Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 163, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 November 1934 — Page 4

PAGE 4

China and Glass to Be Shown in Second Annual Children’s Museum Event Entire Collections and Parts of Others Will Be Displayed at L. S. Ayres & Cos. Store Beginning- Wednesday. BY HELLN LINDSAY REPEATING the successful display of china and glassware held last y< ar. *he Children s Museum will open the second annual exhibit of this kind in the L. S Ayre* A: Cos. store Wednesday night. The exhibit will close next Safurdav. A lecture by an authority on glass and china will be given each dav at 3 during the exhibit. A small charge will be asked of those attending the exhibit. Proceeds will be used to finance th r If <%eum until time for renewal of memo rships. Jan. 1. Glass lovers and collectors from Indianapolis and vicinity have been invited to exhibit collections, or parts of them. Entries

are being made under the direction of a committee headed bv Mr Elmer E Scott, 2002 North Alabama street. o?h<--r members of the committee include Mrs. C. O. Robinson Turns hobby editor, 4517 Central avenue; Mrs Theodore B Griffith, 940 West Forty-second street, and Mrs. Harrs - R Wilson. 50 Hampton drive. While the exhibit is open to dealers in antique glas: and china, the major part of the entries will be thos> of individual collectors, known throughout Indianapolis for rare specimens of china and glass. Mrs Jessie Nye 2868 North Pennsylvania, will entet thirty-seven pieces, among them a Royal Purple compote of Sandwich glass. Another compote to be entered by Mrs. Nve which is unusual is the Rebecca at the Well pattern. Mrs Hugh H Hanna, 1735 North Pennsylvania

Jill

Mrs. Lindsay

street, Will enter a edit cti o of ER ptian glass, and Mrs. Walter Winkler. 627 North Gray street, has listed twenty pieces of china in a rare old pattern, which she will display. a a a ana Sandwich Glass Will Be Shown MRS K E. LEWIS '>452 North Illinois street, will show a collection of Sandwich glass in the baby face pattern. Mrs. M. C. Lewis, 5452 North Illinois street, will have entered an entire collection of china in a clear w.id flower pattern. In addition to a pair of Dolphin candlesticks. An < nrire collection of one thousand eye pattern glass will be shown by Mrs. Ella Coates. 418 East Nineteenth street Another unusual collection will be one belonging to Mrs. A. E Curtis. 3226 West Washington street. In this there will be nine pieces of Anthcmion glass, made about 1870. Mrs. Clarenre Stanley. New Augusta, will show a collection of glass paper weights and bottles, in addition to a silver luster tea set. In the displays of china there will be an unusual collection of pitchers owned by Mrs. McKim Copeland. 1317 West Michigan street. These win include pitchers of Bennington majolica, Chelsea and blue Spatter ware The exhibit is the only general assembly of glass and china to be shown in Indianapolis, and is in keeping with similar exhibits being made in New York, Chicago and other large cities. a a a a a a Tech Pupils’ Work Will Be Displayed AN exhibit of jewelry, fashioned from various kinds of metal and stones, and finished completely by pupils in the metal crafts class at Technical high school, will remain at the school until Wednesday. In the collection, all the work of the thirty-six pupils in Mi.ss Irene Hardy's two classes at the school, are rings, necklaces, tip pins, bracelets, ash travs, letter openers, earrings, brooches and watch fobs, all made by hand. Included in the displav is a bracelet which won for Juanita King f. st place in the state fair exhibit. The bracelet is made of flat metal Strips iasten* and by links. The three center links are etched with a rose design. Th"* metal crafts classes in which these pieces of jewelry are made are a part of the flne arts course at Technical high school. The work has been done at the school for a number of years, and a number of former studen s rave graduated into commercial work in hand-made jewelry, following completion of the hieh school course.

Contract Bridge

Today’s Contract Problem E3-U Is playing the contract •( four hearts, redoubled. West having opened the bidding with one spade and North having made a trainerable overcall of two clubs. Can the hand be made, and can you give the logical reasoning for the play? AQB 2 V None 4 Q J 5.1 AAK 7 4 AAKJ9 5I N A7 * V None r f AQJ 10 ♦ AKI s j SX32 *Q h : ‘ P** l * AS 5 A 1 4 f KOTM 4)12 * J 10 3 Solution in next issue. I)

Solution to Previous Contract Problem • BY W. E. M'KENNEY ilnrrlir? American Bridge learns THERE is no such a thing as a perfect bidding system. That's the thrilling part about contract. You never can figure it out. You can take the best players, playing for high stakes, where they know it does not pay to over-bid their hands; still they will pick up a hand occasionally which will take them for a terrific set. Many think that the experts never go down 1.000 points. But that is why contract is so interesting—no person or system can account for freakish distribution.

A None VKJ 9 S ♦ 7642 AKJ 10 6 3 A 10 6 5 3 A A N If AS! V<} 10 4 W E, #QJ 10 3 S I 5 ♦ *>"• D N ;.r * A s 7 2 AQ * ■ 1 A KQ J 1 $ 74 V 7 ♦AK S 3 A 4 Rubber—N and S vul South WfM North K.of 1 a Pass 2 A ‘l’ass 4 A Pass PiM Double Tass Tjss Pass Opening lead—V 4 9

Safe Deposit Boxes The Indiana National Bank of Indianapolis

WISE New Fall OQ_ Ties 4vC

Fletcher Ave. Savings & Loan Assn. 10 East Market SI.

I was sitting in a restaurant in New York the other night, after a tournament, and there was a crow'd of bridge players gathered around the table discussing unusual happenings and unusual holdings. One of the players, who has a good reputation as a money player, told about the following hand. He called off the cards in the declarer’s hand and asked if we didn’t think it would be hard luck if a four-spade contract were defeated with this holding. He agreed that there was a possibility of the hand being defeated a trick* or two, so he did not re- | double, but he thought he was j justified in complaining of hard | luck when the hand was defeated 2.000 points. a a a

IITEST opened the four of hearts. W The declarer felt pleased with the first play, as he made a good guess—he put on the jack and East won with the ace. East returned the queen of diamonds, South played the king and West ruffed. West's next play was a small club. Declarer thought he'd try to steal a trick, so he went up with the king in dummy and East won with the ace. retu-ning the jack of diamonds on which South played the e West ruffing with the ttyree spades. The queen of clubs was West next play and the declarer trumped with the four of spades. At this point, if the declarer led a small spade, he would have saved himself a trick, but his natural play is to lead the king of spades, which East won with the ace. East immediately cashed his ten and nine of diamonds, after which he played the five of diamonds. The declarer was forced to ruff with the jack, which meant that he would have to lose another trump trick. Down five, minus 2.000 points. After listening to the story we were rather inclined to side with the teller's story that it was a hard luck hand. (Copyright. 1934. NEA Seruce. Inc BRIDAL SHOWER TO FETE MISS HOYT Miss Lavinia Havman. assisted by her aunt. Mrs. Ed Hunter, will en-:ert-ain at a miscellaneous shower nd bridge party tonight honoring Miss Winifred Hoyt, whose marriage to W. Pearce McClelland will take place this month. Guests will be Mrs. C. D. Hoyt, mother of the bride-to-be, and Mr. McClelland's mother. Mrs. Harry X. McClelland; Misses Janice and Evelyn Kellogg. Betty Jane Temperly. Jessie Fisher. Helen Carson. Jean Boyd. Jane Dungan. Kathleen Rigsbee, Mary Fry and Mildred Black. Luncheon Scheduled Mrs. Louise Markina, president of the auxiliary to Indianapolis post American Legion, has announceu that the auxiliary will have a table at a Tuesday luncheon, honoring the legion's national commander. Frank N. Beigrano. Mrs. George Swaim. 3102 North Delaware street, chairman of the auxiliary activities, is in charge of reservations.

Society Women of City Find Dogs Source of Enjoyment

Pledges Will Be Alumnae Guests at Dinner Party Gamma alumnae chapter of Kappa Alpha Theta sorority will entertain pledges of Gamma active chapter of Butler university at a dinner meeting at 6:30 Friday in the chapter house, 442 West Forty-sixth street. Pledges will presen a stunt.. Mrs. Dale R. Hodges, new alumnae president, will preside. Other officers are Miss Virginia Goodwin, vice-president; Mrs. Russell Fleming, secretary, and Mrs. Robert Neale, treasurer. Hodges has announced committee chairmen. They are: Mrs. Flank T. Sfsson, ways and means; Miss Betty Lee, phone, and Mrs. Merle Mac Cloud, publicity. Executive committee members will be hostesses for the dinner. They are: Mesdames Harold Mercer, Lawrence Henderson, Mrs. Hodges, Miss Goodwin, Mrs. Fleming and Mrs. Neale. Mrs. Mary Keegan, chaperon at Theta house, is in charge of reservations. TEA SCHEDULED BY LEGION AUXILIARY Mrs. Roland Daly, 4646 Graceland avenue, t will be hostess from 3 to 5 Tuesday at the tea of the Bruce P. Robison auxiliary. American Legion, which will honor its new president, Mrs. James Jordan, and the retiring president, Mrs. Fred Wolf. Presidents and secretaries of other units in the district and district officers will be guests. Assisting the hostess will be past presidents. Mesdames John Paul Ragsdale, Will Long. Willard Boyle, William Mayer, Harold Purcell, Richard Thomas, James Sertell, C. K. McDowell and Paul Beam, and the present officers, Mesdames Fred Hasselbring. Rudolph Kvler, Fred Plumb, Clarence Knipp, Dorothy Ashley and Albert Schrand. Mary Catherine Starr will play the harp during the tea. HEBREW MUSIC WILL BE STUDIED An evening devoted to a study of Hebrew music has been arranged j by Zeta chapter. Sigma Alpha lota, j national professional musical sorority, fr its monthly musicale at 8 Tuesday night at the home of Mrs. J. A. Goodman, Kessler boulevard. Cantor Myro Glass, barytone cantor of Beth-El Temple, will be assisting artist for the program arranged by Mrs. Robert Blake, chairman.

SINGER AND PIANIST TO GIVE PROGRAM

Mrs. Irma Wocher Woollen, soprano. and Miss Carolyn Richardson, pianist, will be presented by the Indianapolis Matinee Musicale in an active section program at 3 Friday afternoon at the American Central Life Insurance Company auditorium. Mrs. Robert O. Bonner, cnairman. has arranged the following program: Quatrps Berceuses" Old French Le Miroir" Ferrari Trots Chanson" Pierr.e L;a s Aria. Lenfant Prodigue 1 Debussv Mrs. Woollen, accompanied bv Miss Dorothv Merrill. ••Faschingsschwank aus Wien" Miss Richardson. “Cloths of Heaven" Dunhill Wounded Birch" Gretchantno.T "Iris" Ware "Lliaes" Rachmaninoff Linden Lea" ... Vaughn-Wiiliams Quatrains from "Rubaivat of Omar Khayyam" ... Rogers Mrs Woollen. "Ballade,” Op 118 Brahms Ir.lrrrr.r'zo " Op. 117 "Rhapsody." Op 79 No 1 Miss Richardson. School Party Scheduled Mesdames Frank Montgomery. Max Norris, Raymond Winkle and W. H. Gwyn, officers of the ParentTeacher Association of School 53. will act as reception committee for a card party to be held at 2 Monday at the Antlers. Mrs. Bert Witham and Mrs. Margaret Musser will be co-chairmen, assisted by Mesdames Roy Pope. William Pohlman, Harry Rice. Lowejl Stone, Albert Murphy, Edward Fitch and Raymond Von Spreckelson. Editor Will Speak Dinner meeting of Theta Sigma Phi Alumnae will be held at 6 Tuesday at the home of Mrs. Donald C. Drake. 4327 Park avenue. Mrs. Jessica Brown Mann on, manuscript editor of Bobbs-Merrill Publishing Company will address the group. Reservations are to be made by Monday night.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Emphasizes Youthfulness BY ELLEN WORTH

I I .....

THE attractive dress patterned for today is so cleverly designed and interesting, it needs little in the way of trim. The jabot frill forms a very flattering bodice line. The buttoned skirt ’has a very young look. You must have at least one bright colored velveteen frock in your wardrobe, as ruby, emerald or sapphire blue, and it is just perfact for this model. Lightweight woolens, velvet and rayon novelties that suggest wool are also suitable. Stvle No. 695 is designed for sizes 16, 18 years, 36, 38, 40 and 42 inches'bust. Size 36 requires yards of 39-inch material.

Enclosed find 15 cents for which send me Pattern No. 695. Name Street * City State Sum

PRESIDENTS DAY OF W. C. T. U. SET President’s day tea of the Marion County Woman’s Christian Temperance Union is set for 2 Tuesday at the Banner-Whitehill auditorium with Dr. J. Raymond Schutz of Manchester college as speaker. Presiding at the tea table will be Mrs. Felix T. McWhirter, Mrs. John Benson, Mrs. C. W. Ackman and Mrs. Arthur Robinson. Mrs. L. E. Schultz, county president, will preside. Assistant hostesses are Mesdames Margaret Bullock, Paul Handy, Alice Caroline Templeton, Dorothy Kortepeter, Ethlene Johnson, Charles Brown and Misses Ruby E. Bailey. Margaret Sissenguth, Leona Helmuth, Beulah E. Bailey and Mary Luella Ostrom. Reservations are to be made by Monday morning with the reservations committee, Mrs. Fred Masters, Mrs. T. A. Berry and Mrs. T. R. Ratcliff.

BETROTHED COUPLE TO BE HONORED

Buffet supper will be given tonight by Mr. and Mrs. Lester Ford honoring Miss Bertha Dernier and her fiance, Howard Stuart, son of Mr. and Mrs. William R. Stuart. The marriage of Miss Dernier, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Dernier, and Mr. Stuart will be solemnized Nov. 27. Yellow button chrysanthemums will appoint the serving table. Guests with the engaged couple will be Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Sutton and Mr. and Mrs. Paul Kahn; Misses Helen Carver, Ruth Heaton, Margaret Arnold and Virginia Paige; Messrs. Harry Lister. Paul Robishaw, Eston Steams and Everett Baby. SESSION HELD BY MUSIC CLUB BOARD Official board of the Indiana Federation of Music Clubs met yesterday at the Claypocl with Mrs. Frank B. Hunter presiding. New members in attendance were Miss Berenice Reagan, recently elected treasurer; Mrs. O. W. Stephenson, Greenwood, recording secretary, and Mrs. Sherman Davis, recently appointed corresponding secretary. Plans for the spring convention to be held in conjunction with the North Central Music Educators Conference, March 17 to 22, are being formulated. District presidents met with the officers and chairmen of standing committees. Club Card Party Set Members of Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity Mothers’ Club and their guests will attend a card party at 1:30 Monday at the Butler university chapter house, 4721 Sunset boulevard. Mrs. H. P. German and Mrs. J. C, Stipher sill be hoc teases.

1. Miss Abby Beveridge with Orpheus, Fex. Ziska and Whoopie. 2. Miss Betty I.ee Burns with Higgins and Pandora. 3. Miss Sybil Stafford with Mitii. 4. Mrs. Robert C. Winslow with Pepper, Highball and Mint Julep. Many a frisky dog with ingratiating ways rules a household. They soon learn that a forlorn, downcast expression will end a mistress’ scoldings, and that a few ecstatic pleading barks will entice her to a walk down the street. Miss Abby Beveridge exercises her three dachshunds Fex. Ziska and Whoopie, and Orpheus, the Gordon setter belonging to her brother. Albert T. Beveridge Jr, joins the strolls. Higgins, the wire-haired terrier. and Pandora, the schnauzer, bid for the attention of Miss Betty Lee Burns, who spends a great deal of time exercising or playing with them. Mitzi, Miss Sybil Stafford's barbizon, is a mere handful, while Mrs. Robert C. Winslow has an armload when she gathers together the mischievous wirehaired terriers, Pepper, Highball and Mint Julep.

Club Meetings

MONDAY Cervus Club will hold its semiannual meeting at 2 in the Claypool. A guest meeting will be held by the Parliamentary Club at the home of Mrs. Rex Young, 5734 Guilford avenue. Assistant hostesses will be Mesdames Charles F. Voyles, E. E>Stacey, E. Monty Campbell and Frank Hunter. Mrs. Elwood Ramsey, 5874 Central avenue, wni entertain members of the Carnehan Club at 12:30 luncheon at the Marott. Mrs. George .esarcuo ana Mrs. John Conley will assist the hostess. Former presiaents of the Womans Research Club will present a piay uirected oy Mrs. L. H. Millikan, in Hoiienbeck hall of th*e Y. W. C. A. special music has been arranged ior tne anniversary meeting. Harvard presidents will be discussed by Mrs. Ernest de Wolfe Wales and Mrs. John R. Thiasher . before members of the Monday Conservation Club at its meeting with Mrs. E. H. Kemper McComo, j 2145 North Alabama street. Mrs. John W. Atherton will present “Victorian Travel” at the meeting of the Irvington Woman's Club with Mrs. Thomas C. Howe entertaining at her home, 4226 North Meridian street. Response to roil call at the meeting of the Sesame Club will *be Things to Be Thankful For.” Mrs. Roy Gorton is in charge of the! Thanksgiving program to be held with Mrs. Howard Morrison, 2546 Carrollton avenue. Te-Aro-Ah chapter, International Travel-Study Club, Inc., will entertain wtih a guest meeting at 1:30 at the home of Mrs. E. P. Messick, j 2218 Nowland avenue. Mrs. Carl Ruelle will sing and Mrs. S. R. Art- ■ man will lecture on “Dixieland.” j HIGHLAND CLUB T?J~ BE SUPPER SCENE The Sunday night buffet supper of Highland Golf Country Club will be followed by keno games* Host and hostesses tomorrow night will be Messrs, and Mesdames Paul Whittemore, Fred G. Rastenburg, Fred Shumaker, J. Park Wood, Irwin Brown, R. W. Sinz, William Bennett, John A. Rau, John Lange and Ben Olsen. Chapter Luncheon Set Mrs. Charles R. Federman, 25 East Fifty-second street, assisted by Mrs. C. F. Ober, will entertain members of the Indianapolis Associate chapter of Tri Kappa sorority at a 1:30 luncheon Monday. Mrs. Eleanor Miller, home consultant for L. 8. Ayres te Cos., will talk on “Little House Ideas for the Home."

NOV. IT, 1034

Dog Owners Cite Pets’ Fine Points Miss Beveridge Favors Dachshunds; Garstangs Fancy Setter. BY BEATRICE BI'RGAN Time* Woman'll Pace Editor IN any circle of friends, the mention of dogs is sure to begin a lively exchange of stories abc it the pets, which have unfailing v ays of winning their masters' and mistresses' devotion and loyalty. In turn, the animals repay these kindnesses with a like intensity of attention.

Dog owners invariably will see to their pots’ comforts before they go away on a trip. They experiment with their diets; they are faithful about exercising the animals and they would not exchange their dogs for a bag of gold. Reginald Garstang and his English setter, Skipper,

Miss 3urgan

have a share of memories. Skipper goes with Mr. and Mrs. Garst-ang on fishing and hunting trips, and Skipper doesn't often fail to remember a lake where his master has taken him on a trip. Skipper is from the litter of a field trail champion, and his master will tell you that Skipper is as good a dog as you’ll find for a hunting trip. Mrs. R W. Garstang, Mr. Garstang's mother, owns Quetrfl Sophie, a Scottie, while William Walk Garstang has as his pet one of Queen Sophie's puppies. King Beezer. While Miss Abby Beveridge was studying in Munich, Germany, sho was attracted to the dachshund, famous for its German ancestry. I Miss Beveridge came home with four of them, Heidi, Fex, Ziska ana Whoopie. Fex is 3 years old and his pedigree carries a long list of impressive German titles. Miss Beveridge’s short-legged, streamlined, sleek dachshunds understand only German commands. They make walks interesting for their mistress. “They're a sporty little dog." Miss Beveridge explains. “We aren’t out a minute until one of them has scared up a bird or a rabbit. They are continually hunting something, and they’re a plucky little animal when they face an opponent." Orpheus is the blscK, long-haired Gordon setter, which claims the affection of Miss Beveridge’s brother, Albert J. Beveridge Jr. Mrs. Fisk Lander’s children have a devoted playfellow, Timmy, the family Old English sheep dog. Timmy is big, wooly and clumsy but he is also gentle and kindly; he is a protective devoted companion to the Landers’ children. ana Mrs. Stuart Dean has returned ! from a visit at Lake Maxinkuckce and will go to St. Louis soon for a j visit. Mrs. Clarence Nesbitt, formerly 1 Miss Josephine Link, has come from Pittsburgh and is visiting her mother, Mrs. M. S. Link, and Mrs. I Norman Metzger.

BUSINESS WOMEN TO MEET AT DANVILLE Calendar for the Indianapolis Business and Professional Women’3 Club this week schedules two events. The first is a meeting w'hich members will attend at 2 tomorrow at Danville with Mrs. Eudora Ramsay Richardson. Richmond, Va., as guest speaker. Mrs. Richardson is national field representative of the National Federation of Business and Professional Women’s Clubs. The meeting will be held at the recreation room of Central Normal college, Mrs. Mary Stubbs Moore will speak at the regular Thursday night meeting at the Woman’s Department Club house. Mrs. Moore will give “Impressions of South America.” Following 6 o’clock dinner, sixteen new members will be Initiated with the membership committee in charge. MEETING OF BOARD SET AT HOSPITAL Mrs. W. C. Hartinger, president of the White Cross Center of Methodist hospital, has announced that the November meeting of the executive board will be held a; 10 Wednesday in headquarters In the nurses residence of the hospital. Luncheon and a social hour will fo’iow a business meeting. The White Cross Music Guild will present a program of southern songs for students of the hospital school of nursing in the residence Wednesday night. A vocal trio composed of Mrs. William Day, Miss Beulah Bailey and Mrs. W. E. Singer will sing, accompanied by Mrs. M. D. Didway. Mrs. A. R. Dewey will read “The Lure of the Vanishing South.” Performers will be in costume. Mrs. Wilma Leonard Smith is program chairman. DRAMATIC CRITIC TO BE SPEAKER “Modern Drama” will be discussed by Walter D. Hickman, dramatic critic of The Indianapolis Times, at a meeting of active, associate and patroness groups of Upsilon chapter, Phi Beta, national dramatic and musical sorority, Wednesday with Mrs. H. W. Rhodehamel, hostess. Mrs. L. H. Milikan. Miss Helen Coffey and Miss Marthadeane Lesher will assist the hostess. Mrs. Arthur Madison, accompanied by Mrs. Gerald Hyde, will sing.

FURNITURE BARGAINS! Heating Stoves 18 95 up Bridge Lamps 11 49 45-La Colton Mattresses *5 45 Medicine Cabinets 79c Felt Base Remnants 37c vd. Walnut Poster Beds ... 18.96 WHITE FURNITURE CO. 243-249 W. WASH. ST.

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