.
Daily Recipe COFFEE CAKE 11-2 cups flour 1 1-2 teaspoons baking powder 1-2 cup milk A pinch of salt 1-2 teaspoon nutmeg 6 tablespoons sugar 2 tablespoons melted butter 1 egg Sift the dry ingredients, add the melted butter, the beaten egg and the milk. Pour this batter into abut- j tered cake tin. Melt a table- j spoon of butter in a pan, stir ! in a tablespoon of flour, four j tablespoons sugar and a tea- j spoon of cinnamon. Crumble = this and sprinkle it on the I batter. Bake in a moderate j
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Contract Bridge
Today’* Contract Problem South Is playing the hand at three no trump. West opens the queen of hearts. How should declarer play the hand? Here’s a wearning—every king is wrong. 48 5 S V 8 2 ♦ Q 10 2 4AJ 9 7 2 ♦ N 1 4 (Blind) W s 1 (Blind) ; LAJ 4 AQ4 VA K 4 4A* 9 5 I 4QIO Solution in next issue. 20
Solution to Previous Contract Problem BY W. E. M’KENNEY Secretary American Bridge League YOU know most of the various plays in bridge have a name. There’s a grand coup, the end play, the squeeze play, and the finesse. But there is one play in bridge that I never have known just how to describe, and that is the one by which you deliberately lose a trick or two. But my good friend, Tom Manning, solved the problem for me when I heard him broadcast the first game of the w’orld series. He was describing home runs and strike outs, and then he mentioned sacrifice hits, and that’s exactly what we have in today’s hand.
▲ J 10 v AK J 6 2 ♦ 764 4J 7 3 4Q74 8 4 3 VQ 10 86 N *974, 3 W E^qi<)32 ♦J 9 * 4*91 486 5 4 P * ,l * r -1 4 AK 9 8 5 3 ♦ None ♦AK 8 5 4 A Q 10 Duplicate—All vulnerable. South West North East 1 4 Pass 2 V Pass 3 ♦ Pass 3 V Pass 4 4 Pass 6 4 Pass 6 4 Pass Pass Pass Opening lead —♦ J. 20
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It is a sacrifice hit. You deliberately give the opponents a trick and actually gain two tricks by the play. I know that many players holding five to five and a haif primary tricks like to open with a forcing bid, but if you do. you usually get yourself into trouble. With today's hand, if your partner does not have some assistance for you, you might easily have trouble going game. Unfortunately, North's two heart bid is of no assistance to South, but South's bid of three diamonds is highly constructive and should not be passed by partner, unless he has absolutely a worthless hand. South's jump to four spades is not a sign-off: he has shown two suits and now jumps to game. I think North's bid of five spades is a sound gamble. a a a TN the play of the hand, if West opens his fourth best heart, the declarer can make a grand slam. But with tne jack of diamonds opened, South will win the trick with the ace, and now you can see his problem. He has no entries into dummy and might easily lose two diamonds, a club, and a spade. His only hope is to get into the dummy, discard the two lasing diamonds, and find East with the king of clubs. So here's where he employs baseball's strategic play, the sacrifice hit. He does not play the ace and king of spades, but leads the deuce. West, of course, wins the trick ■with the queen of spades. Now, when he leads the nine of diamonds, the declarer wins with the king and then leads the five of spades, winning in dummy with the jack. The ace and king of hearts are cashed and the two losing diamonds discarded. Then the jack of clubs is led and now the declarer is assured of the remainder of the tricks. The sacrifice play created an entry into the dummy, which was needed to permit the declarer to make his contract. (Copyright, 1934, NEA Service, Inc.)
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Mrs. Hill, Wed Recently, to Be Honored Guest Miss Rosalyn Reed will be hostess tonight at a bridge party and shower in compliment to Mrs. Richard T. Hill, who was Miss Marthalou Schoener, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. M. R. Schoener. before her marriage last month. The party will be at Miss Reed's home. 5361 Washington boulevard. The hostess will be assisted by her aunt, Mrs. George Pierson. Among the guests will be Mesdames Buford Cadle. Garth Marine. Burchard Carr, Earl Thurber, Howard Caldwell. Ruell Moore. Dana Chandler and Edward Paul Gallagher. Others will be Misses Dorothy Jane Atkins, Jeanne Winchel, Evelvne Pier. Grace Abbott. Betty Stotenberg, Rosalind Woods. Marian Power, Sally Basman, Dortha Weaver. Marian Whitney, Agnes Ball and Betty Hodges. Explorer Speaks Carveth Wells, explorer and author, addressed students of Park school yesterday at the assembly.
A Day’s Menu Breakfast — Unhulled straw berries, cereal, cream, shirred eggs, crisp toast, milk, coffee. \ Luncheon — j Waffles with creamed | dried beef, shredded cab- j bage and tomato salad, ! hermits, lemonade. j Dinner — j Veal pot roast, new po- ! tatoes cooked with meat, creamed radishes, fresh asparagus salad, deep dish cherry pie, milk, coffee. i
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A FIRST TIME
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